What if the reasons so many people feel unhappy today is because they're tryi...
In a culture obsessed with optimization, personal growth, and constant positivity,
millions of people are doing everything they've been told that should work. They're reading the books following the routines and tracking their progress, trying to stay grateful and optimistic all of that. And yet anxiety, burnout, loneliness, continue to rise. My guess today believes that the problem may actually be the direct pursuit for happiness itself.
Tal Ben Shahar is one of the world's leading voices in positive psychology and the author of happier no matter what. His course on happiness at Harvard became one of the most popular classes,
“and I think he was known as one of the most popular teachers in the university's whole history,”
and his work has helped millions of people rethink what it really means to flourish and be happy. One of the most fascinating ideas in his book is what he calls the paradox of happiness. And what it says is the more directly we choose happiness and chase happiness, the more elusive it tends to become. Tal compares it to staring at the sun. If you look directly at the sun, it blinds you. But when the sunlight meets the rain at the right angle, something beautiful appears.
A rainbow. You don't chase the rainbow. You create the conditions for the rainbow. So today, we're going to explore what those conditions are. We'll talk about psychological flexibility, toxic positivity, and anti-fragility, and why the ability to grow stronger through
“adversity may be the most important mental skill for the modern world. And we're also going to”
discuss how to explore frameworks like the interface response system. Sound familiar? Perceive, pause, process, proceed. And we're going to talk about how that can help people navigate stress in an uncertain world. So I want to welcome to the Dragon's Lair and the make sense with Dr. JC podcast, Mr. Tal Benchahar. Have you noticed that the world that we live in has been doing most of the thinking for you? That your beliefs, perceptions, reactions, fears, and doubts
have been shaped by unsolicited outside noise? How easy it's been for you to slip into that default sleep walking mode and label it as life and reality. Yeah, that ends here. Welcome to the make sense with Dr. JC podcast. This is your opportunity to start thinking for yourself, reclaim control, and step back into that role as the shot caller and dominant force of your own reality. It's when you change the way that you look at things that the things that you look at begin to change.
So let's wake up, let's rise up, and let's make sense of why and how shift happens. [Music]
For me, the first such point, you know, when I realized that something was
was off in the cultural model of success and happiness, is when I was working towards the Israeli National Squash Championship. So just this happened when I was 16 almost 17 and I started playing an 11 and I remember distinctly thinking when I was 16 years old. So before I'd won the championship, what am I going to do with my life when I no longer have squash? Because
“it was all consumed. It's the only thing I wanted to do and was interested in. Yes, I went to”
school and I worked relatively hard at school, but because of my parents, not because I was interested in school, it was all about squash for. And for years, I'd struggled with anxiety and with with stress and I knew. I didn't think I knew that when I won the Israeli National Championship, this anxiety and the stress and this unhappiness would be over. It was for me as clear as day follows night and then I won the National Championships and I was ecstatic, happier than I'd
ever been before for four hours and after four hours the exact same stress and anxiety and unhappiness returned. Now then I had an excuse. I said, well, it's because it's only the Israeli National Championships. I need to win the World Championships and I continued with the same process. All I need to do is win the World Championship and then I'll be happy.
Now I never got to win the World Championship, however, I tend other goals, whether later it was
academic goals or financial goals and I believed. And again, it was more than a belief. It was so clear to me that this is what I needed to do. Just succeed and then you'll be happy and I
Succeeded and I was happy ecstatic for a few hours.
same grind. I ended up writing about it. I called this the arrival fallacy. The arrival fallacy is the false belief that when you arrive at a certain point, then you will be happy. Then you will be all set. Then you can finally achieve that serenity or calm or whatever it is that you're looking
for. It's an illusion. As you pointed out, we always struggle. It becomes easier, not easy. We become
happier, not attain this constant bliss. Certainly not as a result of an outcome of an achievement, of an arrival. I'm not a one to blame, but who's fault is this? One of the things that I'd like to point out, I teach people something called the interface response system, which is just about first acknowledging that most of what we think and feel and perceive is not necessarily what we think feel and perceive. It's something that's been taught to us. And I find that whenever something's wrong
“with my car, I always blame the manufacturer. I find that we do that as humans as well, right?”
I don't know if I can trace it to its origin of my parents. I mean, they played a role in paying it
forward. But where does this illusion come from? Whose ideal was this? I would assume that you have some sort of knowledge in the origins of this idea of setting happiness as a goal? So, I don't think there is any one person to blame. In fact, I know that there isn't just one person to blame. It's a systemic error, meaning a cultural error, meaning it's something that our parents and grandparents and great grandparents were born into. I don't know because it comes from Adam and Eve,
maybe, but what I certainly do know is that it's all around us, that it's pervasive, especially
in the West, but not only. You know, I see more and more students who are coming from countries
“that historically, I think had a better understanding of what happiness is, but they have bought”
into this, I guess, Western orientation of success equals happiness. That's the mental picture, the schema that most of us have. And it's not just for us, it's also for our kids. You know, if you ask parents, what would you most want for your kids? Of course, they would say, I want them to be happy. I mean, who wouldn't say that? And yet, they put so much pressure on them to get into that university and to get that job and to reach that destination because they truly
believe that's for their children to be happy. They have to, you know, check those boxes. This is the most fascinating part of all of this because by the body of my work is just acknowledging how we're kind of going around exhibiting habits and behaviors that to some degree been conditioned and we've been persuaded to think certain ways. So I love that.
“Just off the cuff, have you ever identified a culture that is not like that?”
I would assume that you've come across a culture or not perfect, but a culture that lives in the sense that as if they've read your book, you know, they don't seek happiness as a goal, but they just, yeah, I would assume a big part of it is acknowledging one of the biggest struggles I see in humanity is unwrapping the present moment. You know, I mean, everybody's living in the future in the past and I'm sure we'll get into that. Have you come across cultures that are pretty close?
So I'm going to answer this indirectly, you know, one area of my research revolves around leadership, whether it's in organizations and schools, political leadership. And when, when you look at the literature on leadership, when you study great leaders, what you find is that they are eclectic, meaning they all have role models and role models are very important, but it's in the plural role models, meaning they don't just say, okay, I want to
be like Winston Churchill when I grow up. Rather what they say is I'm going to take, you know, the the ability to communicate from Winston Churchill and I'm going to then learn from the toughness of Margaret Fatcher. And then I'm going to study Joan of Arc as well as a restarter
Allow to and you take the best of all worlds, so we speak.
collectors, collectors of traits and characteristics and strengths. And then they put it together
“and if they're successful, it's a beautiful mosaic that they create their own leadership.”
And then they become part of another's mosaic. Right. You know, who creates her own, his own leadership picture. Now it's the same with with happiness and specifically what in answering your question, I think we need to draw not on one culture, but on at least a couple of cultures. Because if you think about it, there are essentially two distinct approaches to happiness.
The first approach to happiness is what I described as the Western approach. It's all about goals.
It's all about the attainment of objectives. Get there and you'll be happy. Now we know, we just discussed, this is not the answer to happiness. So then there is the opposite, the alternative. Let's call it the Eastern approach, which is it's all about the present. It doesn't work. They're rifle fallacy to continuously chase that elusive goal happiness.
“What does work is to be in the here and now, because the only thing that really exists is the present”
moment. And that sounds great and it is great, but it's not enough. Why? Because as human beings
were also future oriented as human beings, part of our nature is to care about goals and achievements. And that's not a bad part of our nature. I don't think it's something we need to fight against and dissolve. Rather, it's something that we need to celebrate in the right way. And the question then is how do we bring these two world views together? In other words, how do we bring that the future orientation together with the present moment or orientation? And the way to do
this, and this is, again, the eclectic happiness model that I'm putting forward is to have goals and then to perceive goals, not as ends, but rather as means. As means towards the attainment of the ultimate end, which is the enjoyment of the moment, deriving the most from the moment. And I'll give you an example. So let's say I have a goal, an objective, publishing a book by July 1st, 2028. As soon as I have that goal, I know what I want to write about,
I begin to write, I begin to put in, say for me, three hours a day into writing. Now, when I'm writing, I have that goal in mind, but I can let go of it. And I can just focus on what I'm doing right now, which is sitting in front of my computer and writing. Given that I have that goal, I'm liberated to enjoy the present moment, to experience what Mihalic accent Mihai, the psychologist, calls flow, or in scientific terms, an autotelic experience
to be present, to be in the here and now. And when I'm present, when I'm in the here and now, I derive a great deal of both joy, enjoyment, as well as I'm performing at my best. So it's peak performance and peak experience, but I'm only able to do it. I'm only able to derive the most from this moment when I'm writing thanks to the fact that I have a goal, a goal that liberates me to enjoy the here and now. Because if I wake up in the morning and I don't
have a goal, I'll be under, well, should I write or well, maybe I should stay in bed or should I watch a movie or how about procrastinating doing this? So it's having that goal that directs me that focuses me on whatever it is that I need to do and then I can fully enjoy, make the most of this moment. So the long-term goal, July 1st, 2028, published that book, allows me to enjoy right now, right here,
“as I'm sitting in writing. And that's how these two world views come together, goals are important.”
We are future oriented beings as well, but they're important not as an end in itself. I'll be happy when I reach that goal, but rather as means, I can be happy when I'm striving towards that goal.
When I'm focusing on doing what I care about so much, what's meaningful to me...
me? Well, I'm just so tempted to ask you right now, what your long-term goal is. If there is one.
“Oh, of course, I almost always have a long-term goal because I know that they”
liberate me and help me enjoy the year and now. So what I'm doing right now is we launched a PhD in happiness studies. I noticed that. This is a lot of work to put together the courses and this is what I do when I wake up in the morning. So we forward, I got on to this call. This is what I was doing. Working on a course, which is a survey course of the field of happiness studies. And I was so into it that I almost missed the time to get on this call. She's always a good sign
and which is also why I have an alarm to remind me. First of all, a couple things. I've never
heard anybody pronounce Mahali's name as perfect as you. That's the first thing I want to say. I mean, I don't know if anybody can do it like that. Yes, so Jaycee, it took a lot of work. That's right. And just so you know, extra credit on some of my exams tests in college was to spell
“Mihali Jeeks and Mihai. Oh my god. Well, I guess that's why I never got into Harvard. You know,”
you know, what's interesting. And this is what's most fascinating to me because we're in a jacuzzi experience right now. People could read your book and listen to you talk and kind of think that they've got it. But then once they go back out into the world, it's the integration of these concepts and putting them into play because of the robotic nature of our subconscious. But it almost seems like because you were talking about different cultures and I was
thinking like, how would the Dalai Lama answer this question? You know, I'm sure it would be a pretty profound answer. I actually met him one time. But it's almost like happiness is a process. And I would assume that the Dalai Lama would just say, I am happiness. But what he would be saying is is that he's in the process of being happier all the time. He's it's the process. One of the things that I teach that is happening in my podcast studio, my office right now in real time is
I have what I call my board of directors. And on the wall, I mean, we've got Gandhi, we've got Nelson Mandela, we've got Martin Luther King, we've got Jean-Claude Keely, who's one of my idols. And what I
love to do is always look to them and run things by them. Obviously, you know, they're not alive,
but I know quite a bit about them. And it made me realize that right now in this moment, you know, Tal Ben Chahar is one of my board of directors. And that's I'm in the process of maybe getting happier by speaking to you. And I've never, on one one last thing I've never met in this really national squash player. So, you know, today is a very special day. So, I love paradoxes. And I know you speak about this often. But one of the ideas that immediately stood out
to me and kind of stopped me. And I'm a speed reader. So, that's a lot when I, when I stop, is this paradox of happiness. And that's this idea that the more directly we chase happiness, the more likely we are to undermine it. I love that idea. And I resonate. So, my question is, why does the direct pursuit of happiness? So, often lead people to the frustration instead of something
“like fulfillment. So, this paradox is very important. And again, just like there is the misconception”
the wrong idea around what will bring us happiness, the form of success. So, to people so often, so many of us make the mistake of pursuing happiness directly. We know from research. And this is research by Iris Moss and others. But if we wake up in the morning and say to ourselves, okay, I'm going to be happy. Or as so many teachers even advocate, just make a decision to be happy. You know, make happiness a value and then pursue it. This in and of itself will actually make us
less happy. And the question is, so what do we do about it? So, we need to understand how it is that we can become happier, if not, by directly pursuing it, by valuing it, think of the following analogy. You go out and it's a beautiful sunny day. And you want to enjoy the sun. So, what do you do? You look up at the sun. What happens when we look at the sun directly? We heard ourselves. What happens is that we begin to tear up. It makes us unhappy.
So, how can we enjoy the sun?
its colors and then we look at those colors and we can save for them and enjoy them. So, we can
“enjoy the sun indirectly, but not directly. It's the same with happiness. If I wake up in the”
morning and say to myself, I'm going to be happy or I choose to be happy or I value happiness. I will actually become less happy. That's about directly pursuing happiness. It's like looking at the sun directly. But if I break down happiness into its elements. For example, happiness is about a sense of meaning and purpose. Happiness is about being present in the here and now. So, if I pursue something that is meaningful to me, I will increase my happiness levels. That's an
indirect way of pursuing happiness. Or if I practice meditation, I will become happier. Or if I exercise regularly, that's another indirect way of increasing happiness. Or if I spend
“quality time with my loved ones, I will become happier. So, the goal when I wake up can be to spend”
more time with my loved ones to maybe meditate for 10 minutes. To go to the gym and doing those things will make me happier. They're an indirect way of pursuing happiness. They are like looking at the colors of the rainbow. Indirectly looking at sunlight. That was one of my favorite things. I've heard you talk about this on many, many shows and obviously the book and that would be the colors of the rainbow of happiness. And I want to speak on this a little bit for the listeners just to make sure
that they don't just carry a card around in their pocket that says "spire". Just grasping that idea of looking at the sun is just such a perfect analogy and then looking at the rainbow. I would love
“you to just now jump in and break down those elements because it's chunkable. A lot of people”
after these, they become very inspired and they're knowledgeable and they've learned. I always say
that learning is nothing more than a distraction in the absence of action. So, I'm very, very action-oriented. A lot of people are going to say, "But what can I do? What can I do now?" So, if we could, I'd love you to break down the elements of the spire, but also, I interpreted them as the colors of the rainbow of happiness. Am I correct in that? Yes, absolutely. So, the big question after learning about this metaphor of the rainbow. So, what are the metaphorical colors of
the rainbow when it comes to happiness? And this is where I put together the acronym SPIRE.
You know, I always tell my students, everything that I teach comes from, you know, the wisdom
of, you know, the great philosophers or the great psychologist. My only contribution is that I synthesize them. I put them together as an acronym. So here is the acronym. The acronym SPIRE, SPIR-I-R-E, that stands for the five elements of happiness. S stands for spiritual well-being. Now, what is spiritual well-being about? Well, of course, many people get their spiritual quota through religion, but spirituality at a more fundamental level is about finding a sense of
meaning and purpose in life. And it's about being present. The P of SPIRE is physical well-being. That's about nutrition. It's about exercise. It's about sleep or recovery in general. It's about touch. And given the mind body connection, all these elements, whether it's eating healthfully or exercising regularly, significantly contribute to our happiness levels, the eye of SPIRE is intellectual well-being. So, you know, J.C. for example, there is research
showing that people who are curious are not just happier. They're not just more successful, which they are. They also live longer. So, you know, the saying curiosity kills the cat, apparently does the exact opposite to humans. So curiosity, intellectual well-being contributes a great deal to our happiness, asking questions, learning new things, exploring. But it's not just exploring broadly. It's also going deep. So deep learning, engaging with a text or with the work of
Art or going out to nature and immersing oneself in nature.
well-being and our overall happiness. Then we get to the R of SPIRE relational well-being. Number one predictor of happiness. Quality time we spend with people we care about and who care about us. And that could be our romantic partner. It could be our families. It could be our friends. But people who spend quality time and by quality are mean without distractions, you know, putting those phones away. Just being present with another these quality times contribute significantly
to our overall happiness. Being kind, being generous, a very important part of relational well-being
and overall happiness. And finally emotional well-being. An emotional well-being, that's when
we come to, how do we deal with painful emotions? So do I reject them and say, "Well, I'm the happiness expert, I shouldn't be happy," which would immediately lead to a spark arise in painful
“emotions. Or do I give myself the permission to be human fully accept the painful emotions?”
I call Yung, the Swiss psychologist one said, "What do you resist persists?" So if I resist painful emotions, they only grow stronger. If I embrace them and allow them to freely flow through me, they do not overstay their welcome. Emotional well-being is also about learning to cultivate pleasurable emotions, expressing gratitude. You know, Oprah was right. Keep a gratitude journal. We'll make you happier. It's about experiencing joy in our life, having fun, humor. These are all
of course important elements of a happy life. So we have these five spiral elements, spiritual, physical, intellectual, relational, and emotional. And the question is, how do we pursue one of these? Because pursuing each one of them is an indirect pursuit of happiness.
“So meditating a little bit more, or exercising regularly, or spending more quality time with loved ones,”
or learning new things. These are all indirect paths, ways to attain higher levels of well-being, or to put the spiral elements together of whole being. And the idea of achieving happiness, as if it was a goal would be some form of self-actualization
that perhaps never has been achieved, but humans were always going to aspire.
You were talking about Carl Young and what he said. I have something like that, because I'm very big on helping people as an action step. Just take an inventory of what they're consuming, not just food, you know, consuming. Within their days and God, you know, right now, if you're caught up in the consumption of what's going on in the world right now, I wouldn't assume on the other side you're feeling happier. But I always say what we consume, we assume. So that's
one of the trading tools. You were talking about the R for relationships, and I just want to also acknowledge that even though you and I don't know each other that well outside of this conversation, that R is taking place right now, because it's a good conversation, and it's enriching, and, you know, my goal that I set for this podcast selfish leap to be happier by the end. I can say that I'm feeling better, you know, less tension and increased happiness there. And
you were the first person. I had heard about this before, but I just didn't really take but this idea of how people, if they're open and curious, which is something that I teach people how to do all the time. You know, it was more of a communication tool and a way of not getting
“distracted in life, but I think it was an MIT study. That idea of people that are open and curious”
living longer. So I started after that saying, and by the way, you know, there's research that shows that you'll actually live longer if you're into that sort of thing, you know? Yeah, so first of all, the, what we consume, we assume, that's your line? Oh, I mean, as far as I know, but, you know, you know, how the brain works. It's in my book as if it's mine, but I'm just waiting for someone to say, you indirectly got that from me. Well, I'm going to, I'm going to quote you on that. Thank you,
it's yours. With your permission, it's a, it's a, it's a very, very powerful idea and it reminds
me of the work of the Echnath is Warren. And Echnath is Warren is a fascinating individual. He,
He was a student of Gandhi, and I believe it was in the 50s, 1950s, that he l...
on a full bright scholarship later became a professor of English at Berkeley. And he was, as far
as I know, the first professor to teach in the West, a full class on meditation. Well,
“one of his most important contributions is in his book, which I highly highly recommend,”
called Passage Meditation. He talks there about how one form of meditation has to do with reading or, or, or repeating, if you can memorize it, a passage. And it could be a religious passage, or a spiritual passage, or your favorite passage from Harry Potter. You know, it, it doesn't mean or something that he's very meaningful to you. And what he says is that when you repeat it deliberately, slowly mindfully, over and over again, it, it has long term impact, again, because of the
neural pathways that are created. And his line is, we become what we meditate on, which is a very similar idea to what we consume, we, we assume. It's funny that you bring that up, what we become, so I've been meditating for years and years and years, every day. It's one of those things that no
matter what I don't, not do. I never skip that. And you just made me realize what I love so much
about meditation is because when I'm meditating, I'm really, after all, thinking about nothing, which is what I love about it. So that's a very Buddhist thing to become, nothing. I love it. So yeah, emptiness, the middle way. Thank you so much for that. And recently, I don't know if you know, Dr. Wendy Suzuki, she's the dean at NYU, just to spectacularly intelligent woman. And she speaks a lot about the benefits of exercise in brain health. And, you know, she has
done all the research on the fact that, you know, even just a ten-minute walk, but or increasing exercise gives what she calls a neurochemical bubble bath to your brain. And, well, what's cool about that is you can ask anybody, no matter how much they complain about exercise, how they feel after and they'll probably validate that they feel happier. And she breaks that down to a science. So you'll love that. And I'm going to send you a copy of my book where you'll learn more about
“the consume and assume thing. We've touched on it a little bit, but I think it's one thing that”
everybody holds in common in the entire world, which is why I like to take a stance for the human race, which is what I wish everybody would do rather than just our culture. But we're all human. So I want to talk about this idea of this permission to be human. And my observation is that there's this enormous cultural pressure, you know, out there to stay positive and optimistic at all times. So much pressure associated with being happy, which is probably like looking in the
sun. And a lot of people call that toxic positivity, you know, like if you're an optimist, God, the last thing that you want to do is run into a group of pessimists, they're going to hate you.
“So my question is, why is suppressing difficult emotions actually harmful to our well-being?”
Because there's a lot of books that teach you how to do that and let go of the past and all of that stuff. And you're giving people permission to be human and I love that. Yeah, so if I had to summarize my work in one sentence, it would be learn about and then follow nature. Learn about and then follow nature. Or as Francis Bacon, the father of modern science said 400 or more years ago, he said, nature to be commanded must be obeyed. We need to understand our nature. So for instance,
our nature requires that we, you know, drink water. If we don't drink water, we die. Our nature demands that we breathe. If we don't, we die. Now, our nature also demands certain things on a psychological level. And if we do not consume them, then we don't necessarily die, but we don't live fully. And one of the things that our nature dictates is that we experience painful emotions literally from the second, you know, a baby cries. You know, they're not crying of joy. Oh,
I've been, I was born into this amazing world. They cry because they're hurt. And it's natural
To express these emotions.
stop crying. No, they cry. It's part of our nature to express painful emotions when these arise. And yet we get to the age of three or four and we're told by, again, whether it's a parent or a
“teacher or the ether, we're told, be strong. Don't cry. Or, you know, what's wrong? Why are you sad?”
And through that, painful emotions gain a negative reputation. To the point where there are called negative emotions, which is a problem in and of itself, they're no negative or positive emotions. There are painful and pleasurable emotions. And when we reject part of our nature, we pay a price for it. There is a coup. And these painful emotions rise up and they say, you don't give us space. We'll take even more space. What you resist, persist instead of
observing them. You know, I love this phrase from the book by Mark Williams, Oxford called mindful way through depression. He talks about looking at these painful emotions or painful part of the body that's associated with the painful emotion, whether it's, you know, the constricted throat or the pain in the belly or the tight shoulders. He said, we need to look observe these painful experiences with friendly curiosity. I love that phrase,
friendly curiosity. And when we learn to do that, we realize, and again, this is very much, you know, a Buddhist teaching and it's a modern positive psychology teaching. When we learn to observe these emotions with friendly curiosity, they just leave as they came. Yeah. There's a beautiful poem by Rumi. Okay, 800 years ago or so called the guest house, which talks about how we need to embrace all these, you know, painful emotions, all these seeming intruders. We need to
invite them in as guests as if there are end-boys messengers from the beyond. It's a lovely image.
“I love that. And that's why grandparents love children so much because they, it's temporary.”
Just like a guest, you know, it's it's temporary. Alan Watts, I'm just a big fan of Alan Watts stuff,
and he always talks about, you know, these thoughts, feelings and emotions. Not as things that
we would be worried that show up, you know, the Buddhist would always just say thinking, you know, say, yeah, my heart beats. I don't question that and my brain thinks. But Alan Watts likes to refer to our thoughts as clouds that just pass on by, you know, if you even give him a chance. I have this fun concept that I share with people. I love to look at how we're similar rather than different. And I think that's a big part of this because just the idea of not having
a good time, you're somehow assimilate that you're different than everybody else. I say that we're all the same in the sense that we all want the same three things in life. I say, we all want to be happy
or there's your thing. Healthy or and wealthy or and I always challenge the audience. Big audience,
“I say, please stand up. Raise your hand if you would like to be unhappy today. Did you set a goal?”
Does anybody here want to get unhealthy or make less money and everybody laughs? So I refer to all of humanity as being seekers of the earth. Is that fun? Lovely. Lovely. So I want to just ask you, I love this stuff on anti-fragility and I know that this is something that somebody else came up with, but it's so perfect for what you talk about as well as it's close relation to this concept of rather than PTSD post-traumatic growth. Oh God, I just, I mean, there's so much stoic
stuff involved in that, but I just, I've never heard it that way. I just love PTG. Could you just
talk a little bit about this idea of becoming anti-fragile and also embracing post-traumatic growth? Yeah, you know, JC when I ask students whether they are psychology majors or whether they are C-suite managers in an organization, I ask them. So how many of you have heard of the term PTSD? And just about everyone puts their hand up. Yeah, they've heard of post-traumatic stress disorder. You know, they've read about it. If there are psych students, they've studied research on it.
And then I ask them a second question and I say now, who of you has heard? Put your hand up
If you have heard of PTG and hardly anyone puts their hand up.
post-traumatic growth. Now, here is the thing, and this is based on research by Tadeshi, Calhoun, and many others subsequently. We are twice as likely to experience post-traumatic growth than post-traumatic stress disorder. In other words, we're twice as likely to grow
following a trauma than to break down following a trauma. The problem is that most people have never
heard of post-traumatic growth. And it turns out that just knowing about the possibility of growth following a trauma significantly increases the likelihood thereoff. In other words, just knowing that post-traumatic growth is possible makes it more likely to happen. Not to mention the fact that there are certain things that we can do that will increase the likelihood of growing,
“following a trauma, or any difficult experience for that matter. What are these things?”
Identical, not similar, identical to the spiral elements. Again, as I mentioned earlier, I did not invent spiral. All I did was put it together in an acronym. And the spiral elements, whether it's meditating, will make us more resilient and better able to grow from hardship, whether it's physical exercise. It turns out that physical exercise doesn't just make us physically tougher. It makes us psychologically tougher. It turns out that relationships are not just
the number one predictor of happiness. They're also the number one generator of growth following hardship even trauma. So all these elements that we cultivate, hopefully on a day-to-day basis, don't just increase our levels of well-being. They also better prepare us to deal with difficulties,
“with challenges, with hardships. And again, this is to my mind, perhaps the most important”
message of the field of positive psychology. Positive psychology, the science of happiness, is not just for good times. It's as relevant, if not more relevant, for difficult times. Why? Because it makes us more resilient, because it helps us grow from hardship. Now, just one more thing, let's not be misunderstood. I'm not glorifying trauma. I'm not glorifying hardship or difficulties. Traumas are traumatic, difficult, and challenging experiences are difficult and challenging.
But they happen. We don't invite them into our lives. When they happen, the question is what do we do about it? I don't know if you if you did as a child, but I constantly heard the phrase,
things happen for the best. And whether it's as a child or as an adult, I never fully
connected to that. What do you mean things happen for the best? COVID for the best, thousands of people dying wars for the best. Someone gets sick for the best. I don't think so. But while things do not necessarily happen for the best, we can choose to make the best of things that happen. While things don't necessarily happen for the best, we can choose to make the best of things that happen. You know, you talked earlier about toxic positivity. Toxic positivity is, oh,
it's for the best, embrace, it, love it, and more effort, you know, whatever happens, it's great. No, it's not. But making the best of things that happen, rather than toxic positivity, that's a grounded positivity. I get challenged quite a bit about my philosophies, especially when I say something that's true that nobody wants to believe. And, you know, my hat, you know, I don't know if you tried to figure it out, but it's a sound. I teach people to say
“it's a practice in cognitive distancing, where whenever somebody says something, I think a very”
healthy answer is to just say. But what it stands for is haven't made up my mind. So I always
like to tell people that I haven't made up my mind about anything yet, and I don't plan to. And that's because I seek growth and expansion. And I'm in this process of happiness and I want to get happier. If you really want to play with that, then you'd have to acknowledge that one of the old sayings that everybody frowns upon is extremely true. You know, I don't think that I'm complaining when I say that life sucks and then you die. What I'm saying is is that for the most part,
I mean, I don't know about anybody else, but I mean, I would say that if I looked at my lifeline in on 54, I would say most of it was sucky and hard and difficult, but we typically
Just look at the shining moments.
birth to death and phase place yourself and put a little piece of tape over the shining moments in your life, you know, you'd probably look at breakthroughs or anything. But if you can't learn how to dance in the rain, well, how could you have an extraordinary life? So I love this idea of being human because if you don't acknowledge that and embrace it as sucky as it is, I think the downside of that is you don't really get to live a great life, which is my end goal. If that is
my last day, I want to have a, I want to enjoy it around the things that matter most. I absolutely
agree with that and I would say that the most important thing in life, and I'm saying this is a psychologist,
“the most important thing in life is not how you feel it's what you do. And many of my students”
asked me so, so what should I study? And I said, you know, pursue your passions, follow your bliss, you know, the usual cliches that are true. However, if I was going back now, you know, to my 20s and I'm, I'm turns out, I mean, a year older than you are. Thank God. I'm going back to my 20s now. I would study acceptance and commitment therapy. Why? Because acceptance and commitment therapy, captures just what you were talking about. You know, there are difficulties, hardships,
very often life sucks, and we experience painful emotions. So what, it doesn't mean that I cannot act, based on my values, on the things that are important to me. And then, evaluate, assess my life as worthy. And yes, sometimes, I feel great about it. And you know, when I arrive certain points, I'll rejoice. And then when I'll be immersed in certain activities, I'll enjoy peak performance and peak experience. And that's wonderful. And I will struggle. And I will have days when when I'm
exhausted and don't feel like getting out of bed in the morning. So what that doesn't mean I
“can't get out of bed in the morning. And do what I believe is important and worthy and significant.”
What we do matters more than how we feel. And when we understand that, we'll actually feel better. And when we understand that, more importantly, we'll actually do better. I think you might have just come up with a great next stepbook for Mel Robbins. You know, she did let them and now she could write a book called So What? So what? It sounds perfect for her. We're kind of coming to the end of this, which I'm not happy about. So, you know, there's a whole discussion about that that, you know,
all good things end. But I want to talk a little bit about something that a lot of people face
with, and that's the distraction problem. So we live in this world where I always tell people that
you need to acknowledge how valuable the asset of attention is because everybody's vying for it.
“But we live in a world where attention is constantly fragmented more than ever and it looks like”
it's happening. Everybody's worried about AI like it's going to take over. You know, I'm worried about something else. It's like it's doing the thinking for us. And we're just involved in this endless content. You know, you once used an analogy of two beautiful songs. I just, I loved this and I want my listeners to hear this. I just got the chills thinking about it. You sometimes stuff in your book gives people the chills. It was an analogy of two beautiful songs playing at the
same time and I don't want to give up the rest. But is distraction quietly eroding our ability to experience happiness? Very much so. So Daniel Goldman calls our age the age of distraction. And that execs a very high price. And what we need to do is move away from multitasking and towards single-tasking because multitasking is one of the major enemies of happiness of whole-being. And the
example that you refer to, my favorite song is Whitney Houston and I will always love you. And
if I were to listen to it and you know, write it on a scale of one to ten, my experience would be, of course, you know, a ten. My second most favorite music piece is Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. You know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And you know, when I listen to it, I, you know, I feel like, you know, everything is possible. And everything is beautiful. And my experience of it is, if I had to write on a scale of one to ten, you know, maybe not quite a ten. It's not with New Houston, but a nine
and a half. And then imagine this, I want more. It's not enough. The Whitney Houston. It's not enough.
Beethoven, I want it all.
No, not a ten, not even a five. It's caffony. It's noise. And that's modern life for you.
Yeah. Trying to fit more and more into less and less is a counterproductive. In other words, the quality of our experience is very often determined by the quantity of experiences. And we need to simplify to do less rather than more. Yes, of course, we can enjoy a beautiful piece
“of music. We cannot enjoy two beautiful pieces of music simultaneously. And it's an important lesson”
for life in general, single-tasking, over multi-tasking. Maybe not all the time, not possible, not realistic, but more of the time. So everybody understands the idea of training, you know, go to the gym to train and you, you know, train in school and all of that stuff. But in our house, we promote doing what we call boredom reps. And, well, I mean, in this destructive world, and that's not mine. I can't tell you where I got it. I heard it from somebody. We just increasingly
moving further and further away from the ability to just be bored. And there's a lot of value in being bored. And I had a guy on my show, or actually I was on his show, and we were, this is a guy that reads, like as much as Jim Quick, you know, I mean, his whole nature,
“actually I want to introduce you to him at some point. This is a guy that promotes people's”
books, so he reads book, book books, and he was telling me from a place of, you know, being pretty proud of himself, that even when he goes in the shower, he has a speaker and he listens to audio books. And I just kind of challenged him, and his name is Nick Hutchinson, and he what he did in response with spectacular. I just challenged him, I said, "Do you ever allow yourself to just be bored?" And that was the first time that he acknowledged that he didn't. So the guy
he goes in he films a video and posts it and he's got a very big following of him going in his shower and throwing his speaker out in my name. But I love that. Yeah, so boredom is a big one. Is it a big one, Jason? I want to say something about that. So I have one of my closest friends her name is Shirley Yuvalia here, and she's a child's oncologist. She doesn't let her children go online all the time whenever they're bored. And they would say to her sometimes, "Mommy,
I'm bored." And her response is always the same. That's okay sweetheart. Just be bored with dignity.
That's great. So a lot of value in boredom. And also there's a great book called Intentional by Chris Bailey. That's, I'm so blessed to be able to have people like you and all these people on my show. And he just talks about the value of allowing your mind to wander. And there's another thing that we were told not to do. So I want to ask you, you know, kind of a closing question. And I guess it would be a little bit of a personal question just because not personal personal,
but something that is going to ask you what you do in these situations. When you wake up on a day, this is what I think most people are going to be like, "Yeah, but everybody likes to bring their butt into the equation." But when you wake up on a day when you don't feel particularly motivated, maybe it's a little bit more difficult to remember the spire and the rainbow. What is it that you personally do? And I'm not insinuating that you would do something different
“on a day like that. Maybe that's how you would justify it. But what do you do on the mornings”
when you wake up and, you know, your computer boots up and things are not looking good? Yeah. So first of all, you brought up Mel Robbins. I'm a big believer in the 54321. Action. Yeah. Approach. So the night before, when I go to bed, I know what I'm going to do the next day. Remember, I spoke about how long-term goals liberate us. So I know that I'm going to, you know, be sitting down by, you know, my computer or I'm going to be teaching or whatever it is.
And I do it. So that's most important. However, when things are really in dire straits, and again,
I had this experience just over the, you know, a few days ago, you know, there's war going on in the world. It's affecting me, just like it's affecting so many people, even if we are not in the war zone and cannot compare our experiences to those who are. And it was very difficult for me to to motivate myself to get myself moving. So what I did is I reversed my day, specifically,
My best times to write are the mornings.
I move for a few minutes, you know, to get the, the black phone, and then I sit down on this chair
in front of this computer and write. I felt like I, I couldn't do that. I was nodding the mood, and, you know, it was distracted. So I exercised and, you know, I went into the gym and, you know, lifted my weights and did my high intensity interval training. And then it was easier, not easy, easier for me to sit down and, and actually write. So, you know, I call physical exercise the wonder drug, I didn't mind, I came up, but the wonder drug of psychological interventions. So,
“I simply took that wonder drug earlier during the day. Yeah, and I think the message there is,”
we're so trained to be in these situations where we can say, well, that's great, but,
and then everybody will justify that their situation and say, people love to justify why they can't be happy, that's, that's a, an interesting phenomenon. And, and again, JC, one of the ways to deal with unhappiness is, you know, to writing your journal or shed tears, you know, these are, all ways of giving ourselves the permission to be human to literally welcome these painful emotions, internalize them, and then they do not overstay their welcome. And if they do, so they do,
so we accept that as well. Beautiful. Well, God, you know, I would say that this is one for the
vault. You did great in the Dragon's layer. I have so many more questions. I'm hoping maybe we can do a part two to this one day, but, I guess I would say, what are, what are you excited about sharing with people right now? How would people best follow you, but also what is it that you really love them to know about? So, I've, over the years, created a number of programs that, um, that I love, and when I created them, I thought, I'd be teaching for the next three, four years and then move on,
but I've been teaching them for the past, you know, ten years, and, and I get excited by every, every new program. It's a certificate in happiness studies, and we have a masters of, a degree in happiness studies. And as I mentioned earlier, I have also a PhD. So these are, things that, again, this is what takes up my, my every day. This is what, what, what excites me, and what, I hope to share, continue to share with, with the world. One thing that I emphasize to my
students, the key is, if you can, to do good, and to do well, they're not necessarily mutually exclusive. Yeah, I would just close and say, you know, there's certain people that have more capability of seeing the colors of the rainbow versus others, and that would just be probably those possibility
“thinkers, and people that maybe haven't made their mind up about anything yet. So, I think there's”
a lot of, a lot of wonderful takeaways, and I'm just very, very honored that you spent some time here. I'm more fascinated with you as a person now that I've actually met you. Thank you so much for spending this time with us, and I'm definitely going to try to cycle you back into this flow, because I didn't get to 50% of my questions. Thank you, Jason. I very much enjoyed it, and thank you for the work that you're doing. My name is Tal Benchahar, and this podcast made me happier.
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“If something hit home and you learn something today, give it away. That's the only way it's”
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