The School of Greatness - 3 SECRETS To Unlocking INNER PEACE (Find Your Higher Purpose Today!)
Episode Date: November 17, 2023Joining us this week are three extraordinary experts who share their invaluable insights and wisdom. You will learn the power of mindfulness, meditation, and self-compassion as we explore techniques t...o unlock inner peace. Discover how to overcome mental obstacles and find clarity in the chaos of life. Tune in as we delve into the depths of self-discovery and embark on a path towards a more peaceful and balanced life. Don't miss this episode that promises to elevate your mental well-being and guide you on your journey to greatness.Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar is a globally recognized spiritual leader, humanitarian, and peacemaker, touching the lives of more than 450 million people worldwide. Born in Tamil Nadu, Southern India, Sri Sri was considered a gifted child. By age four, he could already recite the Bhagavad Gita, an ancient Sanskrit text. As a young boy, he studied Vedic literature with a close associate of Mahatma Gandhi. At seventeen, he had already graduated from college with a degree in Physics. He combines the ancient teachings of India with Western learning.Marianne Williamson is a renowned author, spiritual teacher, and political activist who has touched the lives of countless listeners with her wisdom and insights. In this enlightening conversation, you will learn about Marianne's journey to self-discovery and how she has harnessed the power of spirituality to make a positive impact on the world.Diego Perez is a meditator and #1 New York Times bestselling author who is widely known on social media through his pen name, Yung Pueblo. Online he has an audience of over 3 million people. He has sold over 1 million books worldwide that have been translated into over 25 languages. His writing focuses on the power of self-healing, creating healthy relationships, and the wisdom that comes when we truly work on knowing ourselves. Diego's fourth book, The Way Forward, will be released on October 10th, 2023.In this episode you will learnThe importance of meditating and how you tap into your meditative power.How to find spiritual abundance.How to begin feeling happy when you’re overwhelmed with stress.Why it’s crucial to find a higher purpose in your life.Why forgiveness is so important for bringing peace and abundance into your life.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1528For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960FULL EPISODES:Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar: https://link.chtbl.com/1216-podMarianne Williamson: https://link.chtbl.com/1358-podDiego Perez: https://link.chtbl.com/1512-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your positive mindset itself creates such a positive vibration around you and helps other people.
You can only give what you have.
Nobody expects you to give what you don't have.
But whatever you have, you can definitely share with others.
Absolutely, yeah.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Welcome to this special masterclass. We've brought some of the top experts in the world to help you unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today.
It's going to be powerful, so let's go ahead and dive in.
What about certain people that maybe don't feel like they're receiving anything in life they're not receiving
any gifts or support they're struggling um and they don't feel like they have anything to give
they really feel like i'm in lack i don't have anything to give as well how can they turn that
situation into joy and happiness my dear you can at least give a smile. Right. I agree. You can say a few nice words to people of comfort.
Can't you smile?
What is big in just smiling when everything is okay,
when things are falling apart,
if you can stand up and smile,
I know I can manage.
I know things will pass.
That smile, that positive vibration from you
amidst all the troubled water itself is a hope.
Your positive mindset itself creates such a positive vibration around you and helps other people.
Absolutely.
So you don't have to be giving something if you don't have.
You can only give what you have.
Nobody expects you to give what you don't have. You can only give what you have. Nobody expects you to give what you don't have. But whatever you have, you can definitely share with others.
Absolutely, yeah.
This is what we see in some of the poor communities. They may have very little, but they share
with others.
Right. And they feel a lot of love and joy and
community and connection, fulfillment. How does someone develop an
abundant mindset? Something where they have they believe that abundance of love
and joy and opportunities can come to them versus staying stuck in a limit of what they're capable of creating or achieving.
One should first of all become aware of the reality in the world. Get out of our little
well that we are into and see the ocean of humanity,
where it is,
and compare with that,
and you'll see you'll be grateful.
You are at least much better off
than so many people
who don't even have the basic things
that you have.
Right.
That itself will give you
a breathing space.
See?
Feel better about yourself.
Number one.
Second,
again here I would say
meditation will help one
to get out of grief
and sense of lack.
You know?
It's just a state of mind.
You can continue to feel lack
even if you are a billionaire. It's true. You know, it's just a state of mind. You can continue to feel like,
even if you are a billionaire.
It's true.
It can continue with you forever in your life.
So here, meditation can bring that inner sense of abundance.
And when you have that inner sense of abundance, I tell you, abundance will start flowing to you
from outside as well.
What should that feeling be
inside of us
in order to feel abundant?
What does that feeling
look like, experience?
There's no,
it should be this way.
Your feelings are feelings,
just be with it.
Those feelings come because
you have certain
misconceptions in your mind,
wrong notions in your mind,
or stress,
too much stress,
then everything appears
to be very bleak.
Yes.
And you don't enjoy
even simple things,
you know. So, I feel stress appears to be very bleak. Yes. And you don't enjoy even simple things. You know?
So,
I feel stress
is the biggest enemy
of mankind.
Really?
Because stress
destroys the relationship.
It destroys
your own peace of mind.
Your health.
Your health.
Yeah.
And your communication
goes for a toss.
You react more.
React.
But it seems so hard for people to let go of stress, to just let go of it.
No, because nobody taught them how to get out of this.
Interesting.
Neither at school, nor at home.
No one teaches us how we can be free from stress.
We're seeing how to be stressful,
but not how to get out of stress.
Get out of stressful.
We see other people stressed,
and we're mimicking that,
but not how to be peaceful.
Yeah.
Because this education is missing.
That is where I feel it's very important.
Now, intellectually, you know,
oh, I shouldn't be upset.
I shouldn't be annoyed.
I shouldn't lose my temper. All this intellectually, you know, as a concept, you know, oh, I shouldn't be upset, I shouldn't be annoyed, I shouldn't lose my temper. All this intellectually, you know,
as a concept, you know,
you understand all that.
But in practical life,
it doesn't seem to become a reality.
It doesn't translate into reality.
Your thoughts are different,
your actions are different.
This is where the breathing techniques
and Sudarshan kriya sky
techniques all come in so handy yes because it helps when it gives tools and technique for people
to you know just let go yes all those and feel the freshness from within how often do you feel stressed or angry today
with all the wisdom
that you have?
Do you ever feel stressed
or angry?
Do I look stressed?
Not right now.
Do you ever have a moment
since I were like,
I don't like that person
did this thing
or said this
or does it ever like
just a little bit
and then you go back
to your...
It will be so hard
to believe
but it is the truth
that I don't get
this at all.
That's got to feel amazing.
It's got to feel
peaceful then.
How much does
the ability
of someone
needing to learn
to heal
support them
in overcoming stress?
If they still have
emotional or physical
wounds
from the past
or memories
from the past that hurt them.
That need to be healed.
And again here, this will help you to heal.
Our breathing technique, meditation helps you to just come out of it.
And that's what we have been doing in this country for all the war veterans.
You know, they had tried all psychological things and then they have seen doctors and
PTSD syndromes. 8,000 of war veterans in America alone have undergone these programs, healing
breath workshops. And you must hear their experiences. It's so heartwarming.
You know, the mothers and the wives of those people,
they've said,
we got our son back.
You know,
these same war veterans
who just hide in their basement
or not have any family life.
And the trauma of war,
wounds of war, the psychological wounds they had undergone,
moral wounds, were very difficult to heal.
But just in a few days' time, three, four days' time, they're completely out of it.
Wow.
So a gentleman even made a movie out of it.
Almost Sunrise is a movie they made on our technique,
how this has helped many war veterans.
It's a very interesting movie.
I feel like it's hard to be peaceful if we haven't learned to heal.
It's hard to not react and be stressed if there's still a wound inside of us.
Absolutely, absolutely right.
That is where wisdom
combined with techniques
would help them to get on.
Right.
Wisdom, techniques,
and integrating these techniques
consistently.
Yeah.
And I'm not saying,
oh, you have to practice
for a long time,
then you will find the effect.
No.
Within few days,
within few sittings,
three, four sittings, you can find the change. Yes. The healing is so fast. No. Within few days, within few sittings, three, four
sittings, you
can find the
change.
Yes.
The healing
is so fast.
Yes.
So at some
point, sometime
we even call
this healing
breath workshop
when we
started.
But then
healing breath
means its
scope is very
limited, only
for those who
need.
But many
don't even
realize they need these exercises,
you know, to be more happier.
Right.
So we change it into a happiness program.
That's good. I like it. Yeah, I like that.
You talked about the education system
and what we aren't teaching our kids at home and in schools.
If you could require, in a hypothetical world,
if you could ask that teachers or schools teach only three things to support the youth,
what would those three lessons be? Teach them how they can manage their emotions,
number one. Number two, we have to teach them how they can accept others and how to create a very cordial atmosphere, make more new friends in their schools and
colleges, wherever they are. Third thing is to be resilient.
You know, failures come in life.
You know, you get fights.
You get into some unpleasant situations.
And how to snap out of it
without hanging on to it in your mind
and worrying about it.
Going along with that,
I think those are beautiful. Going along with that, I think those are beautiful.
Going along with that, I believe one of the biggest fears for people is the fear of rejection.
The fear of other people's opinions and rejection. How does someone learn to be okay with others
rejecting them, with nasty comments online, with people saying no to
them over and over? How does someone learn to still love and appreciate themselves in the face
of rejection? You need inner strength for that. That's where the journey we think will help you a
lot. Yeah. You need inner strength to be able to be solid and not worry about what others say
not to be football of others opinion
for that you need that
inner strength
it's a gradual growth
you can't say it can happen right tomorrow
after listening to our podcast
no, for that they need
to do a little bit of meditation
a little bit of wisdom
and all, let's still be the journey with it that they need to do a little bit of meditation, a little bit of wisdom,
and all, let's still be the journey with it. Yeah, for sure.
But why do you think people hold on
to the opinions of others so much?
Why do we care so much about what?
Because you don't have a bigger context about life.
You don't see all the thoughts,
all the opinions of people are changing,
including your own.
You have some opinion about somebody, and then it just changed very fast, you know, in a few days or in a few months, right?
Your opinions do change.
So you must give others also the freedom to change their opinions.
It's true. And we don't have to think their opinion is
is right.
It's etched in stone and same all the time.
It's just a ripple on the surface of water.
And you have no control over that.
That's true.
And the bigger context to your life,
again, and more being conscious of
the different treasure of wealth
that you have,
the beautiful qualities you possess
as a human being,
will help you
to overcome those things.
Broadening your perspective about life.
Correct.
I've heard you talk about, you know,
we have so many thoughts every single day in our minds, right?
Thousands, millions of thoughts a day.
What are the thoughts that we should be trying to focus on the most
consistently when we have a negative thought?
How can we replace it with something else?
I feel you shouldn't fight with any thoughts.
The more you resist,
the more those thoughts will come to you.
There is a skill in dealing with the thought,
turning the negative into positive.
That skill is what meditation is all about.
And if you are stressed,
however you struggle to get rid of negative thoughts,
it is impossible for you to get rid of them.
If you don't get rid of stress
and try to only manage the thought,
it is not going to work.
Root cause of all this negativity is the stress.
You get rid of stress and you will see
naturally you will see naturally
you will have only positive.
Right. And if you start to heal, you'll start to get rid of the stress.
Absolutely.
Yeah. Is it possible to be happy and hurt at the same time? Have like a wound emotionally
or psychologically or physically? Is it possible to be happy at the same time that
you're dealing with this hurt? Maybe partially. There could be some more. But to be really,
totally happy, you have to get rid of the wounds. The wounds. And I don't see it as impossible.
Right. I see it as very much possible.
Even if they take a little bit of inner journey,
make that inner journey,
meditate a little bit,
have a broader context to life,
and serve in society
in whatever capacity they can.
Yeah.
What do you think people struggle with the most
that you've seen over the last few months in society?
Is it dealing with...
See, post-pandemic, what I see is
there is aggression on one side
and depression on the other side.
People are swinging between
these two
extremes.
At the
drop of a
hat,
people lose
their tempo
and become
so aggressive
on one
side.
On the
other side,
there's
depression
and suicidal
tendencies
and feeling
bad about
themselves.
This is
also prevalent.
And both I feel is not good for the health of a society,
of an individual.
So we need to get rid of these two extremities.
What's the root cause of aggression and depression?
Again, lack of robust mental health.
And this is the talk of the town now everywhere.
Mental health, we talk about it.
But we are not thinking about remedies
which are time-tested,
like breathing, meditation, yoga,
and all these things.
Nature.
Nature walk.
And we are only thinking about
what type of medication we can stuff ourselves with and steroids that you take.
And then, you know, you blow to yourself even more.
And I think the lifestyle changes really to adopt to ourself.
Why are people so influenced
on these things
or on things that really don't matter
about the journey within?
Fancy things,
superficial things,
you know,
more and more and more.
Why are people so focused
on these things in life
versus feeling peaceful and happy?
See, nature of mind is to wanting something new.
Mind always goes for something new.
Right.
And fashion and more.
But heart always longs for something old.
You take pride in an old friend, not in a new friend.
Right.
And you take pride in having
the latest model of car a computer or a watch right that that's the latest thing
that the mind wants so life is like that life is a combination of old and new
like the roots are old but the shoots come new.
Right.
And we have to balance them.
And if you don't attend to the roots at all,
there is no life.
That's true.
How do you balance that
in your life
by having the mission
that you're on
and dealing with
everything else that's happening?
Life is already balanced.
You don't have to make struggle,
make any attempt to balance it.
It's been like this for me.
Right.
Because I want nothing for myself.
What's that?
I want nothing for myself.
Right.
I'm here to give and whatever I have, I have.
Yeah.
That's it.
We've all desensitized ourselves too much to what pain feels like.
So do you think when we're going through an experience of pain or suffering or whatever,
we're going through depression, that we should feel the feelings fully?
Or how should we experience that time? And how long should we be in that pain before we're like you know what enough is enough let's
like get out of this crap and start thinking positively very good point well once again there
is that symbol of the 40 years in the desert the three days between the crucifixion and the
resurrection and i saw this i've seen this in my life. The congressional campaign was an example,
but other times. And if you're honest, when you really take a look at yourself, this is the truth.
Let's say you know that I went through something painful. And you say, hey, Marianne, I'm really
sorry I heard about your divorce or I heard about your banquet, whatever. And I'm like, thanks so
much. And you say, you know, let's go have a drink. Let's talk about it. And you're really there for me. But if six months later you see me again
and I'm telling this story,
you're not going to naturally feel like,
oh, let's go out and talk about it.
You're going to actually be a little repelled.
You can feel it in your gut.
And other people can feel it too.
That point where processing becomes milking it.
Talking about it becomes spewing.
Being a victim for too long, whatever, right?
And other people can feel it too.
And when you're in that holy tomb time,
as my friend would say,
people have a natural,
hey, I'm sorry, you know, heard about that.
I'm here for you.
Conscious people.
And when somebody's,
it's become their calling card, their victim story, now you're doing too much. I'm here for you. Conscious people. And when somebody's, it's become their calling
card, their victim story. Now you're doing too much. I know he hurt you, but you're badmouthing
him in public. No, that's not cool. And that's how. And also, you know, people talk about,
but at what point do you need medication because it's gone on too long? Here we are,
everybody's talking about the wisdom of the body, the genius of the body. Everybody's doing muscle
testing because the body's so smart. Why don't we count tears as part of that? If the body is so intelligent,
why are we assuming that it's not intelligent about how many tears you have to cry?
So if you have 44, when you say, how long does it go on? However long it has to go on,
if you're conscious, if you're meditating, if you're working on forgiveness, if you're doing
your spiritual work, that's a chapter on forgiveness. There's a chapter on relationships to do our work. And then if you have 45 tears to cry, 35 is not enough. And if you,
and if you do a pharmaceutical bypass or whatever you do to self-medicate, to, to, uh, to numb
yourself, to distract yourself, it's in there. I mean, even talking about the campaign, I can talk
about it. I don't think I could talk about it.
You know, because the only way to clear it is to move through it in life.
And then there are lessons learned and hopefully ways that you can be a better person.
What do you think or how long of time is the longest time you've held on to not forgiving someone else or yourself for something that's happened in your life?
The lawyer who threw me under the bus and cost me a lot of money.
I had a hard time with that.
When was this?
Around 15 years ago.
Yeah.
How long were you holding on to that?
It was a hard one.
We're talking years,
we're talking months,
we're talking years. Yeah, I was bitter.
Decade?
Yeah.
Did you finally forgive?
Yeah.
See, once you know spiritual principle,
spiritual principle,
certainly as it's articulated
in something like The Course in Miracles,
spiritual principle certainly as it's articulated in something like the course of miracles says that you are 100 responsible for your experience you and i might both go through
the same experience but how we contextualize it will determine its ultimate effect like i was
saying at one of my lectures the other night that i see more marriages break up not because
of infidelity but because of the other person's
inability to forgive the infidelity.
Makes sense.
Someone was talking about we had a great marriage for 25 years.
He went out.
He had an affair with a girl.
They did it around four or five times.
It's been two years.
He wants to remain in the marriage.
He's really sorry.
I can't forgive him.
25 years.
Yeah.
I mean, so, right?
And fortunately, she got that and she saw that too.
Forgiveness means that you are at choice.
What are you going to focus on?
Are you going to focus on the person's mistake or are you going to focus on anything they
ever did right?
Now, to the extent, the way the mind operates, to the extent to which I'm focused on what
you did to me, to that extent, I will be emotionally at
the effect of what you did to me. Only if I'm willing to take the hook out of you will the
hook be out of me. Now, in terms of that lawyer, I wrote a book called The Law of Divine Compensation.
And that book is about the fact that whenever there's a diminishment on the material plane,
the universal substance will compensate. It's like if there's a diminishment on the material plane, the universal substance will compensate.
It's like if there's a hole in the ocean,
it doesn't matter how big the hole,
it doesn't matter what the shape of the hole,
the ocean will fill it up.
So from a metaphysical perspective,
the Course in Miracles says,
God has the answer to every problem
the moment the problem occurs.
So that money, I had earned that money.
So that lawyer, by doing what he did, and I think
it was, and many people go through this, and I think a lot of women go through this, you think
the men in suits are the ones who are going to protect you, and the men in suits are the ones
who, like, hello, awakening to that is one of the, not every, not all of them but so um so from a course in miracles perspective if the money was
mine if i had earned that money the universe it was already programmed programmed into the universe
for that money to come back but miracles can only occur where there is love so unforgiveness and
withhold of forgiveness blocks the miracle, deflects the miracle.
So the bitterness in my personality was blocking the probability.
For it to come back.
For it to come back, to go on with your life.
And more than that will come back to you.
Be in abundance.
You are letting him.
Right.
The only real abundance of love, all the abundance that matches the frequency of your need and your ultimate desire for your good, for yourself and all living things is already programmed. So
your unforgiveness and your bitterness, as well as your own lack of atonement about your own mistakes
blocks the flow of the universe that would otherwise bring you all good.
So what was happening in this however many years period of this lack of forgiveness
for you? Were you being abundant or were other challenges coming up or did this?
Well, yes, it was just one of, you know, many situations in my life, but it just came up for
me because you asked what was the longest that you ever, you know, once you know, spiritual
principle, that doesn't mean you automatically become an enlightened master
and you never go to those places.
But when you go to them, you know that you went to them.
And, oh, I know what it was.
It's interesting that you say that because I thought of something from before when I
said I couldn't remember.
The Buddha said that one of his four noble truths is that nothing in the material world can provide anything but temporary happiness.
So the entire social construct.
Can I say it one more time?
The things of the material world can provide only temporary happiness.
Okay.
Okay.
So when you apply that to our culture, you see that the whole thing is a setup for despair.
Because half the time we're struggling and grasping because our whole thing is you can
make it, you can make it happen. Figure out what would make you happy. You can have that. You can
make that dream come true. You can have that house. You can have that career. You can have that money.
You can have that sex. You can have that relationship. So half the time we're in struggle
and grasping, trying to make it happy because that's when we're going to be happy. Then you get there. And as Buddha said, it's only temporary.
So inevitably the fairy dust is going to rub off the idol. And then the rest of your time,
you're in despair over the fact that what you thought was going to make you happy,
didn't make you happy. Yeah. That was my whole childhood, essentially.
Exactly. I was like 25.
Yeah. I was always striving for something,
achieving and being like, why am I miserable now?
Yeah, well, I saw that in my mind the other day.
I got a call that my book
had reached the New York Times bestseller list.
I was very happy.
You're number five
on the New York Times bestseller list.
So for about five minutes,
I was like, woohoo!
Let's go have a drink.
And then what?
No, no, no, no, no.
Yes, exactly.
The ego mind is insatiable.
Maybe it's just a spike.
Maybe I'm just going to be on for one week.
And by the way, who's one through four?
Why am I not number one?
Right.
And how are you going to be?
I've been number one before.
Why about this time?
I didn't quite go there, but I did go to, what if I'm off next week?
And I just saw that's the way the ego mind works.
It's insatiable.
It has no capacity for enough. It has no capacity for,
I'm happy because I'm alive. I'm happy because I can give love and I can receive love, which is
the only source of happiness. Should we be ambitious then? Well, okay. Does the embryo
have to be ambitious to become a baby? Does the embryo have to say, I will become a baby. I will
become a baby. Does an acorn have to say, I can strategize becoming an oak tree? Does the bud
have to say, I know I can become a blossom if I work hard enough? Nature works through us all.
Nature is intentional. Nature is intentional that your heart beat. It is intentional that your lungs
breathe. It is intentional that the bud blossom. It is intentional.
And so when you are in your self-actualized state,
which is not trying to make it happen,
but allowing it to happen,
nature is ambitious through you
because nature is intentional that all things rise
to their highest level of creative possibility.
And our struggle mode tightens us.
You can feel it in your body. It puts you in a...
So how do you focus every single day on not being tight or struggling?
Meditation.
Is that a daily practice for you every morning?
Oh, absolutely. I'm a Course in Miracles student, so I do the workbook of the course.
I also do transcendental meditation, although I'm not daily with that like I am with the workbook
of the course. There are many different paths of meditation.
People doing yoga and meditation and prayer.
A serious spiritual path, though.
Because a serious spiritual path, which is a path of relinquishing the thought system that dominates the world, the thought system of fear.
And accepting instead a thought system based on love.
So I'm not an enlightened master.
I'm not beyond going to those places.
But it's like the whole thing about the bestseller list.
I was able to laugh at myself mightily.
I was able to guffaw at myself once I saw myself going there.
And then you surrender it to God and say,
take this false ambition away from me and this craziness.
It's only here to hurt me.
What would you say are some non-negotiables for you every single day?
It sounds like meditation is one.
Are there a few other things you're like,
I must do this every single day. Otherwise I like meditation is one. Are there a few other things you're like, I must do this every single day otherwise I'm going to feel
the effects of whatever.
What's non-negotiable?
Like I must get a certain amount of sleep
or eat a certain way.
I must monitor myself
and I must not make excuses for myself.
What excuses do you make
or have to make?
Well, I had a right to be angry.
I had a right to be angry.
No, you have...
You did this to me.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, we have a right to feel our feelings. You have a right, of course, you have a right to be angry. No, you have- You did this to me. Yeah, yeah. You know, we have a right to feel our feelings.
You have a right.
Of course, you have a right to feel whatever you feel.
But maybe instead of saying I have a right to be angry, I take that back.
I'm not saying that you don't have a right to be angry, but I never have a right to express
it as an attack on another human being.
That I think that-
You mean to attack back.
Yes.
Gotcha.
We are too emotionally self-indulgent
in our culture. We have this feeling, well, if I feel it, I have the right to say it. If I feel it,
I have the right to do it. And this is a, is a form of self-sabotage. You know, your ego mind
is your self-hatred masquerading as your self-love. You know, some of the most selfish
self-sabotaging things we do these days, we call self-care setting a boundary. Well,
there are healthy boundaries and there is self-care but a lot of times the ego mind will use that
to justify what 20 years ago we just could have called selfish jerk behavior for example what
do you mean well i need to tell you that what you just did absolutely did not work for me
well that's not going to open your heart do you you know what? I might say, may I, I have something I'd like to discuss.
Is this a good time for you?
I mean, there might be feedback.
There might be, but there is an appropriate way to talk about it.
You know, sometimes these days we say, well, I communicated.
I needed to communicate my truth.
But the word communication has the word commune inside it.
So if I didn't commune when I was communicating, I actually didn't communicate
because if it was, if I talked to you in a way that felt like an attack to you rather than
genuinely share. No, you're going to, you're not going to hear me. You're defensive or regarded.
So there's a line in the course where it says, it is your job to tell your brother he is right,
even when he is wrong. That doesn't mean tell him he didn't do something foolish when he did, but to affirm
your basic value as a human being. And if you feel that from me, then within that space, you know,
this is just plain non, you know, nonviolent communication skill. So when you say what's
non-negotiable for me, and I'm not, you know, I'm not an enlightened master. I don't get it
right all the time. But what is, what I think I am pretty good at is,
you know, like that line,
tell the truth as soon as you know it.
I think I'm pretty good at telling myself the truth
as soon as I know it.
Like, wow, you really blew it just now.
That was really dumb.
Apologize, send an email.
Try to monitor yourself.
You know, the ego mind wants to monitor you or you.
How did you two?
Never wants to monitor ourselves.
And are you pretty active?
Do you do yoga or some type of physical workout practice?
Yeah.
What is it, yoga?
I do yoga.
And I have become less religious with my cardio recently.
And I have made a commitment that when I go home this week, I'm getting back to all that.
All right.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'm 63 years old.
What?
No.
Wow.
And some stuff that's-
That's impressive.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Some of the stuff that's cosmetic when you're younger becomes like no you have to do this
it's not even like just to look
okay
stay here
what are you most grateful for in your life
recently my daughter
yeah I have a fantastic daughter
how old is she 26
yeah what are you most proud
about with her she's happy
she's contributive.
She's achieved.
She's well adjusted.
My only real regret in life is that I didn't have more kids.
Yeah.
Do you have children?
No kids.
Not yet.
It's nothing like it.
Really?
Everything else pales in comparison.
What's the biggest lesson you learned about your life from having her?
It's just how beautiful life is.
You know, not everything else is.
I mean, love is what matters.
You know, everything else is like, what are we talking about here?
You know, we have a society in which, and I talk about this in the book,
people pay more attention to taking care of their car than taking care of their relationships.
You know, if you could buy a Bentley, you could buy a Rolls Royce, but you're going
to take it off the lot.
You're still going to have to put gas in it.
You're still going to have to maintain it.
The fact that that's why it's high maintenance, because it's a great car.
But we expect our relationships to just take care of themselves and not be such a problem.
I have to do so much. No, that's kind of the point in relationships as well as everything else. You
get what you put into it. You know, sometimes I'll say, uh, at my lectures, I'll say, I don't want
anybody to raise your hand or anything because I don't want to put you on a spot. But if you're in
love or if you're married, did you pray for your partner's happiness this morning?
Did you wake up this morning and before he or she left the house and said,
just want to remind you, you are so fucking fantastic.
And I so believe in you.
And you are so hot.
And you are so, did you, did you, you know,
we always talk about how important it is that we build children's self-esteem.
At what age do we stop needing that?
And also we talk about how it's important to tell your children to say their prayers. At what age should we stop needing that? And also we talk about how it's important to tell your children to say their prayers.
At what age should we stop doing that?
Right?
We're so clear that children, you must build their self-esteem.
Well, you could use the help too, and so could I.
Yeah.
And it's a full-time, you know, monitoring your own life, your own mind,
being vigilant on behalf of your own best self, downloading the best version of yourself, atoning for your own mistakes. You know, a lot of the pain that we feel when we go through difficult times in our lives is, you know, I messed up and if only I had done it different, etc.
You can't numb yourself or distract yourself from that pain.
you can't numb yourself or distract yourself from that pain in all the religious traditions spiritual traditions catholicism there's confession in judaism the holiest day of the
year is yom kippur or day of atonement in alcoholics anonymous you have to take a fearless
moral inventory you have to admit the exact nature of your wrongs you have to look at that. I blew it. I made a mistake. And atone. Atone for
that. It's a spiritual. It's not self-will. It's you give this to God. I did this. I get it.
And I atone for that error. It's like a cosmic reset button. And then the only way you can get
yourself respect back is if you do something that would make you respect yourself. Like,
I'm going to be different this time. I'm not going to be that way next time.
I'm going to be a better person today.
And if you really see as your life's purpose
to actualize and be the best you can be
and rise to the occasion in every situation,
including your relationships,
and to be really present,
you don't have time for all that other caca
and craziness and criticism and blame and victimization.
If you filled your house with light,
darkness can't come in.
And are you, you're not married anymore, right?
No.
No, are you in a relationship now?
No, I'm not.
Well, tougher question.
Okay, we'll leave it for after the interview.
Who was the most influential person in your life growing up?
My father.
Why?
My father was a magical character.
Although, you know, as life has gone on, I think my mother, I think I undervalued my mother in some way.
So I realize now that the answer is both my parents.
But my father was a magical, charismatic person.
Do you feel like we can, as human beings,
find peace if we have pain, sadness,
or darkness inside of us
and we're always running away from it or numbing it
no there's no way i think you're just it's it's almost like you're being hunted you know like
you're you're running but like your emotions are hunting you they're trying to like find you in
some way or another to get you to acknowledge them and try to process them because how can you walk
around with such a heavy load and i mean that, that was like the, you know, fast forward
a year later, like I stopped all the hard drugs, started changing my habits, started eating a
little bit better, started exercising, started examining my relationships. And, you know, it was
sad because I started noticing how shallow all of my relationships were. And, um, but when I started meditating and I was even more so had to practice being with my emotions, I went through that, you know, it was a silent 10 day meditation course. First one I had ever done. And it was so difficult. But at the end of it, I felt like, I felt like my mind had lost like a hundred pounds.
Holy cow. You know? And I was like, how do I like, my mind feels better. And even though like I barely finished this course,
but it was, that's when it showed me, I was like, oh, you can actually heal yourself. And that,
that's I think the reason why I'm here now. Wow. What, what do you think happens if we
never process and acknowledge our emotions? I think repetition. You keep repeating, you keep sort of living through,
going through the motion,
and you end up slowly just accumulating more and more density
because you're just repeating the same reactive habit patterns
over and over again.
And we don't realize that every reaction,
it creates an imprint on the mind,
and it predisposes the mind to react in the same way,
to perceive in the same way. So you can just get denser and denser and denser.
Yeah. And I think these reactions also cause our nervous system to then follow suit and react and
be on more high alert, which causes chronic stress, chronic illness. Exactly. And disease in the body as well,
when our mind is not able to address the pains of the past.
Yeah.
And process it correctly.
So you get into meditation,
then you do a 10-day silent meditation retreat,
and then afterwards, are you all in two hours a day,
or do you get away from it for a while and come back later?
Yeah, it took me a while. It took me like two years to start meditating two hours a day or do you get away from it for a while come back later yeah it takes it took me a while it took me like two years to start meditating two hours
a day where I would just I didn't understand what was happening in the
meditation course like I I didn't quite understand why it was working but I knew
I felt better right like I was like do my best to follow the instructions and
meditation instructions and I said that was the July of 2012 was the first one.
And when I realized that I felt better, I ended up signing up for another one, two months later.
A 10 day one.
Yeah. So I signed up.
Silent, 10 day again.
Silent again. Yeah. And then the second one was September of 2012. And I got the same result. I
was like, shoot. I was like, I feel better again. You know, like I feel better.
Dang it.
This thing works.
Oh, man.
And it was tough.
It was tough going back into it the second time because I knew how hard it is.
It's demanding.
Yeah, it's really demanding.
I mean, you're there.
You're meditating like 10 plus hours a day.
You can't speak to anyone.
You're not speaking to anyone.
You know, if you have questions to the teachers, you can ask them questions, clarification and whatnot.
you know if you have questions to the teachers you can ask some questions clarification and whatnot but um but you're really there almost for you know for that 10-day period practicing living
like a monk like you're not going to become a monk or anything like that but you're it's a monk
type life yeah and it was you know grueling because you you sort of you get yourself away
from all the distractions like there's no phone no no email, no social media, no nothing. It's just you and yourself and this practice is
going to help you engage better with everything that arises. That's crazy. Okay. So that's 11
years ago when you did this, I guess, 10, 11 years ago when you start this. and you were in a relationship with your now wife um before
then i guess for probably four or five years yeah yeah so we were together about six years before
the first meditation course and um so that first six year period like we got together young like
she was 18 and i was 19 we met college. Immediately there was a connection there. Like immediately we,
you know, became great friends, were hanging out alone all the time. And there was no like,
you know, we were like friends first for a while. And I think after three months,
we realized that there were feelings there and we got together, but there was just connection.
And there was just, there there was there's just there is
probably zero emotional maturity between the two of us we didn't know how to process our own emotions
we didn't know how to argue in a manner that would be productive we you know all we knew was blame
was you know the the battle to win arguments and really like i you know now that i think about it
it's really like it's dominance
like if you want to win an argument right it's it's what are you trying to do it's it's don you
want to dominate the narrative yeah and we would just it was a rough we were like in this tough
hurricane for six years together and we'd you know we'd break up get back together and and and but we
never could really pull fully apart because like the connection
was just so undeniable so we kept trying to figure out like how can we do this better and it wasn't
until we started meditating that ever so slowly harmony started arising in our relationship and
now i mean we're in a far better there's nothing there's nothing perfect about the picture right
but we're in a far better place because healing has happened inside of both of us as individuals. Self-awareness has developed, so there's less projection between us. And we've developed that calmness so that we can have patience when we have to talk through more serious things. It sounds like you both had your own wounds or your own past pains or whatever it might be.
When two people get together and they haven't healed their past,
what typically happens from experience that you've seen over the last 10 years of couples you've met or stories you've heard?
I mean, you just, you, so this is the thing that I find really often is like whenever two people are in close proximity, whether they're in a relationship or not, an intimate relationship or not, you literally have two egos.
And these two egos, when they rub up against each other, sometimes there's going to be friction.
Like egos are rough, right? It's almost like two rocks.
You rub the right rocks and there's gonna be fire
right so these egos i think when we carry that past pain they're dense they're super rough and
when you do that healing work you smooth out that roughness you decrease that density that you're
carrying so that you can have more self-awareness when points of friction happen. Because those are undeniable.
You're not going to like heal yourself and then never more will you like have arguments or anything like that.
That's unrealistic.
But you can sort of maintain your inner harmony or try your best to while something difficult is happening.
I love that you kept using this word harmony.
Because that's what I feel like I've been developing within me for the last few years in my healing journey at this stage of healing.
Because I feel like healing is a journey and you're to keep healing forever.
But this stage of healing, it's been the word and the theme has always been harmony and developing it within me.
Yeah.
And really not worrying what's happening around me.
But as long as I create that within me,
I'm going to have more peace in my external world. And when two people in relationship develop,
cultivate harmony, cultivate a beautiful garden inside of them, as opposed to a desert or a rocky mountains inside of them, it's easier to navigate challenges in life.
Can I ask you, so what does like harmony feel like for you?
Peace.
Peace.
Nice.
Like laying on a calm beach and just hearing waves gently grazing the sand.
That's so good.
And just calm.
It's funny because I'm like, I'm thinking to myself when I was listening to you talk,
like how do I perceive harmony?
And it's clarity and peace.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You talk about this on page 154 of the way forward.
When your self-love increases, you become far less willing to harm others.
Why?
Because real self-love slowly opens the door to unconditional love for all beings.
And it sounds like the more I'm talking to you about this, it sounds like when we have hurt or sadness about something in our life, whether it's a recent hurt or sadness or past that keeps coming up, we don't know how to fully love ourselves for the pain, the shame, or the feelings we have towards that memory.
Yeah.
And so we have guilt, sadness, anger, resentment, a lack of forgiveness
of others, of ourselves. And therefore we harm self and probably others more frequently when we
do that. Totally. But you said real, again, when you, when your self-love increases,
that's when you're more in harmony with yourself and less reactive to others is what it sounds like.
Totally. Totally. I really believe that. I think if you were literally to wonder, like, what is the missing piece? And we're talking about both words, like a piece in a puzzle and peace in the earth. Like what's missing? It's self-love.
and I've seen this process not only happen inside of me, but others.
And as that, we're talking genuine self-love,
like not commercial self-love, not like,
what are you buying yourself and all this stuff, not that.
We're talking about how you engage with yourself in an accepting manner, right?
The energy you put into your personal transformation,
the sort of the willingness to engage with your own emotional history.
That's what I really think is genuine self-love. But once you're able to engage with yourself and activate those parts of self-love so that you can better know and heal yourself, then that sort of reactive pattern to lash out
on others, to, you know, wish harm on others, all those things just decrease, they melt away.
And even for people
you don't like, you know, you're just like, oh, I wish them the best, but I may not be over there,
but I wish them the best, you know? Exactly. And I think it's pretty across the board. I think if,
as people really develop that quality and can just engage with their past better,
I think they're, they're less likely to want to harm others. It's so fascinating because there was definitely decades where I was extremely
reactive or combative or defensive or emotional,
right.
In certain moments,
not all the time,
but like when I was triggered,
when the wound was triggered in me,
I had this like,
okay,
I want to win.
I want to be right.
I want to defend.
And I always felt like people just don't understand me. People like don't get me.
And I was like, why don't they understand me? Why I'm so angry or why I'm frustrated about
these certain moments. Now, after being on a healing journey, I can witness other people
doing it and say, wow, yeah, I remember that because that was me for a long time.
Yeah, for sure.
And have compassion for people, but also know that the only way I was able to have more calm
and inner peace was doing the healing work.
That's the only way I was able to get there
because I tried it from other ways,
making money, being successful,
having attractive women around me,
trying all the things that you think
are going to bring you more peace.
They didn't bring me peace.
Yeah, yeah.
And it was until I did the inner work
and I turned around and I faced the pain.
Yeah.
As opposed, you know, the thing that was hunting me
and haunting me, I faced it and started to work with it.
Yeah.
As opposed to run away from it.
That's when over time it started to have more,
you know, calming reactions.
It's still not perfect, but it definitely improved over time.
You know, your four life lessons in your book, you say,
the first one, build inner peace or fall to outer chaos.
This is like the missing piece in the world, but also the peace within you.
Your number one life lesson of these four life lessons is build inner peace
or fall to outer chaos.
Second one you say is be flexible.
Being flexible does not mean giving up.
The third, appreciate the closest friends in your life.
And the fourth, challenging times do not last forever.
The only thing is challenging times may last forever if you don't face them.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, these painful memories will keep coming up.
Will keep haunting you.
Yeah.
Unless you face them and find a way to build inner peace.
Yeah.
Right?
No, it's really true.
And I think it's interesting because you can look at it from different perspectives where
challenging times, you know, ultimately everything that arises ultimately passes away.
So something that may be difficult may disappear and
then they may come back right so in that sense it doesn't last forever but in the other sense that
you're talking about it's totally true where there will be particular difficulties that you carry
within you that will just keep popping up popping up they'll get triggered by a certain thing that
your memory is like oh this again danger danger. And then you feel the reaction again. So these things have to be addressed. And I love that you're pointing
out too, you know, the fall to falling to outer chaos, because that's something that I feel like,
I, you know, as people who care about personal transformation, people who really want to build
peace within themselves, the challenge is, can you maintain
your energy the way you want it to be? Because human beings, we are often in the system of like
osmosis where if I have a particular emotion, whether it's anger or joy, right? Whatever it
may be, I'll usually want, we'll want another person to join us in that emotion right right so it's
like bad ones yeah exactly even the bad ones so like if i'm angry i'm like please please join me
in my anger and either by making you angry or by being like let me tell you a story about this
thing that happened that pissed me off please join me and also being angry yeah this yeah right
but the same thing with the lighter emotions right we want to partake in them and those are
beautiful like those happily yeah let me join you and. Like I would love to be happy for you.
But when someone is inviting you to join them in their anger, whether by pissing you off or by
telling you what pissed them off so you can be angry with them, I think those moments are where
the real sort of like, this is a test, right? This is like, I don't need to join you in this anger. Actually,
I'm okay. Like, I don't want that heaviness. I could even practice, like, especially if it's
a dear loved one, I could even practice listening to you and seeing you, but also just maintaining
my peace while I'm trying to see you. And it's really difficult, right? It's not like a,
you know, get a hundred percent type test, but you can do your best to just keep your energy as
it is, especially as you're moving through different environments, you know, moving out
of the work environment to, you know, different, different situations that you're in. Cause I think
being able to manage your own energy, I think it's just a sign of mastery.
It is a huge sign of mastery. And when you are in reaction mode, something else has power over you.
Oh yeah.
Something else is more powerful than you are. And it's, when I learned that, it
pissed me off because I felt like I was always in control. But when one was reacting or defensive
or guarded or frustrated, I realized later, i was like man i allowed that person that
that moment that thing to have power over me to get into a negative state yeah that's not
fulfilling that's not fun yeah and so i had to learn how to deconstruct that right and have more
mastery over my emotions and it doesn't mean i'm perfect and i still get frustrated i still have
moments of you know anger but anger, but I'm aware of
it quicker and I'm like, you know, let's shift out of this. This isn't serving my vision. It's
not serving me. And you know, when you're in a group in a situation like that, where maybe the
whole group is getting upset by a particular situation, if one person is able to put their
head above the water and they're like, oh, actually we're okay. You know, this sucks,
but we're going to be fine. And then everyone kind of can, you know,
gets another opportunity to kind of wake up a little bit.
And they're like, oh yeah, we're good.
You know, we don't have to just roll in anger right now together
because people don't quite get, like,
you can be skillful without creating all this immense tension in your mind.
So you can still assess the situation and be like,
oh, this situation needs my attention.
I need to solve it without producing so much stress in the process.
You talk about focusing on four fundamentals that can massively change your life.
I want to see if you can read.
I've been reading your book, but I want to see if you can read these four.
Oh, so I wrote this one after finishing a 45-day meditation course.
It was like the first thing I wrote.
after finishing a 45-day meditation course.
It was like the first thing I wrote.
Focusing on a few fundamentals can create a massive change in your life.
Number one, make your healing, personal transformation,
and well-being top priorities.
Number two, refrain from harming yourself or others.
Three, create mental space for gratitude.
Four, be kind and generous to others.
Yeah, this is, if everyone on the planet
made these four things their top priority,
the world would be a more harmonious, peaceful place.
And it starts with making healing, personal transformation,
and well-being your focus. Yeah. Because when we don't make it our focus, it's not present.
It's not in us. And we become sick, we become sad, we become cynical, all these different things.
And that doesn't create positivity in the world. It doesn't move things forward in a powerful way. Yeah.
So making your healing, personal transformation and well-being a top priority,
that alone, most people aren't spending the time
like you talked about to create mental space
for that to happen.
Yeah.
They're not living in gratitude
even for a moment throughout the day.
They're not creating 10 minutes to just think in peace
without being on a distraction or a phone or a TV.
And really think about where can I invest my time in well-being?
And if people could spend one hour a day on just well-being,
whether it's calm mind, whether it's meditation, whether it's walking,
whether it's working out, going to therapy, one hour a day on their well-being, it will drastically improve the quality of their life.
It totally does. I've gotten so many messages from, especially like mothers, you know, mothers who like have so many responsibilities and so many things they're doing.
responsibilities and so many things they're doing and, you know, hearing stories about how they were inspired to just take like 10, 15, 20 minutes to themselves to just like do whatever it was that
they needed to recalibrate, right? To whatever practice, whatever tool they had to just like
get back into a certain degree of balance. And it's fine. It's, you know, you know, it's good
for you, but it's until you practice it, until you do it, until you see the results, you know, you know, it's good for you, but it's until you practice it until you do it until
you see the results, you know, you see the payoff of the investment. And until you see the payoff
of the investment, you're not like then that that's when you double down. And I think that's
what happened to me personally, when, you know, I would go to these 10 day meditation courses,
like I told you, like I was doing that for two years. And I think I did four,
Like I was doing that for two years and I think I did four, about five of those courses before I started meditating two hours a day.
And I had seen, I'm like, this is completely changing my mind.
Like I'm not fully healed, not fully wise or anything like that.
I got the inspiration to start writing.
But then I knew I was like, if I bring this into my everyday life, the results would be even bigger.
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