The Rich Roll Podcast - The Science Of Happiness: Dr. Laurie Santos Shares Evidence-Based Tools For Genuine Joy, Why We Chase The Wrong Things & What Actually Creates Well-Being
Episode Date: June 30, 2025Dr. Laurie Santos is a renowned psychology professor at Yale University and creator of the most popular course in Yale's history: "Psychology and the Good Life." This conversation explores why our in...tuitions about happiness are spectacularly wrong and the mental health crisis plaguing young people. We discuss how our brains mislead us about well-being, the power of negative visualization, and evidence-based "rewirements" to overcome our natural biases. Along the way, she shares the stark reality among elite students and practical strategies for authentic happiness. Laurie brings science to humanity's quest for happiness. Essential for anyone seeking genuine well-being. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: Lincoln Financial: Watch The Action Plan series and learn how Lincoln can help you make your pastimes last a lifetime 👉 lincolnfinancial.com/richroll On: High-performance shoes & apparel crafted for comfort and style 👉 on.com/richroll AG1: Get a FREE bottle of Vitamin D3+K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs 👉 drinkAG1.com/richroll Airbnb: Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much 👉 airbnb.com/host WHOOP: The all-new WHOOP 5.0 is here! Get your first month FREE 👉 join.whoop.com/Roll Momentous: 35% OFF your first subscription👉 livemomentous.com/richroll Check out all of the amazing discounts from our Sponsors 👉 richroll.com/sponsors Find out more about Voicing Change Media at voicingchange.media and follow us @voicingchange
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We as a species have always been obsessed with happiness.
The cultural apparatus that we surround ourselves with is telling us all the wrong things to
do, right?
Go for money, go for status, just buy something, change your circumstances, you'll feel happier.
And what we know is like, those are wrong.
We go after those things at the expense of social connection, time for rest.
We kind of forego those great things in the service of stuff that's not going to make
us feel good.
I think of these strategies as almost like preventative mental health.
So you can have your little a la carte snack list
of different strategies you use to feel happier.
And if you can manage to turn them into habits
to put them into effect,
you'll wind up reaping the benefits.
Hey everybody, welcome to the podcast.
Today's version of which is focused entirely on happiness.
My guest for this very broad
and somewhat elusive subject matter is Dr. Laurie Santos,
who is a professor of psychology
and the head of Silliman College at Yale University,
where she teaches psychology and the good life,
which is one of, if not the most popular courses at Yale.
And we're gonna get right into it in a sec, but first.
What if we've all been thinking about our future wrong?
What if there is no finish line?
What if there's only a through line?
Well that's the idea behind a special project I've been working on with Lincoln Financial,
a four-part series of mini documentaries in which each episode features me spending the
better part of a day with a remarkable human to understand what it really takes to evolve
with intention over the long haul
and how to sustain what you love across the physical, mental, and financial
dimensions of life. My guests include something for everyone.
Andre Agassi, tennis legend, Olympian Sarah True, musician Walker Hayes, and
Morgan Housel, an expert in personal finance. So if you're drawn to the kind
of depth that we explore on this show,
I think you're going to really connect with this program. It's called The Action Plan,
and you can check it out now at linkinfinancial.com slash Rich Rolla.
Movement is so much more than just exercise or training or motion even.
Movement is a language.
It's a way of connecting body, mind, and environment.
Movement has a way of being.
A way of being that brings me close to myself,
closer to other people,
and to what matters most in life.
For me, what we wear in that pursuit plays a crucial role.
And that's what I appreciate about Onn.
They don't just make gear, they engineer apparel
that supports and elevates the practice of movement itself.
From running shorts with built-in support
to technical tees that cool you down right where it matters.
Every detail is widely intentional,
scene placement, reflectivity, breathability,
minimalism that works together so the gear disappears
and nothing gets in the way.
This is a peril born from precision
and tested by elite athletes,
but made for anyone committed to the path.
I've been with On since 2023,
and I'm still just so impressed by how they continue
to elevate and innovate in the name of purpose, not flash.
Head to on.com slash rich roll to explore gear
that supports you every step of the way.
So what is happiness exactly?
Well, this is not new terrain for this show.
Avid listeners will remember Sonia Lyubomirsky's
appearance a while back,
as well as multiple episodes with Dr. Arthur Brooks.
But I think this conversation goes to some pretty
interesting new and important places when it comes
to the many ways in which we misunderstand happiness and why we so often behave in ways
at cross purposes with getting it.
We discuss what gets in our way specifically.
And of course, the many things that we can do
actionable tools, Lori calls rewireables
to engender more happiness in our lives more often.
You can read up on her online at drloriesantos.com
where you will also find her fabulous podcast,
the happiness lab, as well as a variety of courses,
courses for kids, for parents, courses for everyone.
And there's even one for teachers
interested in teaching happiness, which is pretty cool.
So with that, let's do the thing.
This is me and Dr. Laurie Santos.
I want to start with some real basic stuff.
We can't talk about happiness
without having a working understanding
of what it actually is.
So what is your thesis?
I'm sure people ask you all the time, you teach happiness, so tell me what it actually is. So what is your thesis? I'm sure people ask you all the time,
you teach happiness, so tell me what it is.
Yeah, I use the very limited definition
that lots of psychologists use.
This comes from Sonia Lubomirsky and her colleagues, right?
The idea is you think about being happy in your life
and with your life, the sort of two parts of happiness.
So being happy in your life is the fact
that you experience lots of positive emotion
or decent ratio of positive emotions to negative emotions.
You have contentment and laughter and joy and these things.
And you have a nice ratio of those
with the normal negative stuff,
anger or sadness, anxiety, overwhelm, whatever.
The key there is you're not getting fully
rid of negative emotions,
but you want the ratio to be decent.
That's kind of being happy in your life. But being happy with your life is the fact that you think your life is going well.
These are what's often called the kind of affective and the cognitive parts of happiness.
How your life feels and how you think it's going.
But how you think your life is going is the answer to the question, all things considered,
how satisfied am I with my life?
Do I have purpose?
Do I have a sense of meaning?
Does it feel like something to be here? And the strategies that I talk about in my course
and on my podcast,
really what they're trying to do is boost both of those.
You're kind of feeling good in your life
and you sort of think your life is going well,
then by and large, I'd be saying that you're happy.
You know, I'm curious around how you got interested
in this field to begin with.
Was there a catalyst or what ignited your passion
around this subject of happiness?
Yeah, well, I've been a nerdy psychologist
basically forever, like since I was a kid,
I was interested in people and psychology,
but spent most of my career studying animals,
all kinds of different stuff.
And then my interest in happiness started
when I took on this new role at Yale,
I became this thing called the head of college,
which is like strange Yale speak for a faculty member
who lives on campus with students.
Like I moved into this big mansion
in the middle of this dorm
and thought I was gonna be around lots of college students
like partying and having this amazing time.
And really what I just saw
was the college student mental health crisis, right?
Most of my day was like students who were experiencing
acute anxiety, suicidality, panic attacks.
And I was like, this is like not okay.
How long ago was that?
This was in 2017 was when I first started up.
Pre pandemic.
Like we're in a different world now.
I think things have gotten worse, you know?
But what I was seeing on the ground was just shocking.
And it wasn't what I remember from college.
And it wasn't what you kind of hear in the media
of a bunch of snowflakes.
These were students having like acute crises.
And so I got interested in the happiness work
because I was like, somebody needs to do something
to help these students.
It started with me being again,
like a nerdy professor thinking,
well, I'll make a new class, right?
I'll develop a class where I teach students these strategies.
And I didn't realize how much that would go viral,
not just on campus, but lots of folks need these strategies.
I remember, it was national news.
You were all over the place,
like the most popular oversubscribed class at Yale.
And I think, you know, it was a couple of things.
One is like, whenever Yale does anything,
it makes the New York Times and national news and stuff.
But I think it was striking for people to see
that these students who are 19,
one of the best universities in the world,
or the whole lives out of them,
were suffering in the way that they were suffering.
Not just at Yale, but right now nationally,
more than 60% of students report being so anxious
that they can't function most days.
More than 40% say they're depressed.
More than one in 10 has seriously considered suicide
in the last few months.
And that was what I was kind of seeing.
So I think it was a striking story for people to see like,
wow, young people are struggling way more than we thought.
And by being head of college
and cohabitating with all of them,
you're the door that is getting knocked on, right?
So you're on the receiving end of a lot of these stories
and tales of woe.
No, I spent numerous weekends visiting students
in psychiatric hospitals.
I had lots of knocks on the door late at night
where my husband and I were like, where are my glasses?
I walked downstairs to see what's going on.
But it was like-
Dr. Santos, you don't understand.
Honestly, it was less the emergencies
and more just the like low grade painful hustle in ways that just like
weren't making students happy.
They kind of like deep anxiety about the future, just like mortgaging the fun and the sleep
and the social connection they could have in college.
It just felt like a really unhealthy situation.
And again, it wasn't just Yale.
The more I dug into it, I was like, this is just college student lives generally.
That was my question because it takes a lot
to get into Yale.
So by the time they arrive there,
they're well into their Stryver trajectory, right?
Like they've been grinding for a long time.
Yeah, and I think there's aspects of being
at Ivy league school that might be worse
because they're kind of been in that grinding mode
for so long, but I just think this is a generational thing.
And then the data really bear it out, right?
You're starting to see seeds of this stuff in high school,
even in middle school with rates of depression
and anxiety skyrocketing.
And I just think we have so many people who are off track.
Prior to creating the course, what were you teaching?
Like I take it that you weren't like happiness wasn't
an area of expertise or specificity for you.
Yeah, I was really interested in kind of how humans
got to be the weird species that we are,
both the strange smart things that humans do,
but also the strange dumb things that humans do.
I know you and I both are fans of Bob Sapolsky at Stanford,
this primate researcher.
And I'm a fan in part because I was a primate researcher.
I studied this group of monkeys off the coast of Puerto Rico
and tried to see how they made sense of the world.
So now it's your gambit to like create this course
and you gotta figure it out, right?
So how do you piece that together
and start to make sense of this very elusive topic?
Yeah, well, one of the things I did was,
stand on the shoulder of giants, right?
There were lots of other faculty who maybe hadn't seen the same crisis in the same way
I did, but were really interested in the science of happiness and had pulled together classes.
I get a lot of mileage because I did this at Yale, but folks like Tal Ben-Shahir had
offered a similar course at Harvard.
There were courses all around the country that were looking at this.
So I kind of pulled different folks' syllabus and kind of looked at the stuff I liked.
I think the unique thing that I added in though
is that I was also really worried about
not just what we should do to be happy,
but how we put that stuff into practice.
Cause I know you know from the show
that like there's all these strategies and tips we can do
to be more fit, to be healthier, to be happier,
to strive more, whatever it is,
but you can know all those things
and not do any of that stuff.
You can do all that stuff and lay on the couch every morning.
There's a big gap between self-awareness and action
when it comes to this stuff.
Take it from me as somebody who's sat across
from many a happiness expert.
They walk out of the room, you're like,
not so sure.
Do I actually then go do these things?
This is a lingering question.
Yeah, the nerds in social science like to call this bias the G.I. Joe fallacy.
You're my age, so you probably remember G.I. Joe, the cartoon, G.I. Joe.
They used to end the cartoon with this public service announcement where G.I. Joe would
teach kids things like, don't talk to strangers or look both ways when you cross the street,
the quaint problems of the eighties that you needed to teach kids about.
But then again, the kid would say, thank you, G.I. Joe.
Now I know. And G.I. Joe would say, the kid would say, thank you, G.I. Joe, now I know.
And G.I. Joe would say, and knowing is half the battle.
Go G.I. Joe.
There's tons of things I know that I don't put into effect
and that you won't put into effect
unless you have social support and the right habits
and like a real commitment to these things.
And so I think that's where my course is different.
Everyone talks about it being a course about happiness,
but the whole second half of the course is about,
okay, now you know this stuff,
but how do you put it into practice?
How do you form the right habits?
Right, the difference between knowing something
and then acting on it is just like you said,
like what got you interested in psychology?
Like why do our brains lead us astray?
It's like, we know better and yet we do these things
and we get into these loops and these patterns
that we can't escape from.
I mean, that is central to happiness,
but central to all facets of like trying to better ourselves.
Yeah, this was the thing that the folks
who were first interested in psychology
who weren't psychologists, right?
The philosophers, the ancients,
all the folks who thought about the human condition,
this was the thing they were really worried about, right?
Self-regulation, how do you get folks to do
what they really wanna do?
Yeah, so this gap has been following us around
for a long time.
Is there science on,
because there are people like,
oh, I read that and now I'm doing it, you know,
it's not a leap, but for most people, it is a leap.
Like, is there some understanding around
what differentiates those two archetypes?
Like the person who can just kind of pivot right
into action?
Honestly, not great work.
I mean, there are people who talk about it a lot.
I know Gretchen Rubin, for example,
and others, journalist, happiness expert.
She talks about what she calls the lightning phenomena,
which is like, a lot of times behavior changes really hard,
but then sometimes there's just this moment
where you see some statistic or you hear something bad
or you have a health diagnosis and you're like, boom,
that's it, I'm changing my behavior.
And then like a lightning bolt, everything has changed.
Sadly, most behavioral change doesn't work that way.
And I think we, as social scientists,
we really haven't figured out
how to engineer the lightning bolt.
If we did, podcasts like this might be.
Well, pain is a pretty good reliable motivator.
Yeah.
I mean, if you're in enough pain.
Maybe for a while.
You develop a capacity for willingness that, you know,
you can't conjure willingness.
Yeah, so how you get folks to be motivated,
how you turn something into a habit.
I mean, honestly, the best strategies we have now
were the same ones that folks like Aristotle
back in the day came up with, right?
You do it repeatedly,
so you become a person who does these kinds of things.
You kind of fake it till you make it.
You get social support, right?
The best strategies we have in social science
for getting people to do stuff
are the ones that the philosophers thought of
thousands of years ago.
Yeah.
Are there not different types of happiness?
I mean, there's hedonic happiness,
there's eudaemonic happiness.
Is hedonic happiness actually happiness
or is that something different?
Like, how do you think about that?
Yeah, there's so many different definitions of happiness.
I try to squish them into this definition
that the social scientists use.
So often the way I think about more hedonic happiness,
that's the kind of in your life happiness, right?
That's like, things are going well, I'm experiencing joy,
I'm savoring stuff, right?
I think it's not the pure way that hedonist
thought about it, because if you just had like,
you know, deep pleasure, pleasure, pleasure all the time,
it would stop being good, right?
Well, you wouldn't be happy in your life ultimately.
Correct, yes.
So you need them- Or with your life. I can't, what is the distinction? Both, I think, you know, be happy in your life ultimately. Correct, yes. Or with your life.
I can't, what is the distinction?
Both, I think, you know,
if I was just going for pure hedonic pleasure,
you know, like Fudge Sundays and sex
and, you know, days on the beach or whatever,
and that was it,
eventually I would get bored with that, right?
This is a phenomenon of getting used to stuff,
what's called hedonic adaptation.
Even the best things in life over and over
stop being so good.
So it wouldn't really make me happy in my life.
And it probably wouldn't make me happy with my life.
You and I, because we do what we do, tend to run in these circles where you meet lots
of rich folks, lots of folks who have the privilege and the money to have every hedonic
pleasure.
By and large, my experience with those folks is they are not happy with their life.
Well, this is the world capital of that.
I mean, we live in, this is Los Angeles.
Plenty of those people cruising around here.
So I'm very familiar with that.
But I think part of what leads them to that place
is a fundamental misunderstanding of happiness.
It goes back to the self-awareness thing.
Like we know, and we've read in so many books
and heard so many people say
that the things that drive happiness are human connection
and having a purpose and, you know,
having some sense of meaning in how you show up
in your life and, you know, all these things
that you talk about that we're gonna get to.
And yet we still delude ourselves into thinking
that the happiness that eludes us
is just around the bend of the promotion or the new car,
or when you get the new house,
or just name whatever your poison is.
And for some reason, we believe
that we are the sole exception
to the rule.
And no matter, it's like in AA they say,
the persistence of this delusion is astonishing.
Like it doesn't, it's like, it's so resilient,
this idea that the things that we chase in modern society
will purchase happiness for us,
even though time and time and time again, they don't,
and we don't learn our lesson.
Like what is going on with that?
Human minds are stupid, man.
I mean, human minds are stupid.
My mind is stupid, right?
I know all this research where I can quote you
this specific paper and the journal
that these findings are in.
But for me, it's like, oh, you know,
like cool new opportunity, maybe I'll make some money.
It's like, how sexy or like, let me just get some emails done rather than like chat with my husband over dinner. Like, we just have these biases to
go after stuff that we strongly believe, at least intuitively, like our deep intuitions are that this
will make us feel good. This will make us happy. This will make life better. And it just doesn't.
The specific things that we go after, what a lot of folks call the arrival fallacy. One of the big
ones that we mess up is if I could just get to this thing, what a lot of folks call the arrival fallacy. One of the big ones that we mess up
is if I could just get to this thing,
if I could just get to the promotion,
just earn a million dollars, just find the right partner.
When I arrive there, I'll be happy.
But this is the arrival fallacy,
it's like the happily ever after fallacy.
And that's one thing we get wrong, right?
Which is, there's never a moment where you're like,
okay, one and done, like I can be happy now
and just exist in happiness.
My colleague, Dan Gilbert at Harvard is fond of saying that
happily ever after only works if you have
three more minutes to live.
It's just how happiness works.
But we often think it is.
And we often really think that the stuff like money,
fame, all these things,
we think that that's going to get us there.
And we go after those things at the expense of all the stuff
you just listed, social connection,
time for rest, hard problems that give us meaning,
but that we might not get to in the end, right?
These are the things that are really ultimately
gonna make life worth living.
But we kind of forego those great things
in the service of stuff that's not gonna make us feel good.
I'm curious or I wonder whether what we think of
is happiness
when we chase these things is in point of fact,
the alleviation of fear or doubt.
Like it's not that we're imagining some blissful
permanent state of wellbeing if we achieve these things
or get to these certain places,
but that we won't have to worry about stuff
that we worry about now,
that we will eradicate some level of uncertainty
and we don't longer need to be afraid
and we won't have to work as hard.
I bang on about this all the time.
So I apologize to the audience,
but I had the psychiatrist, Phil Stutz.
You know who Phil Stutz is on the show?
He's a wonderful man.
And he has this working idea, this working theory,
cause he treats all these people in Hollywood
who are like rich and powerful and just miserable, right?
And he said, this sort of shared strain
between all of these people is that they are in denial
of three fundamental truths of life,
which are pain, uncertainty, and the need for constant work.
And in the context of happiness, on some level,
it seems resonant like we're chasing these things
because we don't like these ideas of pain, uncertainty
and having to continually work on things.
And if we just get to this place, then we can take a breath.
And we associate that with happiness.
And I guess there's some veneer of happiness with that,
but it's a little bit of a different thing.
Yeah, and I think we're really bad
at making effective, accurate predictions
about like how much pain we're gonna have
in different situations, right?
Take money, I think this is one that people get wrong
all the time, right?
Just walk in when the power ball gets high and people are like, oh my gosh, when I win
this $800 million, everything's going to be great.
And I think if you talk to someone with $800 million, they'll be like, oh man, no, you
got to worry about the taxes and everyone comes out of the woodwork to get money from
you and where are you going to park your yacht?
It's a huge pain in the butt to figure out where you're going to put your yacht, et cetera,
et cetera.
It's like when we simulate these positive futures,
we just get it wrong, right?
We kind of miss out on the stuff that's really gonna matter.
That's true for the good things in life.
Interestingly, it's also true for the bad things in life.
One of the most famous studies on this
that folks did like back decades ago now
had people predict, if we were to walk out of the studio
and you and I both get hit by a car
and we were both paraplegic, how would that affect our lives?
We said, oh my gosh, we would just be so unhappy our lives would be ruined.
But you look at people who've actually gone through a terrible accident like that, who've
become paraplegic.
And what you find is that within six months, their happiness levels are statistically indistinguishable
from what they were before, and statistically indistinguishable from folks who walked out
of the studio and didn't get hit.
That is absolutely not what we predict.
But what happens?
Like, you know, life goes on, there's still reruns on TV,
and you chat with your friends,
and something funny happens on the internet,
and that's what's changing your day to day.
But we absolutely don't think
that a terrible thing could happen to us and we'd be fine.
So these are our prediction problems.
When we simulate the wonderful thing,
the awesome thing that we're going for,
we don't simulate all the problems that go with it.
And when we simulate the terrible things,
we don't simulate all the day-to-day stuff
that's gonna affect our happiness much more than we expect
with this terrible thing happening.
So we're just kind of bad forecasters.
And that's a lot of what we get wrong.
One of your so-called rewireables around this,
which are basically actionable tools, right?
Is very counterintuitive.
We're all taught to like visualize success
and imagine what will happen
and believe in yourself and all of that.
And your council is basically like visualize the opposite,
like imagine the obstacles,
which is a very process
versus destination mindset.
And I think it's really cool.
I'd never heard anyone talk about this before.
The idea that what you should be visualizing
are all the problems you're gonna face
on the road to getting the thing.
And when you visualize on the destination,
that's when you succumb to the arrival fallacy, right?
Cause when you get there, it's like, all right,
well, I already imagined this
and maybe it's not as good as I imagined
or it wears off very quickly.
Yeah, there's also lots of evidence
that when we imagine these positive futures,
like, oh my gosh, I'm gonna run ultra marathon,
oh, it's gonna be so great, I'm gonna be so cool,
everyone's gonna think I'm great, whatever.
The more you imagine the positive future,
your imagination kind of works like real brain cognition,
like real brain thinking.
You get some of the reward from that.
One thing, oh my God, everyone will think I'm so cool.
I kind of get a little bit of everyone
thinking I'm cool already.
And it actually makes people less likely
to take action towards those goals.
This is a lovely work of this woman,
Gabrielle Oettingen, who's at NYU.
She does these studies where she has students
positively fantasize about getting good grades.
And she finds that the ones who have the most vivid fantasies
are the ones that put the least work into studying.
Cause kind of like that already happened to you.
Right, I've already had the experience of succeeding.
Meanwhile, you're not putting the work into things
you really need your cognitive help with, which is like,
okay, how am I gonna actually get to the library?
Or how am I gonna go to office hours?
Or how am I gonna do the million things you need to do
to achieve that goal?
And so when you envision the obstacles,
now all of a sudden you're putting your cognitive brain power
towards practicing and thinking through the things
that are really gonna mess you up
when you try to go for that goal.
But you do need some self belief
that you could achieve the goal, right?
So you have to balance that against, on some level,
you know, there is value in seeing yourself
cross the finish line or getting the report card
or whatever to anchor you in the journey.
Yeah, it's so nuanced.
It's more than you ruminate on it, right?
It's so nuanced.
In fact, this was the thing that I just finished teaching
my happiness class this semester, you're talking to me,
I submitted grades right before I flew here to LA.
So I'm feeling really good.
But the one thing my students kind of fought about and complained the most about was this,
because right now in the popular culture, this idea of positive fantasies is big, right?
My students love manifesting.
They hear about it on TikTok a lot.
And so they're like, you're telling me manifesting is bad.
I thought thinking about your positive future and thinking you were the kind of person that
could do this is great.
And the subtle distinction is you want to think that you're the kind of person who can
do it, but you're not that person yet.
Like you haven't done it already yet, right?
So you want to be like, I'm the kind of person who can put in the work needed to become a
good student.
I'm the kind of person who can put in the work needed to become ultra marathon or get
fit or whatever it is, right?
You want to think you're the kind of person who can do it, but you also wanna know the things
that you actually have to do to do it.
Cause most big goals have some like work
that you need to put in.
And when you get the reward without the work,
that's when you get into trouble.
Yeah, so by focusing on the obstacles
with some anchor of self belief
that you are going to be able to solve the problems
and like navigate through the minefield is very valuable.
But it's distinct from maybe what some people
misunderstand it to be,
which would be like an attitude of dread around this
or a victim meant everything's terrible.
There's all these problems.
It's gonna take forever.
I'm never gonna make it.
And why even try?
Like those are two different things.
Yeah, and the best thing in Gabrielle Oettingen's work
is not just imagine the obstacles,
but imagine the if-then plan you would take
to get through the obstacles.
I talk about this on my podcast,
the sort of idea of kind of getting through the obstacles,
and I interviewed Michael Phelps, the swimmer's coach,
because Michael Phelps-
Bob Bowman. Yeah a great, great guy
and can talk so articulately about what Michael was doing.
And one of the things he did a lot
was he used a lot of visualization, right?
Visualize the perfect swim.
But Michael was so good at this, he got bored with it.
And so he started visualizing what would happen
if terrible things went wrong.
His goggles came off, he slapped his foot against the thing,
just stupid stuff went wrong, right? And what he did in doing that was that he kind of just played out the scenario.
He's like, well, if my goggles fall off, then I can just count my strokes and that'll be
fine. Turns out this wound up being incredibly helpful. I think it was the Beijing Olympics
when his goggles actually came off. He kind of had practiced what to do and therefore
he was fine and he ended up winning a gold, even though the horrible event that he was saying,
well, this would be so terrible actually happened.
And I think this is what we want to do.
You want to ask the question, okay,
like I'm trying to study more.
What's the horrible thing?
Well, there's a party this weekend.
Well, how would I navigate that?
Well, I'd set time to go to the party
and I'd set my alarm clock early and get up, right?
I want to go running a little bit more this weekend.
I want to pick up my more miles or whatever,
like, well, what should I do?
Well, I have to cancel this thing
and schedule a little bit more time.
Oh, it's gonna be raining.
I gotta get myself to the gym
because I will wanna do on the treadmill.
But you're just going through the scenarios
and coming up with a plan.
So it's not this victim mindset.
It's not like, oh, it's just gonna be so hard.
You're like, oh, there's an obstacle,
but I can overcome that obstacle.
And I've already thought through how to do it.
I've kind of given myself some practice.
The distinctive quality in that is resilience.
Is it not like the ability to adapt
when things aren't going your way
without getting completely derailed by it, right?
So in the athletic context,
when you've visualized the perfect race
and something slightly is a miss or doesn't go
as you imagined it, you collapse and fall apart.
Versus being able to roll
with whatever life throws at you.
Yeah, and it's also the practice
that we can do inside our heads.
I mean, this isn't a wonderful feature
of the human mind, right?
Is that we can just experience things happening to us
in our head, right?
I don't have to go through the morning where my alarm clock goes off and I don't want to run
because like, oh, I can practice that in my head and I can walk through like,
oh, here's what I will do to do that better.
There's just some amazing cognitive science work on the power of mental practice.
One of my favorite studies that I tell my students about nerdily is,
I think this is a work by Kerry Morwidge at Boston University.
He does this study where he either has people imagine eating M&Ms one by one slowly or slowly
putting quarters like into a vending machine over and over again.
And then at the end of imagining this, you just give people a big bowl of M&Ms.
What do you find?
The people who imagined eating the M&Ms, they're like, oh God, I don't want any more M&Ms.
Like I'm good.
Oh, that's so interesting.
I don't need it anymore.
Whereas the people who imagined the quarters, it's like, oh, M& don't want any more M&M's. Like, I'm good. I don't need it anymore. Whereas the people who imagine the quarters,
it's like, oh, M&M's, I'll have some, right?
When we practice something in our heads,
there's something in our brain
that's a little bit confused
about whether that's happened already.
And we get to mental practice in the fitness domain
or in the health domain
or in the like happiness strategy domain.
What it means is when you practice it in your head,
you're building that habit up,
even though you haven't had to do that in real life yet.
And that can be great.
That means your time, you know,
stuck in traffic on your commute to work,
the rumination that you have in bed at night,
oh, am I gonna be able to get through this?
You can harness that for good.
You can like practice the thing
that you're worried is gonna be hard.
And you'll get the benefit of that practice, you know,
when you wake up or in real life later on.
That's the positive side of the coin.
If you flip it over, the other version,
the negative version of that is the person
who talks all the time about the thing they're gonna do.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then never ends up doing it
because their brain has already been satisfied
by whatever it's seeking, right?
So what's going on in the brain,
like dopaminergically or neurologically,
that like, what is the signaling that's occurring?
I think the key is like,
if you just sit there with the reward and that's it,
and you stop there, right?
You kind of, oh, it would be so great if I did this.
I'd be so proud of myself.
You know, you kind of dust it off and you're done.
That means you get the reward without doing the practice,
without kind of getting the information.
When you start to simulate and ask,
okay, well, what would I need to do to do that?
What are the obstacles that are gonna come up?
Oh, I like to sleep in, or it's gonna be cold out,
or whatever strategy you need to think of,
whatever obstacle that's there.
Now all of a sudden your brain goes into planning mode.
Rather than just sitting with your reward areas firing, be like, oh my gosh, this would be
so awesome.
Now you're kicking into the planning parts of your brain.
Your frontal lobe's kicking in, is trying to think through different scenarios and come
up with these answers for you.
And that means you get the answers before you have to be in the situation that's doing
it.
And so I think you switched from just kind of sitting there and enjoying what you already accomplished, which you didn't accomplish yet, to turning on those planning parts of
your mind and your brain that can actually help you get through in a much more successful
way later on.
We're brought to you today by AG1.
I know that I've been a loyal consumer and partner with AG1 for many years at this point,
but I couldn't actually remember how long it's been specifically, so I decided to do
some research.
I mined my inbox to try to figure out when it all began, and I discovered it's actually
been 10 years, a decade in which I've seen this brand iterate its formula many times,
but nothing like what just happened, which is a just-launched
massive next-generation formula upgrade in which AG1 has enhanced its profile for broad-spectrum
nutritional coverage, five new vitamins and minerals, four upgraded ingredient forms that
work better with your body, and upgraded probiotics for enhanced digestive support and immune
health.
Along the way, AG1 went beyond industry standards to rigorously test the upgrade with four human
clinical trials to back up its efficacy and make a great product even better.
Now clinically backed with an advanced formula, this is the perfect time to try AG1 if you
haven't yet. I've been drinking AG1 for many years now, as I mentioned, a decade, and I'm so happy to be
partnering with them. So subscribe today to try the next gen of AG1. If you use my link, you'll
also get a free bottle of AG D3K2, an AG1 Welcome Kit, and five of the upgraded AG1 travel packs
with your first order. So make sure to check
out www.drinkag1.com slash rich roll and get started with AG1's next gen and notice the
benefits for yourself. That's www.drinkag1.com slash rich roll.
So right around this time last year, Julie and I embarked on this really incredible once in a lifetime, two week journey
in India. We visited the Dalai Lama and Dharamshala. We then went to Rajasthan where we toured ancient
temples. We took in the vibrant colors and daily life rhythms of Jaipur and we walked the streets
of Delhi dining on its delights. The experience was profound in ways that words struggle to capture, but what really resonated
was how people everywhere seek connection and understanding, and how stepping outside
familiar environments brings clarity to what truly matters.
What I've been considering lately is this idea that home is where you find yourself,
and therefore, when we travel, our living spaces can actually serve this purpose
for others.
That's where Airbnb comes in,
offering this really cool and practical approach
to share your space when it makes sense for your situation.
The extra income from hosting
can help fund these perspective shifting journeys
and your home just might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.com slash host.
While we're on the topic of misconceptions around happiness,
another one that occurs to me is the way in which
we're wired to believe that comfort and convenience
and expediency and all of these things, luxury are essential
in this equation happiness.
When we know that actually it's discomfort
and getting out of your comfort zone and pushing yourself
and getting up when you set the alarm
or whatever habit or practice it is,
that as uncomfortable and as miserable as they feel
when we're doing them, leads to that resilience
and ultimately a sense of greater self-esteem.
Like these are like seedlings that blossom
into a more lasting and low grade maybe,
but sense of wellbeing that has to be part of happiness, yes?
Yeah, for sure.
And I think we get it wrong in two ways, right?
One is we assume that if we get to the comforts,
that those comforts are gonna last, right?
And what we forget is that we get used to stuff,
that again, the best thing in life could happen to you.
And it's awesome when it first happens,
but it gets boring over time.
I think this is one of the reasons that people
with just enormous privilege,
the rich folks that were living around here,
hanging out here in LA with us,
that they don't enjoy the great things
that are happening to them because they're used to it.
You fly in first class the first time,
you're like, oh my God, I got a free drink,
this seat's so nice, whatever.
You fly in first class for the 15th time, the 50th time,
it's just how you fly, right?
The comforts that we bring to ourselves stop being comforting the more we have them over time.
In contrast, the hard work we have to put in, the little bit of struggle, it does two things, right?
One is that we kind of don't get hurt by it as much as we think because we get used to that too,
right? When you're starting a new fitness program, my husband talks about this, he was a college
swimmer and he remembers when the swimming season started and you do the first workout
and you're so tired and you're like, I cannot do this every day for the next semester.
Then two weeks into it, you're like, oh yeah, that's just a workout.
We forget that we're going to get used to the hard stuff too.
So we start off being really scared by the hard stuff, we start off being really scared about getting out of our comfort zone.
But then once you jump into it, that's just like, it becomes easier over time.
And so this idea that we get used to stuff, this kind of concept of hedonic adaptation,
we kind of adapt to stuff in the world.
We forget that it causes us not to get as much happiness out of the comfort stuff because
we're going to get used to the good stuff.
It'll stop being as good over time.
And the bad stuff won't be as bad over time
because we'll sort of get used to it, right?
The non hedonic adaptation, is there a term for that?
Well, it's like researchers call this kind of
these are affective forecasting biases.
One of the things we call it,
what's often called the impact bias,
that the impact of whatever it is,
both in terms of its kind of magnitude of how good
or how bad something is and also its duration.
It just doesn't impact us as much as we think.
A tangent of this hedonic adaptation,
I'm just imagining like the super wealthy guy
driving around LA in the fancy car,
is that person's attention or my attention,
I'll speak for myself, I'm not immune from this,
immediately goes towards comparison
because there's always somebody who's more successful,
more powerful, more wealthy, better looking, fitter,
you name it, right?
Why do our brains deal with hedonic adaptation
by immediately going there?
Yeah, well, this is just a like really remarkably
common feature of our brain.
You and I are talking in the studio, you've got these great lights,
there's a podcaster I'm so jealous of, but when we walk out of this really bright space
into the rest of the studio, we'll be like, oh man, I didn't even realize when I was sitting
talking to Rich that it was really bright, but when I walk out, everything will look kind of dark.
Our brains are always processing things in this relative way.
I'm not processing how much objective light is here, I just kind of get used to the
amount of light here and then when I walk outside now all of a sudden it's
brighter, it's darker or something like that. That's our visual system getting
used to stuff. But the fact that we get used to stuff that we think in terms of
these relative things over time rather than like what objectively is going on,
that's just a general feature of how our mind works for everything.
So nobody thinks of their salary as being objectively good
or objectively bad.
If you think of how your salary is going,
you just think immediately in terms of like,
well, what is the guy next to me in the office making?
Or like, or who is the guy-
And that comparison is very much a function of proximity.
Oh yeah.
And what's terrible about the comparison is that like,
it never goes in the good way, right?
There might be tons of people sitting next to you that aren't making as much money, that aren't as hot as you,
they didn't have as good a vacation as you, that doesn't have a nice car view, and you just like don't notice those people.
Yeah.
This is what happens in LA, right? I mean, even driving here, and again, I fall prey to this stuff too, you know, driving here,
you know, I was like driving right next to this like super souped up white Porsche, and I was like, oh, that's such a cool white Porsche, right?
I'm noticing the car that's crappier than my rental car,
but I didn't notice the hundreds,
maybe thousands of other cars on the streets of LA
that like just were unremarkable and more as good.
It's fun and easy to poke at the billionaire
who's all bent out of shape
because there's another guy at the cocktail party
that has a billion more than him.
Like, how could you possibly think that?
But it's just an extreme version of what we all do.
And like the data on this is like, just, they're so funny.
There's one really funny study.
It was in Europe where they do lotteries
a little bit differently.
So here, the lottery in the US is like,
you go buy a Powerball ticket.
If your number comes up, you win.
The way they do them in Europe is often they do what's called a postcode lottery.
So I'm in zip code like 06511 and they're going to pull a lottery ticket that's just
going to say my postcode.
And if I played, then in my postcode, my whole postcode will win.
If I didn't play, I don't get it.
What's the consequence of this type of lottery system?
If your postcode is called and you didn't play,
you're gonna have a bunch of people around you
who like won something.
Like they all won like.
That's like the worst case scenario for you.
But it's great for the lottery
because a lot of people wanna play lottery
and regret insurance, right?
But one of these lotteries was a lottery
that gave people a new car, right?
And so people in the postcode,
if their lottery number count, they got a new car.
What they found is that sales of lottery cars
of the non-winners went up when people won.
Of course.
Cause like you're like,
I wanna be the only one in my town
with like a crappy car.
You're gonna be left out.
You're gonna get booted out of the tribe.
And this is true in the context of material goods.
It's definitely true for my poor students
in the context of grades.
It's true in the context of looks.
And our brains are just bad at it.
We're just bad at it.
We're just good at finding people who are better than us.
And sometimes that's us, right?
I think in the context of fitness, in the context of looks, right?
All of us are getting older over time.
We're moving towards a reference point that's going to make us feel crappy about ourselves,
if not now, 10 years, 20 years, right?
And so, yeah, minds are built to not be objective.
They're built to pay attention to stuff
in this relative fashion.
And they seek out reference points
that make us feel crappy.
I did this consulting with a basketball team
where I was talking about social comparison,
a professional basketball team.
And that's something that comes up all the time,
who's doing better than you, who's making more money.
And I was asking, well, who's the reference point
for salary? And at the time it was like Steph. And I was asking, well, who's the reference point for salary?
And at the time it was like Steph Curry.
I was like, okay, Steph Curry.
I was like, who's the reference point
for like three point shots?
And like, oh, Steph Curry.
I was like, who's the reference point
for the best height in the NBA?
And they're like, taco fails.
Like, wait, why is it not Steph Curry anymore?
Steph Curry was the reference point for everything else.
But in the one domain where you're like doing better
than him, now he's not the reference point anymore.
And like, that's just how our minds work.
We just pick the one thing
that makes us feel crappy about ourselves.
And yet when we see those individuals
who somehow have immunized themselves
against this compulsion that's so human
and stand proudly as themselves without concern
for whatever anybody thinks about what they're doing.
And they're not comparing themselves to anyone else.
And they're just doing their thing.
These are happy people.
And there's a magnetism to that.
Like when you see those people, it's inspirational.
You're like, wow, like, how can I be more like that?
And then we go right back to comparing ourselves.
You know what I mean?
I was thinking about this
because yesterday I had Bob Roth on here
who runs the David Lynch Foundation.
We were talking about David Lynch
and I'm obsessed with this guy.
And he's like, why?
Like, what is it about him that captures you?
And I said that very thing.
It's like, he's so thoroughly himself
and that's very attractive quality.
Yeah, and I think it's a really hard quality to go after
because our minds are not,
our minds are really built to be paying attention
to what other individuals do.
And I think that was bad enough back in the evolutionary day
when we were a part of bands of people who were, you know,
a hundred, 200 strong.
It's a threat to your membership.
Yeah, but it's so much worse
when that membership is
everybody on TikTok or everybody on Instagram, right?
I think this is something that comes up a lot.
I see my college students talk about this where,
when I was in college, you could have these like dorky
hobbies, you could be like, you know, I don't know,
like solve Rubik's cubes really fast or like be like
in a cool band, right?
Like you played bass really well.
Now I feel like our poor college students can never feel
like they do anything really well
because they immediately go on the internet
and however fast you solve the Rubik's cube,
there's somebody who's doing it blindfolded
and much faster than you.
And so I-
But maybe they're learning that lesson earlier.
I don't think so.
No? Okay.
I think they're just much more paralyzed by it, yeah.
But you can also, I mean, I know you have a lot to say
about the digital landscape and how social media
is driving a lot of the malevolence here,
but there are millions of sub-communities now
for every bizarre interest and that lonely kid
who is the only person he or she knows
that's into name your weird hobby,
can go on Reddit or one of these places
and find like-minded individuals
and have some sense of connection and community there.
Totally, totally.
So it's not a black and white thing.
No, and I think this is one of the tricks
with social media and really all of our technology, right?
It has such good aspects when it comes to our happiness.
There's such real potential to use this in positive ways,
to increase social connection,
to get a better sense of purpose.
Honestly, to see reference points
that should make you feel really good about yourself.
But I'm just like the fact that you are,
anyone listening to this right now is privileged.
You have a technology that you can use to access this.
You have hearing that is working.
Probably eyes are working
if you're watching this on YouTube, right?
Those are incredible privileges that we can look
to other people to feel good about,
to remember like, oh, that wasn't a given in life, right?
And so the point is that we can use technology
in all these positive ways when it comes to our happiness.
The problem is that we tend not to use it
in those positive ways.
And I think sometimes the technologies themselves
are set up with algorithms that are set up
to kind of lead us towards the not so good ways of using technologies.
You have a rewirable around this as well though,
like the idea, the solution to this comparison problem
in terms of actions that you can take is to use this,
what do you call it?
The bronze?
Yeah, the bronze medalists.
Yeah, which the joke is we always,
you have this idea of look for the silver lining
and the joke is you look for the bronze lining.
And this actually comes from a sports domain too.
One of the most famous studies of social comparison
in the field of psychology
was a study of Olympic medalists,
looking at the emotions they show on the stand.
And what you find is that gold medalists,
best in their sport,
are showing like really strong positive emotions.
But the silver medalists aren't just showing
slightly less positive emotions.
They're showing incredibly negative emotions.
Their facial expressions show things like contempt,
deep sadness, anger, and these kinds of things.
And that's because of social comparison, right?
You were so close to being the best in the world
and you're not.
And rather than feeling like you beat billions of people
in your sport, which you did, you find very salient.
You're haunted by what could have been.
You're haunted by the one person, right?
That's a silver medalist.
And the reason why it's the kind of bronze lining
that matters is that if you look at the bronze medalists,
you might think that they're even more contemptuous,
more angry than the silver medalists.
But no, because the bronze medalist's reference point
isn't gold, they were multiple seconds
or multiple whatever it was in their sport away from that.
Their salient reference point is like,
if I was just like a teeny tiny bit slower,
I wouldn't be up here, I'd be going home empty handed.
And so it turns out that the bronze medalists in some cases
in these studies are actually happier
than the gold medalists.
Like they're showing like incredible elation
because they're like, oh my gosh.
And this is why I like finding the bronze lining instead
of the silver lining.
Because again, for any trait you care about,
there are people who are doing a lot worse than you, right?
And if they're not doing a lot worse than you
on that particular trait you're looking at,
just broaden your horizon a little bit to be like,
again, if you're watching this or listening to this right now,
you have hearing in a way that not everybody on the planet
has. You have the privilege of owning that not everybody on the planet has.
You have the privilege of owning this technology,
which not everybody has.
You have your phone that didn't break 10 minutes ago,
which it could have done.
Like when we kind of take a broader perspective,
we can use our social comparison to realize
we're actually doing pretty good.
How do you give more than lip service to that though?
Cause it's like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I can hear, I can see fine.
Like I know what you're saying, but the but.
The but, the but, yeah.
Well, like all things, you got to do the strategy,
but here's the strategy that I love.
And it comes both from what we were talking about before
in terms of using our imagination in positive ways.
And it gets back to the ancients.
This was a technique that the ancient Stoics talked about.
They called it negative visualization,
but here's how it goes.
When I leave the studio right now,
I'm going to get hit by a car.
I'm going to lose the use of my legs.
My phone's going to be dead.
And I'm not going to be able to find my next appointment
because I don't have a phone anymore.
Something terrible is going to happen to my husband.
And I'm going to get a horrible phone call,
like knock on wood that that's not going to happen.
That took me like, what, 30 seconds?
Instantly, I'm much more grateful for my phone,
much more grateful for my legs. I'm going to call my husband when I got out of this and be like,
I didn't do something terrible, didn't happen to you, right, honey, are you okay?
That's negative visualization. The Stoics thought that you should start every morning being like,
I was exiled, I will lose my health, I will lose my house, I will lose my money.
And you take a deep breath and you say, hey, that didn't happen. Now, all of a sudden,
you're a little bit more kind of grateful for those things. I do this negative
visualization exercise in my talks lately. I've been doing a lot of work on parenting
and talking to parents about happiness. And I say, let's do a quick negative visualization.
The last time you saw your kids, that was the last time you ever going to see them.
They're gone. Never going to see them again. My guess is the next time even people listening
see their kids or hug them,
you're gonna hug them a little bit.
Like that's the power of imagination.
It doesn't take us long to get to a reference point
of we don't have the good things that we have in our lives.
We just have to take a practice to do that,
to recognize that a little bit more.
We all know people in our lives though
that see the world through a very negative lens.
Like nothing's ever gonna work out, like I'm worthless.
It's only a matter of time before I get fired
and then I'm gonna be homeless
and like I'm gonna be starving on the street
and I'm just gonna die.
You know, like I know a lot of these people.
So that what you just shared isn't quite like,
it's a different thing, but like-
Notice the stoics didn't say you do this like all day
into the evening, two o'clock in the morning.
They said, just do it really quickly
and realize you can shut it off.
I get that for the normal person,
but what is the antidote for somebody
who's really caught up in this looping negative pattern
of the mind that then translates
into how they show up in the world?
And then they do manifest negative outcomes in their life
because they're walking through life,
staring at their feet and expecting everything
to go terribly wrong.
And kind of on some level,
like are co-creating that real world experience.
Well, I think there's two strategies.
One is a strategy just to shift your attention
to the positive stuff.
And this is what comes out of a gratitude practice.
I feel like this is kind of in the common ether
about people talking about the power of gratitude, right?
Just taking a moment to notice the good stuff,
even the little good stuff.
The reason this is powerful is that it trains our attention
to do the opposite of what we naturally do.
We're naturally built to have this like negativity bias
where we're noticing,
well, my car's not good enough
or that bad thing happened.
There's so much traffic today.
The weather's so crummy in LA today,
which by the way, rather is kind of-
It's been terrible.
It's been really crummy.
Believe me, I'm all upset about it.
They keep going.
Rather than like the temperature's actually quite pleasant.
It's not, you know, like-
And it's been raining and we need rain
and it's beautiful.
And the hills are alive and green.
Exactly. Yeah, no, just so beautiful out.
But this is where our brain normally goes,
negativity bias, oh, the weather's so crummy,
rather than, my God, we need a rain, this is great.
This is gonna protect LA from all the yucky stuff
that happens here, right?
And so this is the practice of gratitude, right?
You're training your attention,
which normally just gloms onto the bad stuff
to find the good things.
Sometimes when I talk to people, they find gratitude to be hard,
or you really have to be grateful, or it feels cheesy.
Another practice I love, which comes from the novelist Ross Gay,
who has this book called The Book of Delights.
He says, rather than going for things that you're grateful for,
which kind of feels like highfalutin or hard. Just noticed the lights on the way here.
I was at the airport coming into LAX and there's just like one like restroom in the ladies
room that has like this orchid there.
And I was like, who's the staff member who put an orchid there?
Just like a delight.
We're like driving here, there was somebody like blasting like Cypress Hill out of his
car, like in a low rider and just like really savoring and being into Cypress Hill.
And I was like, that's a little delight.
LA is so cool, right?
I'm not taking extra work to like find these things that I'm so grateful for, whatever.
I'm just noticing like the world has these good, funny things that are amusing,
that are beautiful, that are nice.
You just like train your brain to find what Roske in his book, The Book of Delights,
he wrote an essay about one delight every day.
And what that did was it made him, he had to find a delight because he had to write
the essay about it, right?
And so I find that writing these things down or finding someone you can share delights
with, I have some friends that I like, we'll just text a delight to, you know, like, my
God, dude, listen to Cypress Hill and his lowrider delight.
What you're doing there is you're training your mind that would normally be looking for
all the yucky stuff to find a few of the good things.
That's how to train your attention.
But the thing you brought up,
the sort of ruminating I think needs another strategy,
which is like, you need to find ways
to harness more positive self-talk
or at least nip the bad self-talk in the bud.
And one of the great ways for doing that,
I know you had Ethan Cross on the show recently,
is a lot of the strategies he talks about
for distance self-talk,
like literally talk to yourself
in the second and third person,
not like, oh my God, this is so terrible, me, me, me.
You just say, all right, it's gonna be fine.
You've gone through stuff like this before.
Like you just switch the pronouns
that you use to talk to yourself.
And what that does is it puts you in good friend mode.
It puts you in mentor mode.
It puts you in problem solving mode
rather than ruminate all the time.
That's a hack, one of Ethan's hacks that I use all the time.
And it's like been a game changer for me.
Cause like you just automatically switch the narrative
in your head when you're getting real with yourself.
Dude, it's not that bad.
Come on, like, and you can kind of-
It also allows you to be a bit of an objective observer.
Like you're just identifying with the problem
and you're bifurcating your identity.
Like, oh, there's me.
And then there's like that other voice
that is saying all of these things
that now needs to sit in the backseat
and be quiet for a little while.
Yeah, I mean, it helps you realize
your thoughts are your thoughts,
which is one of the biggest innovations
the human mind has come up with.
To realize that like, wait, that's not the truth.
That's just like the little dialogue
that's going on in my brain.
I could put a little stop gap there and it'll work better.
Human beings are storytelling and story receiving animals.
And as you were sharing about the person
who is in a negative thought pattern loop,
so much of that is anchored in whatever story
they're telling themselves about who they are,
what they're capable of,
and probably a very age old story
that maybe they inherited or was impressed upon them,
but nonetheless become cemented in such a way
that we rarely question it.
And for the person who's waking up every day and saying,
it's gonna go terrible
and this bad thing is gonna happen.
I believe we have the power to sort of change that narrative.
And the practice that seems like it would be effective
is to kind of do an inventory at the end of the day
or in the morning and say,
okay, here's what actually happened.
And reaffirming where the bad thing didn't happen,
like in something good happened instead.
And like, you know, kind of starting to attune
your attention to all of those things as a way
of kind of creating a new neural pathway.
Does that make sense?
Is there science behind that or?
Yeah, totally.
I think it's partly using that negative visualization.
It could have gone bad, but it didn't kind of thing, which is powerful.
But it also fits with what a lot of the science shows is the power of practices like journaling,
right?
Which often is the kind of thing people do towards the end of the day, right?
Journaling practices are really powerful because when we're writing down, we kind of just assume
that writing is supposed to have
a narrative arc.
You kind of got this in middle school and high school, right?
Or it's like, it's got to start, it's going to have a conflict, and then you kind of solve
the conflict, right?
It's very hard in your journaling just to be like, this sucks, this is terrible, I'm
terrible, I'm terrible.
When you're writing, your brain just automatically goes into like, okay, but how can I make sense
of this, right?
We go into sense making, we go into problem solving.
It's kind of similar to some of Ethan's stuff.
When you talk like you're a friend, if you take that other perspective, you instantly
go into coach mode or mentor mode.
When you're writing, you go into sense making mode, into storytelling mode.
And there's lots of evidence that expressive writing about whatever the thing is that you're
scared about or that you're worried about, you wind up coming up with better problem solving strategies.
There's some lovely work by Jamie Pennybaker
who looked at the power of expressive writing,
even in domains where people went through terrible trauma.
He did some famous work looking at the narratives
of Holocaust survivors and found that the people
that got content onto paper,
that were able to talk about their stories,
whether in writing or whether with an interviewer,
like they wound up kind of going into sense-making, and it had not just a huge effect on how they
process that horrible trauma, but also on their health later on.
So those individuals live longer, they had less heart attacks and so on, because it's
like you're not like holding in the body all this stuff.
And so I think this practice of express, if you get kind of get stuck in this negative
thought pattern and nothing works, give yourself an hour
to just like get stuff on paper.
And don't try to have an agenda,
just kind of let it go down
and your brain will go into the normal mode
it goes into to try to make sense of some stuff.
I find that to be very effective in my life.
It's something I've been doing for a long time.
And I've learned that when I start to resist,
like I've done enough, like I need to stop.
Like you need to have a certain number of pages
that you commit to because something happens.
Yeah, that's why I said an hour, not three minutes.
Then you're like, suddenly you're writing
all this crazy stuff that your unconscious mind
gets activated and things start to spill out
and more will be revealed.
Yeah.
And I think just remember that one of the reasons
that human mind is closed,
there's so many different parts and processes, right?
We have so many different kind of narrators coming online
and like there's a narrator in there
that wants to understand things
and wants to make sense of things.
You just kind of get to give them space to kind of come out.
All those voices just wanting to be loved and heard.
Wanting to help, you know,
all the voices want us to be happy, I think.
Another way in which our intuition leads us astray
with this idea of happiness
is that it is very much rooted in circumstance.
So talk a little bit about that.
Yeah, I think we assume,
if we were putting together a big ingredient list
of what we need for happy life,
we would assume maybe like, some genetics,
you want some like genes to be happier,
but you would also want to have great circumstances.
You wouldn't want a life with a lot of conflict,
a lot of kind of problems.
You'd want life with perfect circumstances.
You get into the perfect college.
If you're like the students I work with,
or you have lots of money, or great things happen to you.
Everything goes your way.
Your flight never gets canceled.
There's no traffic.
You just want the circumstances to be perfect.
But it turns out that circumstances have much less of an effect on our happiness than we
think for a couple reasons, right?
One when you have good circumstances over and over again, you don't keep noticing that
they're good.
You just get used to them. The other is if you have bad circumstances, right? You become
paraplegic, you have a horrible accident, quickly you get used to that bad thing too, and it doesn't
continue to affect you as much as you think. And so oftentimes we're much better off not trying
to change our circumstances, getting richer, changing where we live, you know, but then,
then changing our behaviors and our mindsets because because those things are gonna matter more, right?
Getting more social connection,
getting out and moving your body,
stopping that negative self-talk, finding the delights.
Those kinds of things are just intervention-wise
gonna have a much bigger impact on your happiness
than changing your circumstances.
It's also the case that changing your circumstances
for a lot of circumstances is like hard, right?
Like you could do it, it often takes it,
you can earn more money,
but that's like much more of a pain
than engaging in a journaling practice every night
or like writing down a few delights every week.
It is a difficult thing though,
because if you're somebody who came up
from very difficult circumstances
or your life is one in which it's difficult
just by dint of,
where you find yourself, it's hard to claw out of that.
It's like, you don't wanna be dismissive of that
if somebody's like, who's unhappy,
but they're caught in something
that they can't claw out of.
The circumstances I'm talking about are not like,
you are in a refugee situation
or you've been put in an El Salvadorian prison or although
Bracketed what we know is people who are in those horrible situations sometimes find a lot of purpose a lot of social connection a lot
Of happiness, right?
But if those are the circumstances that you're listening right now and you're like, that's the situation I'm in
That's not what I mean
What I mean is for the person who has food on the table who has a roof over their head
Who's not in a terrible war zone or terrible trauma.
I'm talking about the person who's like,
oh, if I could only make $10,000 more a year,
I'd be so much happier.
I just need to move to a better neighborhood.
I need a better phone or car.
Those are the circumstantial changes I'm talking about.
And the sad thing is like changing those things
are just not going to impact your happiness
in the way you think.
This is similar when we were talking about money
and happiness before and we said like, oh, money doesn't buy happiness. That's not gonna impact your happiness in the way you think. This is similar when we were talking about money and happiness before and we said like,
oh, money doesn't buy happiness.
That's not entirely true.
Money does buy happiness if you don't have any, right?
You can't put a move over your head.
You don't have food on the table.
Yes, getting more money will allow you the basic needs
you need to like be a little bit happier.
It's just that after a certain point,
once you get those basic needs,
more money doesn't impact your happiness like you think.
What are the questions that you ask
the person who comes to you, Laurie, and says,
I've done everything right.
I checked all the boxes, I went to the schools,
I got the job, I worked hard, I got married,
I had the two kids,
and I've done everything and I succeeded.
Like I kind of have it all.
And I'm not necessarily unhappy,
but I can't say that I'm happy either.
I know that there is a greater happiness available to me.
I just don't know what to do or how to get it.
Yeah.
Well, first I would start by asking questions
about their behaviors.
You have this perfect job and all this stuff.
What's your social connection like?
Maybe not perfect, but like good.
Reasonable, yeah.
What's your social connection like, right?
Are you putting time into the connections that matter?
Are you putting time into doing good in the world?
One of the things we know is that treating ourselves
just doesn't make us as happy as treating other people, right?
I might ask about like simple physical habits.
Are you moving your body?
Are you getting sleep?
Or is all that at the expense of doing this other stuff that you talked about?
And then I would ask about kind of how you think about emotions, right?
Are you trying to get positive emotion, right?
Do you get positive emotions we don't often think about?
Sense of wonder, sense of awe, humor, those kinds of things.
And I might even ask,
how are you engaging with your strengths?
What are the things that you find purpose in and value,
and are you doing that stuff?
I'd really kind of ask in detail
about people's thought patterns and their behaviors,
because often that's the trick,
that's what people aren't investing in.
And I see this even in,
again, in my Yale students,
who have every privilege,
I think they fall a lot into the category you're talking about.
Like I got into the perfect school, I'm, you know, young and healthy and all that.
My future is so bright.
Why am I so miserable?
And it's often because those are the same students who are mortgaging their social connection
filled with thought patterns of just like such anxiety about the future, not sleeping,
right?
You know, they're kind of doing the stuff that we know kind of will negatively affect your happiness
in the service of trying to go after this stuff
that probably won't impact their happiness
as much as they think.
Yeah, I think in addition to that,
for those students or the person who has climbed the mountain,
there's a sense of betrayal
because they've played the game and followed all the rules and implicit in the game
is this idea that happiness is the reward, right?
When you arrive there, you'll be happily ever after.
You're supposed to.
This is a fantastic lie that has persevered
within this narrative.
And I wonder if it's more acute in America
because this notion of the American dream
and kind of pull yourself up by your bootstraps
and these stories, it's back to stories.
It's like, this is the story of what it means to live here
and how to go from where you are to where you wanna be.
Yeah, one of the stories I watch in my Yale students
is that there's this phenomenon on the internet
called admissions videos.
So when students are about to find out
if they're gonna go to college,
they've got a camera, TikToks watching,
and they hear.
And so in my class, I show students these admission videos
when students find out they get into Yale,
which is like a big hurrah.
They click on this little website
and it plays this Yale theme song.
It goes bulldog, bulldog, blah, blah, blah.
It says you got into Yale.
Students scream and they cry and their parents are in these videos screaming and crying.
And the students will watch these videos and have a moment of sadness because they're like,
I remember that moment.
And that moment was a good moment.
But like 30 seconds later, I was like, now I just have to do the same thing to like get
into medical.
Like the carrot just moved, right?
And it's like you didn't even.
Pain, uncertainty and the need for constant work.
Exactly, exactly, exactly.
I've been banging the drum about recovery for years now.
And after all of my endurance escapades,
I've learned the hard way that how well you bounce back
is really just as important as how hard you push
because if you don't recover, you don't improve.
That's why the brand new and all new whoop sensor
is my constant companion.
And it's seriously impressive.
7% smaller with a ridiculous 14 plus days of battery life.
I haven't taken my whoop off my wrist
in something like five and a
half years at this point. And I love it because it's the only wearable that turns your health and
fitness data into personalized guidance. All those metrics matter. Sleep quality, HRV, resting heart
rate, stress, strain, and whoop tracks them constantly and then actually tells you what to
do with that information.
Should I go hard today or should I take it easy?
Well, Whoop knows.
And the new Heart Screener feature
with on-demand ECG readings is just a game changer
because it allows you to check in on your heart
whenever you want to and share those results
with your doctor, which is pretty powerful stuff.
Their HealthSpan feature shows you how your daily habits are influencing your biological
age and the hormonal insights provide personalized guidance throughout your cycle or pregnancy.
Whoop is not just another gadget.
It's really the only wearable that gives you a truly comprehensive view of your body, helping
you to make smarter decisions about when to push and when to rest.
So check it out. Go to join.woop.com slash roll. That's join.whop.com slash roll.
Unless you're new to the show, you're so welcome. You know that I've been plant-based
for quite a while, about 17 years in fact. And as an athlete, I can tell you that I know more than most when it comes to plant-based
protein products.
I've tried them all beginning around 2007 when I remember that I had to drive like over
an hour to the only store in all of Los Angeles that even carried the one product that existed
back then.
Things have changed, of course, but that choice creates confusion.
And most of the products that are out there, let's face it, fall way short of the mark.
Grainy textures, chalky taste, questionable ingredients, poor nutritional profiles,
you name it. But I am here to cut through all of that confusion and make it easy for you with one
word, momentous. Not just another plant-based protein powder,
but the protein supplement to end the discussion.
It's pea and rice protein that's sourced exclusively
from the US and Canada.
Clean ingredients, no unnecessary gums or fillers,
just pure protein that actually tastes great.
In terms of quality, every batch is NSF certified
for sport, tested to rigorous standards.
And what that means is that this is nutrition
that professional athletes rely upon,
which embodies Momentous' commitment to performance.
For me, it's always been about finding a brand
that brings genuine integrity to nutrition,
and Momentous consistently delivers on that promise.
So if you're ready to upgrade your protein game,
head to livemomentous.com slash richroll
or use the code richroll at checkout
for 35% off your first subscription.
That's livemomentous.com slash richroll
for 35% off your first subscription.
So we're kind of dancing around the edges here,
but there are well-identified scientifically evidence-backed
pillars to happiness.
There is relationships like connection with other people,
like how social are you in your community?
And the low-hanging fruit like sleep and nutrition
and physical exercise and being in nature.
These are relatively easy to identify and also easy to fix,
but there are other pillars that are a little bit more
elusive. Like when you talk about purpose and meaning,
like these are kind of big, scary words that
I think are hard to get
our heads around.
Like, what does that mean?
Like if I, do I have purpose in my life?
Is there meaning?
Is what I'm doing meaningful?
Is it meaningful to me?
Is there some greater animating force
that's propelling me forward that is of value?
Like how to identify that.
And if it's missing, how do you fix it?
Because I think when you say to somebody like,
well, you just need more purpose or you need meaning,
it's like, what are you supposed to do with that?
I think it's paralyzing.
And I think it leads to people feeling guilty,
if not ashamed.
Totally, totally.
And I think two things there.
One is I think when we think about purpose, you know, in our brains, I think we image
like the capital P, purpose, like it's so big.
Some of the folks I've talked to on my podcast, I've talked about small P purpose, like, you
know, little lowercase P. And I think when you think about it like that, you say, oh,
it's like the conversation I have with the priest at the coffee shop, or it's that I
help my nephew with his homework, or it's that I help my nephew with his homework,
or it's that I really care about this hobby that I engage in.
I find it fun. I like moving up, right?
Like I get a sense of purpose for like running marathons, whatever it is, right?
If you're not thinking like you have to like, you know,
become Steve Jobs or solve cancer or whatever, like when you realize it's like,
oh, that's the thing that just kind of,
I feel better about myself when I'm doing that thing.
I feel more authentically myself when I'm doing that.
That's the kind of little P purpose.
And I think you just want to build more of that in.
I also use a technique with my students
that get them to think about
the kind of more in an abstract way
what some of those things are.
The little P purpose exercise is trying to figure out
what are you already doing that does that.
But a different exercise you can use is to try to figure out what researchers call your
signature strengths.
Researchers like Chris Peterson and Marty Seligman have done this work where they've
kind of gone cross-culturally and tried to figure out like what are the strengths?
What are the values that different people can have?
Like the good traits that you can have in the world.
And they've come up with a list of 24 of these things they call character strengths.
They're things like bravery and love of learning, a zest for life, curiosity, right?
Like helping people, social intelligence and stuff.
And what they find is that all of these are good, like all those things I just listed
are great, but some of them you resonate with more than others.
You can actually go online if you Google character strengths as a website called the Values in
Action Character Strengths where you can take a psychometric quiz and look at this.
You can just look at the big list of these.
I find just looking at them, you go through like, oh yeah, bravery is good, but oh, humor,
that's me.
Or love of learning, that's me.
Or whatever it is.
Those, the idea would be are your signature strengths.
And what research by Seligman and his colleagues has found is that the more you use your signature
strength in your daily life, the happier you feel, the more purpose you have, like the
more like you love whatever you're doing.
In your workplace, for example, if you use your signature strengths, you can turn whatever
job you have into a calling.
And the reason I like the work on the signature strengths is that some of it's been done not
in jobs like our job.
You know, we have this wonderful podcaster job or professor
where I could build in all these things.
A lot of the most creative work on signature strengths
is done in domains where folks have
jobs that are very constrained.
This woman, Amy Rosenskis, at the University of Pennsylvania
looks at strengths in hospital janitorial staff workers.
So these are people who are washing the linen for people
who are sick or mopping the floors. you don't think they could bring in like
bravery or curiosity or prudence or whatever it is, right? But what she finds is that between
like a quarter to a third of janitorial staff workers say they love their job, they're,
you know, they have to work, you know, earn an income, but they would like, they would
do it even if they hit the lottery because they love what they do. And those are the
ones who are naturally
infusing their strengths into their job.
She tells on my podcast, she told these lovely stories.
She had a story of a janitorial staff worker
who worked in a chemotherapy ward.
And so if you're listening right now
and you had chemotherapy or know somebody who does,
you know people get sick, right?
So a bad thing about this treatment
is people tend to vomit.
So a lot of this dude's job was cleaning up vomit.
But he said, that's not my job.
My job is, my strengths are humor and social intelligence.
My job is to make that person laugh.
The person's having a crummy day,
and I see it as my duty to like make them laugh
before I walk out of there.
And he had, I guess he'd like a standard joke
where he said like, oh, there's a lot of vomit,
over time today, like keep it coming.
You know, it's a stupid joke, but the person would laugh. And he's like, that's my job, right? She talked about another janitorial
staff worker who worked in a coma ward. So this was a staff worker who couldn't interact
with the patients because the patients were all in a coma and unconscious. But every day
she would like walk around and move the artwork in the room. Her strength was creativity,
right? Like, I guess she thought like maybe the patients will notice or wake up, probably not medically
accurate, but it gave her some purpose going to work.
These are the ways we can infuse purpose into our work.
And I love the janitor work because again, not all of us have jobs where we can switch
things around and do some intellectual switch, right?
But like everybody has a job where you can bring some of these things in a little bit,
right? And if you can't do it these things in a little bit, right?
And if you can't do it at work,
bring it in in your leisure and stuff.
So if you're not sure what those are,
I think Google character strengths,
just look at the big list or take one of these formal tests
or just kind of have a sense of like,
when I feel most authentically myself,
what am I engaging in?
And just try to do more of that.
There's something wonderfully counterintuitive
about that though, because I would have thought
that that inventory would be an attempt to identify
the things that bring you joy or remembering
when the last time you felt like really happy,
what were you doing?
To like set it in the context of strengths
as opposed to activities where you really feel yourself.
I mean, you mentioned authenticity, so that's part of this,
but why isn't it my version of that?
Like why is it strengths versus like activities
that make me feel happy?
I think ultimately they're one and the same for you.
It's just that the ones that might work most for you
might not be the ones that work for somebody else, right?
Like there's people that like, you know,
their signature strength is humor, right?
I love working on my weaknesses.
Your strength is...
Yeah.
That could be something like-
I don't know who those people are, but-
There are strengths that are bravery, for example,
which I think depending on how you think of those weaknesses,
it could be part of that.
There are strengths that are self-regulation, right?
That like what I'm going to do is really try hard to kind of regulate my deepest emotions,
strengths of things like prudence, right?
Where it's like, I want to just very carefully work on these things, right?
So the set of strengths when you look at the big list is pretty broad.
And a lot of times, the thing that feels most authentic to you when you look at the list,
you'll be like, oh, that's kind of on there for me.
You have artists who have strengths of things
like appreciation of beauty or zest for life.
A lot of folks who have strengths
that are related to social intelligence,
like kindness or forgiveness,
or social intelligence kind of empathy
and understanding people.
When you look at the big list,
usually folks have some that fit with that.
And often if you're using those things,
it can be powerful.
How do you parse the difference between purpose and meaning?
Is it that meaning is this emergent property
of finding some purpose,
even if it's a small P purpose
by investing in your strengths?
Yeah, these definitions always get so complicated.
It becomes like a mind bender.
And I just like-
I think of meaning as the same.
All these words are like the same,
but they're not the same and are like,
does one come from the other?
Like, you know, I'm still after like having
a million conversations about this,
I still don't, I'm still not sure I really get it.
The way I think about it, and again,
I think we all, we use many of these terms interchangeably
and it gets so much more complicated
when we look cross-culturally.
There's a set of researchers at Harvard
who are doing a project of trying to catalog
emotional words that exist in one language or one culture,
but that don't translate to other languages and cultures.
And it's a really fascinating list to go through
because me as a monolingual English speaking American
just see all these words of like, wait, I kind of know that emotion, but I never had a word for it.
One of my favorite ones, maybe not translate as well in LA, it translates a lot on the
East coast where I live in the Northeast is the feeling that you get on the first spring
day where you can sit outside and have a beer and like the outdoors, that emotion, I'm like,
oh man, I know that, I don't have a word for it.
Yeah.
I mean, listen, I'm from the East coast.
I lived in Ithaca.
But this is the point.
You know, if you look in Asian cultures, you have lots of different words that are hard
to translate for an American that mean different aspects of contemplation or peacefulness or
kind of attention to what's going on in the world, acceptance, right?
So point is, it's hard cross-culturally.
It's hard even for these terms that we all use in English together.
I think of meaning as the experience.
I get a sense of meaning from engaging in the purpose,
which is kind of the activity
or the kind of thing you're doing.
It matters less how you define those things
than the actions that you're taking.
Like you're very action-based.
You're like, here are these things that you should do,
get into action, journaling, identify your strengths,
like all of these, you know, sort of snackable, you know,
what do you call them again?
Rewirables, right?
That are there to counter program all the intuitions
and instincts that lead us astray when we're on autopilot.
And I think this is the thing I didn't say
that I would say to the person who's like,
I feel like I'm doing everything right,
or I feel like I'm really struggling,
I have this rumination.
I think that the thing that really gives me hope
about all this stuff is like,
there's like hundreds and hundreds,
if not thousands of studies on these things,
these little snackable activities or mindset shifts.
They all work.
They all work in a striking way, right?
They don't take your happiness from zero to a hundred,
but they give small, reliable, significant increases
in your happiness.
I know you had Dan Harris on the show recently, he talks about 10% happier and that's a great
name for a podcast and a title for anything because that's kind of the range that you're
going up and all these little meaningful changes I'm suggesting.
You get a little social connection, you'll go from a seven on a 10 point happiness scale
to eight.
You get some exercise in half hour of cardio every day, like you'll move from a six on a 10 point happiness scale to eight. You know, you get some exercise in half hour of cardio every day,
like you'll move from a six to a seven, right?
Like that's about the magnitude of increase,
but that increase is available for all the different things
we've talked about, right?
So you can have your little a la carte snack list
of different strategies you use to feel happier.
And if you can manage to turn them into habits,
to put them into effect,
you'll wind up reaping the benefits.
Another important pillar here is contribution to others.
Service, basically, which as a 12 step person,
I know well and had to learn the hard way
that this is the most reliable and truest antidote
to self-obsession.
And I think self-obsession is sort of at the root
of a lot of unhappiness out there.
We're just constantly thinking about ourselves all day long,
whether positively or negatively.
And if we can get out of that
and invest ourselves in somebody else,
I mean, this is a big part of the community piece too,
like be with other people.
Like, you know, you have to get out of your own
like narrative and immerse yourself in the world.
But when you invest yourself in somebody else's welfare,
even in the smallest way,
it's incredible how that can shift your mood,
your energy and your perspective.
Yeah.
And I think this is something that culture gets wrong.
We talked about culture getting manifesting wrong.
I think that's number one thing we get wrong on TikTok.
But number two thing we get wrong
about happiness on TikTok is this.
If you look anywhere on TikTok,
it's all about self-care, treat yourself, self, self, self.
Like you look at the studies of happy people
and happy people are not focused on themselves.
Happy people are very other oriented.
They're doing nice stuff for other people, right?
Controlled for income, happier people
tend to donate more money to charity
than not so happy people, right?
It's just these like subtle correlations
between doing nice stuff for others and feeling better.
But then you have all these experiments
where you kind of force participants
to do nice stuff for other people.
One of my favorite is by Elizabeth Dunn and her colleagues
where they walk up to folks on the street,
hand them 20 bucks and say either,
hey, spend this 20 bucks to do something nice
to treat yourself, right?
Or, hey, spend this 20 bucks to do something nice
for somebody else.
You could donate it to a homeless shelter,
you could buy a friend, you know, something nice,
like it has to go to someone else.
When they call people at the end of the day,
or even at the end of the week,
they find that people are happier
when they treated someone else
rather than when they treated themselves.
Right, in giving that money to that other person,
if you qualify it, it then becomes a burden for them,
as opposed to an enriching experience
where you felt like, oh, I like, you know,
I did something nice for somebody.
Yeah, and this is a spot where even in my own life,
if I'm not careful with it,
like there's just like a terrible opportunity cost
because like all the money you spend on yourself
to feel better, you know, buying yourself a massage
or buying yourself that new gadget
or buying your treating yourself to a nice glass of wine.
It's making it worse.
Well, it's just the same money
that you could have spent on someone else.
I often joke that every time my brain is like,
I'm gonna get a manicure,
I'm gonna do something nice for myself.
I'm like, wait, can I give my sister-in-law a manicure?
Can I buy that massage for someone in my workplace?
It genuinely is one of these things
that even violates my intuitions,
even saying it now, I'm like, dude,
I would like the massage better than my sister-in-law,
you know, whatever.
But the deal is- But you're cultivating abundance
and abundance mindset, right? Totally.
Instead of lack, like you have to hoard it
because you're afraid it'll run out or you'll run out.
And the benefits is like,
when you do nice things for other people,
like what you get back in the social connection is huge.
Right?
My producer and co-writer for my podcast, Ryan Dilley,
tells this story of he was walking into a coffee shop
and someone was walking out with this cookie
they were very excited about.
And then dropped it like on the threshold of the doors,
they were walking out and seemed sad. And he ran into the coffee shop and brought this person a about and then dropped it on the threshold of the doors they were walking out, it seemed sad.
And he ran into the coffee shop and brought this person a cookie and gave them the cookie
and the person was really happy and he's like, months later, I'm still telling that story.
I don't ever tell this story of the time I walked into the coffee shop and just got myself
the cookie.
Now it's millions of people on your show are hearing it.
And so these moments of good deeds that we do for others, they percolate, they percolate in our own memory,
they percolate in our social conversations,
even just hearing Brian's story,
probably all your people have this little boost
in happiness that we get.
And so we forget that our actions and our things we do
to feel happy at the moment,
some of them live on better than others
and the things we do for other people live on
in special ways.
Is there any science to establish,
I wanna call it a placebo effect, but it's not quite that.
What I'm getting at is the intention behind it.
Like, does it matter if you give of yourself
from a place of, you know of openheartedness and generosity,
or you're doing it selfishly because Laurie Santos said,
if I do this, it makes me happy.
And I know just based on my anecdotal personal experience
that it actually doesn't matter.
Like if I just, even if I don't want to do the thing,
like I know that it will make me happier.
And so to be selfless from a selfish perspective,
it still ends up creating a shift.
Yeah, and I think that's true for all the,
like we get the benefit from the behavior
in a lot of the cases.
I think, again, with all these things,
there's a little bit of nuance.
Lara Acton has this work that if you feel
forced to do nice things for others,
like you don't have any choice,
you don't have any agency in it, that can be not good.
This is one of the reasons we see things like
caregiver burnout and so on.
Like you have no choice,
you have to be doing these nice things.
That's not great.
But if you come at it from like,
all right, I don't really feel like doing this, babe,
I'll try it.
It kind of works.
And that's, look, that's true in all these domains.
You know, like I respect so many people
that get the like, the wonderful emotional hit
that have the like craving for working out.
I never have that.
It's always a slog for me.
I've hoped that doing it more and more,
I'll get into it.
Never is.
But every time I do it, when I'm done, I'm like,
oh, that was great.
Why did I hate doing that?
What's my problem, right?
And I think the same thing can be true
for doing nice things for others. For me, that's
also true for like talking to people. I know that talking to strangers from all my studies,
again, I can like tell you the journal article name, right? That it makes you happier. But
I'm just like, don't really feel like talking to people. But then inevitably when I do it,
I'm like, okay, I should really do it. I wind up feeling better. Even on the plane over here today, I was sitting next to someone who kind of plopped down and
this individual sort of disabled and like had a tough time getting in and was sort of
seemingly sort of frustrated.
And I had this moment of like, all I want to do is look at my phone and check my email.
That's all my craving and motivation is telling me to do.
But I know happiness wise, I should like try to brighten this person's day.
And so I did it and we had a little chat
and then I felt a little bit brighter,
the first 10 minutes into the flight
and feel like I made his version of that flight
a little bit better than if I was just kind of on my own.
How does this break down between introverts and extroverts?
Because that type of behavior comes a little bit
more naturally to the extroverted person.
And so it would follow that extroverts are happier
because they're more social,
they like to be around a lot of people.
And it's an easier lift for them to kind of engage
with people out in the world,
whereas an introvert is like afraid of those situations
or is avoiding those and isolating.
So is there science around those two archetypes?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, first is there a difference
in the happiness of introverts and extroverts?
And the answer seems to be yes,
where extroverts are happier,
probably presumably because they're socially connecting
more often and more easily.
They can be more self-obsessed though.
They might be more self-obsessed, yeah.
That's going against them.
There's a lot of nuances, as I said, for all of these.
But there's a different question, right?
Which is if introverts engaged in more social connection, if they kind of pushed against
their natural tendency not to do it, but tried it out more, would they wind up being happier?
And this is something that's been studied by lots of folks.
My favorite experiments on this are by Nick Upley at the University of Chicago, where
he does these studies where he forces people to talk to strangers.
That situation I was in talking to the person on the plane, he basically makes people do
that on commuter trains in Chicago.
He says, you'll get a $10 Starbucks gift card if you spend the train ride talking to someone.
And everyone hates to do it, but they do it because the promise of the $10 Starbucks gift
card in social science.
Amazing.
What a gift card.
Amazing what a gift card will do.
But people predict that this is gonna be terrible,
talking to a stranger on the train.
And introverts predict that it's gonna be like more,
I think the scale doesn't go low enough for them
to say how terrible it will be.
But both introverts and extroverts
get a positive emotion boost from talking to the stranger,
which is not what people expect.
Is the boost higher for the introvert
because there seems to be more to be gained,
like there's a bigger gap there.
So the test that they did is the difference
between your prediction and what the outcome was.
They didn't compare introverts and extroverts,
but what you find is the prediction error, right?
What you think is gonna happen versus what really happens,
that difference is much bigger for the introverts. But everybody overall gets a positive boost.
This is the thing I'll tell you because you're going to look at the comment section of the
show that we're going to get the most hate mail about because when I did a podcast about
introverts, try it out and get a little bit more social, we got tons and tons of hate
mail. I had this fantastic guest on, Jessica Pan,
who wrote this book called,
Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want to Come,
colon, An Introvert's Guide to Extroverting.
And she was this like incredibly hardcore introvert,
like would go to parties and like, you know,
have to go cry in the bathroom
because she hated being social so much
and read the work on extroverts being happier.
And she's like, I'm just going to try it for a year.
And she did one of these, you know, experiments that journalists do where they's like, I'm just going to try it for a year. And she'd one of these experiments that journalists do,
where they do that, the thing that will make them happy for a whole year.
And she did improv comedy. She went to like networking events.
She talked to people on the train and she worked with Nick Epley about this.
And at the end of the year, she was like way happier.
And at the end of the year, she found something interesting, which is like,
it's hard at first because your prediction is wrong, right?
And if you think about that prediction or I just talked about, you see where it gets hard.
You're an introvert. You're like, I predict calling my friend, that's going to be yucky.
You're talking to the barista at the coffee shop. Well, that's going to be yucky.
You never do it. You don't notice it feel good and you keep not doing it, right?
It's like when we get in bad cycles of whatever, I see this sometimes in my own fitness journey of like,
I don't feel like exercise and I don't do it.
Then I forget, oh my God, it feels amazing.
It's harder for me to do it next time
because I didn't do it before and so on.
And so folks like Nick Epley think that this is kind of
one of the things that happens to introverts
is that you predict it's gonna be crappy,
you behaving based on your predictions,
you don't engage in social connection.
And then it's harder next time and it's harder
and it's harder.
And so his advice would be baby steps.
This is not like going to a party
or doing improv comedy or like, you know
going out with 300 of your best friends.
This is just like text a good friend and say,
hey, can we connect for coffee?
Or like, you know, set a time to call
like someone you haven't talked to in a long time.
It's not doing that all the time.
It's just getting a little bit more of that in.
I didn't try to see, try to notice
if it makes you feel better.
Yeah, well, let me try to inhabit
the voice of Susan Cain right now
and speak, you know, speak to the introvert thing.
I think there is a distinction between the introvert
who's just predisposed to a little bit more solitude and quiet
and tends to thrive in those types of environments
or is more suited to smaller gatherings, let's say,
than the introvert who has this fear
or this terror of these,
and it has like this negative predictive,
kind of brain around what happens
when they're in those, you know, more crowded environments.
And I think on top of that, I would imagine that part
of the pushback that, you know, you get for this
is that beneath it all, there's this perspective
that it's better to be an extrovert.
And that if you're an introvert,
you should be more extroverted
or there's something wrong with you.
And some people are more wired to be,
many, many people are more wired to be
more introverted than extroverted.
I happen to be one of them.
And it's very comforting to hear Susan talk about this
and say, there's nothing wrong with you.
You know what I mean?
And that's not to say that what you're sharing
is incorrect either.
It's that, you know, if you are isolating
and cutting yourself off from life
because of this predisposition that you have
that there is greater happiness that you can find
if you get out of your comfort zone
and, you know, put yourself in those uncomfortable positions.
It doesn't mean that you have to become an extrovert
or that there's an expectation around that.
Is that, do you think that's a fair?
That's exactly right.
That's exactly.
I think when I talk about the work in social connections,
some people hear me saying like, don't be an introvert,
that's wrong, everybody should be extroverts.
Not true.
I think there's a lot of happiness boost
that comes from certain aspects of introversion,
like contemplation, right?
Time in a sense of kind of like being with yourself,
understanding your own intentions.
I think there's forms of happiness that come from solitude
that you can't get from social connection.
That said, what we know is for better or for worse,
one of the ways that we boost our mood
and improve our overall happiness and life satisfaction
is to have rich connections with other people.
Not to go to the hugest party and like whatever,
but like make sure you're maintaining your social connection
even with weak ties, like the priest at the coffee shop
or the stranger on the train.
And what it means is if you're an extrovert
that's not doing any of that,
you're leaving opportunities for happiness on the table.
And I think one thing to remember is
there's so much of the advice about happiness
that at least for some personality types or people with certain backgrounds
Feels like a little bit of a stretch, you know
Like I think sometimes like, you know
Some people might listen to this podcast because like eating super healthy like eating plant-based and getting away from processed foods
It feels like a stretch for people given some backgrounds
Even you know
If you're the kid who was picked on in gym class like they you know moving your body every day might feel like a little
Bit of a stretch. I think social cognition is one that's just like that too, right?
It's a little bit of a stretch for people, but if you engage in it, it doesn't make sense
to really mean it's better or worse, but there's an opportunity for you on the table that if
you engage with that a little bit more, you might wind up feeling happier.
Yeah, you don't have to break the rubber band, but you can, you know, extend it a little
bit.
Exactly.
And take a moment to notice, because I think one of the interesting things about so
many things in this happiness space is that our predictions are wrong. We predict this thing is
not going to work. We do it, oh, actually, I feel a little bit better. We predict this thing, oh,
definitely going to work. More money, status, whatever. I still got to go after more of it.
One of the reasons I like being a nerdy scientist in this space is I want people to test their predictions,
right, try it out.
It may be won't work for you, maybe it will,
but you can do your own experiments on yourself
and see what works.
And those experiments require a little bit of discomfort.
Yes, for sure.
Right, I mean, that's the piece, right?
So it's that Susan David thing,
like discomfort is the price of admission
for a meaningful life.
Yes.
So you have to be willing to step outside yourself,
even if just a little bit to reap the benefits
of any of these things that you're talking about.
And this gets to something
that we haven't really talked about, right?
Which is negative emotions, right?
Senses of this kind of pushing yourself,
feeling uncomfortable, right?
I think that not only is
discomfort the price of a meaningful life, but so are all negative emotions, right? Anxiety, stress,
overwhelm, anger, all these things are prices for a meaningful life. And that means that we need to
not run away from negative emotions. I think sometimes people hear about my class and assume
it's this terrible Ivy league toxic positivity thing where I'm teaching people to be
and you know, happy emoji all the time.
And I think that's not true at all.
I think what we wanna do is find ways to notice,
accept, embrace, learn from our negative emotions,
but also find good ways to regulate them.
Do you get criticism for the class?
Oh yeah.
Is there skepticism that you're treating this subject matter
in kind of a reductive way or what is the nature
of the critique?
Yeah, part of the critique is these snowflakes
that need a class on happiness, right?
And I think those are people who just haven't,
honestly haven't seen the data
of just how bad this mental health crisis is.
I think there are also folks who think we're treating it from a scientific perspective
and therefore we're missing out on other ways to kind of come to these truths, right?
Which is one of the reasons I always like to bring in the wisdom of the ancients and
philosophers often sometimes even spiritual traditions, right?
Because I like to see the science in part because often our intuitions are wrong.
So it helps me to see the data of like,
oh, actually talking to somebody does make you feel good.
But so many of the ancient traditions
figured this stuff out and had deep insights,
even in the absence of these psychological
and neural data on these questions.
What is your most controversial
or contrarian opinion about happiness?
Honestly, introversion,
like introverts could actually get
a little bit more social connection.
It won't be so bad.
That's when I get attacked on.
Manifesting doesn't work in the way you think.
When I get attacked on money, it doesn't make you happy.
I always know what's contrary.
You're like, yeah, you're just,
whatever is going against the grain of TikTok trends.
It might be, honestly.
It really is like, if I could tweak the algorithm,
I'd get much less hate mail.
I mean, I think another big one really is just this idea
that being happy is ultimately good
if what you wanna do is face challenges and push yourself.
A different attack I get is kinda,
look at the world right now.
It is falling apart, you know,
like from the economy to the climate to whatever,
like, it's just like a crappy place with many big structural problems, right?
You're going around telling everybody to, like, be happy
and accept the things in life and find your purpose, right?
Like, people need to not be happy. People need to be out there pissed off.
You know, if you're not angry, you're not paying attention kind of thing.
And this is a pushback I actually get from a lot of my students.
I think a lot of my students.
I think a lot of the young people I work with
are really inclined to worry about the big problems
and fix them and think that the way you face
those big problems is not to like be happy
in the face of them or to kind of be happy
in ways that like ignore the structural problems, right?
I think sometimes people hear, for example,
like more money doesn't make you happy.
That what I'm doing is justifying really terrible practices
where we billionaires get richer.
It's like, nah, nah, nah.
I think what we need to remember is two things.
One is that we can have individual change
and individual strategies for feeling happier
that work alongside the structural changes
for making you happier.
You can write in your gratitude journal
and do expressive writing
if you're in a terrible job situation
while working to change that terrible job situation, right?
And those things should go together, right?
It's not like, well, just expressive writing
and then you can put up with these terrible bad practices.
But I think the other thing is that researchers
have gone out and asked the question,
like, what is this set of psychology
and the set of emotions that you need
to be the kind of person
that's fighting these big structural problems? This work by Konstantin Kuchlev at Georgetown.
And what he finds is that like, it's actually the people who are experiencing the most positive
emotion who are the ones who have the bandwidth to go out and fight this stuff.
He looks at folks who are interested in, for example, in things like climate justice and
asks like, who are the ones who aren't just like anxious about climate change, but really
putting on solar panels,
going to a protest, donating money.
And he finds that it's the folks who experience the most positive emotion who are taking the
actions.
It's kind of like putting your own oxygen mask on first.
And so this is something that I really push is that when people are like, well, if you're
not angry, you're not paying attention.
It's like, yes, but a little bit of self care to protect yourself, kind of protecting your own bandwidth
is gonna make you the kind of person
who has the resilience to kind of fight the big fights.
And so-
Whatever you're pursuing,
whether it's some strain of activism or you have an ambition,
what I'm hearing is that happiness on some level
is actually strategic
in achieving those goals,
because otherwise you're on an unsustainable fuel source
and you'll burn out, right?
So if you're fulfilled and finding meaning and purpose
and all of these aspects of what it means to be happy
in the pursuit of these difficult things,
then you're gonna stay in the game.
Otherwise, like if you're just fueled by anger and outrage
and this has to change, you know, when you're young,
it's like, you know, of course you think that
you'll be able to do that forever, right?
But you're not gonna last.
Like you're not gonna be able to stay in it
for all four quarters of the game.
Yeah, and I love your idea that it's fuel, right?
Because I think it really is, you know,
and I think this is a spot where we get
the metaphors all wrong, right?
And another thing we hear on TikTok all the time
is like work-life balance, right?
Which I think in our brains, we picture like a scale,
like, well, when work is going up,
when I'm performing really hard,
like, you know, life is going down.
Like, oh, they can't kind of,
and I think a much more accurate way of thinking about it,
which we get from the science,
is the sense of work-life harmony,
right? Where if you're prioritizing life, by which I mean kind of happiness and mental health and so on,
you're going to work better, you're going to perform better, you're going to have more bandwidth
to do the stuff you care about. And this is the kind of thing we see in study after study. You give
people a hard problem at work. One of these was done with medical doctors, where it's like you
have to kind of, you get some tough problem, you have to figure out like, what's the diagnosis is really tricky, you need true
innovative out of the box thinking. You put some set of doctors in a good mood first, they just
watch silly cat videos on YouTube ahead of time. They're the ones that come up with the innovative
solution, right? You have to go through something really uncomfortable at work, whether that's,
you know, a terrible time like COVID or just pushing yourself on a hard workout, but you go into that listening to happy upbeat music
versus like, blah, blah, blah, blah,
down or EO music.
And you're gonna push through better if you're just like,
so it seems so simple, but I think we get it wrong, right?
We're like, well, I have this ambition
that I really care about,
and I'm just gonna make myself super miserable.
I'm not gonna see my friends, I'm not gonna sleep, I'm gonna just like, but then I'll get to the success and I'm just going to make myself super miserable. I'm not going to see my friends. I'm not going to sleep.
I'm going to just like, you know,
but then I'll get to the success and I'll feel happy.
And we get it wrong in two ways.
One that we've talked about,
like the success that arrival isn't going to make us
as happy as we think.
But second, if what you really want to do is perform well,
you're not doing that as well.
If you're not taking care of yourself,
if you're not giving yourself that sort of happiness fuel
that we know performance, like true exceptional optimal performance really requires.
I think that's a really important point.
I know what it's like to be laser focused on something
and lose myself in the pursuit of a name or a goal.
And there is something dopamine inducing about that.
There's like a euphoria of like, I'm all in man,
and I don't have time for anything else.
That in of itself is a form of self obsession
where you begin to believe, or I should say,
I have been lured into places where I would think,
is happiness like, is it really all that important?
Like, it feels like an indulgence
and also something I can live without
because I have this purpose and it's fulfilling
and it's giving me meaning and it's driving me forward
and I have this aim and I'm gonna get there.
And so not only is,
or are all of the things that you need to do
to engender happiness inconvenient,
they just feel indulgent and like a distraction.
And that is part and parcel of like the strivers dilemma.
We had this woman in here the other day,
Dr. Judith Joseph, who talks about, you know,
high functioning depression.
And I'm like reading this book and I'm like, oh my God.
Yeah, that's my name.
They changed the name, right?
I'm like seeing God, you know, anyway.
But I can also imagine the person
who has a very challenging life,
like the single mom with two jobs and kids
and has to take the bus to work and life is just hard.
And for that person, that person as well,
I would imagine is in a position
where they could develop the perspective
that like this happiness thing is an indulgence.
And I can't take my eyes off the ball
because people need me and I need to provide.
And so make the argument for the self care,
at least at a base level to cultivate some degree
of happiness from that sustainability perspective.
Yeah, like you just can't sustain that for very long.
And again, we know this in other domains.
I remember one thing from you reading your book
that I loved in your story was,
even when you're training to be as fast as possible,
you didn't want to run as fast as possible.
You like actually want to be at,
I don't know, I'm not a fitness person,
but it's like 80% right?
Conservation and efficiency.
And active rest, right?
Active rest.
We understand that
in other high-performance fields.
We forget that when it comes to just performing
at our jobs and our life.
And I think of active rest as the kind of fuel
that we need to do it better, right?
That sometimes what we need is a break.
Sometimes what we need is like a moment
to notice that stupid delight in the world,
to like, you know, have a gab fest with our, you know,
good girlfriends, right?
Like we just kind of need this time
to boost our overall mood and to kind of feel good in life
and to feel good with life.
And ultimately, if we're doing that,
it just makes it easier to achieve the bigger aims
that we have for ourselves.
You mentioned curiosity earlier,
clearly having a growth mindset
or being interested in the world
or wanting to learn things
and seeking out new experiences are crucial,
to being a happy person.
But at baseline, like foundational to that
is your relationship with your own curiosity.
So talk a little bit about that.
Like curiosity is something that is part of being human,
but also lives on a spectrum.
Yeah.
And I think there's so much we can do with curiosity
to feel happier, right?
One is that sometimes curiosity can be
that little motivating force that gets us
to positive emotions we don't expect.
One of the positive emotions I think about a lot
is the experience of awe, right?
This like sense of wonder,
the sense that stuff is bigger than you.
We've talked a lot about being self-obsessed,
but like when you look at the skyline here in the canyon,
or when you look at something bigger than you,
or even just like people doing amazing moral good
in the world, like you're just like, wow,
there's things that are bigger than myself.
It's so inconvenient though.
Awe?
Well, there's so much evidence. Awe. It's so inconvenient though. Oh, inconvenient.
Well, there's so much-
Oh, it's hard, like awe and gratitude.
Go with delights, go with delights.
I mean, sometimes these words get so big.
Is that why you consciously use the word delights?
I think so, because sometimes it feels like,
was I grateful that the guy was listening
to Cypress Hill in the car and the low rider?
Not really, but was that delightful?
Talking about it now, does it make me smile?
Yeah, it does, right?
And I think all like, if all feels too much,
like maybe go with like badass.
Like when you see something and we're like,
that was just badass.
Like that was a badass sunset.
Or like, you know, the James Webb Space Telescope,
where you just see all these worlds, that is badass.
Or like someone doing an amazing thing in fitness
is like Simone Biles is just like,
she's badass. That badass allows you to think of something that's bigger than yourself. It
allows you to see achievement. It just kind of feels like a good positive emotion. And so
I think curiosity can often get us to things that are badass and that's helpful. But I think a bigger
way that curiosity is so important for our positive emotions is that we can use curiosity to allow and deal with our negative emotions.
I think the kinds of type A folks that you talk to a lot on this podcast and listen to
this podcast are like, perform, perform all the time.
And that sense of overwhelm or that fear, that anxiety or that yucky feel, that is really
inconvenient.
So I'm just going to squish that down.
But in doing that, we lose the opportunity
to learn from our emotions, to learn from our discomfort,
something that Susan Cain talks about a lot.
And I think curiosity can be a way in,
especially if you're kind of uncomfortable
with those negative emotions and your move is like,
squish them away, I don't feel that.
Get curious, like, huh, I don't want to do this workout today.
What's going on?
Like, I'm feeling a little overwhelmed at work, or, huh, I'm feeling like to do this workout today, what's going on? Like, I'm feeling a little overwhelmed at work,
or, huh, I'm feeling like a little bit pissed off, right?
I'm like extra pissed off in this traffic right now.
Curiosity, what's going on? Where is this coming from?
Like, oh, I'm actually feeling kind of lonely, right?
Often when we get a little bit curious about our emotions,
it's a way to engage with them in a way that doesn't like amplify them,
but kind of has some common humanity, like, makes sense I'm feeling this,
let me try to understand it.
And then we can use emotions for what they're really for
evolutionarily, which I think of them as like our internal
signaling unit.
Like I like to see our negative emotions as like the dashboard
on your car.
It's like tire light, engine light, that comes on in your
car.
If it came on in my rental car today, it'd be really
inconvenient.
Like, crap, I had to deal with this tire situation.
I think our negative emotions are kind of like that.
It's like ding ding, overwhelmed, like ding ding, anxiety.
It's like, oh, this is stupid.
But if you don't deal with it, you know, you're going to break down on the highway.
And I think the same is true for negative emotions, right?
We need to get curious, like, huh, I wonder what's going on.
Why is that sense of overwhelm there?
Like, oh, I'm too busy at work or I need to take a break or often there's something in there
that you can change your mindset
or change your behavior about to fix it.
But if you suppress it, you're just not gonna notice
what that signal is telling you.
Yeah, it's another way of disidentifying,
detaching yourself a little bit from those emotions.
It's a little indicator light.
Because negative emotions can be intoxicating.
And when they flare up,
then there's a kind of instinct to indulge them, right?
And you're not even consciously thinking about it.
It just takes over.
And then in the aftermath of that, we self-flagellate.
Like, I can't believe, why did I do that?
And you feel guilty and shame,
you just go down in the spiral, right?
But to be able to look at it
as if you're watching it on television,
as opposed to something that's happening to you
is a really powerful technique.
And using curiosity as the way in is a really cool idea.
Some people are naturally very curious.
Some people are extremely in curious.
I've asked this question to other people on the show
and everyone seems to agree that curiosity is something
that you can learn and get better at and trained,
but you have to be curious about your own curiosity.
Yes, there's a loop there, fortunately.
I think with all of these things,
there are gonna be some of these sort of happiness hacks,
happiness strategies that come really easy.
You might be listening to this, you're a super extrovert, you're, oh yeah, social connection tick,
or, oh yeah, like watching what I eat or moving my body, great.
But then there's some that are like, oh, this one, the like curiosity is a little harder.
I actually think those are the domains where you can have the most impact, right?
You know, we mentioned this idea of being 10% happier.
You're not going to go from zero to 100.
So it's helpful to find the spots where you're as close to baseline, as close to not doing
it all as possible.
Because if you intervene on that, even a little baby step will kind of give you a big boost.
And so if yours is curiosity, I think just use the opportunity to kind of notice a little
bit, right?
Rather than call it curiosity, just call it noticing.
Just noticing what's happening in my body.
I'm noticing what's going on.
Expressive writing is a really great tool for this,
in part because when you go into sense-making mode,
you have to ask questions, right?
And so just by the act of writing about whatever's going on,
you can often go into question-asking mode,
which is sort of one of the fastest ways
to get to curiosity.
On the topic of noticing,
isn't attention sort of the whole ball game here.
Totally.
Like it really is a function of the extent
to which you're mindful
about where you're placing your attention.
That's like the whole thing.
So whether it's curiosity or your interactions
with people out in the world or your ability
to notice something
that could give you that moment of delight.
It's all about being present with your own attention
and not allowing it to randomly go where,
it's sort of impulse to go,
but commandeering it in a conscious way.
Yeah, and that's hard, right?
Because we know that attention is very,
we know that attention's like basically built to go
where it's gonna go, right?
If someone screamed fire right now in the studio,
in the whatever, no matter how interesting
a conversation we were having,
we're feeling like we're fired, right?
It would steal our attention.
And that kind of mode of commandeering attention
is the thing we've built into all the devices
that are around us all the time. Like there's so much built out there to steal our attention.
Like it was already bad just having a human brain that would just kind of get commandeered
really easily.
But now we have all these things around us that are trying to commandeer our attention,
often for bad, right?
Because negativity is what makes algorithms lots of money.
And so lots of folks around us are trying to commandeer our attention towards the anti-delights
or the anti-grateful things.
But yeah, if you can develop the agency
to harness your attention,
and so much work in the field of psychology suggests
that you can do that just through training, right?
Just through practice and trying to notice certain things
more through your intention for your attention,
you can kind of gain agency over that
and feel a lot better.
What do you make of the mainstreaming
or the degree of attention and interest there is now
in the subject of happiness?
Like this is sort of unprecedented in the history
of humanity.
And to me, it's sort of like, you can look at it
through two different lenses.
On the one hand, you can say,
well, this is just a by-product
of our metastasizing self-obsession, right?
Like, you know, we're so caught up in our own selves
and obsessed with our own degree of happiness.
And this in and of itself is some form of disease, right?
Or you can look at it as a symptom of the real disease,
which is that we are suffering this epidemic of unhappiness
and loneliness and disconnection and the like.
And this is us raising our hand
or like asking to be rescued.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, I guess a couple of things there.
One is that I think we are obsessed with happiness now,
but we as a species have always been obsessed
with happiness. We've been obsessed with happiness since we were we as a species have always been obsessed with happiness.
We've been obsessed with happiness since we were a species
that could think about happiness.
I mean, look at the ancients.
That was all they talked about was trying to live
the good life and eudaimonia and how do we get there
and create the right habits.
You look at the founders of the country,
which even in the Declaration of Independence
could have written, here's what we want,
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Living like longevity, freedom.
Right in the document, in the parchment.
And there's actually a really interesting history.
If you look at the original document,
they went through different versions.
It was like life, liberty,
and then they decided on happiness,
which is sort of interesting and it's all right.
But the point is that like-
What was it?
Was there something in happiness's place?
It's hard to know, but I think it was like,
do we want that in there?
It was an interesting debate about putting that in there.
So it was interesting.
But point is like even old school,
they were thinking about this.
So I think we've always cared about it.
However, I do think we're more off track than ever, right?
I mean, I think we have cultural patterns
that are actively leading us in the wrong way.
We were joking about TikTok and being a little facetious,
but I think, you know, we mean something.
Like the culture apparatus that we surround ourselves with
that's easily stealing our attention
is telling us all the wrong things to do, right?
Go for money, go for status, just buy something,
change your circumstances, you'll feel happier.
And what we know is like, those are wrong.
And so I think the interest we have now is in part
because we're kind of raising our hands and saying,
help, we're doing it wrong.
But I think it's also because we,
how could we not be doing it wrong
when there's so many other influences
that are pushing us in the wrong direction?
Our digital devices are proxies for social connection.
And we believe that it is making us closer
to all these people.
And we're not really conscious of the extent
to which it's actually isolating us more and more and more.
Like it's very effective in convincing us
that we're in touch with all these people
and we know what they're doing.
And it feels like one big community,
even if we're prone to comparison
and we're a victim of the algorithm and the like,
short of turn your phone off, do a digital detox,
don't bring it in, like all the sort of stuff we know,
right, like what is the counsel that you give
to your students and talk about more broadly
with respect to how we navigate our digital age
in a healthier way.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's worth noting
that technology is just a tool, right?
It's a tool that we could use in positive ways, right?
Which I think we all saw during the pandemic, right?
I don't know about, like, Zoom Thanksgiving
and like, you know, Zoom Pilates classes
with friends of mine, right?
Like it's, we can use this to really get connection,
especially when we're feeling isolated, you know,
communities that, you know, you're the one person who cares about this thing, and now you can connect with
others who care about that same thing and have that sense of little-p purpose. I think there's
lots of things we can do positively with technology. But you're right, a lot of things we actually do
with technology is leading us astray. It's leading us away from social connection. But we don't want
to get rid of it because it does have these positives. And so the strategy I suggest to my students is this strategy
of attending, noticing, getting curious again, right?
What are the parts of this that are feeling good
and what are the parts of this
that are maybe leading me astray?
And I like shortcuts to do this
because it's hard to do this in the abstract.
And one of the ones I share with my students
comes from the journalist, Catherine Price,
who has this lovely book called How to Break Up with Your Phone, where she argues that
you don't really need to break up with your phone, but you need to take it to like couples
counseling because you can develop like maybe like a healthier relationship with it.
And she has this acronym she uses called WWW, which is funny because you know, World Wide
Web, but in her case WWW stands for what for, why now and what else?
She argues that whenever you find yourself kind of engaging with technology, you should So in her case, www stands for what for, why now, and what else?
Cherokee said whenever you find yourself
kind of engaging with technology,
you should ask this question, what for?
What was I picking my phone up for?
Maybe I was checking my email, looking at the weather,
maybe I don't even know what it,
like I'm just in some Reddit rabbit hole
and I have no idea how I got here.
Or you're just standing in line at the grocery store.
Yeah, it's a purpose, right?
You don't wanna have to be alone
with your thoughts for an instant.
Exactly, and then that gets to the second question, why now?
What was the trigger?
I was feeling lonely, I was feeling anxious,
I was feeling socially avoidant.
What was your being curious about?
What was the trigger, often an emotional trigger
or a situational trigger that caused you to get on it?
And the final question, what else?
What else could you be doing right now?
Maybe in that grocery line,
you could talk to a friend in the grocery line
or text someone and check in.
Maybe you could do just a couple deep breaths, right?
Like, you know, notice the world around you.
Notice that guy who's playing the Cypress Hill or whatever.
Like, what's the opportunity cost of being on your phone right now?
I like this WWW technique, what for, why now, what else?
Because it doesn't say digital detox, get off your phone.
It just causes you to notice your own patterns.
Oh, whenever I'm being socially avoidant at a party,
I look at my phone.
Or I go to this whenever I'm anxious.
Or, huh, what else?
I haven't noticed that it's spring time out
because I've just been staring at my phone the whole time.
It allows you to get curious about the things
you're using your phone for and when you're using it
and what's the cost.
And you can ask, are those things worth it for me?
Right, it's a way of applying your curiosity.
But you're certainly not gonna find moments of delight,
awe and wonder if you're looking at your phone.
Sometimes you do.
I mean, there's a lot of like bad ass.
Yeah, I get that.
I understand what you're saying, but like.
The analogy I like to use, and again,
it gets back to the nutrition stuff is like,
I think oftentimes we get the sort of nutritious
we have social connection online, right?
Where it's like, it feels like I connected
because I scrolled through my Instagram feed
and saw what everyone's doing.
It's not really nutritious, social connection.
So it's kind of like drinking a Diet Coke,
like it satisfies the sugar tubes, but it doesn't.
And it has these kind of downstream consequences
because it's not nutritious.
I think the same thing is true
for our kind of social connection psychology.
It overcomes a little social friction.
We kind of get to it easier than maybe talking to a friend
or texting someone.
But I think that ease is,
we kind of mistake it for something
that's gonna feel really good,
ultimately psychologically, and it sort of doesn't.
Happiness is a byproduct of welcoming into your life,
all of these things that we've been talking about.
It is not the aim.
It's not something you chase, right?
It's a consequence of doing all of these things
where we place our attention.
What is our curiosity like?
Are we going out of our way to be connected
to the people we care about?
Are we meeting new people, all the like?
But do you think that there are still many,
many people out there who are pursuing happiness
in a wrongheaded way such that this pursuit
becomes a barrier to happiness.
Like, because it is such a mainstream phenomenon
and there's so many books and so many experts like yourself
and we're talking about it and you know,
you're on the Today Show and in our collective consciousness
like happiness is something we're thinking a lot about
and we're trying to get more of.
But if we're chasing it, we're getting in the way of it.
I guess is what I'm getting at.
Yeah, I think for whatever reason we engage
with these habits, many of them will work.
If I'm engaging in social connection,
not because I really wanna connect with this person
because I'm like, I'll get my little happiness boost.
I might still get the happiness boost, right?
The same with doing nice things for others.
You know, I might do it because like, well, Lori says to do it and then you'll feel happier.
But you still, as you noticed yourself, you still get the benefit.
I think where we go wrong is that when we go after pursuing happiness, we do it in a
very perfectionist, very self-critical way.
We're like, I must get happy right now and I'm gonna not do normal baby steps
and take it a little day by day,
I'm gonna do it all right now.
And then we wind up disappointing ourselves,
we wind up feeling crappy about it,
it winds up becoming a chore,
it's another thing on the to-do list,
it makes us feel overwhelmed, right?
And I think that's not helping anyone, right?
There are a lot of good things that we could do
for ourselves from eating healthier to fitness
to whatever pursuit you wanna engage in that that will feel good if you do it in a self-compassionate,
kind, reasonable way and will feel really terrible if you do it in a perfectionist,
self-critical, has to be perfect kind of way.
And I think one of the problems with pursuing happiness is people get into that mindset.
I'll often get a question after a talk is like, will you imagine all these things?
What's the thing I can do right now to do it?
Like, I just want to do the one thing.
It's like, okay, we're already like off the path here.
Maybe we want to do a little.
But it's in the declaration of independence.
Pursuit. The pursuit.
But it's the how of the pursuit.
There's things we can pursue for the journey of it,
for the growth of it, for noticing that stuff.
And there's things that we can pursue where like, if I don't get this right by Thursday,
I'm like a loser.
And we just get out of the loser mindset, right?
We need to recognize that a way to motivate ourselves for anything, whether it's pursuing
happiness or any of your pursuits, a healthier way to do that is through self-compassion,
right?
Kind of noticing this is a challenge, this is tough, recognizing your common humanity,
I'm just human,
and talking to yourself in a kind way.
Those are the paths to achieving
so much of the stuff we wanna achieve.
I think where we get happiness wrong
isn't that we're going after it,
because I think, again, it's just built in,
we're gonna wanna go out,
we're gonna wanna have a flourishing life, most of us.
But if we go after that flourishing life in this like,
er, way, it doesn't work.
The person who's clutching onto it
and who's like, tell me the thing
and I need to have it now.
It's sort of like asking a fish, how's the water?
Like that's the problem.
That's sort of the barrier, right?
You have to emerge out of that like mindset
and that bubble and find a different way.
Yeah, and I think, you know,
when you really tackle the principles
and understand the principles better,
that comes a little bit more naturally, right? You learn these strategies for self-talk
that are a little bit healthier. You learn to be more other oriented, right? So you get
out of this individual pursuit and you kind of develop these notions of wanting to do
nice things for others for the sake of doing nice things for others. I think what's interesting
is if you start going after this stuff, you find it rewarding and it gets easier to do it not in a like grippy half-do way
but in a kind of more measured self-compassionate way.
Are you a happier person now
than when you started lecturing on this?
Oh, for sure.
I mean, I'm a nerd.
I take data, you know, I do my little psychometric
happiness tests all the time.
It would be so tragic if you weren't.
Yeah, well, I'll see.
Or if you had to lie about it.
Yeah, I'm so much happier.
No, no, true to this idea of 10% happier,
I'm about a point to a point and a half happier
on a standard happiness test than I was when I started this.
But I will say something interesting,
which is with the interesting meaning and purpose
and amazing privilege of being able to do this,
comes a lot more happiness challenges, right?
If I'm not careful, I can have, you know,
so many guest appearances like this,
opportunities for travel that will take away
my social connection, that'll take away my sleep,
that'll take me from my movement routine
if I'm not careful.
And like, so I have to push against that.
I get to see a lot more unhappy people
that gives me some challenges with negative emotions, right?
When you know about this stuff,
you're put in situations where people need this stuff
and you really see the full gamma of human emotion
and that can be really tough.
And so I think even though I have these strategies
I can use to feel better,
it's also brought with it like many good things in life,
lots of challenges.
And so it means that I have to practice what I preach
maybe even more now than I was before I was doing this work.
Being really clear on your nos and your yeses.
Yeah.
When to say yes and more importantly, when to say no
and how to have clear boundaries.
What was like the biggest epiphany or shift that you made
as a result of this experience in the research and everything that you've learned
that made the biggest difference in your life.
Yeah, well, a big one is maybe a happiness strategy
we haven't mentioned yet,
which is this idea of time affluence
that one of the things we need to feel happier
is to be wealthy, not with money in our finances,
but to be wealthy in time.
I have none of this, Laurie.
I know, yes, I get it.
Most of us self-report being time famished,
which is like literally starving for time.
And the physiology of this when you look is very similar to being tired.
It's inflammation, it's stress, it's all this stuff.
This is work by Ashley Williams at Harvard Business School.
If you self-report being time famished a lot,
that's as bad for your well-being as if you self-report being unemployed.
You probably would be sad if you lost your job tomorrow.
Your listeners would be sad if they lost their job.
Just not having any time is this bad.
This work was an epiphany for me,
both because as a professor, a podcaster,
as a human in the modern age, I'm busier than I should be.
But especially because this new found path that I'm on
have given me so many opportunities where if I don't set
really hard boundaries, ones that I like hate,
I'm never gonna be able to have any time affluence.
So-
Does that come up because you have a history
of being a people pleaser?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, good, just confirming.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think because, you know,
the hardest times to set time affluence
are like when there's really good opportunities.
And I think for a lot of the interesting people
with interesting jobs, interesting opportunities
that are listening to this, you're gonna have to say no,
not just to the stuff you don't wanna do
that feels like kind of crappy,
you're gonna have to say no to the stuff
you really do want to do to leave space
for the time to stuff that really matters.
Which are kind of the fruits of your labor.
Like you work so hard and now you're in this position
where you get invited to do really cool stuff
with cool people.
And after all of that work to get to this place,
you have to say no.
Yeah, yeah.
Cry me a river, but you know, it is like a,
it's tough to do that.
I think it's tough and it's tough to realize
that that open space, that open time
is gonna be more valuable
than whatever you could get out of these things.
I think for most people-
But that's being clear on those values
and what's important, right?
Exactly, and not falling prey
to all the biases we just talked about, right?
I think a big kind of trade-off
that people have to make is time and money, right?
I could spend a little bit more time at work.
Maybe I don't take my vacation time
and I get that promotion or I get some overtime.
I get these things.
And again, if you have enough money to put a roof over your head, if you're in that sort
of threshold where more money is not going to make you happy, more time really will make
you happy.
And so Ashley Willens finds that one thing you can do to improve your time affluence
is to spend any discretionary income you have on getting time back.
Get the chopped up vegetables,
get the healthy takeout, hire the neighbor's kid
to mow the lawn, whatever it is to free up time.
That actually makes you happier
than spending your discretionary income on stuff
or even in some cases, experiences.
There's a piece within this subject of time affluence
that has to do with deferred happiness.
Like I don't have a lot of time affluence right now,
but it's because I'm in this phase of life
and I need to do these things
and I am going to defer my happiness
and all these things that I know,
cause I pay attention to Lori and everything that she says,
and I get it and I agree,
but it's just gonna sit over here for a while
and I will indulge it at the appropriate time.
So you hold it in abeyance versus like the time is now
and your life is happening now.
And I fall into that.
So how do you disabuse people of that mindset?
Yeah, I think having the terms for some of these things
can be so helpful.
I think often we worry about what researchers
call myopia, right?
Which is like, you know, you eat unhealthy now, you know,
cause like you'll do, you'll start your workout
tomorrow kind of thing.
We kind of are indulging now cause we're myopic.
We're like not taking care of our future self.
That does happen, of course. But I worry much more about the opposite, which is what folks
call hyperopia, which is like, I'll have my rewards in the future.
I'll just work really hard right now and the social connection, I'll do that later.
Or enjoying the thing that I really care about, I'll get to that later.
And the sad thing is that later is not guaranteed.
So many of us have had the experience of like this thing
that we were waiting to do like runs out.
The cliche is like, you buy the nice bottle of wine
that you're saving for a good occasion.
When the good occasion finally comes around,
you open it and it's like, it's toast and it's dead.
Or you save your frequent flyer miles.
Or for the people like me, like to cheeky self care,
you buy that one nice candle that you're gonna use
or like that one bath bomb that you're gonna save.
And by the time you get to it, it's like, oh, it's smelly.
And it's just, I think we're doing that so much
with the big opportunities in life
that we're assuming that they're gonna be available tomorrow
and they might not.
I just did this episode with my colleague, DJ Didana,
who's a sabbatical expert who talks about the benefits
of taking extended time off now.
And he finds that people are like, well, you know,
I'll do it someday or I'll do it when I retire.
And he shared this statistic
that I think I'm gonna get right,
which is that if you're in a couple,
the possibility that both individuals in your couple,
you and your spouse will make it healthy to retirement age
and like be able to do stuff is actually only 50% that both of you will make it
and be healthy enough to travel
or do whatever you're fantasizing.
And retirement's not really a thing anymore.
I know, yeah, but you're lucky enough to take retirement.
But his point is like, don't be hyper-optic.
Like see if you can get that time affluence now.
And so I think we need to kind of,
I think too often we worry about myopia, right?
I think like capitalist culture gets us to do this.
I'm like, you know, don't put off till tomorrow
what you can do today.
But then we have to be doing everything today,
assuming there's going to be a healthy, happy tomorrow.
And that given that that's not guaranteed,
we can have a healthy medium where we put in some fun times
from enjoyable stuff now.
And I think our mistaken assumption is like,
well, I can't do that because I won't be as productive,
but everything you've just heard showed you
that that's a misconception.
You'll actually be more productive
if you have that break now,
if you engage in that social connection,
if you engage in active rest now,
you'll be able to perform better in the future.
It's so much of this is about short-term versus long-term
also what makes us happy in the short-term doesn't make us-term versus long-term also.
What makes us happy in the short-term
doesn't make us happy in the long-term.
And these uncomfortable things that are important
for the long-term feel like tremendous inconveniences.
Yes, they do.
And easy to dismiss, you know,
cause we can just say, I am gonna do it.
Like it is important to me, just not right now.
So of course there's a conflict
between the short term and the long term, right?
This is again, the thing the ancient thinkers talked about,
but often, like more often than we think,
the thing that's good for us in the short term
is also good for us in the long term.
We just are predicting wrong, right?
You know, take exercise, like a good workout
might seem inconvenient, but you do it
and you actually feel good.
You're pretty soon into it, right?
And that's good for the short term
and good for the long term.
Social connection, right?
That's the kind of thing that like,
I might think like, oh, it's gonna take up time.
I should be checking my email,
but let me talk to this person on the train.
It's actually gonna feel good for you.
And the experience, like the research shows that like,
you won't actually get a ding in your productivity.
If anything, you'll be more productive later on, right?
And so I think there are cases where obviously
there's this kind of disconnect
between our short-term and long-term happiness,
but a lot of the things that really work
for happiness do both.
It's just our mistaken minds
that think they're gonna be in conflict
and practice they're not actually
as much in conflict as we think.
Is there anything that you've changed your mind about
because of emergence science or some new idea that cropped up
that challenged your preconceived idea about happiness?
Yeah, I mean, I think I've changed my mind a lot
about the time stuff, right?
I would have set no boundaries,
people please put in every opportunity, push, push, push.
And I think I've really seen the signs
be like, no, no, that's not gonna work.
I need to build in rest, I need to build in breaks, I need to seen the signs been like, no, no, that's not gonna work. I need to build in rest.
I need to build in breaks.
I need to build in that stuff.
I wouldn't have thought that before.
And it goes against all my intuitions,
but I think that it's been so essential for me.
You mentioned Martin Seligman earlier
and Sonja Lea-Bamerski, who's been on the show.
In the pantheon of people who study and teach happiness,
Arthur Brooks comes to mind,
where do you and your colleagues divert?
Like, is there daylight in your perspectives?
Like, I imagine you don't match up perfectly with Sonia
or Arthur, you have a different lens.
So where is that daylight?
What are the kind of points of departure and why?
Yeah, I think so many of us are swayed by the data
that to the extent that the data all agree,
I think we kind of mostly agree on these things.
I think if there's a spot where not so much we disagree,
but our emphases are different,
I think my emphasis has really been on this idea
that our minds are biased, that our minds are lying to us.
And then unless we kind of like approach those things
as lies, as misconceptions,
we're kind of not gonna get it right.
And so I think that's a difference of focus
that like, if you look at my course, for example,
I'm so focused on like, what are the misconceptions?
Cause we have to understand what we're getting wrong
before we can figure out what we need to do better.
I feel like Arthur puts a lot of emphasis on faith,
cultivating a relationship with the divine.
And I don't know that you disagree with that,
but it doesn't seem to be as top of mind
or as big as a priority.
I mean, Arthur, you know, very devout Catholic.
How do you think about that aspect of it?
Well, I think, you know, in terms of the research,
Arthur is right on this, right?
I mean, as many studies have looked at
what makes people happy and a big predictor
is if you have some participation in religious faith.
What's interesting though, is if you kind of break down, what. What's interesting though is if you kind
of break down what does that mean? Like what are the components of being a person of faith that
allows you to feel happier? It seems like it's actually not so much your beliefs as opposed to
your behaviors and what you do. What do I mean by that? Let's say you're, I don't know, a devout
Catholic who really believes in God. You kind of really buy into the whole worldview, all the metaphysics you agree with, but you
never get to church, you don't have time to pray, you're very busy.
Versus, you are someone who goes to church a lot, you pray a lot, you do the pro-social
acts, you donate to the spaghetti suppers and so on.
But inside, you're not there with some of the metaphysics.
You're like, is it really the body of Christ? I don't know. I have some questions, right? Turns
out that the person that will get the most happiness benefits is the latter person. It's
the person who doesn't necessarily believe in the faith stuff, but actually engages in
the behaviors. And if you look at the behaviors that matter, it's all the stuff we've been
talking about. Social connection and community. It's doing nice acts for others.
It's taking time for presence and contemplation.
It's turning your attention to the good things in life, right?
It's often taking time for rest.
Most active religions and faiths have time for like a Sabbath or like taking time off,
right?
It's doing a lot of the behaviors that you would do that we've just talked about that
matter for happiness, but you're doing it in the context of a cultural and a religious
tradition that brings it all together for you're doing it in the context of a cultural and a religious tradition
that brings it all together for you.
And in a community of people that are doing it together,
which is one of the biggest hacks we know
matter for happiness.
So I actually think that the reason that faith,
among many reasons that faith is really good
for boosting happiness is that it like kind of forces you
to do a lot of the behaviors and the mindset things
that we know matter a lot.
It drives you towards all of those behaviors as naturally as a result of the behaviors and the mindset things that we know matter a lot. It drives you towards all of those behaviors
as naturally as a result of the culture around it.
Exactly, to quote the big Lebowski,
you know, thousand years from both Stanley Kovacs,
you know, it's like, yeah, no, I think, yeah.
I think Arthur would say,
and I would probably agree with Arthur on this,
that there is something distinct
from what you're talking about with respect to believing in
and appreciating that there is a power greater than yourself
and that that power is ineffable.
And as a result of that,
it doesn't have to take any dogmatic
or particular strain of thought or faith,
but that alone is a way of disabusing yourself
of your self obsession.
And it's ultimately humbling.
And it also makes place for awe and wonder
and the mystery of it all that I think is,
I think that is a big piece.
Totally. And that's one of the other, I think the behavior of it all that I think is, I think that is a big piece. Totally, and that's one of the other,
I think the behavior of finding more on your life
is another thing that of course religion gives you at large.
And I think this idea of having a sense of purpose
that comes from religion and being a person of faith
is really powerful.
And often it's in part kind of something
that's bigger than yourself, but it's also most faiths
are about not being about you, right? It's about other people. It's about connecting. It's about doing good
things for others. And so I think having those in like one packed up tradition that's culturally
relevant that you're doing with other folks is really important. It's not the only way
to do it, right? There's work by folks like Caspar Turcayle, who studies ritual and cultures
and these kind of strange cultures that find you can actually get a lot of it, not everything for sure, but some aspects of it from other
kind of cultural traditions.
He actually looks at people that are really into CrossFit, for example, where he finds
that people push themselves, they have a ritual that they go to, they have a sense of community.
If somebody gets sick, they all work together to help that person, right?
They're all in this kind of shared experience together.
Not all the benefits, but you get some of them.
And so I think that faith traditions are one way
to get at it, but for those folks who are atheist,
agnostic, questioning, maybe just didn't grow up
in a faith tradition that was really obvious to them,
there might be other ways to get some of those things too.
Obviously a big piece in the declining quotient
of happiness, at least in America,
has to do with the decline of faith-based institutions
and community afterschool programs.
Like CrossFit is a great example,
but 30, 40 years ago, we would have been talking about
the afterschool programs or YMCA or any number
of things that kids used to do or young people used to do.
And so many of those have gone away and people have to kind of find their footing in all
of these subcultures, which thank God they exist.
And I think they serve a really important function, but the infrastructure upon which,
we used to create so much of that seems to be no longer.
Yeah, and this is something that researchers
have focused on a lot, especially researchers
who've looked at say increases in loneliness
and declines in social connection across time.
There's a very famous sociologist, Robert Putnam,
the political scientist sociologist
who talked about what he called third places.
And so there's a place that's not work or not home where you can get together with other
people.
He had this very famous book called Bowling Alone.
It's called Soho House.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
But no, but Robert talked about how, you know, in the 1950s people joined bowling leagues,
right?
And you would have this league.
He was really, we talked about Pig Lebowski, but you have these leagues
where you bowl with other people,
you see them every week.
It would be cross sections of people
from different wealth categories,
different political backgrounds and so on.
Nowadays you don't get bowling leagues,
people are bowling alone.
Or maybe this was his book in the late 90s, early 2000s.
Nowadays I think we have bowling on Wii
or bowling on like PlayStation or something.
And people don't even go to work anymore.
I mean, everyone's at home on Zoom
and that gets back to the digital aspect of it.
But having these places where you don't have to spend money,
where people know your name,
where you have cross sections of society,
these things are going away.
And he kind of charts from the 1950s today,
kind of changes in this.
When he wrote his book in the 2000s,
it was just the dawn of the internet.
So he kind of talked about how maybe television was causing this. I think if you look at kind
of the way we engage with TV and all the media that you and I create and the things that
we get online now, it's easier to stay home and entertain yourself than it was back in
the day. The reason I love Robert's work though, is that this could be just like a really depressing
conclusion about bowling alone. Like from the 1950s to today, everything's going to crap and social connections going
down and third places have gone away.
But he actually looked at the history before the 1950s.
And what you find is that from the beginning of the century, from the late 1800s to the
1950s, people were actually creating these institutions that we were really atomized
society, really individualist society, really polarized society, and a society of really unequal wealth distribution where
it was the robber barons who controlled everything and so on.
And people kind of got together and created these local, in real life, in person communities,
and it really changed the structure of society and probably changed the structure of happiness.
And so his, what might seem like a depressing conclusion
has a positive upswing.
In fact, there's a new book called the upswing
that he talks about this, which is like,
we were at a yucky place in terms of social connection
and community before we fixed it.
And with the right structures,
we could have the intent to rebuild
those kinds of structures today too.
Life finds a way and the pendulum has to swing back
because we need it, right?
And even if we're not conscious of what we're lacking,
we will intuitively start to build those things
because deep down we know that this is important
to living a meaningful life.
I think that's true.
If we can get over our misconceptions,
I think we can build structures for ourselves
that make us a lot happier.
But I think we can also build a world filled with structures
that would make everyone happier too.
I have this question and I find myself reluctant
to even ask it,
because I'm not sure that there's even an answer to it.
And if there is, it's probably a four hour podcast,
you know, to answer it.
But I guess I'm curious, maybe just on a top level,
how you think about all of these tools
and ways to engender happiness in one's life
for the person who is suffering from
maybe something a little bit less than a, you know,
mild mental health disorder.
I mean, as a psychologist,
what do you say to the person who is,
because of childhood trauma
or because of a certain particular type of upbringing
when they were young is caught in a mindset pattern
or a behavioral pattern that makes it very difficult to see their lives clearly
and make these decisions effectively
that can change their behavior
and in turn their relationship with happiness.
Yeah, I think this is, I'm glad you asked this
because I think this is an important question
because when we talk about these kind of rewire bowls
or rewirements, we can
assume that they're the whole answer.
And I think it depends on the degree of problem that we're experiencing.
Again, sometimes I can use a physical analogy when we're talking about mental health.
So let's say I go into my doctor and I say, hey, doctor, I'm experiencing a little bit
of inflammation, some high blood pressure.
What should I do?
The doctor will be like, well, eat right, get on the treadmill, do this thing.
If I walk into my doctor and clutching my chest and saying,
I'm having a acute cardiac arrest right now,
the doctor would be like, well, eat right.
They would like clear and do all the things, right?
There would be an urgent medical intervention
for an urgent situation.
I think the same is true for our mental health, right?
If you're feeling a little bit of languishing,
things are going right, but I'm not as happy as I could be, all these rewire bowls are for health, right? If you're feeling a little bit of languishing, things are going right, but I'm not as happy as I could be,
all these rewire pulls are for you, right?
They're the thing you can do.
If you're acutely suicidal,
if you're actively in the middle of a panic attack,
I'm not going to be like,
well, go out and find the delights in the world.
You need a more urgent medical intervention for that, right?
But just like in the physical health case, right?
Hopefully, my, keep walking into the doctor, acute cardiac arrest, I get through it and I'm on the other
side. At that point, the doctor might say, you know, now that you're in recovery, I think you
need to look at your eating patterns. You need to get a little bit more exercise and so on.
I think the same is true for our mental health, right? Once you're through an acute crisis,
once you're like working on something that's maybe a long-standing issue for what you need
professional help or if you're acute issue, which you need treatment for, like once you're like working on something that's maybe a long-standing issue for what you need professional help
or if you're acute issue, which you need treatment for.
Like once you're on the other side of it,
I think all these strategies then come into play.
I think if these strategies is almost like
preventative mental health, right?
Like almost like the project to make sure
you can kind of get back to equilibrium,
but they might not be the best immediate intervention
if what you need is urgent care
or really serious kind of mental health support.
I guess I'm imagining a situation
in which it's not necessarily urgent,
but there's an underlying wound.
And that wound is the reason you're behaving
the way that you behave.
And you can do all of the rewirements and rewireables
And you can do all of the rewirements and rewireables
and try to improve your behaviors. And that may move you in a forward direction,
but ultimately, if you don't heal that underlying wound,
like you're still dealing with symptoms, I guess.
And so at some point, you have to look inward
and kind of contend with that.
If you truly want to make the magic leap
to the happiness that alludes you.
Yeah, and I think again, the physical analogy there
would be, you know, maybe you have like a heart,
underlying heart condition or just some genetic thing
that right, like even if you're doing all the-
Or just you have like, you got a calcium scan
and the score wasn't so good.
Exactly.
You're not gonna die of a heart attack tomorrow,
but there's a situation looming on the horizon for you.
I think sometimes when we talk about these strategies,
we think, well, that's the only thing
Laurie thinks you should do.
I think these things can work in conjunction
with going to therapeutic practice, right?
A lot of the strategies we're talking about
are basically CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy,
where you're changing your thought patterns
to change your behavior and your mindset.
And sometimes that's hard to do on your own, especially if there's deep seated stuff.
Like there's a reason that some of these therapeutic practices work.
But ultimately what they are is being curious, right?
Being curious with the help of some supportive person who can maybe help you see in if seeing
it is hard.
But then once you get curious, you're going to have homework where you try to change your
thought patterns.
You're going to change your behaviors in the face of this.
And so if you're struggling to do it yourself,
it might be that what you need is some therapeutic help
in part because like that can kind of get you closer
to some of the answers.
It can maybe make it the curiosity part easier
if what you have to be curious about is not, you know,
some low grade thing, but some deep like Sherlock Holmes
mystery of what's going on with your mental health.
This has been great, thank you.
Thanks so much for having me on the show.
I'm not done yet though.
Oh no.
I got one last one for you, Lori.
We're gonna get you to Santa Barbara though.
I think it would be great to just round this out
with one message about happiness or a concrete thought
or action that you would like everyone to hear.
Yeah.
I think when things are feeling the most unhappy, the most frustrating, just remember that all
the science shows you have agency over it.
There are concrete things you can do to change your behavior, change your mindset, to regulate
your negative emotions that you can learn the skills to do.
And so even when it feels bad, remember there are strategies you can use to feel happier.
Beautiful.
I love it.
I'm happier now than I was at the beginning of the podcast.
I should have given you the scale before and after.
You feel good?
I'm happy.
Good.
This was great.
It was a long time coming, like we said at the outset, but I feel like we did the thing. That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation.
To learn more about today's guests,
including links and resources related
to everything discussed today,
visit the episode page at richroll.com
where you can find the entire podcast archive,
my books, Finding Ultra,
Voicing Change and the Plant Power Way.
If you'd like to support the podcast,
the easiest and most impactful thing you can do
is to subscribe to the show on Apple podcasts,
on Spotify and on YouTube
and leave a review and or comment.
And sharing the show or your favorite episode
with friends or on social media is of course awesome
and very helpful.
This show just wouldn't be possible
without the help of our amazing sponsors
who keep this podcast running wild and free.
To check out all their amazing offers,
head to richroll.com slash sponsors.
And finally, for podcast updates,
special offers on books and other subjects, please
subscribe to our newsletter, which you can find on the footer of any page at richroll.com.
Today's show was produced and engineered by Jason Camiolo.
The video edition of the podcast was created by Blake Curtis and Morgan McRae with assistance
from our creative director, Dan Drake.
Content management by Shana Savoy,
copywriting by Ben Pryor.
And of course, our theme music was created
all the way back in 2012 by Tyler Pyatt,
Trapper Pyatt, and Harry Mathis.
Appreciate the love, love the support.
See you back here soon.
Peace, plants.
Namaste.