Huberman Lab

Tools to Bolster Your Mental Health & Confidence | Dr. Paul Conti

130 min
May 4, 202627 days ago
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Summary

Dr. Paul Conti discusses practical frameworks for building mental health by identifying personal strengths, examining self-talk and life narratives, and balancing introspection with action. The episode emphasizes starting from what's going right rather than focusing on deficits, and explores how understanding childhood patterns and gaining agency over behavior enables meaningful life change.

Insights
  • Agency emerges when people recognize they're being controlled by patterns rather than making conscious choices—the realization itself diffuses tension and enables behavioral change
  • Mental health improvement requires both internal reflection and external action in balanced measure; too much thinking without doing or vice versa creates diminishing returns
  • Starting self-examination from a position of strength (what's working) rather than deficit (what's broken) makes people more receptive to identifying and addressing genuine problems
  • Childhood patterns don't determine destiny but operate as unconscious triggers; insight into these patterns allows conscious choice about whether to repeat, reverse, or transcend them
  • State-dependent emotions (feeling differently alone vs. with others) are normal, but an 'observing ego' that maintains continuity across contexts is essential for integrated selfhood
Trends
Growing recognition that introspection without action (or action without reflection) is ineffective; mental health frameworks increasingly emphasize balanced integrationShift away from deficit-based mental health models toward strength-based approaches that build on existing capabilities rather than pathologizingIncreased clinical focus on agency and autonomy as core mental health outcomes, moving beyond symptom reduction to intentional livingSocial media's erosion of natural context-switching and private reflection time is creating new mental health challenges around fragmented selfhood and constant external validation-seekingTherapeutic emphasis on collaborative goal-setting and small incremental wins over prescriptive directives, reflecting broader shift toward patient autonomy in healthcareRecognition that self-talk and internal narratives are malleable and can be deliberately reshaped through structured questioning and environmental cues (e.g., memory photos)Clinical interest in how fear of loss of control (rather than actual pathology) prevents people from examining themselves, with implications for mental health literacyEmerging understanding that trauma and non-traumatic patterns operate similarly in the brain—both create automatic responses that feel timeless and can be addressed through insight
Topics
Self-talk and internal dialogue patternsStructure and function of self (foundational pillars of identity)Childhood pattern recognition and intergenerational behavior transmissionAgency and autonomy in mental healthIntrospection vs. action balance in personal developmentTrauma processing and emotional time-bindingState-dependent behavior and observing egoStrength-based mental health frameworksCollaborative goal-setting and behavioral changeSocial media's impact on self-concept and reflectionIntrusive thoughts and thought redirection strategiesLife narrative examination and malleability of self-viewCompassionate curiosity as therapeutic stanceUnconscious mind and bias toward negative thinkingContentment, peace, and delight as components of happiness
Companies
Helix Sleep
Mattress and pillow customization company; sponsor emphasizing sleep as foundation of mental and physical health
BetterHelp
Online therapy platform; sponsor offering licensed therapist matching and remote mental health support
AG1
Nutritional supplement brand; sponsor providing foundational vitamins, minerals, and adaptogens for health
Function Health
Advanced lab testing and biomarker analysis service; sponsor offering comprehensive health snapshot and personalized ...
RORA
Water filtration company; sponsor removing contaminants and forever chemicals from drinking water
People
Dr. Paul Conti
Guest discussing mental health frameworks, self-examination, and his new book 'What's Going Right'
Andrew Huberman
Podcast host and interviewer; professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology
Barbara Chapman
Referenced as example of 'quiet but not shy' communicator; graduate advisor to Huberman
Larry Squire
Luminary in memory science; discussed value of displaying positive memory photos for implicit memory priming
Mark Andreessen
Referenced for provocative statements about introspection vs. action; co-founder of Netscape
David Senra
Mentioned as mutual friend; hosts podcast with Mark Andreessen discussing introspection debate
Lex Fridman
Humorously referenced as unresponsive to texts; implied to be in Dagestan or Austin
Quotes
"There's far more going right in any of us, in all of us, than there is going wrong if we're here, right? And if we're listening to educational material, we want to better ourselves, there's so much more that's going right in us."
Dr. Paul ContiOpening remarks
"If we're willing to look at ourselves and we bring this compassionate curiosity to ourselves of, hey, what can I learn about myself, and what might I be interested in changing in myself, or in emphasizing in myself, I think we can bring a lot of change."
Dr. Paul ContiEarly discussion
"The moment that you have an enemy, you feel a sense of agency. You said, no, you're on your own side. So realizing one is being controlled is... that's the essence of agency."
Andrew HubermanMid-episode synthesis
"We don't like to be controlled and that sense of agency can blossom out of that. There's something about the human primate brain... we don't want to think or know that someone or something is putting one over on us."
Dr. Paul ContiAgency discussion
"We can find happiness because we can weave peace contentment and delight into our lives... it has to also be an awareness of our lives and we have to at times be able to have in our minds the things that are not the way we want them to be and the things that are tragic and still feel good about our lives."
Dr. Paul ContiClosing discussion on happiness
Full Transcript
There's far more going right in any of us, in all of us, than there is going wrong if we're here, right? And if we're listening to educational material, we want to better ourselves, there's so much more that's going right in us. And it's a good place for us to start because it helps us to be able to look at what's not going the way we want it to be, where we want to bring change in our lives, but we should start from a position of strength. Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. Paul Conti. Dr. Paul Conti is a medical doctor and psychiatrist and an expert in recovery from trauma. He is also one of the foremost public educators on how anyone can build a greater sense of agency, confidence, and well-being in their life. Today we discuss the practical aspects of building and maintaining mental health, in particular, how to identify your natural strengths, and the often unseen opportunities to improve your reflexive mental framework and relationship with self and others. Dr. Conti's approach to building mental health and overcoming challenges with mental health are very different than most of the information that you'll find on the internet and elsewhere. He has decades of clinical experience, and he draws on that end data to explain the specific questions that we all need to ask ourselves when we're facing things like lowered motivation, mood, or challenges overcoming bad habits. Today we discuss all of that, as well as how to balance action and introspection. And this is very important because I think a lot of people think about mental health as merely an introspective process. But as Dr. Conti points out, it's really a balance of thinking and doing, and often involves more doing than thinking. So during today's episode, you'll get a specific framework of questions to ask yourself repeatedly, that is, every day or every week, and specific action steps to take so that you can truly become the best version of yourself and derive the greatest sense of meaning along the way. I'd like to point out that Dr. Conti also has a new book coming out, which is aptly entitled, What's Going Right? A Powerful New Method for Optimizing Your Mental Health. And I've read the book from front to back, and I have to tell you it's a wonderful resource that includes both information and simple worksheet-like prompts that can help anyone through sticking points, as well as to build on what the title suggests, what's already going right. So if you're currently suffering, or if you're doing well and you want to level up your mental health further, today's conversation is definitely for you. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, today's episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Dr. Paul Conti. Dr. Paul Conti, welcome back. Thank you. Thank you for having me back. Congratulations on your book, What's Going Right? A Powerful New Method for Optimizing Your Mental Health. It is amazing book, and you also hold the record not incidentally, I think, for the most viewed and downloaded episodes of this podcast ever. You know, you got a lot of Huberman Podcasts listener fans out there, so they'll be reading if they're smart and they want to be better, they want to feel enriched in all the ways. So let's talk about individuals first, and then I also want to talk today about interactions between people, people, which we probably haven't talked quite as much about, at least not here, the self. We all have a name, a self-concept. We wake up thinking and knowing essentially who we are, what bothers us, what we're excited about. And the question I've been living with for a long time is how malleable is our self-view and our relationship to our self, and we can define those. If we're not super comfortable or completely happy with our relationship to ourselves, how much flexibility is there on that whole picture? I think it's very malleable. I think there's a lot of flexibility, but we have to be willing to look at ourselves. Very often we're not looking at ourselves. We're afraid of what we're going to find, or we don't know how to understand, or how to bring change. So we don't look at ourselves, and then we can see ourselves as inflexible and think that we're just stuck in the same place over time. But if we're willing to look at ourselves and we bring this compassionate curiosity to ourselves of, hey, what can I learn about myself, and what might I be interested in changing in myself, or in emphasizing in myself, I think we can bring a lot of change. The title of your book, What's Going Right, is that a good lens to start looking through when we look at ourselves? What works? 10 fingers, 10 toes, in my case, is that a good place to start? You know that I feel some sense of agency over a number of areas of my life. Is that the way to start wading into the questions about self? I think to start off with what's going right, it's not just a way of looking at it because it feels better, but it's consistent with truth. There's far more going right in any of us, in all of us, than there is going wrong. If we're here, and if we're listening to educational material, we want to better ourselves, there's so much more that's going right in us. It's a good place for us to start because it helps us to be able to look at what's not going the way we want it to be, where we want to bring change in our lives. We should start from a position of strength. The mental health system really tells us to look at ourselves in the opposite way, to look at ourselves through what is going wrong, and to put labels on ourselves that often just make us feel worse, or make us feel more helpless or hopeless in understanding. If we start with what's going right and we bring curiosity to ourselves, then there are processes we can follow to understand and to bring real change. What are some of those processes that people could use to explore? What are some questions that people can, or thoughts or landscapes, to explore where people can ping themselves with specific questions? Good places to start are looking at yourself talk. What are you saying to yourself in quiet moments when no one else is listening or when there's a pause in the action in your life? What are you saying to yourself? What messages are you giving yourself? Oftentimes, we're telling ourselves things about ourselves that are often negative or often critical, and we're not aware that we're saying these things over and over to ourselves. That's just one strategy. Another strategy can be to think about the life narrative that we're telling ourselves. If you just tell yourself about yourself, or if you're telling someone else about you, what is it that you say in a reflexive way and does it match what's real and true about your life? All people have these two foundational pillars. In the first part of the series that we did in 2023, we really sort of hashed this out, and it was the first time I really put together, there's a structure of self. We all share this. I've been thinking along these lines, but our talk helped me to pull together. There's something that applies to all of us, just because we're human, and we have a human brain and a human mind. There is a structure of self and a function of self, and these foundational pillars are where we can look to understand ourselves better and to bring better health. If we are aware of where to look and how to look, and we're willing to look because we're not afraid of what we're going to find, and we have a belief that we can bring change, and this is how we bring flexibility and malleability, and we can approach ourselves feeling really good that, hey, if I do this, I am going to be able to make things better. There's so much hopefulness to that, and it's reasonably grounded hopefulness. I have a question that might seem like a leap somewhere else, but I promise it ties back to what we're talking about. In your experience with psychiatry and the brain and patience and interacting with people in your own life, do you think that there's tremendous variation or little variation in how state-dependent people are? Some people, it seems, they're so affiliate that when they're relating to somebody else, they think and feel completely differently than they do in their own, not necessarily even extroverted for that to be true, but when they're suddenly alone, the internal state is very different, almost like it's two different lives. There's a reason why I'm asking this, but I'm wondering about the role of state-dependence and how we think and how we feel and how we think about the things around us and think about ourselves. For most of us, life is moving very fast, and life has a lot of stressors in it, and what ends up happening is we're kind of rushing just to keep up with ourselves, and when that happens, we become very state-dependent as opposed to being able to observe ourselves. To be able to see, okay, I'm here, and this is what I'm doing, and this is the people I'm with and how I'm feeling and how I'm behaving. To be able to observe ourselves is how we knit together oneself across situations, so we can be aware. I'm different in one situation than another. Some of the behavior then and the sense of self is state-dependent, but there's a whole self that's riding above all of it, it's observing us and knitting us together. Sometimes it gets called an observing ego, and this is how we can both be state-dependent, but also have a self that is true across all of those states. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, Helix Sleep. Helix Sleep makes mattresses and pillows that are customized to your unique sleep needs. Now, I've spoken many times before on this and on other podcasts about the fact that getting a great night's sleep is the foundation of mental health, physical health, and performance. When we aren't getting great sleep on a consistent basis, everything suffers, and when we are sleeping well and enough, our mental health, physical health, and performance in all endeavors improve markedly. The mattress you sleep on makes a huge difference in the quality of sleep that you get each night. How soft it is or how firm it is all play into your comfort and need to be tailored to your unique sleep needs. If you go to the Helix website, you can take a brief two-minute quiz and it will ask you questions such as, do you sleep on your back, your side, or your stomach? Maybe you know, maybe you don't. Do you tend to run hot or cold during the night? Things of that sort. You answer those questions and Helix will match you to the ideal mattress for you. For me, that turned out to be the Dusk, D-U-S-K mattress. I've been sleeping on a Dusk mattress for more than four years now and it's been far and away the best sleep that I've ever had. If you'd like to try Helix, you can go to helixsleep.com slash huberman. Take that two-minute sleep quiz and Helix will match you to a mattress that's customized for you. Right now, Helix is giving up to 27% off their entire site. Helix is also teamed up with TrueMed, which allows you to use your HSA, FSA dollars to shop Helix's award-winning mattresses. Again, that's helixsleep.com slash huberman to get up to 27% off. Today's episode is also brought to us by BetterHelp. BetterHelp offers professional therapy with a licensed therapist carried out entirely online. I've been doing therapy for a long time and I can tell you that it's a lot like physical workouts. There are times when I want to do it and there are times when I don't want to do it. But whenever I finish a therapy session, I come away feeling better and I have specific actionable items that hadn't occurred to me that when I implement, improve various aspects of my life. The data tell us that there are just so many benefits that come through effective therapy. And effective therapy involves having a good rapport with your therapist, getting insights from them and with them, and coming away with specific actionable tools that you can apply outside of therapy. With BetterHelp, they make it very easy to find an expert therapist who can help provide those benefits that come through effective therapy. They have a short questionnaire to help match you to a therapist. And while BetterHelp has an industry-leading match rate, if you aren't happy with your match, you can switch to a different therapist at any time. If you would like to try BetterHelp, go to betterhelp.com slash huberman to get 10% off your first month. Again, that's betterhelp.com slash huberman. When somebody sits down to think about their strengths or to think about their self-talk or to just think about what they're made of and how they want to change or not change certain things, build on certain strengths, when and how should they do it? Yeah, I think all we need to bring is curiosity. That's all. And curiosity doesn't have to be overly serious or worried. It doesn't have to have a gravity to it. It can, but it can also be very lighthearted. There's so many things that we're curious about, so many things we want to learn about, and this is great. It's great for our brains and it's great for our health to be curious and to want to learn. But so often, what we leave out of that equation is being curious about ourselves. And that can be a sort of high-spirited thing to do of, you know, what is there in me that runs through all the things that I do? How is it that I feel so different doing one thing than another? What are the common threads of me that run throughout my life? You know, this is a great way to approach what's going right in us, right, to be curious about ourselves. And it's from there that it's easier to see, wow, in one certain kind of situation, I'm really not doing as well, right, where I'm not as happy. Then we can think about that and we don't have to be afraid of it. So bringing curiosity to ourselves, what runs through everything we do, and also how we're different in different situations can help lead us to all sorts of answers about what makes us happy and what doesn't. When are we presenting a true and honest self? When are we presenting a false self that even we know is false? So I think the only crucial ingredient is curiosity. And then we can approach with seriousness and gravity or we can approach with lightheartedness. We can be alone or we can be thinking with someone else. There's all sorts of good places that curiosity can take us. It's interesting that you talked about true self versus false self. I think the more state dependence we have, the more confusing that becomes, right? And I think perhaps even more so in this day and age, there seems to be not a complete, but at least to me, a kind of partial erosion of etiquette. I'm not saying this to encourage people to be more rigid. It just seems to me that I'm 50 now when I was growing up, seemed like people would dress and act one way in one context and dress and act one way in a different context. And there's some overlap, obviously. But now there's this sort of propensity for not just oversharing, but there's information from all corners of the world coming through our devices all the time. And people are putting out information about many facets of their life all the time. Even people I went to high school with who aren't public facing in the traditional sense are putting out pictures of their kids and what they ate and this and the wins and the losses. And it's a very odd thing to do when, in fact, we evolved for so long, just kind of experiencing ourselves separate from all the other activities that we were doing and certainly that other people are doing. In your clinical practice, are you seeing more challenges with people creating separation between kind of aspects of self and aspects of life because of all the information coming at them and maybe even that they're putting in the world? I think it can be different depending upon what the person is doing, how they're using that information. So if you think of falseness of self, it's possible a person can be engaged in something that even they themselves know isn't real. So wanting everyone to see what's best in my life and to think that I'm doing really well. And maybe I'm doing that to hide something. Why am I doing that? If I want to appear externally differently than how I am, there's a good place for curiosity about the falseness of that. What am I trying to protect against? Why is it that I want people to see me in a certain way that might be different from how my life actually is if it has not just all wins in it, but stressors too that might not be as glamorous? So that's one way we can use those resources. Another way can be to engage in ways that are more true to self. So someone who has an interest or a passion that it's hard to find people right around them, but they can find that more distantly or people who have a lot of sensibility and compassion for some of the difficult things in the world who can find kindred spirits through social media. So I think we can use or misuse anything around us to either be we can use it to be closer to ourselves and to have a stronger sense of self, or we can use it to distract from who we really are and to maybe find solace somewhere else or find accolade somewhere outside of us because we're protecting against something. So I think the important point is always to be honest with ourselves. And if we bring compassionate curiosity, then we're not mad at ourselves and that we're not coming at ourselves of what's wrong with me or why can't I do this thing better or that thing better? Or why don't people like me more, whatever it may be. There are ways that we can guide ourselves away from honesty and truth. And if we look at ourselves, we don't have to be afraid of what we find. Maybe if we're worried people aren't liking us, we're spending time with not a healthy group of people. Or maybe there's something in myself I need to change if I'm feeling that. So the key is just bringing honesty and curiosity and not being so afraid or so negative towards ourselves that we're going to hide from what it is that we can find to knit us together. Yeah, I'm not trying to demonize social media, but we are in a strange new version of humanity where let's say somebody's sitting by themselves, chances are their experience is vastly different than it would have been 30 years ago because they are most likely getting a lot of information about what other people are doing. It could be good information, could be interesting, but nonetheless it's very different alone state and or they are doing things that hopefully they enjoy, but there's this additional layer where it's put out into the world. This is very unusual. The reason I'm asking about this in the context of addressing the self, exploring the self is that I wonder to what extent being really happy with oneself at some level involves being able to be curious and explore different ways of being and ways of thinking without the impulse of sharing that and without the feedback comparison of what other people are doing. The moment we see something else, there's more sensory input or the moment that we think what we're doing needs to be shared, it changes the experience. It's not truly an alone experience. Right. I don't think it matters if you put it out to one follower or to a billion followers. It's still externalizing this thing that for thousands of years was just us with our thoughts, us with our emotions. Processing time alone has become, I believe, a very, very different thing altogether. Yeah, I think that's true. I think there's a sweet spot of connectedness to others. We know that it's not good to have too little, that isolation isn't good for us, but where the modern world has gone is it offers us too much the opposite, where there's not enough aloneness, where if we're overconnected, then in order to decide what it is we even like or prefer, how we feel about things, we're looking for external cues. That sweet spot of having some external check-ins, how does the world around me feel? How do people I like and trust feel? How do people who seem like me feel? How do people who seem different from me feel? It's good to have those tests outside, but to have enough aloneness that I am still thinking about myself and the questions of life, the questions of my own life, I'm thinking about on my own before I'm pinging outside of me for information or validation or even guidance. I'm willing to bet that many people will find just the being alone introspective process to be pretty anxiety-provoking. In fact, there's been a little bit of a semi-comedic exchange online recently because I'm actually our mutual friend, David Senra. David Senra has a podcast with this very podcast production company. He sat down with Mark Andreessen of Found a Netscape, a 16Z investments. Mark made the statement that was very provocative, which was great men of history didn't sit around thinking about their thoughts. Of course, knowing Mark, and he's a friend of mine, I think that was a bit tongue-in-cheek. I think he was pointing toward, I don't want to speak for him, but I think he was pointing toward the idea that too much thinking and not enough doing can be self-destructive. Of course, the media ran with it. In classic Andreessenian fashion, he just doubled down and tripled down on that message, which was fun for a while, actually, because it got people thinking about the role of introspection versus the role of doing. I have to say, I think what he contributed with those statements, however provocative, were useful in thinking how much thinking, how much doing when exploring the self. We don't want to spiral into a tunnel that we can't get out of, but we also want to make sure that we're putting things out into the world. When you have a patient that is not depressed, maybe just struggling, no clinical issue that needs dealing with first. How much do you encourage them to explore the self through doing versus thinking about their thinking? It depends very much on who is that person and where do they need to face to break new ground of self. I mentioned that most people would find the idea of just being with themselves to be anxiety-provoking. I think that that's unfortunate. I think that comes from a lack of leadership in the mental health field and then the stigma of mental health and our fears, those black box fears that we don't understand. So we're afraid of what we don't understand. What we don't understand is ourselves. Then the idea of being with ourselves becomes very anxiety-provoking. I think that's not good. I think there are ways that we can go about being with ourselves that we don't have to be afraid of and say, if I do that, it's interesting what I'm going to find. The reflection and the thoughts and the ideas, the learning that comes from it is going to guide me towards the best balance for me. There are some people who are very assertive and they want to have high levels of doing in the world, but they still need some reflection. There are other people who are going to be very reflective and they're going to be doing less. We need to understand what profile works for one person. It's not one exact place, but we have a profile of reflection and of doing. If we are well-balanced, where we're asserting ourselves in the world at levels that work for us and we're finding pleasure and gratification in ways that are healthy, now we're finding balance. If there's too much doing and not enough reflection, not a lot of good will come from that. We'll find that there's diminishing returns. We feel unsatisfied because we're doing too much and we're maybe taking less pleasure in what we're doing. But if we're doing too little, then we can feel idle and there can be a sense of learned helplessness. It's finding what is the optimal range for a person to be asserting themselves in the world and then finding gratification in what they're doing. If that's going well, we'll see it. There's a happy, balanced person. If not, we'll be able to figure it out of what is going on in that person. Is there an issue somewhere, say in the unconscious mind, are they asserting more and too much and reflecting too little? By looking at the person and going through these steps, we can figure out what serves that person best and how might they adjust from where they are now to get there. Is it true that there are just some people who just don't really think about their thinking very much? They just do stuff? I've had friends say that. I don't want to speak for me. I'll speak for them. They'll say that they don't think about their thinking. They just get up in the morning and they brush their teeth and they use the bathroom and they go about their day and they're not very introspective. They're not called to think about their thinking. In some cases, these are people who are extremely busy. Maybe that's one reason, but in some cases, there are people who just, for whatever reason, the mirror doesn't pop up in their cortex. They're busy doing and observing and they seem functional. Are they missing out on something fundamental or is that maybe even the goal? I asked this from a very selfish perspective because growing up, I thought, how cool would that be to just go through life, just do stuff, not think about stuff from the past too much, not reflect too much, just get stuff done. I'm a get it done person, but I think most people, I also am forced to think about my thinking from time to time. When you say forced, what then forces you? Sorry, it just spontaneously happens. I reflect. The reflections, usually, I'll try and generalize these because this is not about me. The reflections generally come from, is that something I should explore? Is that a problem? Is the way I'm thinking about or doing that a problem? Or is the way that they're thinking about and doing something a problem? This us them thing is what it boils down to. It's either positive or negative. I confess, I don't really sit around a lot and think about all the things going right. I should. I have a gratitude practice. I generally don't sit around and think, oh, the walls are open, the ceiling's intact, and I'm fed and I'm healthy. Of course, until something bad happens, and then we start doing, we do our inventory. I just wonder whether or not there's a spectrum of reflexive self-exploration. People have different reflective capacity, and people have different reflective interests. There are people who have more, and that could serve them well to be more self-aware, but also people may have less reflective capacity, but be more naturally generative. Then they're just moving forward. The question is, even though we have different natural levels of reflective inclination, are we happy? Are our lives going well? If life is going well, and that person is healthy, they have good mental health and secure relationships, and life is going well, they're not reflecting very much. That sounds good. How I would characterize that is they're living through the generative drive. They're being productive, contributory people in the world. They're making the world better. They're learning. They're growing. They're making themselves better, and they're just moving forward. That's a great way to be. For most of us, in order to get there, we do have to be reflective. Some of what will happen is it will come to us. You said you're not planning maybe to sit down and be reflective, but then it comes to you, hey, I should think of this possibility at hand, and what are other people thinking, and how is that impacting what I'm thinking? You become reflective because your brain is leading you there. It's saying, hey, we do need to stop and think about things. That's how we're going to make better decisions. Our brains will lead us to reflection, but if we're moving so fast or we're defended against it, then we're not reflective, and that's not good for us. That's how you could see, for example, someone who's always busy, so they don't have time to reflect. The big question is, is that person happy? If that person is not happy and they're complaining and they feel like they're working and never getting anything out of it, or never getting any reward, then it's not good that they're not reflective. They're blocking themselves from something that they need. There are spectrums that apply differently to different people, and we all reside on different parts of the spectrum, whether it's reflective capacity, or it's assertion, or it's pleasure. But in terms of what we're doing and whether it's healthy for us, it's different for each and all unique, so we have to stop and look at ourselves. Like, hey, how's this going for me? How am I functioning? Is it working for me? Am I pausing and thinking enough? Maybe the answer is yes. Maybe the answer is no. Maybe I'm not sure, but if I'm not happy, let me go back and revisit that question. So this curiosity of self can lead us to, oh, how am I built to function? Am I functioning in a way that really works for me? If not, why not? What change might I bring? And here again, we're using the ability to understand and to go through a process to make our lives better. I realize these aren't clinical terms, but someone recently said about themselves that they are an external processor. They need to talk things through in order to understand what's going on for them and make decisions. And that implies that some people are internal processors. Is that true? Do you see that in your practice that some people do best by thinking, sitting and thinking, walking and thinking, driving and thinking, working things through and other people actually work it out by talking either to you or to their friends or family, some trusted person? Are those two probably not completely separate, but at least semi-separate bins of people? I don't know that they're separate bins of people. I think that the ability to think and to be objective in our thinking differs among people. What happens often is we get stuck in our own minds, so then we're thinking, but we're not thinking productively, because we get stuck in our own loops. And when we take the thought process outside of us, so if we write the words down, or if we say the words and we say the words to another person, then we're bringing different brain processes online, different error-checking processes online. So some of us can do more of this insight and say, hey, I've been thinking about this for a while and nothing's different or nothing's going better. Is there a different way? Is there a way I could think about it that's new or that's different? Sometimes we can do that, but a lot of times we just get stuck inside of ourselves and we have to bring different brain processes online. Making words and putting those words out there in writing or in speech is different. It sort of holds the brain more accountable. That's why sometimes we'll just say something out loud or we'll say something to someone else and say, oh, I figured that out. Or thanks for helping me figure it out. And you might realize all you did was listen. Because just by being there, the other person is forming words, we do more due diligence inside of ourselves that way. I must confess, I'm fascinated by this notion of people differing in their tendency to work things out internally and then bring that forward into the world. Maybe for more help or some additional solutions or maybe just they've figured it out. So they're bringing a version of self into the world that is vetted by them. I notice I tend to respect that picture, but I realize that's not necessarily the way it always works. I had a conversation with my sister this morning and I love my sister. We're quite close. There was no friction, but the direction she was taking what we were talking about and the direction I was taking, they weren't aligned. So we did a little bit of our brother, sister pushback and then at some point we both realized that we weren't aligned with the other person and we kind of arrived at this overlap in the Venn diagram. That's when it was like, okay, there was some real clarity that came to something important. I thought, how cool is that? She has her way of doing things. I have my way of doing things. I don't think I could have gotten there without that conversation. And yet for the two thirds, sorry, I won't say her name for her own privacy, but for two thirds of the conversation I'm thinking myself like, oh, this is like, this is already difficult thing made more difficult by the fact that there's this other picture of it and then version of it that she's extra. But then boom, you hit this convergence and that's real synergy. I certainly couldn't have come up with that on my own. So while I say I place value on the internal processor, I know with certainty I could not have gotten there if I hadn't actually felt and met the friction of what she was bringing forward and her willingness to bend a bit and my willingness to accept a bit. Right, because you were doing something together. You were doing something together that involved real and open communication. So you have to be able to say, hey, this is how I think and feel and put that out there and test it and bounce it off the other person and take inside with the other person things and said, there's a really complicated process there, which is how human beings come to understand one another or come to agree or come to a place where there's a way forward, even if there isn't complete agreement. We have to do these things outside of us. Most often, if we're going to be at our healthiest, we do want to be able to do some of it inside. It's a good place to start and we can do that alone with ourselves. And we're talking about reflective capacity and inclination, but none of us knows how to do something we haven't been taught to do. So very often, we haven't had a way of going inside of saying, well, I'm going to think about myself and I want to do that productively. And part of what I'm trying to bring to the fore is that there are ways of going about being with yourself, thinking about yourself, thinking within yourself that can lead us towards progress at least and sometimes answers. And if we're doing that, we can probably all do more of that than we're doing. And if we're given a way to do it where we think, okay, this works for me. I'm actually learning about myself while I'm doing this and I'm bringing a vetted self. I'm bringing my best self to what I'm going to find outside of me. And that may be collaboration with another person. It may be talking with another person and coming to some middle ground when there is an agreement. So if we start with ourselves and we're able to reflect and to bring self-understanding to the fore, we're much, much stronger in a good way, not stronger in that we're going to force our way through things, but we're much stronger in terms of both self-knowledge and ability to be flexible when we're out in the real world meeting other people. Yeah, I think to me, the picture of internal processing people is one that, and maybe I've seen too many movies and shows from my childhood, but the picture is one of, okay, people who internally process bring the best version of themselves forward. They don't burden other people, but I think by now we understand as a culture that that person, well, traditionally was kind of revered. This is a kind of a male-centric phenotype here, picture that I'm drawing. It could be about a woman as well. There's also this idea that they're a little bit disconnected from all the chatter, but in my mind, I have this belief like if people are externally processing a lot, that they're also revealing their uncertainty and that that's not a good thing to reveal to the world. And again, this probably reflects my age and the times when I was raised and a bit about the culture and my family, et cetera, but I think in general, that's like we never really talk about like strong silent type, but lazy. Right? We're thinking strong silent and therefore getting stuff done. Right? The tacit message there is strong and silent, so they're not burdening other people with their internal stuff. We also assume that people who process internally are actually processing, that they're not just sitting there. I used to joke, what's my bulldog Costello thinking about? And I know this is untrue, but I used to think it was white noise. Like maybe he was just sitting there white noising, experiencing the world as white noise. I mean, I don't know what he was thinking about. So it's sort of... Could have been quantum physics. Could have been quantum physics. I doubt that, but it could have been... And if it was... It was good at keeping a secret. Exactly. Right. Yeah. And the picture actually works because he was a big kind of stoic dog. He had his joyful expression, but there's something about this notion of somebody that processes internally that gets a lot done and maybe even serves others, although more than somebody who's processing externally. And it's hard to probe this area without kind of setting up natural gender stereotypes here. I think the stereotype is that women externally process more than men. I don't know that that's actually true. It just might be that men process less overall. I mean, who knows? I don't know what anyone else is thinking. Half the time, I don't know what I'm thinking. So do you think that people who hold it in more are coming to a greater understanding and get more done in the world than those that externally process? No, I think not necessarily. I think what's best for us is a balance. And again, it's going to be different for each person, but there has to be a balance of things that I know and understand inside of myself that aren't up for question, that I am sure of and resolved about. So it might be a line not to cross because it's a certain moral boundary. I know how I feel about it. And I know where I am. I know how I feel and I know where I stand. So it's just one example. There are issues of self that we want to feel very resolved. How I want to treat people in the world and how I want to be treated. For example, it's good to know those things inside of us, but it is good to then test externally about how we're interfacing with the world. If too much internal processing can be too self-referential, and now I may think that how I think it should be is actually how it should be because I haven't tested outside of me and I haven't done enough of that testing to see. A lot of other people feel differently than me. And this isn't a moral point where I feel sure about how I feel. There's actually more gray in it than I might have thought as an example. So there has to be a balance. I mean, it's always been this way for humans, a balance of what we discern and know inside, but bringing that vetted self to the world means that the vetted self also knows that it doesn't know everything, right? And it's testing in the outside world to learn what is it that other people are thinking. Can I learn from that? So bringing an openness is also very important about a lot of things. So I think that no one way of being is better. I think we all need a balance. 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Viering towards some questions about physiology and how it relates to all this, but I want to just peel back one more layer on this kind of admittedly extreme example of kind of, I don't want to use strong silent. I want to be internal processor, external processors. Actually, right now I'll try and disintegrate the strong silent type because people immediately default to mail and I'm not doing that for political correctness, but I think about my graduate advisor, Barbara Chapman, incredibly smart person, and our chair of department years ago, my chair of department years ago, described her perfectly when he said she's quiet but not shy. So she could sit and be in a room and observe and pay attention when she spoke. You really did get the sense that it counted, high signal to noise because she wasn't one to chatter much. There does seem to be this assumption that if people are talking a lot, that there's a lot going on in there all the time and some of it's just getting out, and that if people are quiet, that it's either more regulated or there's not a whole lot going on in there. I think my chairman's mention about my graduate advisor really woke me up. I thought, you're right, she's really quiet, but she's not shy. She's not afraid to speak. She's very organized and deliberate in what she says. I can't say it was always of value. Forgive me, Barbara. She's passed away, but sometimes it was just casual talk, but you did get the sense like she's a thinker. It's not white noise in there. You do sometimes get the sense that people who are constantly sending words out into the world that it has an anxiety component. It doesn't necessarily seem that organized, but you and I have both met. I'm sure many people know people who are hyperverbal, but very structured in their hyperverbalness. I guess I'm asking this because I want to break down the notions of quiet versus verbal. Introspective necessarily means calm. I mean, so many assumptions around all this. None of it is necessarily true. The reason I'm so genuinely curious about this is I think that most of the world is confronted with this Mark Andreessen provocative question like, how much time should we spend in here and how does it serve us when we're out here in the rest of the world? And vice versa. Like if we're just talking, talking, talking, doing all day, maybe we are processing and we can be peaceful inside and lay our head down and that's it. It's all out there for better or worse. But for us, it's great. But there's this assumption that there's the constant, whatever we see is also happening internally. Yeah, I think we have to just be very, very wary of either mapping some stereotype, oh, this is good and that's not good and applying some value system to it when we're outside of looking at a person in a context. Because all of those things, being internalized, speaking less or being hyperverbal, they could mean anything, anything under the sun that has to be who is the person and what is the context. So if you're describing Barbara Chapman in meetings, I interpret that as she's communicating judiciously. She's in a place where maybe sometimes people say excess things because they're self-aggrandizing or they want to bring something up or they're trying to guide a conversation one way or another and you think, no, that's a place where less is more. We're not doing that and just communicating about something that matters, when it matters. So wow, that's speaking judiciously. That's what it tells me about her. I don't know if her mind was going a mile a minute inside or if there was a common equanimity. But I think who that person was and what that situation was was very adaptive. Same thing if there's someone who's speaking a lot. But they just have a lot of ideas and they're really constructive ideas and they're talking to people about those ideas and they're enthusiastic and it's helpful. Well, that sounds good to me. That sounds very different than someone who's hyperverbal and they're talking. But you can tell they're saying the same thing but coming from a different angle and they're anxious and they may want validation. So the person in the context makes all the difference. We want to be able to identify when a person might fit a certain profile. There are people who are quiet because they're strong and they're silent and there's not a lot going on inside but they're resolute. Okay, that's a kind of person. But we shouldn't assume that someone is that way until we've looked at who is that person and what is the context in which we're assessing them. We're human so we fit patterns. But we're all unique so you won't know what pattern we may be fitting until you really look at us. One thing I love about your book is you have probe questions. You have questions for people to ask themselves to explore the self. And I think for me that is a huge gift of the book and the work in it. When I got to see an advanced copy I was like, obviously you understand the theory and the science and you're a clinician but for me, okay, what do I ask myself? And how do I go about doing that? How do I figure out what's going right as a stepping stone to maybe exploring what's not going right? But certainly to really understand where my strengths might lie. And I think that it's a really unique gift because I think that we don't have enough of that. I think we have a lot of what's going wrong, where the friction points, what's wrong with me kind of stuff and what's wrong with the world. And I think starting from that place of really knowing what the questions are to ask oneself is, I just personally found immensely useful. And I realize we're mainly discussing theory up until now, although I'm about to ask you a very practical question, which is assuming no pathology, no lycripling anxiety or depression or panic, how much do you think people should try and adjust their what I call the autonomic set point? Some people are just more expressive with their hands, with their words, they want to move a lot more. And if they don't, it makes them anxious. Other people are more still. And we again assume that if they're physically still that things are probably a bit more still internally and that's not necessarily a bad thing. But there is a lot of emphasis, including on this podcast, on learning to sit with stress, learning to sit with anxiety, and not just letting it out or experiencing it. And sometimes I wonder, despite knowing the immense value of those tools, I mean, I've benefited so much from things like non sleep, deep rest and meditation and things like that. And I know others have as well. But I mean, how much should we be trying to control our states? I do wonder if it's good for us to think that there's something wrong for us if we feel a certain way. Period. And then controlling our states in order to help us be at our best is different from trying to control our states so that we change ourselves. So if you're finding a deep state of peace that's not sleep, you find, oh, that helps you be a better you, that finding that peace just gives you some groundedness and you feel healthier for it and you're better able to solve problems. So you're learning something and doing something because it serves you well and it helps you be at your best. That's different than thinking, oh, I need to be different. If a person thinks, well, I need to be different and I need to be calmer or more peaceful, what does that mean? And is that person imposing something external on themselves? So there are people who are very active and yes, they can sit quietly sometimes, but they're not really built for it. They're active people and it works for them to be active and they may be quite meditative when they don't seem to be quite meditative. They can be doing something and we see a lot of movement in them, but inside they can be in a meditative state. So it's so easy for us to, it's well-meaning in that we're trying to understand. We're trying to understand ourselves and we're trying to understand others and we're trying to find patterns, but it's so tempting to think that we know something because we're just observing someone in a certain state or we're observing someone talking or not talking. So what does that mean? And we have to ask the right questions in order to get there. So the only way we really know the answers for a person is we have to understand that person and we have to understand their context. So we must ask the right questions. You had talked about trying to write practical routes of approach to ourselves in the book. I'm doing that because think of if someone wanted to learn physics, would you say, well, just stop, go somewhere and think about physics? No, there has to be a route of approach of saying, well, here's some of the basic knowledge. Think about this approach that way. Read from this book and then that book. There are ways that we are guided in how to learn things. And it's interesting that we don't have these guides for what's most important, which is learning about ourselves. So it brings us back to why it can make us so uncomfortable, so anxious, is okay, we're going to sit with ourselves. It's like, so we'll sit with yourself and learn horticulture. I don't know, I'll sit with myself, but you have to help me figure out how to learn that or I'm going to feel anxious about sitting there if I don't know how to go about it. So if we have the prompts to look at ourselves now, what we're doing is we're making it real. We're asking the right questions of ourselves to think, oh, how do I function? What does work well for me? How do I think of myself? How do others think of me? Am I introverted or extroverted? Am I combination of both? Do I sometimes feel in one state and sometimes in another? Is it working for me? Is it working for me in the big picture? Are there parts of the small picture that work for me or things I really don't like or things where I really don't feel uncomfortable? Now we're bringing curiosity and yes, we want to learn from patterns and learn from all the knowledge we have of the world, but we're taking that and saying, hey, none of that actually means anything until it's directed towards me, if I'm the person reflecting about myself or if it's a helping process, we're helping a friend or we're in a therapy process. We have to take everything that we know and then it's all seen through the lens of that person. We have to do it that way or we'll lead ourselves astray. If you're willing, I'm curious about throwing out a sort of a generic clinical session example. Let's assume you know something about the family background of a patient and there's nothing glaringly obvious in the background about trauma or maybe there is, but you know that there's nothing really to dig into there just yet and the person comes to you and says, yeah, I don't know. I'm like, work is okay, but this and so on, so it worked at that and I guess this is good and you know, and they're, I don't know, they're dating, they're in their life and I swear I'm not trying to get a free therapy session here. I'm just trying to imagine. Someone says, you know, and then like the news is really bothering me and you know, and just kind of reporting. Right. You observe human patterns. I mean, your pattern recognition is presumably oriented towards where there's emotion, where there's patterns in them, how it matches to templates that only you could harbor the same way that a really amazing neurosurgeon would look into the brain and see a pattern of epileptic seizure and would be like, okay, this is, even without remembering those specific cases, I know which direction to go at this to explore. When you hear all that stuff and the stuff I'm talking about here is deliberately meant to reflect what you see a lot of on social media. Upset about that political team, upset about that politically in my life is this, but this, but this, but what does that tell you? And what does it tell you specifically about where that person should invest effort into thinking or doing? I realize it's impossible to give it a pan prescriptive here, but like, what does that mean when somebody's just really absorbed by all the things going on around them and things feel good, but where do you start to probe and where do you start to encourage them at least until the next session? The way to probe is to encourage reflection, right? Because with what you said, I think while I'm hearing somebody reporting, right, it's like they're just telling me the news, right, of what went on, I'm doing this, I'm doing that, I'm doing this way, I'm doing this way, I'm doing that way. Yeah, I did that. Yeah. It's kind of an inventory or a laundry list, right? So what it makes me think is, huh, I wonder how much of that you're really choosing, right, or how much of that is intentional or how much of that is just a reflex. The behaviors that in their life, how much of it they're choosing or the reporting? No, the behaviors, how much of what they're reporting, like how much of that are you really choosing, right? How much of that is what you want to be doing? How much of that is working for you, right? What we're trying to do then, what I want to do then is encourage, like to have some interest in examination of like, well, why am I doing all of this, right? Maybe some of this I really like and I am interested in and others of it I'm just doing because it's habit or it's routine, I don't even know why I'm doing it or if I'm dating, who am I dating, why am I dating, how am I choosing, is that also just something that I do? How much am I just kind of along for the ride of what I'm doing that just has forward momentum versus what am I really choosing? Now, if we stop and we look at it that way, what are you really choosing and also what's working for you? Now, we're off to the races of an examined life and we see this as I know you know we do a lot of intensive work, we do it with individuals, we do it with couples where we try and move this process forward very, very, very rapidly of looking at one's own life and it's very interesting that sometimes, by midway through the second day of an intensive process, the person wants to revisit almost everything. They realize 10, 20% of all those things I just said, this is what I do, right? I really value and I want to be doing more of the others. I'm not so sure of, right? I don't know why I'm doing some of those things. Now, we're really along the process of change because we're looking at ourselves and it may seem strange that someone would see the 80% of what I just told you I do, I don't know if I want to do or if it's working for me, but that happens all the time when we're not examining our lives. They just kind of run forward and we accumulate what we accumulate, right? And it's like, well, this is what we are because this is what I've accumulated by grabbing and carrying with me as I'm moving through life and there's not an organization to it. So this idea that we must examine our lives is at the heart of all of this. That's how we keep mental health and our structure of self and our function of self. We keep our drives in balance. We set ourselves on a path where we are in a place to meet future challenges from the best health we can have and also to meet future opportunities. So just like we want to do with our physical health, right? We want to build good physical health. Likewise, we want to build good mental health when that's the best way to be when life throws us whatever curveballs are going to come our way. And it's also the best way to have a good life, to be on the front foot of life, but we need to examine ourselves and we need a process and a structure in order to build good mental health the way we build good physical health. And ultimately, that's how we build good health. So what I'm hearing is in order to gain more agency over any areas of our life, we have to ask the why question. Why am I doing what I'm doing now and why aren't I doing this other thing that perhaps would serve me better? It starts with questions of self. What do you do, and this must be incredibly frustrating, at least it would be to me, what do you do if somebody, you say, well, why aren't you on the person, well, I know I should work out, but I don't. And you say, why not? And they say, well, I don't know, I'm tired, I know I should. Then you say, well, why do you still hang out with Sharon when you always come back from it feeling totally exhausted and feeling like you've just had all this stuff done? How do you work past the person who's just, this is just life. This is just what life requires. I got to work, I got my friends, what am I going to do, overhaul my life? This probably varies by region and by generation, the extent to which people are willing to look at things and spin them around, like rotate the cube, as I like to call it, and look at it from underneath a bit. Just as a practice, to some people, that's okay, cool. I'll play the, no one listens to albums anymore, but the same way they used to, but I'll play the album in reverse for a bit. Maybe it'll give me something different, maybe it'll be like, ah, that's the album, this is how I do it. So how do you get somebody to do this? And of course, I'm not asking you to tell us this so that people can play therapist with others, even though they naturally do. I'm asking this because hopefully this is what people will do for themselves. Well, if someone is talking in the way of the person you described, right, saying, well, this is just what I do, and in describing, I think you say, every time they go out with Sharon, they come home and they feel kind of drained, and they don't feel good, then they move on to something else, and to something else, and they might talk about their job and, you know, something that's frustrating them all the time, and they just keep going forward. Then I might say, well, what you're doing is you're showing both of us where the X's are, you know, the X's mark the spot, right, to dig, right? So you're showing us, hey, here's where there's some treasure, right? Let's dig where this X is. So if you're going out with someone, and every time you see that person, you come home, and you feel a sense of lethargy, and you feel a sense of time wasn't well spent, and you kind of feel hopeless, well, it's really important to think about why you're doing that, right? And I would link it to something else. So I might say, so, you know, you had said earlier on, or a couple of sessions ago, that you really want to find a partner, and you really want to find a good relationship. So that's important to you, told me that it was, and now you're telling me that, you know, you keep seeing this person where you know every time you go out the front door that nothing good is going to come of it, and you're going to come back feeling worse, than when you left. Like, we should look at why, and we don't have to be scared to look away, because this is where the fear comes in, like, oh my gosh, what is wrong with me? Why would I be doing that, right? Somewhere inside of them, that person knows that's not working for me, but I'm still doing it. So there's some fear of looking at that. So if we say, hey, no harm, no foul, like, let's just, let's think about why, you know, it may be that that person really wants that person, in this case, I could think it's Sharon, or wants Sharon to like them, right? And maybe they feel a need to be liked, so they don't like this person, but they think they need this person to like them, maybe. Maybe they're a person who always takes too much care of others versus themselves, and they don't like Sharon, but Sharon likes them, right? So they don't really want to end that relationship. But there's something going on there, because the person is saying, hey, I'm doing this thing that absolutely won't get me what I want. And I'll keep doing it. And say, well, that's not really what you want. If you're, if you are doing it over and over again, you think you're going to keep doing it, it's just because, you know, you haven't felt empowered enough that, hey, I can understand myself and I can bring some change so that, so that my behaviors, my choices are actually in line with my wishes, you know, with my strivings. So now we get that person interested, right? We tell them that there is an X. Let's understand why it is that you're still going out with Sharon, right? There's got to be something to learn there. And there always is. If we dig where the X's are, we do get some treasure. It might be a little, it might be a lot, but we learn from that. And we bring that learning to life, the rubber hits the road, as that leads to real life change. That makes really good sense. And thank you for the clarity of that answer. It brings us back to asking why to develop more agency around possibly making different choices. It's not always, I mean, it wasn't, I guess one could realize like they really, they want that kind of relationship, but with someone else or they want a completely different kind of relationship with the same person, right? Right. And to work on that. But it starts with asking questions. Yes. I realize I'm going backwards into this, but it goes from inventories are a start toward informing what questions are useful, useful questions, probe understanding that hopefully develops more agency. Do you encourage people once they get to a point of, oh yeah, like maybe I want a different sort of relationship to this person or thing or activity in life. Do you give them specific action, action directives? Like, yeah, like how about between this session and next session, like you go to the gym twice. You do whatever there. Maybe watch TV and just like pedal, you know, on the bike and, or maybe you go and you like really take a course or a class rather. Do you tend to give people clear directives about what could really help if you sense that that could really help? Sometimes, but I think it's much more effective if it's arrived at collaboratively. So if we decide, hey, you know, it'd be really, really good. And we both agree. We've talked back and forth now. And if you can get to the gym once before you come back next week, right? And then we talk about that back and forth. Like maybe that person wants to go to the gym five times, you know, before they come back. But each time they do that, they get frustrated with themselves and they don't go at all. Right? So we might say, look, we've been talking about this and maybe I'll say it, or maybe the other, maybe the patient will say it, right? And to say, look, I do, I do want to be going to the gym. I want to be getting exercise. And I see I go between too much and too little, right? I go between taking on too much and I get frustrated. I don't do anything. Have as something that's more measured. Okay. Maybe I'll try and go on Monday and Friday. I'm making that way. Maybe you decide, yeah, you know what? Maybe twice is, twice is okay. Or should it be once? Right? Because if you get once under your belt, you can get twice under your belt the next week. So we're, we're just trying to understand. So there's no mystery to it. And we, we know what we're doing. So someone who wants to have a different relationship and says, well, maybe I could have a good relationship with Sharon, but I'd have to talk to her about A, B, and C that isn't really going well. Okay. How might you do that? Right? Like, let's think about it. Right? Because that communication isn't going to happen unless you bring it. And what's keeping you from that? How might you approach her in a way that you could really talk? What's, what's holding you back? So we're, we're trying to problem solve, but we're doing so in a way that's, that's open where we know what we're doing and we're not bringing some magic or mystery to it. We're trying to move ahead and we understand it's one step at a time and we want to take those steps. So we don't want someone to think often we want a process of change to occur so fast that we can't possibly occur as fast as we wanted to and then we get frustrated in two weeks. Right? So we have to set reasonable expectations of, hey, it might be, you could really get somewhere with us in a couple of months. It seems like that from our conversations. What do you think? Are we, we make sure we're on the same page and then we say, well, one week after another, like we could put one foot in front of the other and we can get ourselves there and it's not easy. So it might not be easy to say broach that first conversation with Sharon or, or get yourself to the gym that first time, right? But we can help you bolster yourself so all your errors are going in the same direction. You set yourself up for success. You're not going to try to go to go the morning after a long night out and we set you up for success and you get a win and small wins and empower and embolden us to, to, to take a little bit more chances and get bigger wins. And, you know, if our structure of self and our function of self are in good places, then what rests on top of that is empowerment. There's a sense of empowerment in us and also a sense of humility that, that lets us accept that we're human, that things aren't perfect. And maybe I have been making the same mistake over and over again. Like it's, so I'm okay. I'm, I'm human. And if I have the humility to accept that and I have empowerment, then I can meet the world through agency and this active gratitude. You know, I'm, I'm grateful that Sharon's still here and I can, I can talk to her, right? I'm grateful that there's a gym for me to go to. I'm healthy enough for me to get myself there and I've got enough agency inside of myself that I'm going to do these things that I've decided to do. This is how we, we make life change, whether it be small or big, and how do we get to big life change? It starts with small steps. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, Function. Function provides over 160 advanced lab tests to give you a clear snapshot of your bodily health. This snapshot gives you insights into your heart health, your hormone health, autoimmune function, nutrient levels, and much more. They've also recently added access to advanced MRI and CT scans. Function not only provides testing of over 160 biomarkers key to your physical and mental health, it also analyzes these results and provides recommendations for improving your health from top doctors. For example, in a recent test with Function, I learned that some of my blood lipids were slightly out of range. 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To learn more, visit FunctionHealth.com slash Huberman and use the code Huberman for a $50 credit towards your membership. Again, that's FunctionHealth.com slash Huberman. Okay, so once again, we're talking about asking the right questions. There's no doubt that the families we're born into and the families we grew up around and the people we grew up around impact us tremendously. At what point does it make sense to try and think about the patterns that you were exposed to as a way to have more agency, to ask better questions about why? I think right now in addition to this not so little debate about the value of introspection versus just doing and clearly it's both, there's also a debate going on about how much to think about the past and traumas, etc. I won't go into why this is really of the times right now, but the dilemma seems to be do you look at your life as something that's happening now and focus on the why questions so you do what you need to do to make your life better? Or is there real value in identifying patterns that you observed or were forced to participate in as a kid as a way of having more agency? In other words, if someone sees or just verbally hears a pattern, does it actually help them make change? Yes, it does. Yes, it's insight that sets us free and it's insight that puts us in the driver's seat of our lives. Otherwise, we're just reacting. So in the example that you gave, so imagine a person who had a very over-controlling parent. So they don't have insight and they become over-controlling themselves. They associate that high level of control with being powerful. They feel less vulnerable when they're being powerful. So they end up being over-controlling with their own children just like their parents were. We say, okay, we can recognize that and we'll say pattern repetition or whatever words we want to put to it. And we go, oh, gosh, that person doesn't have insight. But when the person is doing the opposite, that's not necessarily good either. So a person could say, well, my parent was over-controlling. I'm going to be easygoing. I'm going to be more easygoing. But if that person doesn't have insight, then they can become too permissive. So now they're not controlling things in a way that does make sense. They're not exercising the healthy control of a parent. So they could identify with what the parent did and do the same thing. Or they could push away from it and do the opposite. But the opposite isn't good either, right? It's insight that lets us say, oh, my parent or parents were over-controlling and maybe that even, it got to a place where it was very, very difficult and maybe even abusive. And I don't want to be like that, right? And I'm not going to be like that. But I'm not going to rush to the opposite pole either, right? And now I have to, I get to, I both have to and get to figure out what's a healthy level of control, right? How much control does it make sense to exert, to keep the child safe, for example, but also to then allow the child enough latitude to be growing and making their own decisions. So it's insight that says, oh, I see, I see what that was in my past. And often we do need to do that. Often early childhood experiences, especially experiences within family units have a great impact upon us and often will guide our behaviors and then kind of like automatons, we're acting one way or we're acting another and we don't know why. But it's insight that lets us gain the understanding. Here's how it was when I was growing up. I can look at that, I can see it good, bad or otherwise, right? And then I can decide, how do I want to integrate that information, how the whole me is going to be in the driver's seat of being a good parent. So there seems to be something fundamentally valuable about insights where we realize I want to push away from something, a pattern, or I want to get more like someone or something that is, you know, would serve me better. And I realize that might just be a giant duh based on what you said, but I'm trying to think about what that means about the mind, about the human mind. I can imagine that there are instances where people are in patterns of behavior and they're struggling with them, they're not working for them and they know it and they want to make the change. This is the thing I hear all the time. I want to make, I know I should do it, I know I should do it, but they don't do it. What you're saying is when we can know that that pattern was something we observed or we're doing the opposite of something we observed, doesn't matter which, suddenly we have agency. What do you think that is? This is a different kind of question than I've been asking up until now. What is that? Because my clinician can tell me, hey, you know what? You should really start to eat better and get to sleep on time because we both know this isn't serving you well. And the version comes back and they're not doing the behaviors, they're not changing their behaviors, they're not changing, and then you ask them, hey, like, what is this about? And you get to a place where it reflects something in childhood. They're either going against or they're going with that pattern. You're telling me that that realization gives them a sense of agency. Aha, it's, it comes from me, but I didn't program that. What is the insight? What allows that? What is the wedge that lets people change their behavior simply by understanding that some or all of it is inherited from a pattern? When we realize that there's something, whether it's external or internal, controlling us, it diffuses that tension. And part of why it diffuses the tension and lets us see clearly and gives us control is because we don't like it. None of us want to be like in the Manchurian candidate, where there's a sound and then we behave in a certain way and we're triggered in a certain way and then we just do something and we do it automatically. We don't like that. And if we realize, oh, that's happening in me. So if I realize, gosh, I've been programmed, and if someone is disagreeing with me, it makes me feel so bad or so vulnerable or insecure, it makes me feel like I felt when I was a kid. So now what I'm doing is I'm being just like the parent was. I'm not giving my child a chance to have his or her own opinion. And now, because I won't let myself tolerate that feeling. So what's happened is it's just been automatic from when I was a kid and it felt so bad. And now I'm in the position of trying to make myself feel good by imposing that on my own child. I don't want to do that. Wow, I see that or realizing that because that happened and I wasn't allowed to have my own say when I was growing up, I'm letting my children kind of run wild in ways that aren't even safe for them. And wow, like I pushed so hard against that. It's this realization that something inside of us is being triggered and then we just do something automatically that we haven't thought about or decided to. That is a very, very strong effect on humans. We really don't like that. So if we can combine that with compassionate curiosity, like if one of us were really, really, really hungry and there's food right outside the door, but we're not getting up to get it, it's a reasonable question to ask why. Right? I mean, it's got to be something very powerful to keep a person who's so hungry from just going and getting food. What are these forces within us that are exerting such control over us? Now we get the person to be on their own side instead of saying, I want to do A, B and C, but I just can't or there's just not enough time to like, whoa, that's not, you know, I don't know, why is it that I'm telling myself, do I really want to do it? If I do, what's keeping me from doing it? How am I keeping me from doing it? Now we bring our gumption, you know, we bring our resources internally and externally to the problem and the whole thing shifts. Oh man, that helps a lot, not just me. I have to say people not feeling motivated, people not being able to break a pattern that isn't serving them, whether or not it's action or inaction is probably the most common question I get. It's the most common theme. It's probably the reason why podcasts like this can exist. I mean, I think people having a natural curiosity about the science and the intellectual aspects and neural circuits and hormones and all that kind of stuff, but I think ultimately people want more agency over their behavior. They want to feel that. And I think what you said is like layering in the room, at least for me, that people don't like to be controlled. So much so that we know that we got kids to quit smoking back in the, you know, in the 90s, early 2000s by advertisements of rich old white men writhing their hands, cackling about the health problems that people are getting while they're getting rich. That's what stopped teens from smoking. You're not going to control me. It wasn't that they didn't like smoking. Nicotine's incredibly reinforcing. The moment that you have an enemy, you feel a sense of agency. You said, no, you're on your own side. So realizing one is being controlled is, I realized I'm just saying what you're saying, but I want to make sure this really resonates in my own mind and for the listeners. That's the essence of agency. You have to be on your own side. And to get on your own side, it's helpful to not necessarily have an enemy, but to say, oh, this was, this is all about my parents and I'm going in the opposite direction in ways that are defeating me. I'm, they're controlling me even though I think I'm controlling me. Boom. Right. Right. Behavior changes or, oh, shit, this is just like my mom or just like my dad or just like the environment I grew up in. And now somebody can advocate for themselves. Yes. I also see this in the media nowadays. I mean, so much of social media is about us them. And gosh, people are like perfectly happy for understandable reasons to be like, you're not going to control me. We saw this during the pandemic. We see this at every level. What is this human thing about not wanting to be controlled that in this context is very positive. Right. Yeah. We, there's something about the human primate brain. Yeah. Like we, we don't like to be controlled and that sense of agency can, can blossom out of that. Yeah. I think that's incredible. Yeah. We don't want to think or know that, that someone or something is putting one over on us. Like, you know, humans don't want to be dupes. We don't, we don't like that. Right. It makes us upset. And here the magic realization is that there is no enemy. Right. That we can get in our own way. And who's most likely to thwart my efforts towards being healthier. It's absolutely me. Right. So I can get in my own way, but it doesn't mean I'm my enemy. So if I, if I do really, I want to be healthier and I want to get to the gym to be healthier. Okay. Who's standing in my way then? It will be me. That, but I said, well, why am I standing in my way? I secretly hate myself and I want myself not to be healthy. No, it's, it's not that. If I'm standing in my own way, there's a reason. I really think that, that I have so much to do and, and, and it's for other people, and it means more than me. So really, I don't think I deserve the time and energy it would, it would take. I'm not going to spend it on myself. Maybe that's why I don't go. Or maybe I don't go because I'm trying to protect myself. Right. Because I'm worried the last couple of times I tried, it didn't go well and I felt worse. So I don't even want to start. So I'm standing in my own way because of fear of failure. Right. There's a lot of reasons. There's many, many, many reasons we could be standing in our own way, but we're not our own enemy. So the realization of like, why am I doing this? I don't have to do this actually. There's one me and I could say, well, if I both, if I really want to go to the gym, but I'm not going, I want to go and I don't want to go. It must be true or I'd be there. Right. Why is it that I don't want to go? Am I not worth the time and energy? Maybe. Do I think there are more important things to do? Really? I do really think that. Right. And I'm not admitting it to myself. Am I afraid that if I try, I'll fail. Right. There's got to be a reason for that. So let me get on the same page. As I've often said, to further the example would be, hey, you get to decide if you go to the gym or not. We just want you to be on the same page with yourself. Like you can decide not to, if you say, actually, there are more, there are things that are bigger priorities for my time. Now someone else is sick. I'm taking care of that person. It really, that is what I'm choosing now. Okay. So I'm not going to go now. And the whole me decides that. But on the other side of this, when this drain on time, like time and energy is different, then I am going to go. Right. Now the person's on the same page and they're not making themselves feel worse by wanting to go and not going. Or I might say, I really do want to go, but I know I'm standing in my own way because I'm afraid I'll fail. Okay. And then maybe I get upset the last eight times I tried, I failed. Right. Now we're really digging where the money's at. Right. Because we go and look and say, okay, you're protecting yourself. How do we try and set you up for success? So you'll want to go forward this time because you'll see that it's different from the other times and you won't just be repeating something that just made you feel bad. So that's how we get all our arrows pointing in the same direction. We realize there is no enemy here. There is me standing in my own way, but like, that's okay. I can look at that and I can figure that out. And now we're at that simple goodness principle where we're all on the same page with ourselves and we accomplish our goals. We wouldn't wish trauma on anybody, but how is it then that people who had reasonably healthy or trauma-free childhoods, how do they operate in the world? Are they moving toward things from a genuine place of curiosity and they're not pushing off anything in this, you know, idyllic example that they're not countering a childhood example? Does that represent the ultimate goal that we're moving towards things because we want them and we're not resisting anything, nor are we copying bad patterns from our childhood? Yes. In the sense that I think that's what I would map to living intentionally, right, to being as self-aware as we can be while also realizing we can't be completely self-aware and then living intentionally. So yes, that's what we're trying to get to. And the presence of trauma, of real trauma that overwhelms our coping skills and leaves our brain function different going forward, it does make it harder to achieve these things, which is why we want to look at trauma if there are traumas in our lives and how they may have changed us. But it doesn't prevent that. I mean, people can have significant traumas and still be on this path and have some insight into how the trauma is affecting them and even insight that the trauma needs more work maybe to really get our arms around it. But that person can still get there. Likewise, someone who hasn't had trauma might have real difficulty getting there. If I haven't had major trauma, but you know, just circumstances or my own maybe overly ambitious with not enough time and energy, hey, I did try and get to the gym four or five times and it didn't work out. And I really do feel down on myself and it's not linked to any prior trauma. It's just I've gotten in this cycle and every time I think about being healthier, now I'm telling myself, oh, you'll never be able to do it or you messed it up three times. And so I'm inadvertently making it harder for myself. And without any preexisting trauma, that person can end up having much more trouble than someone who does have preexisting trauma. Or how do you respond to the words, I get tired just thinking about it. Like something that would be good for somebody, I get tired just thinking about it. And it involves energy. I'm not giving you a very full picture, but I'm guessing you've heard those words before. Oh, I want to understand a lot more about that. What that tells me is there's a lot of brain space and a lot of energy that's taken up in the thinking of it. So for a lot of people, they get so tired of thinking about trying to go to the gym, because thinking about trying to go to the gym takes more energy from them than actually being there. Because it's running around in their head, how they failed and how bad they're going to feel and how they really want to do this. And maybe they will, maybe they won't. And there's so much going on inside of them that they're making something very, very complicated. So I want to understand why all that energy inside, and is there a way that we can simplify that? That's a marker that there's something going on that we want to be able to get at, because it's not the healthiest process. To say that there's a lot of internal turmoil about something that almost certainly can be better understood and simplified. So that statement represents 10 mental workouts that is exhausting them. At least that's the sense it might give you. Yeah, with no improvement in physical health. So the 10 mental workouts just wasted that energy, right? There is no improvement in physical health. Let's take those 10 mental workouts and figure out, how can we turn that into one physical workout? That person's going to feel a lot better physically and mentally. I want to table a couple of common statements about the mind and psychology. I'm perfectly willing to accept that they're true, but I have a feeling they're at least not entirely true. One is, however you talk to others, that's also how you talk to yourself. Is this just nonsense? I mean, there's some people that are very harsh with other people. Are they walking around being harsh to themselves? Or are they just peaceful in there? And they're externalizing all. I had a former colleague, let's just keep him anonymous, a former colleague. And he used to say, I don't get stressed, I give stress. That feels true to me. He gave up all his cards by telling me that. So I was grateful for that statement, but he was very proud of it. He was like, I don't get stressed, I give stress. And I thought, I bet you he's pretty stressed in there. And then I realized, I don't know what the hell is going on in there. Maybe he's just absolutely right. So can we make that assumption that how people treat others is really how they treat themselves? No, sometimes that may be true, but sometimes that may not be true. So the statement has no validity. Maybe yes, maybe no, you have to look at the person and look at the situation. For most people, when there's a difference between the two, it is not the person who say is externalizing all that stress, giving everybody stress, but they feel calm inside. That is not a healthy way to be. And there's something going on there that's different. That is an issue that Warren's really looking at and addressing. There's a problem there. For most people, if it's different, it's the opposite where people are treating others much, much better than they're treating themselves. And they may say, well, that's okay. Maybe we each made a mistake and I get it. Everyone makes mistakes. I may say that to you, but then go, what's wrong with me? Or I maybe act very differently inside. And that's mostly what good people do is we'll give other people a kind word or a benefit of the doubt, but we get very harsh and our language and our tone inside of ourselves can be very different. And this idea of, if you're going to make yourself special, don't make yourself special in a negative way. Partly ingest, but it is saying, for most of us who are making ourselves special, it is in a negative way. Other people can get a pass about that something. They've made an honest mistake or we'll give them another chance, whatever it may be. But for us, we may use much harsher language. What's wrong with me? I'm an idiot. I mess that up again. And there's a lot of that going on inside of us. So no, if we're treating other people kindly, it may be that we're treating ourselves kindly inside, but that is certainly not a given. And if we're being unkind to other people, most of the time there is some real turmoil and that person is not feeling okay inside. The person who's making other people unhappy and they themselves feel okay, that's a different kind of problem. And it's not a common one. In your book, you talk about intrusive thoughts and things that people can do to deal with intrusive thoughts. If you wouldn't mind, could you give us a few examples of things that people can do to deal with intrusive thoughts? The first is we have to identify it. And there are people who have intrusive thoughts, something they may say to themselves hundreds of times a day and they're not aware of it, until they stop and think, what am I saying to myself over and over again? What's running around, being aware of our self-talk, the idea that we're not safe or worried about one's children and safety or worried about them, I'm going to get fired or there's not going to be enough. These things can comp us over and over again without us being aware of it. So the first thing is we must be aware. And it may sound strange to say, we could say something to ourselves hundreds of times over and not be aware of it, but absolutely that happens. So we have to be curious, what is it that I'm saying to myself in these quiet moments and then what purpose is it serving? So if I keep telling myself that nothing's going to be okay, why am I saying that? Am I so afraid that nothing's going to be okay, that I'm trying to save myself from the shock of nothing being okay? Maybe, right? Maybe that's going on. Am I just so afraid about something, something happened in the past, someone was hurt or there was a loss and now the intrusive thoughts tell me that things can't be okay, but what it's telling me is I haven't processed that loss. There is going to be a meaning. There is a meaning to intrusive thoughts. There always is. So we want to recognize them. We want to look for that meaning and then there are strategies of what we can do and they can range from thought redirection. Sometimes we think something because we're thinking it over and over again and if we thought redirect it gives us greater control. Sometimes we diffuse some of the energy in it by understanding why we're thinking that thing and maybe taking measures if I'm worried that I'm not safe and things aren't going to be okay. Maybe I'm letting myself be in an unsafe situation and I need to change that situation. This is a place sometimes medicines can help. So there are a lot of things that we can bring to bear, but we first have to recognize that they're happening and then we're going to encounter current to modern mental health. Often we have to actually understand why if we want that to change for the better, if we want to really get into the engine and figure it out instead of just trying to polish the hood and not look at where that problem is coming from. In keeping with commonly discussed themes, out in the world that I question, are our dreams informative and is there anything that we can know about ourselves like patterns of thinking when we're awake that make our dreams more informative? For example, if I tend to think in analogy or parallel construction and will the content of my dreams be more meaningful to me to understand through the lens of analogy or parallel construction? I'm not sure about the last point. I don't know. I just don't know and my clinical experience has been people's dreams can have a lot of meaning regardless of what kind of thinker they are. So someone who might be, for example, a very concrete thinker may have dreams that are really telling us a lot because what the unconscious mind wants to bring to the surface doesn't have a lot of room to do that because that person is thinking concretely and they're not thinking in analogies or parallel processes and they're not opening up their mind that way. So the dream is expressing something there's no other way of getting to the surface or it may be people who are very expressive and cultivate routes of expression have informative dreams. I think the one factor is being curious about ourselves because then we tend to remember more what went on inside of us. We tend to then either think through enough or write down and become curious about ourselves. So I think being curious about what our brains are telling us during sleep can be very helpful. I haven't known of another quality or characteristic of a person that really points strongly one way or another and sometimes dreams don't have meaning or they don't have meaning we can clearly discern. So we have to be careful. We have to be respectful of how complex our minds are and sometimes we're looking to read something in to a dream or we want to see it as a marker along the path where our thought is going. So we have to be very careful and very level headed but if we approach that way it can be remarkable, amazing what dreams can sometimes tell us and how something can come out allegorically in a person that is speaking to events that have unfolded across years in a large family system and you find in a very simple way an allegorical way the brain is capturing that. So curiosity about ourselves and our dreams can really give us a lot of insight but we have to be careful about it and be respectful of our own complexity. It's an unfortunate reality but tap water often contains contaminants that negatively impact our health. In fact a 2020 study by the environmental working group estimated that more than 200 million Americans are exposed to PFAS chemicals also known as forever chemicals through drinking of tap water. These forever chemicals are linked to serious health issues such as hormone disruption, gut microbiome disruption, fertility issues and many other health problems. 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In your previous book on trauma and in our previous discussions about trauma you've said that anxiety, trauma, stress doesn't know the clock or the calendar. Time is erased. The negative feelings that one feels in those states seems like it's going to go on forever which is why it's so scary. It sort of suggests that the way that we thread ourselves through our life is by kind of segmenting time. That was then this is now. That's a healthy version that the past doesn't necessarily dictate the present. The present doesn't necessarily dictate the future. But I think for many people the fear, the anxiety, they feel for many people on a daily basis. It is so uncomfortable because we just in those states we can't imagine feeling any differently but we cognitively know that we yeah like this is just a state. It's just like a thing. What sorts of tools do you offer people to try and anchor themselves in those states? Should they just feel them perhaps? Just let them pass through? Or is it useful perhaps for them to anchor to some sort of thing outside the experience so that they don't get carried by it? Like get out of the stress? And I think what I'm trying to do here is get to a fundamental question. Feel your feelings or be careful of feelings that put you out of a sense of time passage because those tend to be dangerous feelings. It has to start with understanding. We have to be able to shine the light everywhere and look at what's true. So as I found myself saying many times you can say that was then this is now but your limbic system doesn't care. In our limbic system are the emotion systems in us. So we can say well the past is in the past. So I'm going to put it in the past. We can say that but we're saying that through logical mechanisms in us. So if there's logical mechanisms and limbic or motion mechanisms it's a simplification but we can look at the brain that way and say well the logic mechanisms are telling me that and are declaring that it's true because the clock says that it's in the past. But the limbic the emotion systems have a very different reality. They don't see it that way. They don't know that there's a clock or the calendar. So it's not that that was then this is now. A trigger in the now can make then now. So we want to be aware of the emotions that are going on inside of us and the strong emotional states that we can get into because they're telling us something. You know if something happens just in going through life and something that might even seem small from the outside but I'm triggered or I'm queued in a way to be in a very deep emotional state of fear or vulnerability like and I can map that to like I felt you know when X happened or like I felt 20 years ago and this happened right. That's telling me something right. It's telling me time is not like a steel rod going you know in one direction. That's the logic systems and the limbic systems it's like a string right and something just made me feel right now exactly the way it took the string from now to this thing that happened say 10 years ago and it put the two parts of the string together. That's real for me and it's telling me there is emotion in something from that time that I have not worked through right. Was I aware of that? Am I kind of aware of it but I'm pushing it down under the surface. If I'm having strong emotions where I'm lost in the past while in the present it's a marker of something and very often we get afraid of that. We turn away from it. We're worried that that's telling us we're not healthier. We're worried we're going to go crazy. Like these are the things that people say right when this happens and so for us to know like well that is not what's happening. This is normal and human right. This is what will happen. These these emotion systems that that pay very strong attention right to negative things that to negative emotions you know fear and loss and terror and despair inside of us they don't know the clock or the calendar so they're going to bring to our present right things from our past that that are then markers are saying go dig there because that is not just in the past emotionally it is still in your present. At this point in time what what do you think is the most efficient way to root out and heal childhood traumas? Bringing compassionate curiosity to ourselves where we just look at our past and we look at it without sort of having a dog in the fight so to speak where like I don't I don't have to see it a certain way right. I don't have to look at this and sometimes people will say they have to make it less bad than it was because they they feel otherwise they won't be okay if they see all that was bad in it. You know others might feel they have to look at the worst of it because they're trying to anchor to things in their in their life now that they're not happy with and why that might be right. So what it ends up doing is it brings so much emotion into it that we can't look in a way that has equanimity right because we're living in the emotion now we can't feel no emotion if we're thinking about difficult things that have happened to us but to be able to have that observation of self of like what is going on inside of me what do I feel about it where does my own mind want to go do I want to minimize it do I want to take it and dial it up so that it'll explain why I did x or why I didn't do y right. So we're trying to observe our own motivations as we look at our childhood and if we can gain more equanimity that way then we can come to understanding this idea that we don't have to be afraid to go and do that and to say okay I can look at this and I see this part of my childhood or this person in my childhood like that that wasn't good or wasn't okay or maybe it was even abusive it was wrong right we can look at that and say okay what what what am I going to do with that now it doesn't define who I am it doesn't determine any one single thing about me right if I can look at it with a calmness of mind and I can see the realness of how it's affected me right now I start talking about malleability kind of where we started with with malleability of ourselves and how we see ourselves and I can start to make progress but we have to be able to look at ourselves and very often we just don't want to do that because we don't bring compassion you know we bring fear and criticism right but if we can just observe ourselves now we can get in touch with what what did happen in childhood what am I making of that now right and then now maybe I might want to put those words outside of me in writing or in speech or I might want to talk to a trusted other or I might want to see a therapist about it so it's taking the strong emotion that can keep us from understanding right which can get very complicated right if we bring fear to our past we're going to see it through the lens of fear if I know I can look at my past and I don't have to be afraid even if it raises difficult emotion in me I'm much more likely to keep a calm presence of mind and then to learn some things about myself do you think that people look back and think about good things that happen to them often enough no I mean it's just a clear no not often enough the answer then is no we tend to have a bias in us towards the negative and we don't stop and think hey you know I did that really well or you know that didn't come out the way I wanted it to but I learned from it or I didn't come out the way I wanted to but I really tried and we tend not to do that and this bias towards the negative means we we then start making the stories of ourselves about the negative or we feel like well if I look at what I've done right you know what's gone right in my life or what is going right then I'll get complacent or like what is there to be gained from that I'm going to look at what's not the way I want it to be and really quite the opposite is true right if we're looking at what's gone well in our life at our successes and even things that weren't successes maybe from the outside but hey I grew I learned something the school of hard knocks taught me something you know then then we are bolstering ourselves we're empowering ourselves by doing that so no we should all do a lot more of that and we wouldn't become complacent right we would become happier healthier more effective in our lives I think when we talk about looking backward most of us including myself just kind of reflexively go to okay my family growing up or elementary school middle school high school so on I have a colleague from the past Larry Squire is a kind of luminary in the the field of memory and it worked out a lot of stuff about human hippocampus and when I was visiting UC San Diego some years ago there were a bunch of photos on his office wall I was like oh cool like I was looking at from meetings and I figured if they're on his wall I'm allowed to look at them so I like probing around oh there's so-and-so and he said you know having photographs on your wall of times that were really good is very good for your for your adult memory and it cues up emotional states for you and this is where it got interesting because he studied explicit and implicit memory the ones that we're aware of versus the ones we're not aware of just to be to be clear to people and he said even if you don't look at them deliberately each day when walking past them if you have some you know implicit understanding about what those are you're surrounding yourself with positive memories yes and I thought that's pretty cool and he's not just somebody saying this right this wasn't some right you know just thing thrown out into the world this is arguably one of the people who knows more about human memory structure function than anybody in the last 200 years or so now that's cool and I so I said you know so it should be party should be that and he just said just things and people and experiences that you liked you just put them up and I said do you find yourself looking at them on your wall and he goes yeah from time to time but he's like I'm basically in a vessel of awesome memories and doesn't you know solve all my problems but but why wouldn't you and I think that's such a cool idea and these days we spent a lot of time looking at other people's experiences a lot of news coming in and things like that I wonder we're just doing a lot less of this and as a last point I've always liked I mean who knows what's really going on behind the scenes but I've always like you go into somebody's home and they you walk down a stairwell or up a stairwell sometimes and they've just got the wall lit with all these photos not necessarily big family sometimes yes sometimes no you're like wow like they're like post in all their experiences and I I think it's kind of cool I don't tend to do it but this is a version of thinking about and exposing oneself kind of basking in the past in a positive way I think it's kind of kind of cool maybe we should do more of it absolutely I think what he's talking about and what you're talking about here is actually being able to have control over the climate within us right the the structure of self which is foundational has at its foundation our unconscious mind and the unconscious mind sets parameters for us it's kind of the climate in which we're living and if that climate is being predisposed it's programmed right to to have a bias towards the negative because we're thinking negative thoughts a lot of the time we're thinking about what we did wrong or what we should have done differently or what's going to go wrong then we're biasing the unconscious mind to throw to the surface the negative answer we should am I going to be able to do that no right we're biased towards the negative now we don't know why why did I say no instead of yes right that arises from the climate inside of me which is my unconscious mind so he's saying hey you can sort of pre-program a bias into you towards the positive and it's not a false bias those memories that are up on his wall are real right and whether he's looking at them or he's just kind of glancing and he walks by and there's a registration inside you know that he that he's not even aware of right he's he is priming the unconscious mind to to see the positive side of things if he thinks well can I do that or yes I can right it changes things inside of him and he's then able to exercise control over his own climate and we can do that too and often what we're inadvertently doing is creating a climate of fear and a climate that is that lacks confidence right inside of us because we're just looking at the negative all the time whether it's about us or the world around us and that's a reason why the title of that book is what's going right because there's way more going right in all of us and there is going wrong or we wouldn't be here so why not prime ourselves with that the way that he was doing with the photographs on the wall it absolutely makes sense and it's not a polyana concept it's not saying well just look at what's going right it's saying no this is consistent with what's real and true and it's good for you too it helps you be effective in the world it helps your mental health helping your mental health helps your physical health that everything about this aligns with truth and it sets us up to be in better control of our lives and to be on the front foot as we're approaching life i'm gonna start printing out some photos and posting them because i don't do enough of that because of all the online stuff i just i have photos but i just feel like that's just remember this larry squire thing now as we were talking about this but i'm definitely going to do that yeah i'm gonna do more of it too it's a good reminder to do that yeah our physical space is you know to impact us so much and um yeah there are a lot of a lot of good memories and some hard ones too but i put up the good memories you know that it makes perfect sense to me why one would want to do that earlier we were talking about the sense of internal control that we feel the sense of being on one's own side when we're pushing off against something and i have to ask i i'm fascinated by scripture and by spirituality and notions of god and devil i mean if people are told i'm not telling people what to believe but we are we are told many people are told that there are evil forces out there or perhaps even in us and there are positive forces out there and in us typically this is presented as god and devil just for sake of conversation we'll stay with that do you think that it helps people choose better behaviors by being told and believing that there's a devil out there or inside of them to push against and therefore to be more on their own side and of course if it's internal it's it's an aspect of their own side that is better than the bad decision maker in them right so a little the way i'm wording is a little complicated but i can't think of a simpler way to get there if so this seems like a brilliant idea right if it's true or not it's not up to me to tell people but one has to choose for themselves but if the best way to come to change one's behavior is to be on one's own side and the best way to be on one's own side is to not be controlled by something else and to actively be resisting that seems like this god devil thing is pretty rational i think maybe from the psychological perspective yes and no i think if we get too over reductionist you know there's a single force of good and there's a single force of evil i think our major religious tenets i think do see the world we live in is more complicated than that that that there is more than just a single force of good and a single force of evil because then i think what we tend to do is over identify either i want to be the good force but i can't be good enough and i've done something wrong and and now i feel that i feel bad about myself because i now i feel evil because i don't feel good enough or i feel that the the evil in the world is clearly coming for me and it's directed for me it's a force directed at me we can tend to personify then good and evil and and either over identify or feel that we are be be legal right so if we over identify that we want to be good and we do something wrong we feel bad right that that that there can be a push towards self-persecuting or really not understanding ourselves if we oversimplify if we think in a broader way which i i do think is consistent with with spirituality and i think it's consistent with the spirituality of major religious traditions and we see there are forces for good their pushes towards good in the universe around us and that includes within us and their forces towards what is not good towards looking the other way for example from someone's needs right not something that's pure evil like most of us aren't going to step on someone when they're down but could we be tempted to look the other way right if we see there's a lot of subtlety and nuance to how good and evil plays out in the world around us and inside of ourselves then i think we're viewing ourselves and the world around us much more consistent with what religion says and i think also where science guides us and is more and more guiding us as we have more and more knowledge and understanding now we feel that we're part of something greater than us right their forces that push towards good and forces that push towards evil forces that push towards construction and towards destruction and and we know how we want to be and where we want to be in that spectrum we want to be generative and we want to be making the world better than we left and we want to be bettering ourselves you know now we're being i think much more true to the reality that we experience as opposed to being so reductionist that we see one good one evil and where are we going to be you know in in that polarized opposites is it a reasonable goal to want to be happy go lucky can i aspire to that and also be a productive person unfortunately no right happy go lucky i think to me it implies that there's not an awareness that hey there are difficult things in the world and in fact they're difficult things in my own life right i i think happy go lucky implies that we're not aware of how difficult life can be or maybe life has at times been so i don't think that you can be happy go lucky and i think it's good that you can't be because who who wants to lose the grounding of the things that are real in life that might take away the go lucky part right i think that you can be happy right and i think that that's better than happiness that includes some turning away or some forgetfulness right so if we take away the go lucky which is i think not desirable or possible i do absolutely believe that you can be happy because what we want and i think there's studies that show us this and and just thinking about how humans have written in literature and philosophy across time of what do we mean when we say happy we do want to find peace contentment and the capacity for delight you know we just want to be able to just be and not have so much going on inside or coming at us right we all said we just want a little bit of peace i you know i want to just sometimes walk around and be able to look up at the trees around me and and see that the trees are pretty right that for me that's peace and and i think yes we we can all find our way to peace we may not be able to have it every moment we don't have to have it every moment to be happy so so we need some peace and we need some contentment and contentment means that there's awareness of our lives of the things that have gone well and the things that haven't so i can find contentment in my life not every moment but i can find it even holding in my mind awareness of tragedies that have happened in my life or things that i haven't done or or performed about the way i would have ideally wanted to i can be aware of those things inside of me but be aware of the whole arc of my life and feel good about it you know as there was a thought about it embracing our fate or embracing what we've created for ourselves in early humanist Nietzsche this was sort of written about of the fate that we create for ourselves can we can we embrace it and want to live it over and over again even knowing the things in it that may be tragic or not great yes i think we can find peace we can find contentment and we can find the capacity for delight we all had it as children and if we don't have it now as adults there's something we can do about that we all need to be able to see something that just makes us light up so i think you and and all the rest of us it may be different how we're going to find it and how much of it and how much time we live in happiness but i think the answer for you and me and everyone else is we can find happiness because we can weave peace contentment and delight into our lives so is it the case that the things that bring us delight make us for moments feel very joyful what i'm hearing is that has to be on a backdrop of some hard things and some strivings that the goal is not complete peace and ease i think complete peace and ease isn't possible right i think for most of us you know life has brought difficulties for everyone in one way or another and life does have its risks and its dangers and its its vulnerability so to think that we need to not have that anywhere in our minds in order to feel good in order to be happy i think tells us that we can't be happy being human and and oftentimes it leads us to say well i just i want to not worry about anything i don't have anything weighing on me and we you know we start listing a bunch of things that sound like death right when we're trying to talk about how we're going to be happy right and like that's that's not what we're going for right i do want to have times of peace when like i'm not thinking about bad things that have happened i'm just at peace and i'm looking at the tree or the bird sitting up in the tree or you know the log floating down the river which which made me brought me a lot of peace not that long ago so we can have these moments it has to also be an awareness of our lives and we have to at times be able to have in our minds the things that are not the way we want them to be and the things that are tragic and still feel good about our lives i think that's how we find real happiness and we're not just looking for escapes because often the happy go lucky part is we're we're looking for an escape and it's kind of easy to to to feel that way sometimes if if a person chooses an escape and it could be even in a substance where okay it felt good for a couple of hours but at what cost right we're not looking for escape what we're looking for is is the ability to apprehend our own lives feel enough in control of our own lives that i don't have to be really afraid of the future i know that there may be scary things in them i'm going to meet them as best i can i don't have to be afraid of the future and i feel good about my life i feel enough in control and i have enough understanding that i can say okay i'm i'm i'm good with me at the moment and you know now that moment has become another moment and i'm moving forward and i'm doing the best i can because these this sequence of moments are the only the only time i'm alive and i want to be really present for it there used to be a lot of articles written and you could still find this stuff online about you know uh regrets that people had close to the end of their life and um you know no one ever said they wish they spent more time at the office i don't know i know some people that loved their work and love their work did they love it to the you know uh to the detriment of their family in some cases yes in a lot of cases no and so i i don't like those lists i think those lists serve as prompts for asking questions am i over invested in one area versus another but i'm guessing you've spent some time with people who are close to the end of their life or at the end of their life yes have you ever encountered someone who like really nailed it you didn't think they were just telling you a story about how they really they felt really good about how they had spent their mental life and their energies we don't hear about those people very often yes but we just don't we hear the oh you know no one lies on their deathbed thinking it was like you know we hear all the stuff you're not supposed to do are there any insights or just and if you can't remember just just feelings that arrived for you when talking to these people that you genuinely believe i don't like if they didn't hit the bull's eye they were darn close yes yeah what does that what did that look like or feel like and what did they say it makes me think actually of a real example in my own life where a family member much older than me he would probably be 120 so if he were still alive so he was very very old at the time who had really made something of himself he didn't have much in the way of education and and he'd been a successful member of the community he'd given back to the community he had no education he started a bank and you know the bank became international and he and he was so good and so helpful to the place he had come from and he'd had real tragedies in his life he'd lost a child and when he learned that i was going to medical school a long long time ago he asked to see me and he was in his actually would have been in his early 90s at the time and he told me that he was happy with his life and that he realized that he could die at any moment and he understood and he accepted that that he tried to do the best that he could and he'd made something of himself and that there were sadness in his life and and and things he certainly wished would have been different but that he was happy with his life and he was okay with dying and and he wanted me to know that he thought that was a good way to feel right and and that it was tempting to to want to to be so much and put so much pressure on yourself that you that you could achieve a lot and not be able to feel good about it and it's not it's not something i forgot i mean i do think of that with with fair frequency and and it made me think of that here i thought that's you know that's a person who's lived a good life and and now i wasn't thinking it at the time but he was clearly describing being able to have peace and to have contentment to to feel good about his life even knowing the things that were not great and then the capacity for delight there were things still things he was very very excited about and his face would still light up and and i think that was probably earlier role modeling for me of oh like that's i'd like to feel that way you know i'd like to be in my 90s and be able to say that and it's really stuck with me that's awesome i uh i think we need to think a lot more about what's going right what went right yes we were talking about that today yes what went right yes what's going right in my life what i've made go right in my life right or what hasn't gone right and i showed up anyway right that's part of what's going right yeah we so easily default to the losses or which can also be beautiful in some sense sometimes sometimes but we we so easily go to what's wrong what's wrong what's wrong but i'm also hearing that happy go lucky and just think about what's going right that's not the answer either it's just not it there has to be that contrast this is what i'm hearing you saying today yes yes we have to be living in an examined life in order to live intentionally so so yes we do have to look at ourselves but the good news is that's okay you know most of us don't want to be dragged kicking and screaming to looking at ourselves but that's just because we're afraid and if we know i'm not going to find anything there that's going to really shock me or probably not going to find anything i'm not already well aware of even if i you know even if i'm trying to hide it for myself and then there's a process i can go through go go through if i look at myself i can use the knowledge to make things better you know then that's the simple goodness of it's okay to look at ourselves we have to but we also get to right and and that's how we're going to live good lives it's how we live the best life we can get in and maybe we get to that point where we can look back and feel good about the choices that we've made and maybe feel okay about choices we've made even if they haven't let the places where we've wanted them to be that we can still embrace ourselves and the lives we've led if you don't mind i just want to ask a couple of questions that are a little bit different than the ones we've been exploring was writing the book informative for you about the mind about people in a way that all the clinical work and and certainly the podcast you've done was it was it different did it did it teach you anything and if you if so are you willing to share one or two of those things yeah i think writing about what we know helps us know it better right because because part of knowing something is also being aware that we don't know everything about it so then when we organize our thoughts and we say i'm doing the best i can to put this down so other people can understand it we just have to learn from that process so so yeah i do i do feel that i learned as part of writing it and incorporating clinical examples and just incorporating events from life uh it helped me i think have a full review of oh i do do you think that this says a lot about how we're being humans in the world and and you know how our mind is structured that there is this parallel to the body and you know and we can bring it to the fore and i felt very hopeful and optimistic that um that it kind of holds together and you know and it leads somewhere so yeah i think i got i got a lot out of organizing my thoughts better and writing the book last question um which is completely outside the world one for what we've been talking about has lex freedman texted you back because he hasn't texted me back in a while i have not heard from lex freedman yeah despite multiple efforts there has been no response yeah there are rumors that he's in dagestan there are rumors that he's in austin and he um and uh lex we we love you and you don't have to text us back but um just maybe just throw up a sign that you're okay or we're gonna send a search party to dagestan right and if you're not there then we'll really be really in trouble dr paul conti this was awesome um i i have to say and i'm not gonna repeat everything i promise but i have to say what i love so much about talking with you is that you like explore these caverns of things and then these gems just pop out like this idea that we can be on our own side by seeing what we don't want to be controlled by i think i know that's really gonna resonate with people because behavioral change is like the hardest thing and behavioral change when people realize they're not changing this is like it's like a double whammy right so that alone is is enormous and right and the focus on what's right i'm not trying to just repeatedly uh you know state the title of the book i mean what's going right is it's just so vital i think especially in this time when you turn on the news and it's just like all these things that are challenging to the world which certainly many of them need attention but focusing on what's going right what has gone right um is just it's so it's so essential right now and it's really what i've learned from you today that it's really the lifeblood of what it is to be a joyous human being with the caveat that we also have to address the challenges and if they're there the traumas and and that there's really no other way that that's what i'm taking from this yes and that we can do that and and instead of thinking maybe that we can do that or we have to do that we get to do that that there should be an excitement that we bring an enthusiasm and a hopefulness that we bring to that process well thank you for being here today thank you for writing the book um it's going to serve so many people and yeah thank you for taking your training and your your clinical experience and putting it out into the world you know you don't have any obligation to do that and most everything that you know and that transpires in those sessions everything would not serve the larger world to the extent that it does uh were you not willing to you know get out here and there and um share with people so thank you you're clearly uh one of the leading public educators on the mind and the self and and navigating this this life landscape so thank you so much for coming here today and come back again please you're very welcome thank you for giving me the opportunity to do so it's my pleasure thank you for joining me for today's discussion with dr paul conti to learn more about his work and to find links to his new book what's going right please see the links in the show note captions if you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast please subscribe to our youtube channel that's a terrific zero cost way to support us 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