The Meaning of Your Life with Arthur Brooks: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness
60 min
•Apr 2, 20262 months agoSummary
Arthur Brooks, Harvard professor and happiness researcher, discusses the growing meaning crisis affecting millions, particularly young adults experiencing depression and anxiety. He explores how technology and modern life have disconnected us from the sources of true meaning—faith, family, friendship, and meaningful work—and provides six actionable strategies to rebuild a purposeful life in six months.
Insights
- The number one predictor of depression and anxiety in adults under 30 is feeling that life is meaningless, not external circumstances or economic factors
- Meaning comprises three distinct components: coherence (understanding why things happen), purpose (knowing your direction and goals), and significance (mattering to others and the divine)
- Technology and left-brain dominance have created a simulation of life that prevents access to right-brain functions essential for love, meaning, and spiritual connection
- Strivers and high achievers are particularly vulnerable to the 'arrival fallacy'—the false belief that achieving major goals will bring lasting happiness
- Micro-goals (deepening relationships, strengthening faith, serving others) create sustainable meaning, while macro-goals (wealth, fame, status) produce temporary satisfaction followed by depression
Trends
Rising mental health crisis among college students and young adults linked to technology dependence and meaning deficit rather than economic hardshipShift from external achievement metrics to internal meaning-making as the primary driver of psychological wellbeing and life satisfactionGrowing recognition that AI and technology cannot solve existential questions, creating demand for philosophy-based and spirituality-based life guidanceDecline in traditional meaning sources (faith communities, family structures, local friendships) correlating with increased loneliness and anxiety across all demographicsEmergence of 'old-fashioned' living practices (tech-free meals, eye contact, physical touch) as evidence-based interventions for relationship and mental healthReframing of purpose from career achievement to relational and spiritual dimensions as younger generations reassess life priorities post-pandemicRecognition that polarization and activism-driven meaning-seeking are symptoms of deeper meaning crisis rather than solutions to itNeuroscience-backed understanding of oxytocin and vasopressin as biological mechanisms underlying the need for presence and touch in relationships
Topics
Meaning Crisis in Modern LifeTechnology Addiction and Brain Hemispheric ImbalanceLeft Brain vs Right Brain FunctionArrival Fallacy and Goal-Setting PsychologyStrivers Curse and Achievement AddictionMicro-Goals vs Macro-GoalsFaith, Family, Friendship as Meaning SourcesOxytocin and Vasopressin in RelationshipsEye Contact and Physical Touch in MarriageTech-Free Zones and Digital DetoxDepression and Anxiety in Young AdultsPurpose vs Meaning vs SignificanceCoherence as Existential UnderstandingAI and Existential QuestionsIntention Without Attachment
Companies
Harvard University
Arthur Brooks is a Harvard professor and teaches the top class on happiness at the institution
Oprah Winfrey Network
Arthur Brooks co-wrote a bestselling book with Oprah Winfrey on happiness and meaning
Google
Referenced as example of technology that cannot answer existential questions about meaning and purpose
OpenAI
ChatGPT cited as AI tool that cannot provide meaningful answers to existential life questions
Amazon
Referenced as source for purchasing alarm clocks as alternative to phone-based alarms
Audible
Platform where listeners can access the audiobook version of 'The Meaning of Your Life'
UCSB
University where Arthur Brooks' father took doctoral classes and where Jamie Kern Lima's birth mother was a student
People
Arthur C. Brooks
Guest discussing his new book 'The Meaning of Your Life' and research on happiness, meaning, and depression
Jamie Kern Lima
Host of the podcast conducting the interview and sharing personal experiences related to meaning and achievement
Oprah Winfrey
Co-author with Arthur Brooks of a book on happiness; praised for her interviewing depth and presence
Michelle Obama
Referenced as guest on Jamie Kern Lima's show who praised the depth of conversations
Melinda French Gates
Referenced as guest on Jamie Kern Lima's show who praised the interviewer's depth
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex
Referenced as guest on Jamie Kern Lima's show
Maria Shriver
Referenced as guest on Jamie Kern Lima's show who praised the interviewer's presence
Deepak Chopra
Referenced for concept of 'intention without attachment' in goal-setting and meaning-making
Quotes
"The number one predictor of depression and anxiety is the answer to the question, does your life feel meaningless? The answer, yes. That's a meaning crisis."
Arthur Brooks•Opening
"Happiness has macro nutrients, sort of the protein, carbohydrates and fat of happiness are enjoyment, satisfaction and meaning. Those are the three things that people need to look at."
Arthur Brooks•Mid-episode
"You can't Google the big questions in life. Why am I alive? For what would I give my life? Chat GPT can't tell you what you'd give your life for. That's something you have to live with."
Arthur Brooks•Mid-episode
"We're in The Matrix. It's happening to us right now. People are spending all day long simulating a real life. That's all left brain. And there's one thing that you can't simulate and that's the meaning of your life."
Arthur Brooks•Mid-episode
"I am lovable when I earn things. That's and you become a human doing, not a human being. Love is a free gift, freely given. It's a grace. Love isn't something you earn."
Arthur Brooks•Late-episode
Full Transcript
The number one predictor of depression and anxiety is the answer to the question, does your life feel meaningless? The answer, yes. That's a meaning crisis. What's meaning? Where do you find it? How do you live differently? What's going wrong? The happiest people are practicing for things every day. They are. Do you know the meaning of your life? Do you feel a true sense of purpose? Is this something you've been searching for, but perhaps are struggling with? If so, you're not alone. Millions of people, in fact, describe this feeling of a growing sense of emptiness or lack of significance. And if you can relate and if you want more meaning and fulfillment in your life, then today's episode is for you. Arthur C. Brooks is a Harvard professor, PhD social scientist and number one bestselling author of multiple books who specializes in using the highest levels of science and philosophy to provide people with actionable strategies to live their best lives right now. And in his brand new book, it's called The Meaning of Your Life. He leans on cutting edge science and great philosophers to give us a blueprint that he says will help even the most skeptical person find a life of spiritual transcendence, passionate love and true calling. Yes, please. Arthur speaks to audiences around the world about human happiness and he's flown across country to be here in person with you and me. Today, I am so excited for this conversation and whether today you're listening for yourself or because someone you love shared this episode with you. I want to welcome you to the Jamie Kern-Lemischo podcast family. Thank you so much for being here. If you haven't done this already, can you take a second and click the follow or subscribe button on the app you're listening to or watching on right now? It really truly means the world to me. And also you can get more inspiration for free right now from me to you. Just join my newsletter community at JamieCurdenLemischo.com. And this incredible episode today is not just for you and me. Please share this with every single person that you know, who may need some inspiration or to find meaning in their life today. Because what you're about to hear can truly impact mine, yours and their lives too. Welcome to Jamie Kern-Lemischo. Oprah, how have you defied the odds? Her show is unlike any I've ever done. A revelation. When you listen, it feels like a hug. First lady, Michelle Obama. Jamie, you are going so deep. I have never had this in-depth conversation. I've actually never said that out loud to anybody in an interview before. You know how to get there. Your brain and your spirit and your heart is like, wow. Melinda French Gates. When I look into Jamie's eyes, I feel like I am on some other cosmic level with her. Megan Dutchess of Sussex. I wasn't expecting that one. I could see the light around her. She's infused with light. Maria Shriver. I never made that mistake again. Imagine overcoming self-doubt, learning to believe in yourself and trust yourself and know you are enough. Welcome to the Jamie Kern-Lemischo. Jamie Kern-Lemischo, her name. Everybody needs Jamie Kern-Lemischo in their life. Jamie Kern-Lemischo. Jamie, you're so inspiring. Jamie Kern-Lemischo. Are there brooks? Welcome to the Jamie Kern-Lemischo. Thank you, Jamie. It's so great to be with you. Two Seattle kids together, huh? Yes, yes. And we both have roots to Montecito I learned. Uh-huh. Yeah. My dad went to high school at Santa Barbara High School and they lived in Montecito, but that was way before my time. Before your time. Yeah. It's wild. You know, I live in Santa Barbara and Montecito area now and I was adopted. I didn't know this my whole life. I learned at age 27, but long story short, my birth mom was actually a student at UCSB. Really? And she had me in secret, you know, and then placed me in adoption. And she worked down the street actually from where I live as a lifeguard. And it's kind of wild that my whole life went in a whole different area than I end up back here. Back here. Living here. All roads lead to Montecito. I think so. I think so. I used to spend summers a lot here, actually. When I was a kid, we would come down here. My dad would take doctoral classes when he was working on his PhD at UCSB, as a matter of fact. So a lot of my summer memories are from here too. And you're a third generation academic. I know you're a musician and a whole bunch of other things. My dad, my, that's the family business. You know, the Gambino's do mob stuff. Yes. You know, the Rothschilds do banking stuff. Well, the Brooks's do academic stuff. You do academics. Well, we are all benefiting from that and blessed from that. And you've had so many bestselling books. You've co-written a book with Oprah. You are, you know, you teach the top class at Harvard on happiness. And so many people, I feel grateful to get so many messages and emails and DMs from people every day. And one of the biggest questions is like, how do I find my purpose? But also, how do I find happiness? And why right now? Why are so many people unhappy? Right. That's a big problem that we actually see. And it's been growing, you know, it's almost a, it's kind of, you'd say there's sort of a climate and a weather problem for unhappiness, where the climate is sort of the general conditions of happiness have been in decline and then there have been some big storms along the way. So it's been since about 1990, general happiness has been ticking down in the United States and many other countries around the world. And the general reason for that is that the happiest people are practicing for things every day. They're paying attention to their faith or life philosophy or spirituality. They're paying attention to their family life. They're paying attention to their friendships and they're looking for work that's meaningful and serves other people. And all four of those things have been gradually in decline. And so that's kind of a sickness, a climatic problem for happiness. And then there's been three big storms that have had sort of a down draft on happiness. Number one was when everybody got on small screens, you know, and that was 2008, 2009, when screen based life and apps became ubiquitous and that pulled us apart from each other. There was COVID, of course, you know, everybody went home and skyrocketing rates of depression, anxiety. And then, of course, there's the whole climate of politics in this country, which has been extremely polarizing. And we're being told by activists and politicians that if your your brother in law or your aunt doesn't vote like you, you got to stop talking to them. And that's just terrible advice. That's leading to tremendous amounts of unhappiness as well. And so these are the things that I'm trying to combat in my work and bring people back to bonds and happiness and love using science and ideas. That's that's my life's mission. For me, that's a huge opportunity because I get to live what God put me on earth to do, I think. And would you say that we have a growing crisis of meaning? Yeah, for sure. And this is what I saw when I came back to teaching. I left teaching for 11 years in the middle of my career and I went to run a big think tank nonprofit organization in Washington, D.C. And I came back in 2019. So I was gone from 2008 to 2019 and it was not the same place that I left that I came back to. When I left in 2008, universities were happier than the rest of the world. You're falling in love, you're making your friends, you're learning interesting things. And I came back in 2019 and there were very high rates of depression, loneliness, anxiety, and people studying at universities were unhappier than the rest of the population. And I'm like, now I'm trained as a behavioral scientist. So this is my Sherlock Holmes moment. Like what's going on? And I started working on that. And this book, this new book, The Meaning of Your Life, is the culmination of that because the number one predictor of depression and anxiety for adults under 30 is the answer to the question, does your life feel meaningless? The answer, yes. That went up at exactly the same rates as people feeling depressed, anxious, and lonely. And that's what predicts it the best. So that's a meaning crisis. And that's a whole, boy, what a kettle of fish. What's meaning? Where do you find it? How do you live differently? What's going wrong? And the answer, well, that's the book. I mean, the six ways that you do find it and to establish the sense of meaning in your life in six months, that's least that's the proposition. Yeah. Well, I've read the book cover to cover the meaning of your life. And if you're just tuning in right now and you're like so many of us, or maybe you have like a sense of emptiness, or you're a seeker of meaning all the time, or you're like, you know, I really don't know the meaning of my life is meaning the same thing as purpose. And how do I feel more fulfilled and happy? There's so many questions that so many of us have. And I'm so excited for your book. And by the way, if you're just tuning in right now, you're listening or watching me and Arthur, grab your copy right now. The meaning of life you can get anywhere. Books are sold and also the audio version, Audible. Sometimes I love to listen when I'm just like doing my morning walk and I'll read it, I'll read it to anybody. Yes. Well, it's so good and it's so important off the top. The question. Yeah. So many people want to know, Arthur Brooks, what is the meaning of life? Where do you find it? How do you have to live differently so you can find it in modern life? Yeah, exactly right. And it really starts with an even more fundamental question, which people sort of assume they know, but they don't, which is what's happiness? You know, when my last book that I wrote with Oprah Winfrey, our mutual, beautiful friend, that defines happiness in a way that people find very counterintuitive. A lot of people think that happiness is a feeling and they're looking for a feeling. We're a very feelings based culture. And to look for happiness as a feeling is to really go after a vapor. Happiness and feelings are related, but the feelings of happiness are related to happiness like the smell of your turkey is related to your dinner. It's not the same thing. It's evidence of the dinner. So don't go looking for feelings. You need something more tangible. The happiness has macro nutrients, sort of the protein, carbohydrates and fat of happiness are enjoyment, satisfaction and meaning. Those are the three things that people need to look at. And when I talk to somebody for the first time or I'm coaching somebody, I'm working with an executive or whatever, all look into their lives to see where they're weak. It's kind of like looking at their nutrition, say, yeah, I'm eating too many carbohydrates, you need more protein. And I can find that pretty quickly. I have diagnostic tests for that. Many people don't have enough enjoyment. They don't enjoy their lives enough. They're super hard workers or they're not taking satisfaction in their accomplishments because they don't know what they're doing with their life. But most frequently with young adults in particular, they don't know the why of their lives. They don't know why they're on earth. They have no sense of that. And that's the big crisis that I find here. The big blockage for people today and not just young adults. A lot of people my age too are struggling with the why questions. Why am I doing what I'm doing? Why does my life matter? Why are things happening all around me? Those are the why questions of meaning. And when I start seeing those things, wow, boy, do I know that I'm going to have a problem on my hands, which is an opportunity to get better if we know what we're doing. And so can you talk about meaning, purpose and significance? Yeah. So meaning, it's, you know, to say, what's the meaning of life? It's too big. Yeah. You know, what's the, you got to go sit in the mouth of a cave and ask a guru in the Himalayas or something. It's the meaning of life. It's like a New Yorker cartoon, practically. You need to break it down. All big problems can be broken down into smaller problems. You know, it's one of the things when I talk to people about how to fix their marriages, that you break it into smaller problems and have smaller tasks. And when you do that, you can repair almost any marriage, but not when you say, I'm unhappy in my marriage. That's too big. That's too big. The same thing is true with meaning. That the whole, the meaning of life is too big a question. It's really three smaller questions. The first is why are things happening the way they're happening? That's coherence. That's the sense of coherence. And maybe your answer to that is because that's what God wants. Or maybe it's because that's what science dictates. Some people really good on the rabbit hole of conspiracy theories. A lot of people do that today. That's a hunger for meaning is what that is, because they're trying to look for an answer to the question of why are things happening the way that they are. So when you have somebody in your family who's just really nutty on conspiracy theories, don't yell at them or send them articles and say, do your homework, idiot. That's really kind of productive. They're looking for a sense of coherence. Give them a better way to find coherence. Talk to them about science. Talk to them about your faith. Talk to them about spirituality. Different ways to find coherence. That's number one. Number two is purpose. And purpose is not the same thing as meaning. It's part of meaning. Purpose is the why am I doing what I'm doing? Where am I going with my life? What are my goals? What's my direction? If you don't have that, you're going to be going in circles. You're really going to be going in circles. This is one of the reasons that people who have purpose, when they know that they've got this big goal, when you think back on your own life. You've had this legendary life of an entrepreneur, but there was purpose. You were going in a particular direction and you were driven, driven. And that was really helpful for you to find meaning. The meaning of my life is having a successful cosmetics company. No, the meaning of your life has purpose where you're going in a particular direction and you know you're creating value. The third is significance. Why does my life matter? And to whom? And it's like, I don't know why. And it's not meaningful to anybody. It's not significant to anybody. You're going to be in trouble. So that's why when people get deeply involved in their faith, they have a much better sense of meaning because you're significant to God. That's when they have a good relationship with their family and friends. Meaning becomes clearer because love is part of significance. And those are the three things we need to look at. The problem is those are hard to find for a lot of people in modern life today. And they're going about trying to find these in the wrong way. Mm-hmm. Can you say more about that? Yeah. So life changed quite significantly over the past 20 years, especially for young adults. Insofar as life is very technology based. One of the things that's different from when I was a kid, a young adult, and the young adult lives of my adult children, is that they suppose that there's an answer to every question that they can find by using technology. As a matter of fact, if you can't Google it, it's not a real question. But the big questions in life, you can't Google. Like, why am I alive? For what would I give my life? I defy anybody to put that into a Google search bar or into chat GPT and get an answer that means anything. Chat GPT can't tell you what you'd give your life for. That's something you have to live with. That's a meaning question. The result of it is that a lot of young people today, they live only in the space of questions that they can answer online. And that is literally using their brain in the wrong way. Our brain has two sides to it, the right side and the left side. That's a big fancy neuroscience theory called hemispheric lateralization. You got to have a fancy word for it. That's how we get tenure in my business. That's in academia. The right side of your brain answers these deals with the complex questions of mystery and meaning and love and happiness, the life and life. The left side figures out complicated stuff. Like, how do I create an app that will find a pizza place that's open at 10 PM? Or how do I design a jet engine? Or for that matter, where do I go to find a better toaster? Those are all left brain questions. But modern life is trying to make everything into the left brain. Is trying to make us technologically savvy enough to answer any question. And that's locking down the right side. The mystery and the meaning side of life. The love side of life. Where you're looking for the cosmic understanding of why life matters. You're not going to solve that problem. All the problems you really care about in life, you can't solve. You can only live with. You know, it's like, I've been married 34 years. I've never solved my marriage. I just live with my marriage. And that's why I love my marriage. But if I were trying to solve it with this app or that technology or, you know, this algorithm, it would be a complete failure because it would never fit. I would never be living right now in love, which is what my right brain allows me to do unless I lock it down and neglect it. And that's what's happening. I have friends that literally do not see their therapist anymore and they use AI or chat GPD for their marriage therapy. It's a big mistake. Can you talk about this? This is so good. You and I were talking before we even started this conversation and I was like, Oh, I've got to get this on camera. This is so good because it can you talk about how if we start only living in our left brain and our tech and technology and this the way we live our lives is there. And then we stop accessing our right brain, the right side of our brain, what happens? And does that prevent us from finding meaning, meaning, but also does that prevent us from being in love and feeling a sense of connection with the divine and feeling like that, the fulfillment and feeling period. Right. No, you got it. You got it is the answer to that. People ask me all the time, how will AI affect my happiness? Because I'm a happiness specialist. And I say, well, it depends. We need to pause for a super brief break. And while we do take a moment to share this episode with every single person that you know who this could inspire, because this conversation can truly be the words and inspiration they need to hear today to keep going to remember that they matter and to feel less alone and more enough, more connected, more inspired and more worthy in life. You don't sort the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self worth. When you build your self worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy, How to Believe You Are Enough and Transform Your Life for You. If you have some self doubt to destroy and a destiny to fulfill, Worthy is for you. In Worthy, you'll learn proven tools and simple steps that bring life changing results, like how to get unstuck from the things holding you back, build unshakable self love, unlearn the lies that lead to self doubt and embrace the truths that wake up worthiness, overcome limiting beliefs and imposter syndrome, achieve your hopes and dreams by believing you are worthy of them and so much more. Are you ready to unleash your greatness and step into the person you were born to be? Imagine a life with zero self doubt and unshakable self worth. Get your copy of Worthy plus some amazing thank you bonus gifts for you at WorthyBook.com or the link in the show notes below. Imagine what you do if you fully believed in you. It's time to find out with Worthy. Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious and so is self-belief. And I'd love to hang out with you even more, especially if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter that's also a love letter to you delivered straight to your inbox each and every Tuesday morning from me. If you haven't signed up to make sure that you get it each week, just go to JamieKernleama.com to make sure you're on the list and you'll get your one-on-one with Jamie weekly newsletter and get ready to believe in you. If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration, some tips, tools, joy and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. Subscribe at JamieKernleama.com or in the link in the show notes. Do you struggle with negative self-talk? Living with a constant mental narrative that you're not good enough is exhausting. I know because I spent most of my life in that habit. The words you say to yourself about yourself are so powerful. And when you learn to take control over your self-talk, it's life-changing. And I wanted to give you a free resource that I created for you if this is something that could benefit your life. It's called Five Ways to Overcome Negative Self-Talk and Build Self-Love. And it's a free how-to guide to overcome that negative self-talk to build confidence and develop unshakable self-love so that you can dream big and keep going in the pursuit of your goals. Don't let self-sabotaging thoughts hinder your progress any longer. It's time to rewrite the script of your life, one filled with self-love, resilience and unwavering belief. If you're ready to take charge of your narrative, build unwavering confidence and empower yourself to persevere on the path to your dreams, you can grab your free guide to stop overthinking and learn to trust yourself at jameykernleema.com slash resources or click the link in the show notes below. And now more of this incredible conversation together. You're going to be in trouble. If you're trying to use AI as your best friend or as your lover or as your therapist, that's not going to get the job done. It might fool you, but your brain knows. What that's doing is it's simulating real life. The most popular movie of 1999 was The Matrix. And that was all about this crazy science fiction story of an artificial intelligence that's taking the energy away from human beings and putting them in a simulation so they won't complain. It's basically the plot of The Matrix. Jamie, we're in The Matrix. It's happening to us right now. People are spending all day long simulating a real life. They get up and check their messages and they go to work on Zoom and they're dating on an app and their friends are online and they're gaming to get a sense of accomplishment and it's a simulation. That's all left brain. And there's one thing that you can't simulate and that's the meaning of your life. The things that mean something to you, your love relationships and the sense of the divine, you can't simulate that. And so what will happen is you get more and more depressed, more and more lonely, more and more anxious and you don't know why. The reason is because you're literally using your brain wrong and everybody watching us is like, yes, yes, it feels like a simulation. It's not your fault. The Matrix is all around us. What we have to do is to break out and this book, the manual, is the handbook is how to break out of The Matrix and get to the right side of your brain. It's so good. It's so good. It's so true. And it's so easy. It's so addicting to just be on your phone to look at it first thing in the morning, to look at the latest funny thing your friend just sent you to, I mean, just like on and on and on and on and on. And one of the things I love that I find really, really fascinating that you talk about too is that people are trying to search for meaning and macro things, fame or likes and followers or activism, even you say, not realizing that meaning can come from the micro things. And meaning largely does come from these micro things. And so when it's missing, you look for something, somebody's offering you this and you take it and offering you that. Somebody says, if you vote this way, you'll feel better if you get angry and marching and demonstration against something else that everything will be okay. No, no, no, no, no, the problem is you're not in your native habitat. You're stuck outside the place where you need to be. You're not home. You're only home on the right side. And so you need to live differently. You need to live in an old fashioned way. Yeah, on the right side. I'm not talking about politically. Yeah, yeah. And what you say more about this, because when you talk about the micro, right, to find meaning and how most meaning is found in the micro, explain what the micro is, because this is something everyone can do right now, right, in your life. And it's thinking about the little things in your life that really are the life in your life. That's really what it comes down to. And it's funny because that was all of life not that long ago. You know, my, you know, great granddad Brooks was not, didn't ever come home to my great grandmother and say, you know, honey, I had a panic attack behind the mule today. It wasn't a thing. It wasn't a thing at all. His brain was working the way it was supposed to. And by the way, his day to day life was probably pretty boring. But at the end of his life, he didn't say my life was boring. In contrast, that with today, with a lot of young people who are never bored moment to moment, they're never bored. But their life is boring. Why is that that you're never bored in the micro moments, but you're completely bored when you look at the totality of your life, which is exactly the opposite of the way that's supposed to work. And if you're not alive, like right here, right now, I mean, one of the reasons that this conversation doesn't work the same way if it's virtual, I mean, it's okay. But this is better because I'm looking in your, in your eyes, I can see it was a real person across from me. And that's a that's a very important thing for us to understand that we're, we're having an experience that's, that's where we're communicating with the right hemispheres of our brain right now, which is why we're able to talk about meaning and understand each other is what it comes down to. And that's what we need more of in life. They're big sort of a six big ways to set up the micro moments in your life, to fight back, to break out of the matrix, actually, before you do that, however, you got to get clean, because you're probably addicted. Now, I'm not a militant about, about technology. I'm not some sort of a Luddite or I have a phone like you, I'm on social media, because I'm trying to bring beautiful messages of love and happiness and hope to people on social media. But we have to be able to use it in the right way so that we manage it and it doesn't manage us. And it's just so addicting. I was sharing with you right before we started that this morning, I was thinking about your work a lot, of course, and this morning, my husband and I are having this conversation. And I realized most of our conversations, he's looking at his phone, sometimes I'm looking at my phone, trying to, and that's our, that's our connection. And it's like, oh, okay, we're sort of like in the left brain and we're, you know, but we're not in that. You're not making a right brain connection with the person with whom you should have, you know, it's like the many religious traditions talk about a married couple being one flesh. And that's easy to sort of understand viscerally, but what that's really talking about, the one flesh is the two right brains working together. That's the, it's the uplink between the two brains. That's a, that's an antenna to the divine. That's why the most profound connection somebody has in a spiritual sense is when they're with their soulmate. But it won't happen if you're actually cutting those neurophysiological connections by using the devices. Because when you're both on the left side of your brains, it's just, it's just technology. You know, you're missing these opportunities. And so I talk an awful lot with my classes about how these connections actually get made between people. Very specifically, it's super important. And we were talking offline before about, about these ideas that I had that the, what the science says about how to repair any marriage. And it starts by looking at each other in the eyes when you talk every time. That's more important for women than for men. And guys don't know this, but they're like, why is she so mad at me? Because you're not looking at her in the eyes and she gets three times as much oxytocin as you with eye contact. Women produce more oxytocin than men. And the reason is because we're, women are evolved to make an immediate connection with a newborn infant. And you look and when you're nursing a baby, the baby looks at you in the eyes. And this is like oxytocin. It's a neuropeptide. And it's the, it's a bonding hormone. That's my baby. That's my baby. And the baby's going, that's my mama. That's my mom. Men get a third as much, which is still significant, right? And the number one way that you get it as a married couple is by staring at each other in the eyes when you're talking. And so I'll say to guys who say that my wife's really unhappy with me, I feel like we're getting, we're, we're separating from each other. We're not close. I say, okay, number one thing, never have a conversation with her in the kitchen or wherever you are, especially when you lie down at night is staring at each other when you're talking, just look at her in the eyes every single time you're talking. And she'll just be weirdly happier. And she won't know why. It's what it comes down to. Now, on the other side for him, what he needs is to be touched more when you're next to him, always be touching, ABT always be touching. This is when he's producing more vasopressin, which is another, another hormone. But that's his like, I'm big and strong. And so if you're walking together and you link your arm in his, he feels like he's a giant. And, and, and that's more important to men as it turns out. So it's number one, eye contact in every conversation and ABT always be touching. This solves so many problems in marriages. And, and this is something that we can actually get that where you use the science, what we're talking about here, you'll weirdly have a sense of meaning in your marriage and you won't know why because the mysterious side of your brain is working. Does it matter where you're touching? Yeah, I mean, it's like, there's, you know, appropriate touch, depending where you are. Yeah. Yeah. But it's just touching, just touching. It's just like holding hands and touching and, and, and always men often don't know they need that, but they really, really need that from their wise. It's super important actually. And that will make him way, way, way more connected. But he has to do his part too, which is the eye contact. Eye contact, the eye contact. Yeah. So good. I think so many people are having as over what's a big aha moments right now. Yeah. Because it's so easy for neither of those things to be happening. Totally, totally. And then what happens is you kind of fall, fall out of the rhythm of what a, that's very, those things are super easy to do when you're first in love, because you'd want to stare into each other's eyes all the time and you're touching all the time. But you don't realize that what that's doing is bonding you to each other with oxytocin, nevastopressin and various other neurochemistry that's going on. But you have to do it manually because life gets busy. You got a bunch of kids and you're running a business and everybody's traveling and everybody's nutty. And did you pick up the kids and that, that, that, did you go grocery shopping? Ah, the dishwasher didn't get emptied. That means you have to have these interventions that are on purpose, living on purpose to illuminate the parts of your brain that, that are necessary for the constant connection. And also you're just addicted to technology. Even if you have time, it's wild. That'll, that'll shut down the oxytocin pump just, just like that. As a matter of fact, when you're eating, which is one of the, the phone free zones is meals should be. If the, if your phone is on the table and you're not even looking at it and it's face down, when you look at it, it'll cut off your oxytocin flow. Yeah, because you're thinking, your brain just went to your notifications or your text messages or whatever it happened to be. And you're no longer mentally and you're no longer neurologically linked to your partner. You're no longer getting the divine antenna. So if you're in this conversation at dinner with your partner or even a great friend about something that's, and, and, and maybe you're, you know, feeling like some type of divine inspiration and you're, and you're maybe in your right side of your brain, but then you go down and you look at your phone. Done. Done. You're done. You turn it off. You're about your go to the left. You go to the left side. So if you, the first thing that people need to do understanding, and again, this is not all about technology. It's also just the philosophy of how we live, which is I got to solve every complicated problem. Everything is a complicated problem to solve. It's the, the technologized culture, the hustle culture just lends itself to this. It's just the technology is the tip of the spear. But the first thing we need to do is to get clean from that. And that starts with tech-free times, one of which is meals, always meals, never eat with a phone on a table. The two other tech-free times, by the way, to solve this problem, because, you know, we're not going to be free of technology. I mean, it's just, that's, I mean, that's like saying, you know, if you have trouble with junk food, stop eating. That's bad advice. It's impossible advice. The two other times were the first hour when you wake up in the last hour before you go to sleep. And, and that means don't look at the phone for the first hour, which is super hard. My students are like, I use it as a, an alarm clock. And I say, well, there's also a thing you could buy for five bucks on Amazon that'll wake you up. Like, like the old days. But what'll happen is you can program your brain in the first hour, not to be super, I mean, reliant on the dopamine and, you know, the, the neurochemistry that's being stimulated by looking at the phone. If you, just that first hour, really important is especially if you walk in the morning without your phone, it's great. And the last hour of the day, it gets you actually ready to sleep without the app, without the phone. And so lock it in a closet, you know, not a time lock if you have to. But I have a closet in my house that I put it in. It's not the same floor as I sleep on. And, and I've gotten so out of the habit of looking at it at night that even if it is next to my bed, because I'm on the road, I am using it as an alarm clock in a pinch, I never look at it because I don't think of it anymore. It's really changed my habits and improved my life a lot. So I want to dive into, you know, the meaning of your life with your book. I'm so excited for everyone to get this in their hands because I can't even tell you, and I would, I would put myself in this boat that there's times where I'm like, I think I'm supposed to be more fulfilled than this. And so, and I've, I've grown to understand a lot of things through some of the concepts you share that I'm excited to dive into for everyone listening for myself, you know, a lot of us are like, Oh, I feel like there's more and I don't know what that more is. And some things miss and we're constantly seeking and I love how you break this down. So I'm excited to dive into this. For anyone listening that's like, I accomplished the thing, but then I still feel not fulfilled. And, and, and then is, is, is it ever enough? Am I ever enough? But just all these questions. First, just a couple real foundational things, which is, do we all, and I know meaning and purpose are different. Do we all have, do you believe we all have a purpose or multiple purposes in our lives? I think we all have a lot of purposes. We all have a lot of goals and direction in our life for sure. And there couldn't be one that's really overarching. You know, if you're a very, really religious person, you might say my goal is to get to heaven. And that's a good one. And that'll be your whole life. And that's phenomenal. But there are lots of little goals too. And that's a beautiful thing as well. It keeps you going in, in a particular direction. It allows you to see whether or not you're making progress. And we're progress oriented creatures. You know, that's how human beings are designed. The problem is when you have a big, big, big goal and you think that your happiness is going to come from an earthly goal, that, you know, it's, when my book is published, then I'm going to be really, really happy. You're going to be disappointed. I've actually done a lot of work with athletes. And, you know, Olympic athletes, they typically suffer from a clinical depression in the months after they win a gold medal. And the reason for that is because all the progress in going to the Olympics is really satisfying because you're making progress toward a particular goal. And you imagine in your head that if you get there and you win, then it'll be bliss that hangs around forever. But that's not how the brain works. The brain produces emotions as information about what's going on outside, you know, things that rewards and punishments and things that you should approach or avoid. It's not there to give you a permanently happy day. That's not what emotions are for. And when you don't, it's very disappointing, which is why they go into a funk. And that's why they get depressed as a matter of fact. That's called the arrival fallacy. And so one of the things I work with people on is how to have good goals that change and they're healthy and you're making progress and they're helping other people. But being kind of, you know, Deepak Chopra talks about this is intention without attachment. And that's a hard thing to achieve. But if you have a good sort of supernatural understanding of your life and you're looking for deep meaning, you can do it. Mmm. Intention without attachment. So for someone that says, you know, oh, my dream was like, I would feel better once I hit my goal weight or once I got the 2.5 kids or the white picket fence or I remember after my first book, Believe It came out and I got, I was like a three or four months after the launch and I got a call from the publisher. And they're like, we're just checking in to see how are you? Like, how are you? And I was like, what do you mean? Like, I'm great. I'm like, are you happy? Like, you know, all the things, of course, you know, that they're like, no, no, no, the book's great. Like the book, you know, because everyone's like, they're happy it's on New York Times. They're happy it's selling, blah, blah, blah. But they're like, how are you? Yeah, because they know their authors. Yeah. And I'm like, what do you mean? And they said, well, a lot of times authors work so hard for so long, you put you put five years into the meaning of your life or like years into into this work. And then it comes out. And they said, sometimes a book launches, like you're shot out of a cannon. And then their authors go into big depression. And I was like, oh, like astronauts, like Olympic athletes, but also, you know, so many people I know have had these experiences where they think, well, once I get married, then everything's going to be fine. Or once I get that promotion at work, or once I have this number in my bank account, then you arrive at it and you still feel like, oh, that didn't solve all my problems. I don't still feel fulfilled. And a lot of people then go, oh, I just need to raise the bar. I need to I need a bigger number in my bank account, or I need, I need to have six pack abs, not four or whatever it might be. And so can you talk about that? Because I'm actually fascinated by this idea of, is it good to feel like, okay, I've arrived, I'm content, or is it good to constantly be in pursuit? In pursuit is actually how you find meaning. Arriving is not the secret of meaning. It's absolutely not the secret of meaning. And people, they imagine that all will become clear. I had a close friend, very, very wealthy guy, significant and older than me. And, and when he was younger, he struggled a lot with his business, big entrepreneur. I asked him, when you thought about being rich, how did you think your life was going to change? And he thought about it and he said, we need to pause for a super brief break. And while we do, take a moment to share this episode with every single person that you know, who this could inspire, because this conversation can truly be the words and inspiration they need to hear today to keep going, to remember that they matter and to feel less alone and more enough, more connected, more inspired and more worthy. Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious. And so is self belief. And I'd love to hang out with you even more, especially if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter. That's also a love letter to you delivered straight to your inbox each and every Tuesday morning from me. If you haven't signed up to make sure that you get it each week, just go to JamieKernleema.com to make sure you're on the list and you'll get your one on one with Jamie weekly newsletter and get ready to believe in you. If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration, some tips, tools, joy and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. Subscribe at JamieKernleema.com or in the link in the show notes. I am so excited for this book. You know what? Because it's going to save so many. It's going to save you. Were the your new beautiful book, Murady? Get this book. This book? I'm telling you, it's a book that can change anybody's life. Who picks it up. Anybody who's ever felt that they were not good enough, didn't measure up, something's missing in your life. I have to tell you, it's powerful. It's happening. It's worthy. Imagine what would you do if you fully believed in you? I went from struggling waitress facing non-stop rejection to founder of It Cosmetics, a billion dollar company, by learning how to overcome self-doubt and believe I am worthy of my hopes and dreams and I'm sharing how you can too in my new book, Worthy, how to believe you are enough and transform your life. If you're ready to truly trust yourself and break through that barrier of self-doubt and know that where you come from or even where you are right now doesn't determine where you're going, then Worthy is for you. It's time to go from doubting you're enough to knowing you're enough. It's time to step into all of who you are and into the person you were born to be and it's time to believe that you are worthy of it because in life we don't become what we want, we become what we believe we're worthy of. Join the Worthy movement today by grabbing your copy of Worthy anywhere books are sold, then head to worthybook.com now for free gifts including my five-part course on becoming unstoppable and my 95-page Worthy Workbook Action Plan that teaches you how to implement the tools from the book into your real life right now. Worthy is groundbreaking. This book is going to change lives. This book literally will teach you how to actually feel worthy so that you can have the strength, you can have the confidence. The lessons in this book and the strategies will change your life. You will never be the same again after you read this book. Jamie's Book Worthy is a must read. It is going to inspire you, empower you, give you the hope that you need and the kick in the rear end that you deserve. Jamie's Book Worthy is incredible. The gifts are going away but they're off-free right now on worthybook.com and now more of this incredible conversation together. I had a close friend, very, very wealthy guy, significant and older than me and when he was younger he struggled a lot with his business, a big entrepreneur. I asked him, when you thought about being rich, how did you think your life was going to change? And he thought about it and he said, I guess I thought that if I got rich, my wife would love me. And I said, so what happened? And he said, she didn't. He's divorced. And I said, so what would have made your life love you? And he said, paying attention to her when I was building my business. See, this is the thing. The goals are small goals around real things with real people in love. You find, for example, that a lot of people think that if I, they want to lose a lot of weight because it's so common in the United States and if they hit their goal weight then something really amazing is they're going to feel good about themselves. People are going to notice them more. People are going to treat them better. And it's going to be this beautiful ongoing thing. And what you find is they hit their goal weight and the reward is never getting to eat what you like ever again for the rest of your life, which is not that great. And so about 30% of people on very stringent diets wind up with a needing disorder because they want to keep going. Because they want to keep this feeling of progress going. You need micro goals that are actually progress in a particular direction. But fundamentally, the goals that we need to have are not about these things. They're about faith and family and friendship and working in ways that actually creates value in the lives of other people. Those goals that we talked about a little bit earlier, those are the goals that really matter. Those are the things that bring meaning. And I just want to recap. So macro goals. Oh, I want to have this huge career, this big number in the bank account or this many followers on social media or or or or, you know, be a well known activist or do all these things macro goals. You know, you're saying typically you don't bring you fulfill those are idols once you achieve them. Just idols micro goals, which is how do I strengthen love with my friend or partner? How do I deepen my faith? How, you know, do I feel of service like things like like that? Right? Micro goals are are where we find meaning. And I think that when you're saying to the arrival, the arrival thing. And so, you know, I had someone who I think is a genius and really, really smart. So when I respect very, very much, she told me that one of the things I'm getting very wrong in life is that I never am constantly. She said, you think you're a climber. You think you're a hiker on the mountain constantly trying to and but you you're at the top. You're at the top. You've got to just enjoy it. You're at the top. And, you know, because I have questions all the time, like, do I work harder to make this show twice a week instead of once a week? Do I do live events that is speaking on everyone else's stages? Do I all these things? And and in the past, I would trade all my time for building the biggest company I could possibly build. And and I struggle with that idea. Okay, should I be like, okay, I've arrived. Let me just be and enjoy it all. That's hard to do for the striver, Jamie. Yeah. That's what you tell me. Yeah. Right. So and not everybody struggles with this. And it's a funny thing. It's like it's it's strivers like you, like us, like a lot of people watching us, struggle with things that are hard to understand for people who don't, who haven't had the same kind of childhood. Typically, a striver has a childhood that looks like the following. You're really good at stuff. You're a good student. You're maybe a good athlete, maybe a good musician. And you notice that you get attention, you get affection from you get affirmation from adults when you do things, you bring home straight out of the report card, you get first year in the orchestra, you make picture on the baseball team, whatever it happens to be. And your little brain wires, it's in a highly plastic state, and it wires in this conclusion. I am lovable when I earn things. That's and you become a human doing, not a human being. That is almost like getting famous when you're 15 years old, which is super dangerous. It's super dangerous because you're going to get your sense of reward from doing things that are excellent. And you'll chase and chase and chase that behavior that leads to self objectification, that leads to success addiction, that leads to workaholism, that leads to never enough. And I wind up with super successful executives and famous actors and athletes that I work with all the time. And I have to teach them how to be alive. Teach them how that it's not next year, man. It's not next year. You don't have to look for the next audacious goal so you can actually feel alive. You're lovable. Love is a free gift, freely given. It's a grace. Love isn't something you earn. You literally can't earn love. And one of the reasons that a lot of marriages fail with super strivers is because they're trying to earn each other's love. I mean, men often will work themselves to death and wonder why they're driving their wife away because they're actually trying to earn their love and what they're doing is alienating them. Women will do the same thing who are very entrepreneurial or they'll be looking for the kind of beauty that would be characteristic of a 21-year-old when they're 51 years old and working for that and working and trying so very hard to do that. And they don't understand that they're losing the sense of meaning that they should be enjoying, but that's because that's how they were raised. And that's why I call it the strivers curse. And that's what everybody watching us, like if you're following Pray to the Strivers Curse, well, that's why I write my book. Yes. So if you're an achiever, a striver, and you have that like it's never enough, it's never enough, what do you do? Yeah. Well, and it's easy to say just go become a slacker, but that's not going to work because I know strivers. Strivers are going to strive. I could tell strivers who become slackers, they never would. I remember a guy, he came to me, I was a classical musician all the way through my 20s and I was super ambitious, classical musician. I wanted to be the best French horn player in the world. And I was on my way, I thought, it turns out I wasn't and I had to change course and get into a new line of work when I was 31 years old. It was very disappointed and very hard. But in my mid 20s, I was so, I was on the wheel, man, I was working, I was going to end and I met this guy and he says, dude, you really got to relax. He's from California, of course. Dude, you really got to relax. You know what you should do? You should take a year off. Come with me. I have a surf shop on the beach in San Diego and you really learn how to live. And I thought, that's a nightmare. That's a complete nightmare to me. Why? Because my life wouldn't have any sense of direction to it, but it was misattributed. And so what I needed to do, I learned and I've only learned as an adult and one of the things I talk about in this book, I need to live more like my great grandfather. I need to live in bonds of love. I need to ask big questions that are not tied to technology. I need to find a sense of service and what I'm doing for other people as opposed to the glory that can actually might bring to me. I need to understand the nature of what it means to suffer. I need to enjoy a little bit more beauty in my life and I need to do those things on purpose. So strivers need to do on purpose what everybody else does naturally and turn that into a project. And is it dangerous in any way to get to I arrived? Like I've arrived. Yeah, because you're not going to arrive. There's no arrival. There's no arrival from that. There are certain things that we can actually do in bonds of love in which there are moments in our lives that are especially meaningful, but you don't say when your baby is born, that's it. No, that's the beginning. That's the beginning. That's the commencement error. So when you graduate from college is called commencement and that seems like the end. That's the beginning because commencement means literally the word means beginning. Your wedding day is the beginning. That's the problem with destination weddings. Destination weddings are statistically less likely to succeed. The marriage is less likely to succeed. And the reason for that in no small part is that your wedding is not a destination. That's the launch pad. It doesn't matter what you say to each other on your wedding day. What matters is what you say to each other every day for the rest of the next 65 years of God gives you this really long and happy marriage is what it comes down to. And so that's the way to think about it is all of these points. The book came out. Well, that's the beginning of being able to go talk about the wonderful things in this book. My baby is born. That's the beginning of a beautiful life together as a family. I just got married. I got the razor promotion. My company went to IPO. Great. It's a big opportunity to do something new. That's the starting point, not the ending point. So good. Okay. Can you talk about, you know, with your new book, the meaning of your life, which if you are just tuning into us and listening to this right now, I want you to go pick up your copy because it's so good. You can get it anywhere books are sold. You can listen to it on Audible. And it's just, I feel like it speaks so well to every person no matter where they're at in their life, but also there's a whole lot of people that are like, Oh my gosh, the world is changing so rapidly. The geopolitical climate, AI, technology, like stuff's just, I have so many friends that don't know how the heck are they supposed to parent right now? What do they do? They don't want to hold their kids back. They don't want to not, they're feeling more empty than ever. They're a lot of college kids, as you know, better than anyone on the planet are just feeling depressed, feeling like not hopeful, not excited. There's just so much going on. And I feel like this book, the meaning of your life by Arthur Brooks is going to speak to every one of you listening right now, no matter what you're, what's going on in your life, because all of us are like, Oh, wow, well, this hasn't happened before in so many ways, right? These are new dynamics in life. And, and, you know, and so many people are asking those big questions. And we're just at the start of the impact of what AI is going to do in terms of impact on jobs, impact on the economy, impact on entire industries, right? There's a lot of people that maybe haven't even embarked fully on their journey of what's the meaning of my life. And they're sort of maybe misguided in thinking their purpose is, as long as they have a job, and they have a part, and that's all going to shift for so many people. And so I think this book is, is just the timing of it, the relevancy of it, and the billions of reps you put in in your entire career, helping so many people find happiness and discover that now, now to talk about the meaning of your life in a moment, a day in age, in 2026, right? How to live differently. The whole, the whole point is how to live differently, because, you know, if we just go with the flow, you know, then we will spend all day online, then we will be living in the simulation, then we will be thinking that we can ask any question to AI and it will give us the information that we seek. And so we need to go back and live in a kind of a new old fashioned way. Then there's this book is there's six things to do. I mean, people need instructions. I do, I need instructions. So I went and I looked at, you know, what will make your brain work the way it's supposed to work? What are the tangible things you need to do and pay attention to? And so really six things. And, and, and when you do these six things in six months, you'll know the meaning of life. Six things in six months and you'll be living a different life. This conversation with Arthur Brooks, it's so incredible. We made it into more than one part. And if you want to dive deeper into how to truly discover your purpose and feel a sense of fulfillment and greater meaning in your life, you are not going to want to miss this incredible part two of our conversation with Arthur Brooks. That's coming up in the next episode of the Jamie Curran Lima show. Remember this episodes, not just for you and me, please share this with every single person you know, because it can impact and change their life too. And if you love today's conversation, please click the follow or subscribe button on the app that you're listening to it on or watching it on. And if it added value to your life, you could please give it a review. I would be so grateful. Five stars is perfect. And again, just share it with everyone you believe in. Maybe it's another person in your life who could benefit from it. Someone who's been searching for meaning or maybe just kind of feeling a little bit empty and needs that boost of purpose. You can also post the episode and share it with others online in your community who just might need the words and tools and lessons in this conversation today. You never know whose life you're meant to change by sharing this episode. And thank you so much for joining me today. Before you go, I want to share some words with you that couldn't be more true. You right now, exactly as you are, are enough and fully worthy. You're worthy of your greatest hopes, your wildest dreams and all the unconditional love in the world. And it's an honor to welcome you to each and every episode of the Jamie Curran Lima show. Here, I hope you'll come as you are. Heal where you need. Blossom what you choose. Journey toward your calling and stay as long as you'd like because you belong here. You are worthy. You are loved. You are love. And I love you. And I cannot wait to join you on the next episode of the Jamie Curran Lima show. In life, you don't sort the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self-worth. When you build your self-worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy, How to Believe You Are Enough and Transform Your Life for You. If you have some self-doubt to destroy and a destiny to fulfill, worthy is for you. In worthy, you'll learn proven tools and simple steps that bring life-changing results, like how to get unstuck from the things holding you back, build unshakable self-love, unlearn the lies that lead to self-doubt and embrace the truths that wake up worthiness, overcome limiting beliefs and imposter syndrome, achieve your hopes and dreams by believing you are worthy of them and so much more. Are you ready to unleash your greatness and step into the person you were born to be? Imagine a life with zero self-doubt and unshakable self-worth. Get your copy of Worthy, plus some amazing thank you bonus gifts for you at worthybook.com or the link in the show notes below. Imagine what you do if you fully believed in you. It's time to find out with Worthy. Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious and so is self-belief. And I'd love to hang out with you even more, especially if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter that's also a love letter to you delivered straight to your inbox from me. If you haven't signed up to make sure that you get it each week, just go to JamieKernleama.com to make sure you're on the list and you'll get your one-on-one with Jamie weekly newsletter and get ready to believe in you. If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration, some tips, tools, joy, and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. Subscribe at JamieKernleama.com or in the link in the show notes. And please note I'm not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.