The School of Greatness - 961 The 5 Keys to Long-Term Happiness and Prosperity with Dr. Laurie Santos
Episode Date: June 1, 2020“Focusing on others will make you happier than focusing on yourself.”Lewis is joined by Dr. Laurie Santos, a Professor of Psychology at Yale University and the host of The Happiness Lab podcast, t...o discuss the science of well-being. They discuss five actionable steps to become happier today, the benefits you receive by helping others, how to maximize your mental health in this challenging moment, and so much more.For more tips on happiness, visit lewishowes.com/961. And text Lewis at 614-350-3960.
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This is episode number 961 with Dr. Laurie Santos.
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.
Malala once said, it is important to know who you are, to make decisions, to show who
you are.
And Les Brown said, help others achieve their dreams and you will achieve yours.
Here on the School of Greatness, we're all about making empowered decisions in our quest for happiness and growth.
And my guest today has created a career out of studying how to make wiser choices and live in a more fulfilling way.
fulfilling way. Dr. Lori Santos is a professor of psychology at Yale University, an expert on human cognition, decision making, and the search for happiness. And a couple of years ago, her course,
psychology and the good life, which is now called the science of well being became the most popular
class in the 319 year history of Yale. Dr. Lori Santos is the host of the podcast, The Happiness Lab,
and will forever alter the way you think about finding contentment. I was so inspired by our
conversation and I'm sure you will be as well. And in this episode, we talk about the five steps that
you can take today to be happier right now. The importance of being in service to others to maintain your individual happiness.
How we can express frustration in a constructive way
instead of an angry one.
The power that sleep and exercise has on our mental health
and different mental health needs
for different types of people,
especially in this challenging time.
That and so much more.
I'm so grateful to share this information and episode with you.
And remember, make sure to pass this along if it's making an impact on you
because you have the power to change someone's life by sharing this.
And if this is your first time here,
make sure to subscribe to The School of Greatness on Apple Podcasts,
Spotify, or wherever you're listening to podcasts.
Again, thank you so much for being here.
And without further ado, let's dive into this episode with the one, the only Dr. Lori Santos.
Welcome everyone to the School of Greatness podcast. We've got Dr. Lori Santos in the house.
I'm super excited that you're here. Thank you for taking the time with me today. And you are one of the most popular professors in the world right now. You've got a class at Yale about happiness,
and you have an incredible podcast, The Happiness Lab, which I've been a fan of since it came out.
I really love the one about the lottery winner, because I think a lot of people think that if
you just get all this money that just drops in their bank account, they're going to be happy.
And I actually met a lottery winner who won the biggest jackpot in Florida.
I think it was like $400 million something in a long time.
And I think it was a couple of years ago, and it's since been surpassed, I think.
But he was 19 when he won.
And a friend of mine messaged me and said,
hey, did you see this guy won this lottery?
I was like, no, I wasn't paying attention.
And he said, well, I looked on his Twitter,
and a few tweets ago, he posted a link to your podcast.
I think he's a fan.
And so I just sent him a DM, and I said, hey, listen,
I can only imagine the amount of joy and excitement
and unbelievable feelings you're having right now as a 19-year-old.
But as you know, most lottery winners go broke, go bankrupt, commit suicide, have a lot of bad times afterwards.
So if you ever need anything, I'm here to support just as a friend to help out.
And we got on a bunch of FaceTimes and talked, and I was coaching him and just trying to keep him grounded during that time because it was very challenging.
So I appreciate that episode and so many interviews you've done and episodes about happiness and the science of happiness.
I'm curious, what made you fascinated in learning about happiness in the first place?
Were you just not a happy person?
Were you the happy person that no one else around you was?
What was
the reason? Yeah, yeah. No, it's a great question. I think the interest in the happiness was twofold.
Part of it started in my role at Yale. So I live on campus with students. I'm a head of college.
So Yale is one of these strange schools like Hogwarts where there's like Gryffindor and
Slytherin and these like weird colleges within a college, right? So I'm head of Silliman College,
no relation to Slytherin despite the kind of similar soundingness. But that means I like hang out with students on a
regular basis. Wow. You're like a big sister almost.
Kind of, yeah. Like an aunt. I call myself an aunt.
Like an aunt. Okay. I'm too old to be the sister, sadly.
But yeah, so living with them, I got really up close and personal with the so-called mental
health crisis that we're seeing among our young people.
I mean, the stats nationally are just staggering.
So over 40% of current day college students report being too depressed to function most days.
Over 65% say that they're lonely or overwhelmingly anxious.
Over 80% say that they spend most days feeling overwhelmed by all they have to do.
It's just like,
this is really tough right now. And so the happiness, the interest in the happiness science came out of that, which is, you know, I'm part of this community where I'm like, you know, again,
they're benevolent aunt and I'm seeing them, you know, not be able to function because they're too
stressed out about their midterm or just like having panic attacks about their summer internship
applications. And I'm like, somebody needs to do something about this. Like we're teaching them how to be overwhelmed with
science and math and all these psychology, but they're too overwhelmed to actually take it in.
And if they're stressed and mentally unwell, what's the point of it all? It sounds like.
Exactly. You know, we act like we're being educators and we're teaching them like computer
science and Chaucer and Shakespeare and all this stuff. And it's like, they're not, none of that's going in if they're not happy, if they're, yeah, they're just, or that they're that mentally distressed, you know, maybe if you're having like a not perfect day, great. But, you know, if 60% of the, you know, two thirds of the kids in my class are overwhelmingly anxious during that class, like, you know, it's just, it's, we're not educating our students in the way we thought. And it's hard to receive information and remember and assimilate the information when
you're under extreme mental stress and emotional trauma, or even if it's not real and it's made up
trauma, it's still hard to remember things and test well and write great essays. It's really challenging under that
type of mental stress, right? Yeah. I mean, you know, like simulate, if your listeners can simulate
the last time they were feeling overwhelmingly anxious, like, was that an awesome productivity
day? Like, did you learn a bunch that day? Were you on your best? Like, no, right? I mean,
donuts and cookies and just watching Netflix, right? Exactly, exactly.
So I wanted to do something about it.
But on your question about am I a naturally happy person,
I feel like if I'm being honest, the other part of that story was,
you know, I wasn't feeling like I was flourishing at the time.
You know, I'm looking at these students feeling anxious,
and I could say, you know, I'm stressed about work.
I'm worried about publications.
I'm not doing the stuff that I need to do to be happy either.
And so part of me was excited to teach my students this class because I figured, you
know, I get to practice what I preach, right?
Like once I learn this stuff, I'm supposed to be an example to them about doing this
stuff, right?
And so it was kind of a little, you know, selfish too.
And so basically I just-
When did this start where you were like, okay, I want to learn about this and retrain myself
for how-
Yeah.
So this was like early in, I started as head of college in 2016. And I'd say like,
basically through 2017 or so, I started reading more about this stuff. And in January of 2018,
I hit go on this new class, I basically threw together all this material and created a new
class for the students at Yale, where you learn about kind of the science of what makes you happy, misconceptions we have about happiness, like money and the stuff we were just
talking about, but also how to put those things into practice. Because it's one thing to know
what you're supposed to do, but it's another to like, actually do it, as you probably know,
and I'm sure you talk about a lot in the podcast quite well. So yeah, so at the time, I didn't know
what was going to happen. You know, it was a new class at an Ivy League school. So I thought, you know, 30 or 40 kids will take it.
You could imagine my surprise when we get this wonderful little tool on Yale
where we can see how many students are looking at our class.
They don't register ahead of time, so they kind of only show up that first day of class.
And most of the classes had a scale from zero to 100 students,
but mine had this weird scale that was different than all the other classes where it went from zero to a thousand students.
Oh my goodness.
That's weird. And what wound up happening is we got around 1200 students who
Taking over the basketball arena.
Well, that we actually like, we joked about, you know, taking over the football stadium. In the
end, we taught the class in a concert hall on the big, you know, this is like where Yo-Yo Ma
plays when he comes to Yale's campus.
Wow. How many people showed up? Just under 1,200, which is, which just for reference is like
about one out of every four students at Yale took the class. Wow. And now is this underclass,
is this upperclassmen, is this? Yeah, it was mostly, it was. Teachers are coming out of
retirement and saying, I need to take this class. Well, that was so interesting. I mean,
it was an undergrad class, but because it was in this big concert hall,
you know, it's hard to, you know,
it's not like we have somebody at the door keeping track.
And, you know, I'd hear from, you know,
the women's basketball coach that, you know,
she was sitting in on it
because she thought it'd be so helpful.
Our faculty colleagues of mine would be like,
you know, I snuck in yesterday, great lecture.
And I'm like, you know, who am I lecturing to?
But it kind of became this weird phenomenon on campus, right?
With so many people taking this class.
Crazy. Now, so you many people taking this class. Crazy.
Now, so you did this as an experiment, and then you've been continually doing it,
and then you decided to launch a podcast and a course for people, which they can take, I think, for free right now.
Is that right?
Yeah.
So kind of what happened was the class went totally viral on campus, which I didn't expect.
But what I super didn't expect was for the class to go viral off campus,
right? Like here I am just, you know,
professor doing my thing and now the New York times shows up and it's like,
Oh my God, you're teaching this class to so many kids, you know,
a quarter of Yale students are learning about happiness, what's going on.
And so talk to the New York times, but then it's, you know,
today's show and NBC news and CBS news and then international media,
you know, people, you know, writing about the class in like and CBS News and then international media, you know, people,
you know, writing about the class in like Croatian and Thai. It was just kind of crazy. But what that
press made me realize was, you know, this isn't just Yale students. I was framing this like,
this is a mental health crisis among college students. Let me teach them. But what the press
convinced me was like, lots of us are feeling like we're not flourishing right now. And i think people were looking at these yale kids of like these kids are at yale they're
19 like their whole life is made what do they need a class on happiness for like give it to me
it's so simple yeah they got simply just got to show up to class and they are daddy's money or
whatever paying them to go and all this stuff right yeah it's not real responsibility it's fake
false responsibility at the moment and i think that you know, that was what a lot of the coverage was like.
And so it made us realize like this could really help a lot of people.
And so,
so we put it online totally for free on Coursera.org.
It's called the science of wellbeing.
You could take it now.
And,
but then we still got some emails and,
and,
and news articles that was like,
I'm overwhelmed.
My life is falling apart. I need
a class on happiness, but I don't have time to take a class on happiness. Like give me the
Cliff Notes version. Like I need it fast. And that's where the Happiness Lab podcast came in.
We realized that, you know, as you know so well with this podcast, like there's so many folks who
are looking for insights, looking for good stories, looking for ways to learn about what to do better. And so we decided to just kind of give all the insights that we've given in the
class in kind of short podcast fun form. That's amazing. Yeah. Entertainment. So you can be
entertained and learn and be educated. Now I'm curious, you know, people have been talking about
happiness for, you know, in the last decade, I feel like I've seen lots of books out there.
Gretchen Rubin's got an amazing book on happiness. There've been other, I guess, happiness educators,
teachers, experts, whatever you want to call it for over a decade. Why is this picking up in such
with so much steam when, you know, happiness has been talked about for a decade. It seems like for
me in lots of different platforms. Yeah. It's not entirely clear. I mean, one answer
is like, nothing's new about this, right? I mean, Harvard had a class on the science of happiness
taught by this guy, Tal Ben-Shahir, over a decade ago. Also, Sean Aker, another famous happiness
researcher was part of that class. And so in some ways, like, every time somebody does this,
it kind of goes a little viral. You know, we've been worried about happiness since i think since we've been human right like basically you know chimpanzees aren't
out there worried about happiness but probably we are right you know it's in the declaration
of independence like aristotle was talking about eudaimonia back in the day like it's in some ways
this is super not new i think what is new is that like a lot of us are focused on this right now
because i think you know things are
pretty good you know like on the internet this idea of like first world problems right and that's
the problem that a lot of us face right like we feel like you know we have food on our table we
have a roof over our head we have good jobs and good families you know great internet and Netflix
but something's missing and like and and that when you're feeling those first world, I think it's even more profound because you're like, everything's supposed to
be fine, right? Everything's supposed to be perfect. Like, why do I not feel like everything's
right? Why do I feel like I'm not flourishing? Why do we feel that way?
Well, I think the problem is that our mind kind of sucks. We have these really bad intuitions
about what makes us happy. I mean, people who are in that state where are also thinking,
oh, if only I could be like that 19-year-old lottery winner, everything would be perfect,
right? So people are doubling down. They're playing the lottery. They're spending more
time at work. They're investing in all this stuff, thinking reasonably based on their intuitions,
thinking it's going to improve happiness. But we're just going about it the wrong way. And
that's why I think the class can be so powerful. It's not like we don't know what to do to be
happier. We have these strong theories. It's just the science suggests they're wrong.
Like, it's not like you're not putting the work in. We're putting the work in in the wrong stuff.
So imagine, I mean, it sounds like you've had this experience with a thousand different students
you've worked with. Imagine a student right now is feeling so overwhelmed and so insecure about everything they do in
their life they're mentally struggling there they don't feel like they fit in
with friends they don't feel like they feel like they've got so much classwork
and they're just struggling and every day is a battle of how to find a joy in
the smallest things but they can't find any joy. Where does a kid like that
start of actually being happy? Like what's the even starting process when you're in that situation?
Yeah. Well, I feel like step one is to just realize how not alone you are if you're in that
situation. That's why I start this class with the stats, right? Like, oh, you feeling overwhelmed?
Great. 87% of your college peers are
feeling that way too. You know, feeling really depressed, like actually probably a quarter of
you are admitting that you're feeling that way, right? Feeling overwhelmed? Well, that's three
quarters of you. And so I think seeing the stats is powerful. And I think this is another spot
where our mind lies to us. There's this wonderful study I share with the students in my class
that has you predict how other people are feeling, right? Because we're
constantly doing that. Like we're in our own heads, feeling depressed and anxious or feeling
inadequate. And then we project onto other people. And whenever we look at other people, we think
they're doing fine. And so there's this one study that has college students predict how many good
and bad events other people are going through. Like how many other people out there like got their dream job or got a perfect grade or got invited to a
cool party versus bad things. Like how many people out there, you know, got dissed for a date or
feeling really homesick or something like that. And what you find is people consistently overestimate
how many good things other people are getting. In other words, other people aren't doing as well as
you think, but what's worse is people really, really, really seriously underestimate the number of people that are going through bad things.
Right.
Almost by double digits.
And so the problem is like we're all kind of suffering in silence and in stigma, right?
Because we don't want to admit like we're feeling like we're not flourishing, but everybody else seems great.
But the fact of the matter is the data suggests that's just not the case.
So that's kind of step one is like you are not alone.
Okay. Step two.
Step two, I think, you know, not take the online class, right?
You know, like, you know, no, but seriously,
I think that what science suggests is that there's ways to intervene in small
ways and baby steps that can matter a lot.
And one of those first steps the research suggests is to kind of reach out to
other people is I think this,
there's this kind of mistaken notion to other people is I think this, this,
there's this kind of mistaken notion that happiness is all about self care and
self, self, self, like treat yourself kind of parks and recs style.
But what the science suggests is that happy people are really other oriented.
You know, they're, they're reaching out, they're making social connections.
They're worrying about how they can help other people and other people's
welfare. that's what
seems to lead to a happy life which is problematic because as we get stressed especially as we get
lonely we end up turning inward we become more like me me me focused and it's kind of the world
is against me no one understands me all the bad things are happening to me but when we when i'm
here you say and what i've been learning through my own
experience is when we actually get out of ourselves and say, how can I help someone else?
How can I be a listening ear to someone else? How can I show up to someone's event and show that
I'm supporting them? When we take it away from us to others, that's when we get our greater joy.
That's exactly right. Yeah. Again, it goes's, again, it goes against our intuitions,
but doing nice for others is better than maybe focusing on ourself. One awesome study did this,
where they, they basically forced people to give money to others. So you walk up to somebody on
the street and you're like, do you want some money? There are people are like, yeah, give me
some money. So you hand somebody $20 and you say, by the end of the day, either spend this on
yourself. So that's the kind of treat yourself sort of condition, or by the end of the day, either spend this on yourself, so that's the kind of treat yourself sort of condition, or by the end of the day, spend this on somebody else. And, you know,
we could predict like what's going to feel better. Most people think, you know, treating yourself is
going to feel better. But it turns out that at the end of that day, the people who spent the money
on someone else feel better. I think, I mean, it's always fun, I guess, to get gifts, but I think
it's way better to give the gift, you know, for a birthday or Christmas or whatever you want to celebrate. Just giving a gift to give it, to watch someone else light up is for me the greatest gift. It's more selfish to give because what you gain from it, as opposed to just, okay, give me things all day long. Am I right? Or is that, is that all? You're totally right. But it's not, I mean,
that's why you're such a happy guy.
But I think it's not most people's,
it's not most people's intuition, right?
I mean, yeah.
Like for me personally,
I mean, I know all the data,
but my, as I said,
I'm not generally a happy person,
which I think translates to
my intuitions aren't normally great.
Like if I'm having a really crappy day,
I'm not like, I'm like,
I want to get a nice manicure for myself
and treat myself. I'm not like, let me give, I want to get a nice manicure for myself and treat
myself. I'm not like, let me give a coworker a nice manicure gift card right now. But you're
right. The data suggests I'm totally wrong. I'd be so much happier and I'd get so much more bang
for my money buck in terms of happiness by spending it on other people rather than myself.
My entire, I would say teens until now, the in my life, I was very insecure and obsessed about what I
wasn't getting. Once I started to shift into my teenage years and start to challenge myself by
allowing myself to be rejected, the potential of being rejected by saying hi to people or
just being nice in the line of getting a coffee or whatever it may be, just putting myself out there. It was always the fear of rejection and insecurity.
Once I said, I'm just going to do this to give to people and I'm going to be kind and I'll walk
down the street and I'm going to smile and say hello and I'm going to ask people questions.
It was like everything started to shift and change because I became outgoing towards other people.
shift and change because I became outgoing towards other people. And I try to look for,
in every situation I can, how can I give to someone else? If I'm at Starbucks, how can I pay for someone for five bucks? If I'm on a grocery line and someone's struggling, how can I just
help them and get something? Something small. It doesn't have to be money, but just how can I show
people that I am thinking about them, that I see them, that I acknowledge them?
And I think when we come from that mindset of giving, we feel more fulfilled and happier
because we realize we contributed to someone else's life.
Again, with your example of money, it doesn't have to be money, but how can you contribute
and bring joy to someone else?
And that contagion of positivity will reflect back
and make you feel that spark of joy as well.
At least that's the way I feel.
Well, that's exactly what the science suggests.
I mean, it doesn't have to be money.
It can be time or it can be a small amount of money.
One thing about that study, they did different dollar amounts.
So it wasn't always $20.
Sometimes it was $5.
And what they find is the amount of money doesn't matter.
Like it can be an incredibly small amount of money
in an incredibly small amount of time.
It's the fact that you're doing something nice
for somebody else and you recognize that.
Yeah, yeah.
Now on a scale of one to 10,
10 being you're happy 100% of the time,
where was your happiness level five years ago
or three, four years ago before you like got into this were you an eight five
or was it kind of like most of the time yeah well i actually have data legit data on this on like
you know because and it is a one to ten scale and uh um basically i was probably like at a like a
you know like a six maybe and now i'm pretty consistently at like a seven or eight which
kind of makes sense like that i think doing these doing these practices all the stuff we teach about in the class you know
from being other oriented to experiencing gratitude to mindfulness and all the stuff we talk about
it's it's not gonna like it doesn't like immediately change your life so you go from
like zero happiness to like a million happiness but it takes time it doesn't happen overnight
is that what you're telling me there's some some stuff that happens overnight. I mean, if you like have a really
great exercise class, you feel immediately better. I bet even if you do the like nice Starbucks thing,
you know, for like that day, that's what the research suggests for that whole day,
you're feeling a higher positive. That day. But it's the consistency every day you've got to show
up in order to rewire your brain, I'm hearing. And this is the bad news about happiness is that
like all good things,
you have to continue to put the work in.
It's like working out at the gym, right?
You can't just go do your leg day one day
and be like, I'm done, good.
Legs are gonna be great.
Based on all the science and research that you've seen,
what would you say are the five things
that if people did these five things every single day
on a consistent basis, their happiness level would go up a point or two consistently over time.
And it doesn't cost any money and it doesn't take a ton of time. But if you did these five things,
your life would start to be a lot happier. Yeah. Well, I think we just talked about one.
I think this act of becoming other oriented, however that works for you, whether that's, you know, donating an hour of your time, we're just like holding the door
open for somebody, you know, giving some money, like, we all can probably, you know, have enough
disposable income to spare a teensy weensy bit. And so what can you do to spend that money on or
that time or whatever on other people? So that that would be topic, that'd be number one. I think
number two would be another thing you just echoed in in terms of how you're talking about changing your life which is to show up for other people so all
the research suggests that happy people are really social um they tend to they tend to talk to random
strangers they tend to be around other people and they really make time for the people that they
care about in their life and so i think this would be kind of big change number two is like how can
you just be reaching out to people more often and And I think, you know, this is one of these things where like, we kind
of know it, but we don't often put it into practice, right? You know, if you found out you
were on your deathbed, you know, this week, and you know, you had a week to live, you might not
like go to work, like you'd probably like want to focus on those people you care about in your life,
like whoever they are, you would see your friends, you would hang out with your family that you care about, you know,
you put time into your romantic relationship, whatever, that's what you do. But if you look
at how we tend to spend our time, it's, you know, we're caught up in work. Sometimes we're not even
present with our family members when we're around them, you know, cause we're like, you know, let me
put the phone down kind of thing. And so, but, but happy people don't do that. They're prioritizing
right now. And so whatever you can do to shift to being a little more social and a little more
kind of social and again, connected with the people you care about, that's like,
so it doesn't have to be strangers socially or fake friends, but being social with people you
care about on a consistent basis. It can actually be the strangers. In fact, there's one study by a researcher, Nick Epley and his colleagues where he just like, I mean,
psychologists are always forcing people to do stuff with money, but so he forces people with
money to talk to strangers on the train. He does this on the L train in Chicago. So he says, you
know, for the next half hour, you have to talk to somebody and make a connection. People predict
this is going to be actively miserable and weird and cheesy. But it's amazing. You did an episode on this too.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So that's one of our famous episodes.
I actually got hate mail after that episode because people were like, you're crazy telling
people, talk to people on the train, like you're going to get people killed and all
this stuff.
But I think that's how strong our intuitions are, right?
Is that we, you know, we really think, oh my God, talking to some random person in the
coffee shop, I'd rather just pull out my phone and check my Instagram feed. But again, our minds are leading us in the wrong direction here.
Okay. All right. So the first two are others oriented and showing up for others.
Yeah. I think the third one would be to kind of focus on the power of gratitude. Again,
it always sounds so cheesy when you mentioned these things, but, you know, sometimes science is cheesy. But, you know, I think our instinct when things are good and when
things are bad is that it's funny to kind of gripe about stuff, right? You know, like, it's funny to
kind of complain. You probably even have people in your life that whenever you see them, you just
start, like, the complaining fest, like, happens. But that's not what happy people do. Happy people
are spontaneously counting their
blessings and this is a spot where i think popular culture has gotten on to something with things
like gratitude lists or gratitude journals like just taking time to count your blessings even if
it's like 30 seconds at night you can see statistical boost in happiness within about
two weeks of that practice and i do this with my girlfriend. Every night before we go to bed,
we both say three things we're grateful for
and it puts our mind at peace.
It gives us a moment of reflection of,
even if there's a lot of stress in the world
with the virus and the pandemic and everything,
even with all that,
it's still good things to be grateful for.
So it's just reminding ourselves
to calm our mind down before we go to bed. And then when we sleep, we have be grateful for. So it's just reminding ourselves to calm our mind down
before we go to bed. And then when we sleep, we have a grateful heart. You wake up with a grateful
heart as opposed to an angry heart. And I think the more you go to sleep frustrated, angry, and
ruminating over things you don't have or you don't like about what's happening in your life,
the sleep isn't as quality and you wake up more tired and you become more reactive the next day.
And that's why I think you're right. The power of gratitude. This is something that I
swear by and without it, I'd be, I'd be unhappy. Yeah, no, I think, I mean, again, it's all about
also like kind of just being mindful of these things. Right. I mean, sometimes I'll leave a
like grape fest with a friend and just notice and be like, I feel really crappy now.
I felt like getting all that off my chest and complaining about whatever.
But no, no, I think, yeah, and there's lots of evidence suggesting that gratitude can have a specifically powerful effect on sleep.
Even things like immune function, like it makes our immune systems work better, which is something else we need right now in the context of this virus.
How much does griping or talking about the things you don't like,
how much does that actually affect your happiness?
I mean, I'm all for creating a container
where I'm saying, hey, listen, for the next 10 minutes,
I just want to share things I'm frustrated about.
But then here's all the things I'm grateful for
to kind of get both of them out.
Yeah.
But is there science or research that says like,
if you talk about negative things or you complain with your friends,
or you talk about what you don't like gossip,
it's going to bring your happiness level down or is this just a theory?
Yeah.
I mean,
it's more,
it's less that,
uh,
so I think part of it is how you're griping.
Right.
And so,
so you can gripe about like,
everything's terrible,
everything's terrible.
And therefore I'm going to problem solve by doing X, Y, and and z if you do that where you're kind of griping to problem solve
then that can be really powerful because it can be kind of identifying problems and then fixing them
but if you're griping just to like gripe gripe gripe gripe gripe and there's no like forward
motion on there's no solutions exactly that's not really helpful and it comes at an opportunity
cost you could be spending that time talking about what you're grateful for yeah and so so what i try to do with friends now is you
know because i definitely still have friends where you know they're they're in they're in
gripe head space you know you know that's that's what they're gonna do but like whenever we're in
that space either move it more towards problem solving like oh yeah okay that co-worker is a
pain in the butt but like what can we do to so try to move it
towards problem solving or try to do exactly what you said which is like you know you can fill up
your frustration bucket but kind of match it with a bucket that's equally filled with yeah blessings
okay so that's number three power of gratitude yeah uh number four is kind of a smushed one but
it's basically yeah it's's like, I'll throw together
a bunch of things under the context of like healthy habits. And by what, by that, what I mean
is like things we know are good for our physical health, but we often forget that our physical
health and our mental health are intertwined. So, you know, getting some regular exercise and
movement in, um, making sure you're prioritizing sleep and having good sleep habits. So it's not
just like you plop down for a certain number of hours a night, but you're really trying to
do things before you go to bed and during your day to make sleep better. You know, even healthy
eating, like we don't, we forget the connection between our gut and our brain, between our bodies
and our brain, between our stress levels in our brain. And so we really have to kind of make sure
we're protecting our
physical health because that has a huge implication on our mental health. Yeah. I just had a doctor on
today, actually on my show, Dr. Stephen Gundry, who talks about essentially how to boost the
immune system, how to reverse disease, how to de-age, all these things about the body. And he
was a heart surgeon for 40 years and stopped doing
heart surgeries because he realized that wasn't solving the root problem. Nutrition and other
things solve the root problem of disease. And he was saying all disease is stemmed from like a
leaky gut and the foods we eat create holes in the gut where things seep through and then it causes eczema and it causes different disease because the immune system is broken down, which attracts disease.
And so it's all about the things we eat to make sure we boost our immune system and we feel better, we have greater energy.
And it also connects to the brain, everything, the heart, the brain and the gut.
So just like you said, I think that's a great, a great point. So you're pushing.
But I mean, the exercise and sleep connection is even, you know, I mean, there's evidence
suggesting that like a half hour of cardio every day is as effective as a prescription of Zoloft
for reducing depression symptoms, right? So these psychiatrists, you know, might not make as much
money if they're prescribing, hey, hop on the treadmill or your Peloton for a half hour, but that's what the data suggests.
And then same thing with sleep.
I feel like we could solve most of the mental health crisis on college campuses if we just
got these kids to sleep.
That's it.
If they just weren't exhausted.
Overwhelmed and exhausted is a combination for unhappiness.
Exactly.
And not making good decisions and not learning and doing all the stuff we need them to do on college. Yeah. And then just needing, needing the sugar fix to like
stay awake and needing some adrenaline. So checking social media or whatever it is,
doing the wrong choice to get the fix, to keep them awake or have some attention because they're
so distracted. Okay. So the fourth was a smush of movement healthy habits healthy habits healthy habits
sleep uh all those things and then what would you say the fifth one and i think the fifth one i mean
again i'm you know cutting off here but i think the fifth one would be uh finding ways to practice
being more mindful and being more present and i mean that in a couple ways you know one is like
you know the standard buddhay way to be present where you're
paying attention to the present moment. But it's also just paying attention to your body and where
you are with things. I mean, we mentioned this a little bit when you're thinking about the griping
of afterwards, after that gripe fest session, I'm like, I feel kind of yucky. Maybe after you
do something nice and give somebody something at Starbucks, you have a presence and notice like,
I feel kind of good. My heart feels warmed. I'm breathing in a different way
and so on. And so I think, you know, we constantly have these theories about what we should be doing
with our time. But if we actually pay attention to how our bodies feel and be present during it,
we can see whether we're going in the right direction or the wrong direction. For me,
this is so true on social media in general, but particularly right now during the virus, right? It's like,
I have this intuition of like, oh, I'm like bored or feeling a little anxious. Like,
I'm gonna just do a quick Twitter check. I'm just gonna hop on Facebook just for a second.
And if you notice, if I notice how I feel afterwards, I'm like, I feel either apathetic
or bored or my anxiety has spiked, or I feel kind of inadequate and sort of yucky
about myself like I want to buy something like none of those are good feelings that I wanted but
if you're not present and you don't notice them then you just act on those urges you know I'm
kind of buying something because I feel inadequate I know what do you I mean in your opinion what's
the worst thing we could be doing during quarantine being isolation you know obviously watching news
or overeating or excessive alcohol sugar social media will all that hurt our well-being and
what's the worst thing we could be doing yeah i mean all that hurts our well-being you know what's
worse probably depends a little bit on what's hurting you the most i mean for me i feel like
my anxiety skyrockets when I'm like panic scrolling
right now, you know, so I have to like, I mean, like, all the negative news me like, yeah, just
like going through my Twitter feed and scrolling deeper and you know, doing more and more clicks
of like, let me check the latest statistics. Like I can watch my chest get tight. I can watch
really shallow. And basically what you're doing when you're doing
that is that you're you're spiking your sympathetic nervous system so you know quick by you know back
to ap biology class right like you're you have two parts of your autonomic nervous system the
sympathetic nervous system is like the fight or flight right like that's what's in your evolutionary
arsenal so that you can run away from a tiger who's about to attack you. And it has
those features. It shuts off everything that's not essential. It shuts off digestion and sexual
health and immune function and all this stuff. And it turns on your muscles and your breath to
breathe as quickly as possible. And you basically start breathing like you're about to run a
marathon. That's a sympathetic nervous system. Yeah. And so it's what we're activating a lot
during this crisis because it's not a tiger. It's like a doorknob that somebody touched or, you know, like the latest, you knowetic nervous system that's the flip side the rest and digest um the the best analogy i've heard about
these um which only works if you're like a child of the 80s like me but i don't know if you know
this movie airplane like this really bad movie from the 80s i grew up in 80s i was born in 83 so
anyway it was this cheesy comedy movie for your listeners who know this reference there's a scene in the plane where this woman starts freaking out she's like i gotta get out
of here and there's this funny scene where there's like a big line of people who are basically going
to smack her and be like shut up like you're like getting over it and whatever right and so the
parasympathetic is that big line of people being like shut the heck up right like it's ready to
like just calm the heck out of the sympathetic nervous system. Be like, there's no tiger dude. Just like chill the heck out.
And the problem is that the only way we can activate the parasympathetic nervous system
is to convince our bodies that there's no tiger, which we do by like getting rid of
the threat, which is hard during the virus.
But there's one way we can take action on our parasympathetic nervous system, and that's
through our breath.
So we can force our body.
Awareness.
Yeah, breath and awareness, yeah.
Breathe super slow and also breathe into your belly.
Because, like, if you've ever, you know, been on the treadmill,
you're, like, you're feeling it in your chest, but deep belly breath,
like, you're not going to do that if a tiger is about to jump out, right?
And so it's actually activating the vagus nerve.
It's, like, really working through the pieces of our body.
But what it does is it turns back on that rest and digest.
So that's the one thing I'm trying to watch when my chest is tight.
That's the action of the sympathetic.
Yeah.
Be like, oh, I need to kind of remind my parasympathetic
that it needs to kick in now.
And that's super helpful.
Yeah, I can't remember if someone i
might have been jay shetty who said something like this uh but he was like you know imagine
standing in front of a train track and seeing a crash happen every minute of your day in person
people getting killed and crashes and different things like you would constantly be in reaction
mode and that's essentially what we're doing by checking these updates
and news and stats and seeing the worst of humanity during this time
as opposed to being aware of the facts, being aware and updated
on what's happening, being conscious and mindful, being safe,
but also focusing on the good side of things is where my mind
tries to focus on.
And my girlfriend is more focused on checking all the
bad and telling me of what's happening. And I'm just like, yeah, it's bad and it's going to get
worse. And it's really sad and it really sucks. But where's the good? Where's the value? Where
can we find meaning in this? And how can we make sure that we are safe, our loved ones are safe,
and we put out information that serves people at a high level to overcome these challenges.
So that's where my head goes. And she's finally starting to shift more into that.
And I can see her anxiety go down because she's not consuming as much. So consuming is what I'm
hearing is one of the worst things we can do, especially if you're an anxious person.
Yeah. And again, I think it kind of matters the kind of person you are. Like I have a very nerdy husband who's a philosopher
and he can look at the stats and just not get kind of like blown up in it, you know? And so,
so for him, it's okay. But you know, we've had to work on kind of exactly what you're saying is
that he'll tell me and I'm like, my chest is pounding. Like I'm not be able to sleep. And it's
like, you kind of have to, this is I think an important thing for friendships and relationships is like
different people are at different points with this and you got to kind of
regulate depending on who you're talking to and what they do.
I mean, there's probably some friends that you want the opposite. You know,
I have other friends who are like, you know,
not taking this seriously and not sheltering in place. And for them,
I'm like, let me tell you the latest horrible statistics, you know?
Yeah. They're in Cancun with all their friends at the bars or whatever and saying, ah, who cares
if I get it? Right. That's, that's not the way you want to be either. And that's a good way to
think about emotions in general is that they're, they're functional, like emotions have a purpose,
right? There's a purpose to why my chest freaks out when I see these statistics is like, I'm
supposed to take action. I'm supposed to wash my hands. I'm supposed to social distance. But once you're already taking action, the anxiety
is not really helping. And the good news is we have, we have tools to, to not get rid of it.
Cause like, let's be fair, this is an awful, grieving, sad, yucky time. We're going to feel
that stuff, but we can have some control over how much we feel it, when we feel it, when it's appropriate to feel it, and so on.
Yeah, and if we're seeking joy and happiness, there's definitely times in our life where
we may not feel that because of grief, because of loss, because of death, because of losing
a career, losing a person close to you, breaking up in a relationship.
There are grieving periods for sure, and this is one of them.
And I think what I'm hearing you say is you can still find joy
and not be exhausted all day long and useless as a human being.
You can still find joy through just following through on a few of these things,
which is getting out of self and what you're angry about and say,
well, how can I be a solution by calling a friend, FaceTiming someone, showing up and doing something nice for someone? How can I work out? How can I
try to get some little bit extra sleep? How can I eat a little bit better, just make a better
decision, the next decision. And it's not easy, but it's worth it if you want to be happy. It's
the only things you can do to be happy really so exactly all of it reminds me of
this wonderful parable um it comes from buddhist tradition of the second arrow and and the way
this parable works is so buddha's talking to students and he's asking his students and he says
you know if you get shot with an arrow on the street is that really bad and people say yeah
that's super bad getting shot with an arrow and buddha asks okay would it be worse if you were
shot with like a second arrow too people like are like, yeah, second arrow would be worse, you know, two times as bad as the
first arrow.
And so then Buddha goes on to explain.
He's like, look, the bad stuff that happens in life is the first arrow.
You know, we're living through a pandemic.
That is a big arrow that we're getting hit with.
But our reactions to it is the second arrow, right?
You know, it is, you know, we might lose loved ones.
We might be trapped in the house.
We might, you know, my Yale students, for example, the seniors aren't going to have graduation. They've lost all their weeks of party with their friends there in mourning. But to like not eat healthy or not exercise or fight with your spouse or, you know, cry in your covers all the time. Like in some ways that second part is on you. You know, you might not be able to control COVID-19, but you can control,
you know, how much sleep you get tonight or what you, you know, again, the best choices you make.
And, you know, sometimes we're going to stab ourselves with those second arrows, but the
idea is to reduce them as much as possible. A lot of those are in our control. Yeah. I mean,
disaster is inevitable. You know, pain is inevitable. Bad things are going to happen, but it's a greater
disaster to respond in a negative way, to fall down and pity yourself and hurt yourself more.
That's the greater disaster is what I'm hearing you say. That's right. That's right. And again,
you know, within reason, because I always like to put in, you know, like with a little self
compassion, right? Because there are going to be the, there are going to be the ice, there are the ice cream
Netflix days, you know, like that's going to be the second arrow, right? No, I get it. Yeah. But
it's the consistency of it every day after day. You're, you're, you're in control of, here's,
here's a question because I want to make sure that I'm very careful when I talk about control and mental health and mental
illness and mental challenges, depression, anxiety. You know, there's different doctors
and research that'll say like, you can cure depression, mental health, like you have tools
that you can apply. And then there's other people that will say, no, this is a chemical imbalance
that this is who I am. I can't be fixed. I need medication for the rest of my life.
Where are you at with this in terms of mental health and depression, anxiety, the spectrum of
it? You know, I feel like I went through more depression-type thoughts and anxiety and suicidal thoughts when I was a lot younger.
And now over time with practice, with improving myself every single day and going through challenges,
I feel like I don't have those thoughts anymore.
But I always thought something was wrong with me.
What's your opinion on this?
Is there a spectrum for mental illness and mental health?
Can you improve your ability to be less mentally ill or depressed? Or is this something we are
born with and it's chemically unable to change? Yeah, I think, I mean, it's worth remembering
that there is a spectrum of this stuff and the kinds of interventions you want to take at different points in that spectrum might look
different. And so the analogy I always use is with health stuff.
So imagine you come in, you know,
I'm a doctor and you come into my office and you say, Hey doctor,
I have high blood pressure and I'm a little overweight.
I'd be like, you need to hit the treadmill,
hit the treadmill every day for half hour.
But if you walk into my office and you're like clutching your heart and you're
like, I'm an acute cardiac arrest, doctor, what do I do? I'm not going to say, hey, get on the treadmill because
like you need to hop on the treadmill today, right? Like you need something different. And I think,
you know, if your listeners are feeling like acutely suicidal, you know, like you're in the
midst of a panic attack, I'm not going to say, hey, you know, write a little gratitude, you know,
list right now. Like you're going to need a different kind of care. You're going to need
something that deals with something much more acute. And I think, you know, list right now, like, you're going to need a different kind of care, you're going to need something that deals with something much more acute. And I think, you know, medications
in those cases, you know, professional therapy, like those are tools we know empirically tend to
work. And there's lots of individual differences of who it works better for and so on. But like,
those are tools that are there for acute cases. I think if you're just kind of feeling like,
you know, I'm a little depressed, and I'm not flourishing right now, or I'm feeling really
anxious in the current situation, you know, that's when you're in the kind of crisis like, you know, I'm a little depressed and I'm not flourishing right now, or I'm feeling really anxious in the current situation. You know, that's when you're in the
kind of crisis where a lot of these long-term tools can really help. These tools that like
build on themselves over time. So they kind of just like in the exact way you were sharing with
your story, where it's like you start with baby steps and then these things become habits that
you're doing all the time that are protecting your mental health. Yeah. What's the difference between mental health and happiness?
I think it kind of depends on your definition. I mean, I think, you know, mental health is all
the things that kind of go into whether we're feeling happy, whether we're feeling flourishing,
whether we're experiencing positive emotion and so on. I think there's a lot of fight about these
different definitions, but we kind of know it, you know, like you both want to be mentally healthy and happy and there's some
overlap. There might be some nuance around the edges, but you know, mostly they're good things
to shoot for. Yeah. And you talk about this in your class about rewirements. Is it possible
for us to actually change who we are and rewire our minds, our thoughts, and our level of happiness?
Yeah. I mean, I think the answer to that is like, yes, but not maybe in the way you think,
right? It's possible to rewire our habits, just like it's possible to become healthier in terms
of our physical fitness or lose a bunch of weight or something like that, right? You can do it,
but it's not like you go to the gym once and then you're good and then you, you know, pack up your
gym bag and that's it. Like you actually have to put in constant effort. And so the research suggests
that it's for sure possible to change your levels of happiness. Every single one of your listeners
could achieve higher levels of statistical well-being. It's not going to be perfect all
the time. It's not going to change, but everybody can get better. But to do that, it takes work. You know, it takes like, you know,
sleep and exercise every day. It takes being social even when you don't feel like it. It
takes being other oriented when you're kind of in selfish mode. Like you have to do those habits
over time. The good news is as you do them more and more, and I think as you see the benefits,
kind of like, as you said in your own story, it becomes a little easier to do it both because it's kind of like a habit that you're used to,
but also you've seen the reward. So when you're kind of not feeling it, you're like,
okay, I, you know, I'm really craving this ice cream right now, but like, you know,
maybe it's better for me to just like, you know, hit my yoga mat instead. Right.
Yeah. I know a little bit what's going to work better.
You kind of know a little bit what's going to work better.
I'm curious as a professor and with someone who's got all this spotlight on them right now and all these people are taking your class at school and around
the world, podcast is blowing up all these things.
I'm sure the book deals are in the works and all this stuff are happening.
Do you ever feel like an imposter?
And I don't want to say this to like, in a negative way, but I've felt
this way over my career, different times of like, and I'm saying these things, but am I living up
to them at the highest level for myself? Is there ever moments where you feel like, gosh, I'm
teaching this, but I'm just, I'm not happy with myself and what I'm teaching. Cause I know I'm
not living up to it fully like sometimes, but is there anything like that for you?
I mean, are there ever moments where I'm not?
I mean, I think that's the real question.
I mean, no, I think one of the challenging things about this work is that just knowing the science doesn't change my intuitions, right?
Like, I know all the things I'm supposed to be doing, but that doesn't instantly mean that I'm doing them.
In class, we talk about this other fallacy that kind of gets back to the
80s culture. It's called the G.I. Joe fallacy. I don't know if you know G.I. Joe. G.I. Joe was
this 80s cartoon, army dudes, had this famous saying at the end that like knowing is half the
battle. G.I. Joe and stuff, if you remember. But it turns out that this idea that knowing is half
the battle is a fallacy. Like we think once I know what I'm supposed to do, you know, I read this management book, I read the self-help book. Now I know what
I'm supposed to do. That is not, it's not half the battle. It's probably like not even 10% of
the battle. It's most of the battle is putting it into effect in your own life. And so there are
lots of times when I slack off and I'm not putting it into effect in my own life. I'm acutely aware
of what I, I acutely aware of what I'm supposed to
do. I acutely know what I'm supposed to do, but I'm aware that I'm not doing it. And I think
honestly, that's one of the reasons people like the class and the podcast is that they see that
I'm kind of a screw up too. I'm an honest indication that this stuff takes work and
we're not going to be perfect and it takes baby steps and that's what you need to kind of feel better I mean it seems pretty common knowledge that most of the world knows that you shouldn't be eating
bad food if you want to lose weight and yet we know it's like you said we know the knowledge
like eat less and you'll probably lose weight and feel a little better don't eat the sugar all day
long and you're probably gonna feel better it's most people know this information, but we don't put it into action.
Is it just because it's hard? Is it because we don't care enough about the desired result?
Is it because there's a disconnect? Why is that? Yeah, I think part of it's hard. Part of it
actually is an accident of neuroscience that I'm totally fascinated with this accident of how our
brains are hooked up. So it turns out that there are different circuits in the brain for wanting something like the
craving that you get and like the amount that you want to go after something and really actually
liking something like how much you enjoy it when you actually do it. Super weird that the brain
doesn't line those up, but they don't. The biggest case where you see that is in the case of
addiction. So people who are heroin addicts, for example, incredibly crave the drug, you know, they're going to steal from their family or do
whatever. But then when they actually get it, they're really habituated to the drug. So they
don't actually even enjoy it that much when they get it, like these circuits have totally dissociated.
I think this is what happens with all this stuff. You know, I will, you know, crave a sugary meal
or crave sitting on my butt watching Netflix or, you know, crave money or something like that. But those cravings don't map onto the liking. And then there's the flip side.
There's stuff that I'll really like, like, you know, doing nice things for others or like really
pushing myself at the gym or getting to bed really early and putting down the social media. Like
those are not things that I crave at all, but they're things that my body and my mind are really
going to like. And it's so stupid that the brain is wired up in this dumb way that they don't align up. But that's, that's the problem.
Well, I mean, how do we change the craving then? So one part is just awareness, right? And so,
and you kind of talked about this just even in your own life, right? It's to kind of force the
noticing and be present with the liking, right? So when I panic scroll on social media, I noticed like, huh, didn't, did not like that so much. Hey brain, let's remember, didn't
like that so much. You know, when you do something nice for someone else, you're like, actually,
this felt super good. You know, with exercise, I get this a lot. I feel like I'm slowly rewiring
my craving for things like yoga and hard exercise where it's like, I really try. I had this wonderful
yoga teacher for a while who at the end of a really hard practice would
say, take a moment to notice what your body feels like after you just did that.
Do you like that feeling?
And again, it's sort of starting to rewire.
I'm like, actually, I do like that feeling.
I'm going to try to go after that.
Yeah.
And so again, it gets back to mindfulness, coming back to presence, coming back to awareness
of how you feel, awareness of your presence, coming back to awareness of how
you feel, awareness of your thoughts, if they were serving you or not, or supporting you,
and just trying to do more of those things that support you. I got a couple questions left for
you. This one is something that I'm concerned with because I don't know the stats, but someone
told me the other day that because of isolation and coronavirus, domestic violence is going through the roof and abused kids are becoming more abused.
You know, relationships that have a lot of tension are exploding.
Now, I don't know if you're aware of the stats or if you can shed light on any of that.
loading. Now, I don't know if you're aware of the stats or if you can shed light on any of that.
What can people do during this time of isolation where they can't leave, where they feel like they're being abused, screamed at, violence, physical violence, emotional violence? How can
people manage it when they literally can't leave? Yeah, well, I think that is a real worry. In fact, we're doing an episode of the podcast
with Eli Finkel, who's a relationships expert. He has a whole book on how to have happier marriages.
And this is something that we talked about directly that he's really worried that individuals
are stressed. You get two people who are stressed out together, you put them in an incredibly
stressful situation and not great behaviors emerge. And so I think if you're in a period of abuse, you know, those hotlines, those places
that will help you, they're still there. Like if you are in like real physical or mental abuse
situation, get out and you'll go somewhere else where you can socially distance, right? You don't
want to put yourself in another physically dangerous situation because of the virus.
But I think there's a lot of
folks who are, you know, a few steps down from that, but still really struggling right now. You
know, marriages, a lot of the data suggests that during crises like, you know, Hurricane Sandy or,
you know, after 9-11, their divorce rates do go up. But the good news is that marriage rates
sometimes go up, as do kind of birth rates, which means, you know, the baby making thing is happening, right? And so the research really suggests we could go either way.
And so then the question is like, what are the tools that we can use to kind of, you know,
protect our relationships from this stress? And I think, you know, one of those tools is one we
talked about a little bit before, which is just a little bit of self-compassion, right? Like we
have a way to frame, you know,
it gets back to this sort of idea of the second arrow we talked about, right? You know, my husband
makes a snippy comment at me, you know, during the day. And I could either react to that and like
freak out and be pissed off at him and spike my cortisol and spike my stress hormones. Or I could
be like, you know, he's under a lot of stress. He probably didn't mean it. Let me give him the
benefit of the doubt. And I think a lot of our family lives
are going to be a lot happier
if we can just kind of remember
that our first reaction should be
give people a little bit more of a benefit
of the doubt right now.
And then sometimes that can lead up, right?
If you're doing that with your spouse,
that means you're going to be less snippy with them.
Yeah.
Normal spiral of emotion that we sometimes get,
you can kind of nip that in the bud to help out right now.
Yeah.
I think you said,
remind me what you said,
you know,
a few years ago before you started this process of figuring out your own
happiness,
you're at a six.
Is that right?
Yeah,
probably six.
Now I'm more like seven or eight.
Yeah.
Now you're more of a seven or eight in three years.
Is the goal to continue to increase to
seven, eight, nine, 10? And so what's missing from you in order to get to that 10 level?
Yeah, it's a great question. I mean, I think, you know, the goal for me is just to do my best,
and to remember what I can control, what I can control. You know, I think I'm at a pretty good
level, you know, maybe a nine or 10
is there. It's worth remembering too, that, you know, a lot of happiness is under your control,
but there are some like genetic limits, you know, this gets back to the, like, are we wired to be
depressed and anxious? Some of us just not, did not hit the genetic lottery when it came to that
stuff. But even that, even if you're a person for whom that's true, there's still movement. And so
take the movement you can get. So, you know, will I be devastated if I don't hit a nine or a 10? Probably not. I'm pretty happy to like be as
bumped up as I am. And if these practices continue to pay more and more dividends over time, that's
great too. Yeah, that's awesome. This is a question I ask everyone at the end called the three truths.
So imagine that it's many, many years from now. It's as long as you want to live,
100, 200 years or whatever, but it's your last day on earth. And you've accomplished every dream
you could imagine. Every podcast, book, class you want to create, you've done it all. You've done
everything. You've seen all the people in your life have happy lives.
You've increased the consciousness of the world to happier people. All those things happened.
But for whatever reason, all the work that you put out there, it's got to go with you to the
next place, the next world, wherever you believe you're going next. So no one has access to your
information anymore about how to be happier or anything that
you've shared, but you get to leave behind three things you know to be true about the lessons
you've learned in your life, the lessons that have supported you the most that you would want to leave
behind. And this is all you would have to leave behind are these three lessons or these three
truths. What would you say are your three truths? Oh, that's a tough one. You like wait to the last minute of the podcast to do that sort of thing.
I think one of the truths would be that there's a lot that we can control and we need to recognize
the things we can control and the things we can't because those can be really powerful.
Kind of like similar to the second arrow.
The second two would be related.
It would be lots of self-compassion. Um, beating
ourselves up doesn't really help. And a lot of these tips are about paying attention to what
you're doing to yourself and how you're feeling yourself. And the related tip would be compassion
for other people that we forget the power of that approach of being connected to other people.
Um, if the final truth is just to make sure you're being other oriented and
connect with others as much as possible.
If I had a life where I did that, I'd be really happy to go knowing that I connected with
others and did as much for other people as possible.
I love that, Dr. Laurie.
Now, is there anything that we can do to support you in this moment?
Your podcast is a must for me.
I love it because I love hearing the research and the stories.
So I think everyone needs to go download the happiness lab,
go check it out.
Is there the free courses online right now?
Where can we get the course?
Yeah.
So the class is on Coursera.org.
It's called the science of wellbeing and happiness lab.
You can grab wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay,
cool.
And what,
do you have a book coming out or anything?
I'll just threw that out there.
I'm not sure.
Not the line.
Yeah.
You know,
you know,
those things,
but yeah,
I'll come back on when it's out.
Okay,
perfect.
And where can we connect with you on social?
Are you on Instagram?
Are you on,
I try to limit my social media,
given my own panic scrolling,
but you can find me on Twitter at Laurie Santos.
Okay.
On Twitter, at Laurie Santos, not Instagram. No, you can find the happiness lab on Instagram. Okay, perfect. I want to acknowledge you for a moment, Laurie, for taking on your own life and
allowing yourself to be a guinea pig on how to improve your happiness and have a more positive
mind and have healthier habits in your life. And through doing this, you're teaching so many kids
and so many adults who need this information.
So I acknowledge you for the gift you are in the world
and for diving in on this scary and fun project at the same time.
And what's your definition of greatness?
What's my definition of greatness?
I think having a great life, having a good life. The definition of greatness is Ah, what's my definition of greatness? I think having a great life,
having a good life. The definition of greatness is the good life. There you go. Dr. Laurie,
thank you so much. I appreciate it. Thanks so much. It was super fun.
Thank you so much for taking the time and listening to this interview and episode with
Dr. Laurie Santos. If you enjoyed it, please share this with a friend. Let me know what you learned about happiness and share with your friends about happiness as well, how they can be
happier in their life. You have the power to change and transform someone's life by just connecting
with them, by reaching out, by being a good listener, by being a good friend. And sending
them this podcast will help them, give them the tools to just be a little bit happier today.
Then you're doing something pretty good.
And if you haven't listened to my recent episode with Kevin Hart,
he mentioned on the podcast,
it's a bigger win when you show other people how to win.
Again, spread this message.
Show your friends and family how to be happier,
how to be more successful, and how to win.
And speaking of Kevin Hart,
if you haven't listened to that episode yet, make sure to
check out the full interview with the comedic superstar.
Go check it out right now over on the School of Greatness.
And if you enjoy being inspired, if you enjoy getting positive messages sent directly to
you, and you would like me to text you on a weekly basis, then shoot me a text right
now with the word podcast to 614-350-3960.
Again, if you want inspirational messages every single week sent by me to your phone,
then text me right now, 614-350-3960.
And make sure to follow me over on social media to get more inspiration
on all your favorite channels.
We are also now doing daily stuff over on TikTok.
So make sure to follow daily stuff over on TikTok.
So make sure to follow me at Lewis on TikTok and check me out there.
And to take you home,
I want to finish with this quote by Deepak Chopra.
Gratitude opens the door,
the power, the wisdom,
the creativity of the universe.
You open the door through gratitude.
Being a grateful person
brings more happiness and joy to your life.
I'm so grateful for you for taking the time to be here today and all the difference that
you make in the world with your talents and gifts.
Thank you again for spending the time with me today.
I love you so very much.
And you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great. you