The One You Feed - Learning to Find Comfort in Discomfort with Light Watkins
Episode Date: January 23, 2024In this episode, Light Watkins discusses important principles from his latest book, Travel Light: Spiritual Minimalism to Live a More Fulfilled Life. He emphasizes the importance of making choices t...hat align with the expansive feeling to embody one’s most authentic self, and embracing discomfort for personal growth. Light’s engaging storytelling style captures the essence of his spiritual journey and his message of seeking internal happiness rather than external validation serves as a powerful reminder for individuals on their life journey. In this episode, you will be able to: Discover the power of spiritual minimalism and unlock your path to personal growth Embrace discomfort to uncover hidden strengths and accelerate personal development Take action and experience the transformative power of giving to others Learn the art of embracing discomfort to unlock new levels of personal growth Seek diverse advice to unlock new perspectives and accelerate personal development To learn more, click here!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Giving people the benefit of the doubt is a really good way to leave a positive final
oppression.
And if you want to have influence over how that person is seeing a situation, guess what?
You're going to have way more influence if you help them feel seen and heard versus the
person who cuts them off, dismisses their point of view as nonsense, and makes them
feel stupid.
them feel stupid. Welcome to The One You Feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out, or you are what
you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us. We tend toward
negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don't have instead of what we do.
We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it's not just about thinking.
Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living.
This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction,
how they feed their good wolf.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together, our mission on the Really Know Really podcast is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like
why the bathroom door doesn't go all the way to the floor,
what's in the museum of failure, and does your dog truly love you?
We have the answer.
Go to reallyknowreally.com
and register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast
or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead. The Really Know Really podcast. Follow us on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks for joining us. Our
guest on this episode is Light Watkins. He has been a meditation teacher and spiritual teacher
for more than 20 years. He's the author of The Inner Gym,
Bliss More, and Knowing Where to Look, and also hosts a weekly podcast called The Light Watkins
Show. Today, Eric and Light discuss his book, Travel Light, Spiritual Minimalism to Live a
More Fulfilled Life. Hi, Light. Welcome to the show. Thanks, man. Good to be here. Yeah,
we're going to be discussing your book, Travel Light, Spiritual Minimalism to Live a More Fulfilled Life, and whatever other topics come up.
But we'll start like we always do with the parable.
In the parable, there's a grandparent who's talking with their grandchild, and they say,
In life, there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.
One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love.
And the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love. And the other is a bad wolf,
which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops, they think about
it for a second, they look up at their grandparent, they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent
says, the one you feed. So I'd like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in
your life and in the work that you do.
Well, you know, I've been writing a lot about this idea of following your heart voice,
which is how I identified the voice of your spirit. And obviously there are a lot of other voices in our awareness. There's the voice of fear. There's the voice of our past traumas. There's the voice of
our parents, teachers, coaches, preachers, neighbors, news, cultural indoctrination,
all of these voices. And what I encourage my followers and my readers to do is to split test
which one is the voice of their spirit, because that's the one that's going to
encourage you to do the right thing when you don't feel like it. That's the one that's going to
cheer you on when you want to give up. That's the one that's going to want to make you more
compassionate, more generous, more empathetic, et cetera. And if you follow that voice enough times,
then that's how you turn the volume up. So it's not just a still,
small voice, but it can actually become a loud, annoying voice. So it's kind of like that good
wolf. It's right in your ear and it's louder than the bad wolf. And if you can hear it and
experience it in that way, it's easier to follow the good voice. The problem is we follow the voice of fear so much that that's the default one that we
oftentimes hear.
And that's why it's easier to follow the fear voice than it is to follow the still small
voice of your intuition.
Well, as the guy who spent the early part of his career in software testing, right,
I'm very familiar with the idea of split testing things, right?
But not everybody might be. And so basically what you're suggesting is, well, say more about what
you are suggesting. How do you split test that? I mean, I love this idea of like, see which voice
brings about which results, but say a little bit more about that.
Well, that's essentially it. You know, like We may have two voices, a good and a bad. There may be a neutral voice. There may be another instigating voice, and there may be
another shame voice. And so there's all these voices. And if we want to turn up the volume on
the one that we feel supports us the most and that leads to the result that we want the most,
which I'm assuming is we want to feel like the most
authentic version of ourselves. We want to feel the most expansive. We want to feel the most
creative. We want to be able to tell the best stories, right? I think about it not in terms
of what's happening right now, because I get that what is happening right now could be very chaotic
and there are lots of things that need to happen, right?
But let's fast forward and project to our final moments.
And maybe even beyond that, let's go to our funeral.
And let's say we're now in spirit form.
We've left the body.
We're at the funeral.
And we're watching people come up to the podium to talk about us and to report on their experiences with us.
And what sorts of testimonials, what sorts of reports would we be proud of at the end of our
days when people go up there and talk about us? Do we want to hear people talk about how
we always paid our bills on time and how
we got that promotion that one time? Probably not. Probably we want to hear about how we were
a good person. We gave people a second chance. We were the one that listened when nobody else would.
These kinds of more altruistic exchanges and dynamics. And so if we play that little game with ourselves,
then we can just reverse engineer back to this moment where all this chaos is happening and
there's not enough time to do anything. And then we have a clear idea of how we want to move
through this moment. So split testing is just another way of saying, don't put so much pressure
on yourself to try to figure out which one is the good wolf or the bad
wolf. Just follow the one you think is the good wolf. And if you do that enough times, you're not
going to get it right all the time. The ego is really good at disguising itself as that good
wolf. But if you do it, say, 100 times or 500 times, you'll have a pretty decent idea of which one is the voice that you ultimately want to
follow because there's a feeling tone that's associated with it. There's a little sense of
anticipation. There's a little bit of fear perhaps around what's going to happen next
because there's no certainty related to following that good wolf. But if you follow it enough times,
you'll see that on the other side of it, there's this feeling of expansion that is very consistent. And it's something that helps you
sleep better at night. It's something that helps to make you wiser. And it's something that you
ultimately will be proud of at the end of your days. Yeah, I love that idea. And I often,
in certain groups that I've led, we've done that sort of funeral exercise, right? It's a very clarifying exercise, like what is really important? What do I want people saying? You know, and the other thing is, depending where you are in your journey and path, right, you may get very good feedback relatively quickly after you follow a certain voice, right? At a certain point, there is a sense of being in integrity with ourselves, you know, of our actions matching up with who we want to be.
And to be out of that, oftentimes we really know it, you know, sometimes we don't,
your point is well taken. Sometimes it's confusing and on big, you know, confusing decisions,
but there's a lot of feedback that I'm able to find pretty quickly,
you know, after I do something like, okay, what do I feel inside? What I'd like to ask you is,
I find this idea of an authentic self inside of us, a little bit of a confusing idea. And what
I mean by that is you listed a lot of ways we've been conditioned. You gave a long list and we could add to it,
we could spend the next hour, right? Laying out all the factors that have conditioned us to be
the person we are today. So that makes this idea of like an authentic self a little bit harder to
tweeze apart, right? Because we do have all this conditioning. Talk to me a little bit, you know,
in your mind about what that authentic self is.
Is it different in me than it is in you when you get down to that truest, deepest level?
I'm so glad you made that distinction because I'm a big fan of defining concepts that people
just take for granted that everybody understands and we're all on the same page.
And the reality is that actually that's not the case at all.
And so I'm happy to unpack this idea of authentic self. And just to keep it really simple,
the way I define authentic self is in a range of behaviors that we do. It's different for different people, but we act upon what we feel like, as you said, is most in
alignment with our own personal integrity. But let's just talk about it generally speaking.
Let's just say, generally speaking, as a heterosexual man, right? We've all had the
experience where you see a pretty girl out somewhere, and it may be clear that she is not in a relationship.
She doesn't have a ring on or anything like that. And everything in you says, go up and talk to her,
go up and say hi, go and strike up a conversation. Just take a leap of faith. Just see what happens,
you know, say F it or whatever we're saying in our minds. And we've all had the experience of
not doing it. And when you don't do it, what ends up happening? You think about it. It bothers you. Right. And you keep playing the scenario out in your head over and over and over, maybe for hours, maybe for days.
sort of stalking the place, hoping that she's going to walk in. And those moments, which are probably more rare, those moments where you did go up, you did say something, even if it doesn't
materialize into anything, you always feel like, you know, this sense of expansion and you feel
so good that you at least did something. And it's easier for you to move on to whatever the next
thing is. And without thinking about whatever could have happened or should have happened had you behaved differently.
I would classify your authentic self as you making choices more in alignment with that
expanded feeling where you knew that you did what was a little bit nerve wracking, a little
bit scary, a little bit, you little bit anticipatory, but it was
something that made you feel like the best version of you, the story that you ultimately want to tell.
If you're the superhero of your life and you're just breaking your life down into these moments,
and the question is, what would the superhero do in this moment? Well, the superhero would
certainly go up and talk to the person. The superhero would certainly stand up for people who can't stand
up for themselves. The superhero wouldn't be in the room gossiping about anybody. They'd be the
person shutting down the gossip conversation and saying, hey, this person's not all that bad.
They have these and that great qualities. So when we think about our own personal hero,
great qualities. So when we think about our own personal hero, what the qualities are of that personal hero, those are qualities that we deep down want to embody for ourselves.
Yep.
Right? And so when we can operate in alignment with those qualities,
that is our most authentic self. And that's different for everybody.
Yeah. And it's interesting that the example you gave is a good one. The
example that came to my mind is extending kindness to strangers. There are moments where it's like,
I see an opportunity to extend a kindness. It could be any number of different things,
but I'm anxious to do it. Does the person want me to extend a kindness? Do they just want to
be left in their little bubble? And I know that the best version of me does the kind thing.
And if it isn't received well, then it isn't received well.
But I know that I was acting from the part of me that knows that that's something I really
value, right?
Is to try and be kind to everyone.
And so I think, yeah, we all have this sense of expansiveness.
And I love that idea. I've often thought about just that very idea, expansion versus contraction, you know, as a really good guide for how to make decisions and how to orient, you know, does this feel like it makes me a bigger, more open, better version of myself? Or do I feel like this closes me down and causes
me to contract? And for me, that's almost been the best way of thinking of certain things is in that
sense of expansion versus contraction. And I think when you look at it that way with feeling tone,
as opposed to even semantics and trying to come up with language for it, just see how you feel.
How does it make you feel? Just see how you feel. How
does it make you feel? Does it make you feel a little bit more expansive or does it make you
feel like a smaller version of yourself? And if you just follow those expansive feelings,
you know, just like with eating French fries or donuts, look, I love French fries.
There's a time and place for a donut, but if you eat these things all the time, because
the idea of it makes you feel expansive in the moment, but then 20 minutes later you feel shitty, that's an indication that this is not taking you in the direction of your most authentic self.
Yeah.
Eating these kinds of foods.
Going to work out may make you contract initially, but then afterward, what happens?
No one ever walks out of the gym or an exercise class having killed it
and feel like a smaller version of yourself. You feel like the superhero version of yourself.
And so, you know, you got to look at it in a broad spectrum of activity as opposed to how
you're feeling in the moment. And then again, once you have enough of these types of experiences and
you have a point of reference, then you can make those decisions easier and easier. Yeah, it's funny. I've interviewed a bunch of behavioral
scientists on this show and I always ask them, I'm like, explain something to me. Every single time
I have ever worked out, and it's thousands and thousands and thousands of times, right? I'm not
a young person, right? Every single time I have left going, I'm so glad I did that. You would think
I would run to work out every single time. And yet it's still difficult. No one has ever really
satisfactorily been able to answer why that is. I think it just has something to do with an inbuilt
wiring to conserve energy as a living being. I think we just have some degree of that, but it's funny. I could have that kind of track record, a hundred percent success and still, still have to talk myself into
it. I mean, but look, let's expound on that further. Let's say you're looking at doing
Navy SEAL training, but then you're like, there's no way I don't want to, I just don't want that
sort of stress in my life. Right. But you know that after you get through hell week and all that crazy stuff,
you're going to feel like a freaking super machine.
Yeah.
Right. Even though, you know, it's going to take you to the brink of your potential. And so we all
kind of have that. It's just a matter of to what degree do we feel it, you know, and challenging
ourselves. But we know that getting to the other side of that
challenge is going to feel amazing. But, you know, it's just a matter of, okay, what sort of challenge
do I want today? And, you know, maybe working out presents what seems to be a very steep obstacle
for us. But we know that once we get to the other side of that obstacle, it's going to feel great.
But do we want to take on that level of obstacle that day?
Or maybe there's a smaller obstacle that we're satisfied with because we know that it's not
going to stop.
It's going to just be the same thing the next day and the next day and the day after that,
et cetera.
There's an absolute art to getting that right.
You know, not too much, not too little sort of threading the needle on that.
Before we get into the book more specifically, I wanted to ask you about a recent Instagram post that you did. And you said to happiness, which is happiness that comes from
the outside to the inside, which means as soon as I get the promotion, as soon as I get the better
job, as soon as I get the better spouse, as soon as I move to the better house, better car, better
city, better this, another zero, my bank balance, that I'm going to be happy and let me do whatever it takes in order to make that happen.
And the opposite of that is what the Buddha and all of the sages and gurus over millennia have
said, which is happiness. There's no way to happiness. Happiness is the way. So in other
words, happiness is an inside out proposition. And therefore it requires some sort of inner practice that will help to cultivate the happiness that you ultimately want.
And now, you know, science has backed this up, and research has said that in American society,
at least beyond having your basic needs met and making a salary of like $70,000, $75,000,
making more money is not going to increase your baseline
level of happiness, right? This doesn't mean that you can't be any happier than you were at $75,000.
It just means that making more money is not the thing that's going to increase it.
What will increase it though is having strong friendships. What will increase it is being of service, having a greater purpose
in your life. And what's also been shown to increase the happiness is cultivating more of
the chemicals that are responsible for happiness, serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin, et cetera.
And the practices that can do that very effectively are gratitude and meditation.
that can do that very effectively are gratitude and meditation. So the thing that stops us from feeling happier than we would be at that threshold, that $75,000 threshold, primarily
is lack of those chemicals. And so what does the body do that prohibits us from feeling those
chemicals? It reacts to demands, pressures, and changes of
expectation. So that's another way of saying stress. It's experiencing stress. Stress depletes
the body of serotonin, dopamine, and oxytocin. So it makes us want to run away from whatever
the experience is or fight that experience. Meditation, gratitude helps to create those chemicals, which makes us feel more
present, more fulfilled, and happier inside, more content with whatever it is that we're experiencing.
Just to put a definition to happiness, because a lot of people think happiness is me walking around
with a big smile plastered on my face all the time, and that's not the reality of what happiness is.
Happiness is being in a state where you don't need other things to be happening to make you feel more fulfilled
as a person. That's what true happiness actually is. So when we can get the body addicted to those
happy chemicals, then our body will respond by making us crave those experiences that are
responsible for those happiness chemicals,
which makes us wake up in the morning. You know how some people wake up, they can't wait to have
their coffee, or they can't wait to turn the television on, or they can't wait to start
scrolling on social media. Well, those are not arbitrary experiences. You've programmed and
conditioned your body to be dependent upon the chemicals that are associated with those experiences. And the good
news is that the same thing can happen with more positive experiences like meditation, like
gratitude, like being of service, like operating from a purpose. And so as you go throughout your
day, your body is actually prompting you, hey, Eric, it's time to sit down and meditate. Or hey,
Eric, you haven't really thought about anything you're grateful for in a moment. What are you grateful for right now?
And you start having these kinds of experiences from the inside out and you fulfill yourself
being more present and more fulfilled. And as a result, you're not sitting there thinking to
yourself, oh, I'm very present right now. I'm very happy. I'm very fulfilled. No, you're just
completely engaged in whatever the activity is. And as very fulfilled. No, you're just completely engaged in whatever the activity
is. And as you're walking around, you're noticing things. You're noticing the birds. You're noticing
the sounds. You're noticing the colors. You're noticing the breeze on your face. And when a
demand is placed on you, you don't jump right into scarcity. Like, oh my God, I don't have time for
this. No, you're able to be present with that and to be the person
that stops and helps the old person across the street because you have the time. In fact, you're
a time billionaire because that's what presence does. So it's not that you need to even be aware
that any of this is happening. It becomes who you are. And that's what that means. The more
of those happiness chemicals you get, it's kind of like that's the true wealth that you're actually looking for.
And the more stress you have, it takes away your ability to feel that.
And that's why we want to start to see stress as a debt, as a liability, and not this thing that we need in order to find our edge or whatever it is that we're telling ourselves.
As we drop into the book and this idea of spiritual minimalism, I want to talk about what you describe
as one of the principles of that. And it's that the fewer options you have, the more freedom you
have to make decisions and the more present you become. Say something about that, because we tend
to want to maximize our optionality, right? We tend to want to give ourselves the widest range of options, right? Because then we
can make the best choice. And we know there's a paradox of choice out there that if you have way
too many options, you get overwhelmed. But even well short of that, I think you're talking about,
you know, short of that. So why is less options often more beneficial for us in a spiritual
minimalism sense? You're referring to principle seven of
spiritual minimalism, which is celebrate the freedom of choicelessness. So there are a few
different seemingly contradicting truths in that statement, right? One truth is that having options
is actually a good thing. Like if we have the option to be well versus the option to be sick,
we're going to choose the option to be well.
We want that option 100 times out of 100.
And at the same time, let's say for whatever reason, we're not in a situation where we
can be well.
We don't have what it takes.
We don't have the money.
We don't have the resources.
We're in a weird physical location where we can't get access to care, right?
So then there is a freedom that is associated
with that. And what that means is that we can either focus on what's not happening,
which again, yanks us out of the present moment, and it actually makes the body sicker.
It doesn't heal the body to be in that mindset. Or we can accept where we are and what's
happening, provided we've done everything we could. And this is where we are. So we accept that
now just through sheer acceptance, we're able to anchor ourselves more in the present moment.
And then it's through that present moment awareness that we're going to be able to see and
detect and feel things that we would not have had access to otherwise. One of my spiritual teachers
used to say, if you want to know what's going to happen tomorrow, then you better get present today
because the richest information about what's happening tomorrow is only found in the present
moment right now. So otherwise you have to use speculation and guesswork
to try to figure out what's gonna be happening tomorrow.
So both of those things can be true.
I like options and I'm recognizing
that I don't have a lot of options for whatever reason.
And so I'm just gonna do the best that I can right now.
If you have time, I'll tell you a little story about that.
Sure.
I used to teach yoga back in the day.
And I remember I had a yoga class.
It was like a 10 o'clock in the mornings on Wednesdays and Fridays in Los Angeles.
And I lived about 10 minutes drive from the yoga studio.
And I had my commute time down to the minute.
I left 15 minutes early. It would take me, you know,
seven minutes, eight minutes to drive there, park, go upstairs, go to the studio, set up my
room. And I had to have an extra five or maybe seven minutes to greet people as they were coming
in. And I'd done this, you know, hundreds of times. There was never any traffic. And one morning
I get in my car and I'm well, you know, right within the
timeframe that I always gave myself. And there was all this traffic on the main road going in
the direction of the studio. So like any good LA driver, I zigzag my way down to the next street
and I hit another pocket of traffic. And this is highly unusual. There's never traffic
on one of those streets, much less
both of those streets. So now I'm recognizing that I'm going to be late and I hate it being late,
but there was nothing I can do about it. So I tried to like breathe and calm myself down
as I'm inching through this traffic. And then I finally get to the main intersection that crossed
both of those streets. And if there was going to be anything
causing this traffic, it would have been at this intersection, but I didn't see anything. I didn't
see any construction. I didn't see any obstruction, no accident. There was no reason why there would
have been traffic on those streets. And then eventually the traffic just kind of spontaneously
cleared up. I arrive at the class 10 minutes late. I'm embarrassed, right? Because now I'm
sending the message that it's okay to show up late to my class.
And as I walk into the room, the actual room, I have flip-flops on and I feel all this crunching
underneath my flip-flops.
And I look down and there's like, there's a million shards of broken glass all over
the floor.
And I look up to the front wall, which is a wall of mirrors,
probably about 10 feet tall. Each pane of mirror was about three feet, four feet wide.
And in the very middle of the room, there was a missing panel, 10 feet tall by four feet wide.
There was no mirror there. And so what had happened was apparently about 10 minutes before
I came in the room, right at the top of the hour, when the class was supposed to start, that panel of mirrors somehow dislodged and came crashing down right where I would have been sitting had I arrived at the class on time.
So evidently that phantom traffic jam that I was secretly cursing on my way there was actually saving
me from having a very unlucky start to my day.
And the reason I like that story is because it tells the flip side of the freedom of choicelessness,
right?
Which is when you're being rejected from something, when you're losing something and you think
to yourself, oh my God, if only I had done X, Y, Z, if only I left earlier, if only I hadn't made friends with this person, if only
I had put more money into it, then it would have worked out better.
That's how we play it out in our minds without realizing that although the situation was
bad, it could have been a lot worse.
And I would have had a very unlucky start to my day had I gotten there when I wanted to get
there. So the universe or nature, whatever you want to call it, was gifting me with a freedom
of choicelessness. And after that happened, whenever I'm inconvenienced, it doesn't bother
me anymore. When I miss a flight, when there's traffic, when someone's not texting me back
as quickly as I think they should be,
I think back to myself, phantom traffic jam, broken mirror. Okay. This is not what's meant
to be happening. Now, again, it doesn't mean I'm sitting on my hands waiting for things to happen.
I'm still doing everything I can do, but when the thing is not happening beyond that,
then I have an easier time saying, you know what? This is fine.
Let me keep focusing on what I can control and let go of what I can't.
Does meditating feel like a chore, another to-do list item to check off, or perhaps it's even fallen off the list entirely? If you sense that meditating regularly would benefit you,
but you struggle to find a sustainable place for it in your schedule, I can help. There are
reasons people struggle with creating and maintaining a meditation practice, and it isn't because meditation isn't right for
them. In my free guide, The Top 5 Reasons You Can't Seem to Stick with a Meditation Practice
and How to Build One That Lasts, I teach you why it can be a struggle to build a meditation
practice that lasts and the small fixes that can have a big impact when it comes to getting you
where you want to be with meditating regularly. Go to OneYouFeed.net and sign up for this free guide
right on our homepage. I'm Jason Alexander. And I'm Peter Tilden. And together on the Really No
Really podcast, our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like why
they refuse to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor we
got the answer will space junk block your cell signal the astronaut who almost drowned during
a spacewalk gives us the answer we talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves
you and the one bringing back the woolly mammoth plus does tom cruise really do his own stunts
his stuntman reveals the answer and you never know who's going to drop by. Mr. Brian Cranston is with us today.
How are you, too?
Hello, my friend.
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park.
Wayne Knight, welcome to Really, No Really, sir.
Bless you all.
Hello, Newman.
And you never know when Howie Mandel might just stop by to talk about judging.
Really? That's the opening?
Really, No Really. Yeah, Really, No Really.
Go to reallynoreally.com.
And register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast, or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead.
It's called Really No Really, and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's always seemed to me there are situations in which there's something I can do about this, and I absolutely do it.
Or there's nothing I can do about this and I absolutely do it, or there's nothing I can do about it. So I let it go. And then there's all that middle ground where we're like, well, you
know, I don't, you know, I don't quite know, you know, I've got a job that I don't love,
you know, do I accept that? Because by accepting it, I might start to like the job more and I'm
not resisting it. You know, it's that middle ground that's always so, so confusing. And like we
talked about, there's an art to finding what's the right response in what situation.
Yeah. And I think one way to kind of navigate that is to, again, remind yourself of what are
the most important things that you want people to say about you at the end of your life? And just
narrow that down to like three things. I'm the person that gives people second chances. I'm the person that leaves the
world more inspired. And let's say I leave places better than I found them.
So that gives you a different point of focus in these moments where the outcome isn't what you
think it should be. And therefore you can can now become more process-oriented. And
guess what? The value that you ultimately want from the experience is going to be found from
the process of it versus from the outcome of it. So going back to our earlier example of going
through hell week as a Navy SEAL, sure, it's wonderful to say that you're a Navy SEAL, but
let's say you had a hookup, Eric. Let's
say you know somebody in the Navy who could just make you a Navy SEAL without you having to bother
with hell week, right? Would anybody want that? No self-respecting person would want to have Navy
SEAL status without going through all of the things that you have to go through, which is advertised
as hellish. It's going to be hell to go through these things. But that's what makes you into the
person. That's what gives the experience its inherent value. And so as a Navy SEAL, you're
the kind of person that does things beyond the point where most people give up. You'll go through
whatever you have to go through to make sure you protect your fellow SEALs. You're the kind of person
that doesn't come up with excuses about why you can't make things happen. Instead, you find
solutions. So when you put yourself through that experience, you actually become that person.
And then 20, 30, 50 years later, when you look back, that's what you remember
fondly. Yeah, I didn't give up. And yes, I went beyond where most people would quit. And yes,
I do protect people just because I expect them to protect me, et cetera. And that becomes a part of
who you are and that shows up in everything you do. And you realize, yeah, it was the journey.
It wasn't the destination that was the most valuable part of the whole experience. Yep. You touched on there one of the key elements
of spiritual minimalism that you talk about. I find it just to be a good all-purpose intention
in life, which is just to leave every place better than I found it. That just, to me,
found it. That just, to me, almost encompasses so much of what I value because that could look a thousand different ways based on what you mean by that and where you are and all that. It is a way
of orienting towards all of your situations that I just have found to be, like I said, a good
all-purpose intention. It's one of my fallbacks.
Yeah. There's a story in that principle, in that chapter called Final Impressions. And I talk about how we're really good at making first impressions, putting our best foot forward, but we're really
bad when it comes to final impressions. And what I mean by that is, if anybody could say these
things about you, they didn't show up to the
meeting that I set up for them and they never notified me or they broke up with me over text
message or they ghosted me or they didn't do what they said they were going to do. So I just stopped
screwing around with them. You know, these kinds of little things, to us, they're like little things.
They can become these really big moments
that we get known for if we do it enough times. And when people are gossiping, usually they're
not gossiping about the first impression. They're gossiping about your final impression,
how you left the situation. And then you start to hear the grapevine version of how you left this.
And then you start to hear the grapevine version of how you left this. It's never like what actually happened. And these would be ridiculously simple situations to correct, maybe just by giving a little bit of
clarification, maybe giving an apology, maybe just giving someone a chance to feel seen and heard.
You know? And so I try to remember that in my day-to-day life, everyone that I'm encountering, that's an opportunity for me to leave a positive final impression.
And that could just be listening.
That could just be acknowledging what someone just said or what they're going through.
I've experienced this recently.
I don't want to make this time sensitive, but there's some international conflicts that are happening right now, as they
almost always are. There's something happening somewhere in the world. But having these
conversations, especially if you feel strongly about one side or the other side, is really easy
to dismiss someone who doesn't agree with you. And I think that that's an opportunity from a
spiritual minimalism point of view to help people
feel as seen and as heard as you would like to feel. Even if you think they're wrong, even if
you feel like they're misguided, they're not seeing the full thing. Well, guess what? They
probably feel the same about you. So at the end of the day, who's right, who's wrong? We don't know
because we're all being propagandized. We're all being indoctrinated by whatever our echo chamber has been conditioning us
to believe.
And that's been repeated throughout history where we thought things were one way, but
actually turns out they were a different way.
And so just exercising the benefit of the doubt, giving people the benefit of the doubt
is a really good way to leave a positive final impression.
people the benefit of the doubt is a really good way to leave a positive final impression.
And if you want to have influence over how that person is seeing a situation, guess what? You're going to have way more influence if you help them feel seen and heard versus the person who cuts
them off, dismisses their point of view as nonsense, and makes them feel stupid. Because
nobody wants to feel those ways. So some very powerful work that we can be
doing on a daily basis. And that's what that principle of spiritual minimalism, give what
you want to receive, actually means. Yeah. So you kind of segued us into another
of the principles we were sort of talking about, leaving every place better. But you've kind of
named it here, which is give what you want. You say, give what you want to receive. It doesn't matter how much or how little you have. If you want a friend, you must be friendly. If you want love, you must be loving. You know, you've talked in the book about if the community that you want isn't there, start creating it. So talk a little bit more about this, you know, give what you want to receive.
When I turned 40, I had an epiphany. I was like, man, I'm not really going out very much. And I reflected on that and I realized the reason I wasn't up. It didn't make me feel like a better version of myself when I was drinking. It's expensive, all the things.
So I decided to experiment with not drinking. I'm just not going to order any drinks and see
what happens. If I miss it, I'll go back to it. If I don't miss it, then great. I've liberated
myself from feeling like I need to drink in order to be social. And so I never missed it.
And I just stopped. I just stopped drinking over the course of like six months. And then I just didn't really think about it much.
But yeah, when I turned 40, I thought, okay, well, I want to be more social. But then I was thinking,
you know, well, where would I go? And all the places that I was thinking of were places that
were centered around drinking, either directly or indirectly. So I thought, well, maybe I'll create
an experience. There's got to be other people out here who also want to socialize without having to
feel pressure to drink. So I started hosting these gatherings once a week at this little
dance studio in West LA. It was costing me $50 each week to rent this place out for like an hour,
hour and a half. And I would be in my kitchen
making honey, lemon, ginger tea, which I really loved from when I visit India. I would have a
question of the night because one of the things I hate is going to a social event as an adult and
you don't know anybody and you feel like everyone's in their little clique and then you have to kind
of get out of your shell. So I was like, how can I create an experience where people feel naturally inclined to approach
other people?
Right.
And I said, oh, let's do this.
Let's have a question of the night.
Something like, who's your personal hero?
Or where would you like to go on vacation next?
Or what's a book that changed your life?
And instead of writing their name down on a name tag, write the answer to the question
of the night on your name tag and wear it on you. And that way, when people come in and they write their answer, you're going around and
you're seeing everybody's answer and it's a natural conversation starter. So we did that.
And then I led a meditation because I thought, why not have meditation at a social event?
And we had someone else come in and give like a quotes TED talk. So I would have like my salsa teacher come in and talk about like what the principles
of teaching salsa.
And I had like someone else come in, a coach, a life coach come in and talk about that.
And it was a really cool little experience.
We only got like 12, 13 people coming out and it was a free event for them.
But it just, it really lit me up inside. And I didn't know what was going to happen
with it. I was just happy to have something to do every Wednesday. It was like a purpose
driven thing for me. It wasn't even about making money, but then I had this volunteer.
And one day she said, as we were straightening up afterwards, she goes, why don't you start
taking up a collection since you're paying for it out of pocket, just take up a collection and just,
you know, at least you can pay yourself back or use that to pay for the rent of the space
so the next event we took up a collection and there were probably 13 to 14 people there
and we collected 55 so now i was a little disappointed honestly eric because
i was thinking man 55 that's it? After all this
work I'm putting into this, it's like I got to see how the market valued this experience.
And it wasn't as high as I was hoping. And so I got home that night and I had my $55 in cash.
And I thought to myself, I could spend this 55 bucks paying for the next rent.
I said, or I could give it to somebody at the next event and I could task them with the mission of
using it to help somebody in some positive way and then have them come back and share what they
did with the $55. Obviously, it's not enough money to make a huge difference in someone's life,
but that's the point. You don't need a lot of money to make a positive impact in the world.
So let's see what someone creative can do with $55. So we randomly awarded someone at the next
event the $55. They come back to the following event and they say, yeah, I put this kid through
a summer art camp. I added 50 bucks of my own money and this is the kid's name and
this is how the summer camp worked. And everybody was so inspired. And I was like, oh my God,
this is the missing component of the event. And so that night we probably still had 14 people,
but we collected like 120 something dollars. So the donations went up and that became a sort of
pivotal moment where we saw hockey stick growth
in the amount of people who were coming because when people would share the story of what they
did with the money, everyone was inspired. And I would tell people, you don't have to win the
money. You have 55 bucks in your checking account, probably. Pretend like you won it and go and do
something about it and come back and tell us what you did and we'll share the story together.
And so it got to the point where we were getting hundreds of people, man. We had events with like
300, 400 people coming six months later and we had to charge because we started serving food.
It became this whole thing. We were doing them in New York. We were doing them in London. We
were doing them in Germany. They were all over the world. And we started getting written up in the New York Times and NBC and all the different outlets. And I ended up getting a girlfriend from
that experience, you know, because she was volunteering. So basically everything that I
was lacking in my life came into my life as a result of that event. I got my first publishing
deal, which was like a six-figure publishing deal. And even though I didn't make a dime on the event directly, but that's the message behind
giving what you want to receive. Instead of sitting around thinking about how no one is
doing what I think they should be doing and this world is screwed up, you give that. Give that to
people in whatever small way you can. And if it's authentic and if it's an integrity with, you know, whatever your heart is having you do, people will respond to it and they'll come to it. And so on my own podcast today, I just and how that all worked with him getting into politics.
But I think that's another area that people complain about a lot and criticize a lot.
It's like, well, these are just people just like you and me.
So if you want to see something different, throw your hat in the ring and give it a run and see if you can make a difference, if you feel like no one else can.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together on the Really No Really podcast, our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like why they refuse
to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor. We got the answer. Will space junk
block your cell signal? The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us
the answer. We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you and
the one bringing back the woolly mammoth. Plus tom cruise really do his own stunts his stuntman reveals the answer and you never know
who's going to drop by mr brian cranson is with us how are you hello my friend wayne knight about
jurassic park wayne knight welcome to really no really sir bless you all hello newman and you
never know when howie mandel might just stop by to talk about judging.
Really? That's the opening?
Really, no really.
Yeah, really.
No really.
Go to reallynoreally.com.
And register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast, or a limited edition signed Jason bobblehead.
It's called Really, No Really, and you can find it on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's a great story on so many levels. Apple Podcasts, or and you get a couple more friends, you've succeeded. It doesn't always have to turn grandiose to be valuable. And that's one of the things I see in a lot of people
that I work with is this idea that things have to be grandiose to be meaningful. And that's a trap.
Yeah. And I tell people in the book, I say, you know, don't be distracted by all these things
that happen. You know, even if you just cook the home cooked dinner for people, everyone loves a
home cooked dinner. Or if you want to walk and you want company, just start a walking group with
your friends from church. And it could be three or four of you or movie night, or just keep it
really small. I mean, you never know where it's going to go, but my intention wasn't to build
this big event. My intention was just to create an experience that I actually wanted to have,
that I wanted to see.
And it grew from that. And in the process, you know, it forced me to have to be a leader
because leading people who are getting paid is one thing. Leading a bunch of volunteers is a
whole other skillset where you have to keep them motivated and inspired all the time.
Yeah, indeed it is. Principle number six is find comfort in discomfort. And I want to read
something that I believe one of your teachers said to you, which is the most dangerous place
you can be is in the ever repeating moment. And the safest place is to be moving towards the
unknown. So talk a little bit more about finding comfort in discomfort or that particular line.
Yeah. So we have our comfort zone, which we all
heard about, right? That's the zone where you kind of know how things are going to go. There's not a
lot of surprises. There's a lot more certainty, but yet you're not really stretching yourself.
You're not really growing into your potential. And just to use an analogy that we're all familiar
with is the gym, right? Imagine if you go to the gym, a lot of people do this. You go to the gym and you
do the same exercises that you know you're good at. You stay away from the ones that you know
you're weak in those areas where you know you're weak because you don't like feeling weak. Nobody
likes feeling weak. Nobody likes feeling like they can't do something. So left up to our own devices,
week. Nobody likes feeling like they can't do something. So left up to our own devices,
probably we're going to do more exercises that we feel stronger in.
Skip the legs.
But what happens when you hire a trainer? Yeah. When you hire a trainer, the reason you're hiring a trainer is to push you beyond whatever your comfort zone was. And so that trainer may immediately see, oh, you're weak in
this area, that area, you know, after, after doing their little diagnostic assessment with you.
And yet they're listening to your goals. You know, I want to have a stronger back. I want to have
a bigger butt, whatever the goal is. And the trainer is like, okay, well, this is what you
have to do if you want to achieve those goals. And probably the reason you haven't achieved those goals is because you haven't been doing
the kinds of exercises that you need to do in order to achieve those goals.
And that's going to make you very uncomfortable.
So the moment you start getting uncomfortable, now you're moving towards your growth zone.
And the growth zone is almost always uncomfortable.
zone. And the growth zone is almost always uncomfortable. So if we want to grow in whatever area of our life, then that means we have to start making friends with discomfort. And that's what
finding comfort means in discomfort is that is an essential part of the process of getting stronger,
accessing more of our potential, becoming the person that we ultimately
want to be, et cetera, et cetera. It really is interesting. I think we hear that and we know
that, you know, get outside your comfort zone. And yet we very often don't. I know as I've gotten
older, I do think this is one of the things that happens as you age, if you're not careful,
is that we begin to prioritize comfort
more and more. And this goes back a little bit to this idea of choicelessness, right? Like,
I'm a Zen student. It's very rigid. It's very formal. You know, like you do these exact things
a certain way, which is against my very nature. But the fact that I just give myself to the form,
I just, here it is. Stop your endless debate about
how you want things to be. This is how you're going to do them for this period of time.
I find that helpful. But this idea of discomfort is, it's hard to keep pushing yourself outside
your comfort zone. And like we've talked a bit about in this conversation, right? There's an
art to finding like how far outside your comfort zone you can go and still maintain it and continue to do it. You go too far and you're like, uh-uh,
uh-uh, you run back in. So, but you don't go far enough, you don't grow. And that's what a good
trainer does, right? A trainer, a good one knows I can push him to here any more than that. And
he's going to, you know, he's not going to come back, right? And push him to here.
that and he's not going to come back, right? And push him to here. And so I think that's the other piece of this is finding like what way outside of our comfort zone and how do we maintain being
there? Yeah. I would say that that is associated with spiritual maturity, right? So when you're
young and you want to change, you tend to go a little too far too fast and you end up getting
the pendulum effect. But as you become more spiritually mature, you understand the value
of discomfort, but you also understand the value of taking the tortoise approach as opposed to the
hare approach. And so that becomes the new gauge through which you approach change because you realize that everything is just different forms of change.
You're changing.
They're changing.
Circumstances are always changing.
And there's less of the whole binary.
This is good.
This is bad.
There's goodness in everything.
And there's negative aspects to everything depending on what perspective we're looking at it from. And so if we can kind of condition ourselves to stay engaged in the
process, and that's where the discomfort really is, I think the greatest is being just in the
process and maybe not understanding how it's all going to turn out, but just knowing that
being in the process is the goal. It's not
about reaching the outcome. It's not about the destination. The destination will be whatever it
is. But again, the more process oriented we were, the more we will extract the value from the
experience. And I have this thing that I've written as well, which says, you know, when you're seeking
advice, should you seek advice from people who've done what you want to do?
Or should you seek advice from people who haven't done and they've lived with the regret, with the pain of regret from not having done it?
Who should you seek advice from?
And I say, seek advice from the person who has been the most consistent.
Seek advice from the person who has been the most consistent.
They've consistently put themselves out there with whatever they were trying to do.
And sometimes they've succeeded and sometimes they haven't. But they keep going back again and again and again.
And if we can just adopt that approach of being consistent, even if it looks like it's not going to happen or if it looks like it's a sure thing, we're still showing up as if it's not going to happen.
That's the ultimate habit that we're cultivating is consistency, which means I'm not attached.
I'm not rigidly attached to the outcome.
Sure, I have preferences.
Sure, I would like for it to go
in this direction or that direction. But I understand that the real value is just me
showing up every day and I'm giving my best and I'm letting the chips fall where they may.
So the outcome will be whatever it is. But if we have the consistent ability to show up,
then we can apply that to anything.
Yeah.
I mean, my spiritual habits program is based on one key idea, and that is little by little,
a little becomes a lot, right?
That's how real change tends to happen and stick is it's just little by little, you know,
a little becomes a lot.
And it's that consistency.
And that really does add consistency. And that really
does add up and that does really lead to change. It's just not as fast as what we might wish.
Yeah. Another spiritual guru, I can't remember who it is. He says, what are you rushing towards?
Death? Like what's the big hurry? If you keep extrapolating it, what's the hurry? Ultimately,
you're going to die. So, you know, there's no real point to all the rushing around if that moment is going to be fleeting
anyway.
I think the better approach is to just enjoy whatever little moments you have right now
and extract whatever presence you can right now from those moments.
Yeah.
Well, we are at the end of our time.
You and I are going to, in the post-show conversation, talk about meditation. You've got a
way of meditating that you believe leads to making it the most enjoyable and sustainable. So we'll
talk about that. Have you lead us in a guided meditation? Listeners, if you'd like access to
that, other post-show conversations, ad-free episodes, an episode I do called Teaching Song
and a Poem, and the deep internal satisfaction of supporting something that you love,
you can go to oneufeed.net slash join
and become a member of our community.
Light, thank you so much.
Such a pleasure to have you on
and I've really enjoyed our conversation.
Absolutely. If what you just heard was helpful to you,
please consider making a monthly donation to support the One You Feed podcast.
When you join our membership community with this monthly pledge,
you get lots of exclusive members-only benefits.
It's our way of saying thank you for your support.
Now, we are so grateful for the members of our community.
We wouldn't be able to do what we do without their support, and we don't take a single dollar for granted.
To learn more, make a donation at any level, and become a member of the One You Feed community,
go to oneyoufeed.net slash join.
The One You Feed podcast would like to sincerely thank
our sponsors for supporting the show.
I'm Jason Alexander.
And I'm Peter Tilden.
And together, our mission on the Really Know Really podcast
is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like
why the bathroom door doesn't go all the way to the floor,
what's in the museum of failure,
and does your dog
truly love you?
We have the answer.
Go to
reallynoreally.com
and register to win
$500,
a guest spot on our podcast
or a limited edition
signed Jason bobblehead.
The Really No Really Podcast.
Follow us on the
iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever
you get your podcasts.