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How to Trust Life Even When It Breaks Your Heart | Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer

June 12, 2026 Leave a Comment

A Journey of Embracing Grief and Finding Joy
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In this episode, Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer explores how to trust life even when it breaks your heart. She talks about grief, healing, and trust following the loss of her son and father. Rosemerry shares how her daily poetry practice and spiritual teachings helped her navigate profound loss, embracing both sorrow and joy. She discusses her book All the Honey, the power of acceptance, and the mantra “adjust.” Rosemerry also discusses how openness, love, and small daily practices can support us through life’s darkest moments.

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Key Takeaways:

  • Exploration of grief and its complexities following profound loss.
  • The healing process and the importance of trust in navigating emotional pain.
  • The role of poetry in expressing and processing human emotions.
  • Discussion of the parable of the two wolves and its relevance to personal struggles.
  • The interplay of joy and sorrow in life and art, as reflected in Rosemarie’s poetry.
  • The significance of acceptance and openness in facing life’s challenges.
  • Personal stories illustrating moments of beauty amid grief.
  • The concept of emotional triggers and their role in fostering mindfulness.
  • The importance of asking reflective questions to guide daily actions and decisions.
  • Strategies for integrating spiritual practices into everyday life to support emotional well-being.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer has been writing and sharing a poem a day since 2006—a practice that
especially nourished her after the death of her teenage son in 2021. Her daily poems can be found
on her blog, A Hundred Falling Veils, or a curated version (with optional prompts) on her daily audio
series, The Poetic Path, available with the Ritual app. She is the author of Exploring Poetry of Presence II:
Prompts to Deepen Your Writing Practice, and her poetry album, Dark Praise, explores “endarkenment,”
available anywhere you listen to music. Her latest book is The Unfolding. 

Connect with Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer: Website | Instagram 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, check out these other episodes:

How to Embrace Life’s Paradoxes with Rosemerry Wahtola-Trommer

How to Embrace the Sacredness of Everyday Life with Mirabai Starr

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Episode Transcript:

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:00:00  I think that’s a mistake that we’ve been told maybe that we’re not supposed to hurt. What is healing mean? Does healing mean that I’m not going to hurt anymore, that I’m going to be fine with it all? That doesn’t seem right at all to me.

Chris Forbes 00:00:19  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:04  In the days right after her son died, Rosemarie Wachtel, a trauma, found herself saying one word over and over. Not yes, not even acceptance. Just. Okay. She’d get to the car door, okay? She’d open it. Okay. Sit down in the seat. Okay. She says she fell in love with the word because it asks so little. It’s not a verb. It doesn’t require you to do anything. It just isn’t. No. Rosemary is a wonderful poet who’s written a poem every day since 2006, which blows my mind. And her book, All the Honey, was born out of the loss of her son and her father within months of each other. This conversation is about grief, trust, and what it means to keep showing up. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi, Rosemary, welcome to the show.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:01:56  Hey, Eric, thanks for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:57  I am really excited to have you on. As I mentioned to you beforehand, I am a fan of your poetry. I do an episode each week that I give to members of our program called Teaching Song, and a poem where I do a little teaching.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:12  I read a poem that I love and I play a song that I love. And your poems have featured multiple times over the last number of years as we’ve done that. So I’m happy to get a chance to talk with you, and we’ll be talking about your latest book of poetry primarily, which is called All the Honey. But before we do that, we’ll start like we always do with the parable. There’s a grandparent who’s talking with a grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. Think about it for a second, and they look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you and your life, and in the work that you do.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:03:02  Well, maybe I’ll start by saying it’s probably very different in my life and in the work I do in some essential ways. But I also was wondering if you were going to do a grandparent, a grandfather or a grandmother with me. And I love that I got the grandparent. Here’s the thing I notice, first of all, that they’re wolves. They’re both wolves. And I just think that’s interesting. Why are they so ferocious? You know, it’s just interesting that they’re wolves as opposed to why not snakes or why not? You know, it could have been any number of animals that could have attacked each other. So I think that’s interesting and that maybe I have an inherent fear of wolves in the first place. So but the other thing that I notice is that I haven’t always in my life known which one was the good wolf and which one was the bad wolf. And there have been times where I think I’ve been feeding the bad wolf, believing that I was feeding the good wolf. Which is to say, especially in my story, perhaps the bent toward perfectionism, which maybe was taking good too far.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:04:08  And when good got too good, then it became a real problem. So isn’t it interesting that a simple, simple story can create such a complex array of responses? Yeah, I think the other thing my other response is, I would like to think that I feed the good wolf. I wish that were true. I know that even when I do my very best to feed the good wolf, bad things happen still and despite my best efforts. So knowing that the other thing I suppose I’ve learned is that even so, maybe I don’t want to feed the bad wolf. I don’t want to turn my back on it either. And I feel, especially in the last year and a half, I’ve learned how important it is to at least turn and face the bad wolf, to not try to deny the bad wolf, to not try to vilify even the bad wolf. And to notice. What do you have to teach me?

Eric Zimmer 00:05:00  I love what you just said there because it made me think of something. Which is that like even feeding the good wolf, you could give it too much food.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:08  Right? Like, I mean, feeding something is good, but stuffing something, on the other hand, is, you know.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:05:15  Well, it’s not.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:16  What did my accountant once say? Like pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. Right? Right. To use an unfortunate animal metaphor, I’ve shared this story from time to time, but it just came to me. I was interviewing Peter Singer, who’s like the famous animal rights activist. He’s a well-known ethicist, and I used the unfortunate phrase of killing two birds with one stone, and he which did not slide past him unnoticed. So I hope the pigs get fat hogs to get slaughtered. But that point being that, you know, I think often about the middle way, right? Like that anything we take too far, one direction becomes problematic, whether it be feeding the good wolf, avoiding the bad wolf. I mean, all these things. There’s a time and a place.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:05:59  Yes. Yeah. And I think in poetry maybe that is one of the places like with poetry a poem loves tension.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:06:08  Right. Which is why this parable is kind of sweet because this parable is based on tension. Right. And all poems thrive on it. Why? Because life is full of tension and a poem wants to speak to. What does it mean to be alive if you only fed the good wolf in a poem? Or if you only fed the bad wolf in a poem, that poem would be boring. It would either turn into a rant or it would turn into hallmark fluff. So in a way, a poem really desperately wants you to feed them both to some degree. To at least honor them both to some degree.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:38  That’s really interesting. I never thought of that in relating to poetry, but I think that you’re right. If I think about the poems I love, there is an element of that. And honestly, if I think about the literature that I love or the TV series that I love or the music that I love. There is that tension. There’s both. You know, it’s always there.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:59  And that is what I’m drawn to.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:07:02  Right? Because it’s what’s true. Yes. I used to be so angry about it. Why can’t there just be a pretty poem? And it’s because they’re boring, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:07:13  Yeah. I was just thinking of Wordsworth’s poem about the daffodils and even that poem, which seems to be incredibly hopeful. He still, at the end, you know, in sort of a down mood, recalling the daffodils, you know, and then, you know, so even in a poem that’s largely about daffodils dancing along the water, there’s that element of it.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:07:35  And if that element weren’t there, I’d suggest we would forget that poem right away.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:39  We probably would. We probably would. All right. So let’s talk a little bit about the new book. And primarily I was thinking we could talk about What brought this book about? And what’s the heart of all the honey?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:07:57  Well, I had a fabulous thing happen almost exactly a year ago. I got a call from a publisher, and they said, we’d love to do your next book.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:08:04  And come on, for a poet, that was maybe for anybody, but especially for a poet. What a sweet call to get. And, and so I was talking with the publishers, two of them, Stephen Nightingale and Elizabeth Dilley, and they said, you know, we were thinking you could do a book that contained a broad spectrum of poems, that it would be poems about grief, that it would be poems that were full of joy and maybe put them all into one book. And I said, I really can’t imagine that that feels impossible. And for people who don’t know, about a year and a half ago, my son took his life and there were many poems that have come out of that, and I couldn’t imagine putting those poems next to some of the more lighthearted, you know, Mr. Clean showing up to seduce me in my kitchen and pretending I’m Dolly Parton while I’m making my kids breakfast. They’re like, how could those possibly inhabit the same spine? I told them I’d think about it, and a couple of weeks later, I had a vision, which isn’t a normal thing for me.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:09:11  Eric. Although after Finn died, it happened with some regularity. I’m just not going to pretend it didn’t happen. Even so, part of me is like I’m a little more practical than that. But here it was, this vision in which my father, who died just months after my son and my son carved into my bedroom wall these words in all caps, we love you. And then right beneath it, all of the honey. And I knew that they had given me the title for the book. That felt like a transmission of sorts. And I thought, well, what does that mean? And I thought about it all day. I went skiing with my husband and in the woods, and I eventually arrived at this that all of the honey that’s ever been made came from the sweetness of nectar, and from the bitterness of the pollen that feeds the bees, and that that’s really what’s being asked of us at all times in our lives is, is to meet that broad spectrum. So I called the publishers with this kind of elation and said, you were right.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:10:13  Yes, of course it has to be. All of it. Of course, all of it. Because that’s what it is. To be alive is to meet it all. So that was the genesis.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:22  Was there going on in you still the positive, the joy I’m curious about, you know, having gone through a grief of that magnitude, which by all reports is the greatest grief that can be imagined. I’m just curious about the process of finding your way back into not even. I’m not even talking necessarily about healing the grief, right. But finding even the sweet parts of things. Were you able to find those and how were you able to find those?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:10:53  Oh, Eric, that’s a good question. I’ll start with maybe just a report that even the day that Finn died, even that terrible day, I laughed and fell in love with people, with life itself, even in that most devastated moment. I’m not saying the very moment, but that evening I remember walking in the Georgia night. We were in Georgia at the time, helping my parents move into their new home, and IRA was talking on the phone with my beautiful friend Wendy Whitlock.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:11:34  And it was this warm evening and Wendy said to me, he has given you his love light to Carrie. And in that moment she said that this firefly lit up right in front of my face. And it was magic, right? It was this zing of illogical beauty. There was no way to say how that could have happened. It felt important and it felt so whimsical. It was lightning bug, for heaven’s sakes. Right? And it felt like he was there. It felt fantastical. It filled me with wonder. And even in devastation, I felt very open to a larger spectrum of possibility. And why is that? I think it’s because, well, I think it’s a few things, but at the very least, it has a lot to do with showing up every day. I’ve had a daily poetry practice since 2006, where every day I show up and I say, well, what’s here? What’s here? Whether it’s something that’s devastating, nothing ever as devastating, of course, as losing Finn.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:12:38  But I think that daily practice of showing up and saying what’s here and exploring what’s happening inside me, what’s happening in the world outside me when the stakes were much lower, allowed me when the stakes were the highest they’ve ever been for me to stay very present.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:55  Yeah, that’s a beautiful story. And I think it speaks to this idea that even our emotions in the worst of times are not these monolithic entities, right? They wax and they wane and other things filter in. If we’re open to looking for them, if we’re not paying attention, it can seem very much that it’s monolithic. There’s only this, you know, I know, like even on a day where I might be feeling like, okay, depression is worse than it might normally be for me. Even if I look at that day closely, there’s going to be moments in there where I was amused, where I heard something that made me smile, where I heard a piece of music that lifted me up. I mean, there’s nuance in there, and I do think that what you’re talking about with your daily practice of showing up is looking for that nuance.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:46  Oh, you know, looking more closely at things that probably did serve you well when the time came.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:13:53  Oh, you’re so right. And I love this word. You’ve chosen nuance because that feels very right to me in terms of the monolithic, as you say, that great stone of sorrow. It reminded me, actually, when you said that, that I had a profound physical feeling of what that was like, that enormous monolith of grief. Right. Yeah. And then it was, I think, a day after Finn died, it was the next day when I felt it, this kind of ridiculous tsunami of love that kind of rushed at me and I had this sense of that is way, way, way, way, way too much. Like I was resisting, like I pushed, I was like that don’t even. And it just kind of crashed over me and obliterated all that know and just kind of infiltrated all of me. That’s what it felt like. It felt like I just got infused.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:14:47  Carried. Boyd met with love. But what the sensation was was that the love somehow broke down the monolith of grief into the smallest possible atoms, and surrounded every single one of them with tenderness and, yeah, compassion and, oh, beauty connection. I could meet each of those motes of grief in the smallest way, not as a monolith, but as a bite sized, a bite sized piece. Something. Something that was mutable, especially because it was surrounded with so much goodness.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:36  Yeah. I mean, that is the flip side of grief to me, has always been great love, you know. You know, I don’t pretend to know what it’s like to lose a child. And I’m wary of comparing things. So that’s not exactly what I’m doing. But, you know, I mean, I feel like the greatest griefs I’ve suffered have been having to put my dogs to sleep, like, more than losing grandparents. I mean, I don’t know what that says about me as a person, but but I remember one of my dogs, Ralph, when we were putting him to sleep.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:08  The grief was overwhelming. I mean, I was just heartbroken and right in there. There was also just an incredible love. Like it was just so evident to me that to be as heartbroken as I was was also that I must have loved something that much. And there was a beauty in that.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:16:28  Yes.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:29  Yeah, there was a beauty in that. I wonder if you’d be willing to read a poem from the new book that is early in the book, and that, I think, speaks a little bit to working with grief. And it’s called The invitation.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:16:43  Yeah I will. I love that poem too because it was the night after he died and it was such an important changing moment for me. Do you know what page it’s on, friend.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:57  I believe it’s on page ten.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:17:00  Got it. The invitation. Two nights after he died. All night. I heard the same one line story on repeat. I am the woman whose son took his life. The words felt full of self-pity. Filled me with hopelessness.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:17:23  Doom. And then a voice came. A woman’s voice just before dawn. And it gave me a new shade of truth. I am the woman who learns how to love him now that he’s gone. It did not change the facts, but it changed everything about how I met the facts. Over a hundred days later, I am still learning what it means to love him. How love is an ocean, a wildfire, a crumb. How commitment to love changes me, changes everyone, invites us to bring our best. Love is Wine is Trampoline is an infinite song with a chorus in which I am sung. I am the woman who learns how to love him. Now that he’s gone. May I always be learning how to love like a cave. Like a rough legged hawk. Like a son.

Eric Zimmer 00:18:36  It’s so beautiful.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:18:38  Thank you. You know there’s a line in there. Especially in light of our earlier conversation about perfectionism invites us to bring our best. And, I think that my relationship to that line is this I did really feel like I’ve been asked to bring my best to this whole time, and part of that, for me has been it doesn’t mean I have to show it perfect.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:19:03  It means I have to show up. That’s what bringing my best means to me is this willingness to really show up and to meet what’s here.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:14  I want to be careful here that we don’t paint too rosy a picture here of what this experience was like for you, I assume in. You know. Right. Like, right. Like, I, I don’t I don’t want people being like, well, okay, I guess I’m supposed to turn towards love and just, you know, like, I just feel like it’s important to also have you say something about the enormity of the grief?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:19:42  Yeah I think. Well, let’s not have a rosy picture of this. I’m glad. I’m glad you said that. One thing I’m so clear about Eric is that everyone’s process with grief is so very different. Right? And that there is no one right way to do it. In fact, that there is many right ways to do it, as there are minutes, as there are seconds as there are humans.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:20:05  Right. And what’s right in this very minute is very different in the next. I am exceptionally lucky that I have had a experience that has been ridiculously flooded with love. I don’t know how I would have done it otherwise, and maybe the world knew that that was exactly what I needed and rose up to meet me in that way. There was a moment I remember thinking maybe a week or two after Finn had died, and I knew there were so many people who were writing me letters and sending calls and, you know, and I remember thinking, you know, it’s too much. It just needs to be not that much. And then I’d imagine one person, just one person not thinking loving thoughts toward me. And I was like, nope, nope. Actually, it’s just enough. Like, none of you stop. Nobody can stop, I need it, I need all of that, I guess, to say, what is it, then? To have that kind of grief and a to are I don’t even know how.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:20:58  I don’t even know what to say about it. Eric, I, I I’ll say this, that, that there hasn’t been a single day since he’s died, that I haven’t wept. But I don’t mind it either. There is no part of me that wants to push the grief away. And maybe for that reason, because I’m not resisting it. It’s the hardest. Worst thing? Worst. But see, here it is. There’s the wolf. Right? Is this the worst thing that’s ever happened to me? Of course. It’s the worst thing that’s ever happened to me, Gregory. Or has this most gorgeous poem that begins like this. Not to make loss beautiful, but to make loss the place where beauty starts. Where the heart understands for the first time the nature of its journey. Right. So losing Finn is the worst thing that’s ever happened to me. Which then makes me think of what about the women I know who’ve lost multiple children? What about the people who lost their child and their home and their car? And like, what about, you know, like, so many people have so much worse, right? But for me to not ever try to make it anything but what it is, which was the worst, right.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:22:05  And that he was suffering so much that that felt like the best choice to him. Yeah. I meet that every single minute. I meet that every minute. And there has been a thousand blessings that have come from it to every day. Just the willingness, Eric, to say yes, even to the hardest thing I’ve ever had to say yes to, to develop a trust in life now beyond what I’ve ever had before because of it, right? Because of this worst thing, to have this deepened sense of trust in life itself.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:11  What you’re describing is remarkable because you’re talking about not resisting what happened to some degree. Right. Which feels almost impossible in that sort of situation. And I’m sure it’s not as clean as that. Like, I’m sure there were moments of like, no, no, no, but there was some openness in you to This is what is. You know, it makes me think of that famous. I don’t know if it’s famous, but it’s famous to me. Idea that suffering equals pain.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:44  Times resistance. Right. And the pain of losing your child is at the very top of any pain scale that could ever be invented. Right? It’s there. Right? Let’s say it’s 100 out of 100, and then resistance is the it shouldn’t be this way, you know, it’s the fighting it. It’s all the why me? It’s all that that comes along and nobody gets to zero resistance. I don’t think. Right. But the thing I love about the way that equation is formulated is it says if I’ve got a pain of a hundred and I’m resisting at a level of a eight, I’ve got 800 units of suffering. This is obviously not a actual scientific description of what happens. But but, you know, you get the point. If I was able just to resist two points Less. You know. Instead of a resistance. Eight. I’m a resistance of a six. My total suffering goes from 800 to 600. Right? Like there’s something in this. But God, is it hard? How do you find your way towards that?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:24:48  So before often died for over ten years, probably.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:24:54  By then I’ve been working with a spiritual teacher, Joy sharp. She leads satsang, and the very first teaching that she gave me was a question. Can you say yes to the world as it is, which is such a profound teaching?

Eric Zimmer 00:25:15  Yes.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:25:15  What an invitation, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:25:17  Yes.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:25:18  And so that was something certainly that I’d understood. You know, like any teaching. Right. First. Do you understand it in your head? Okay, sure. I can see this, the world as it is. But then the messier things get and the harder things get, and the harder it is to say yes to that. So I had for, you know, a decade before this, had some practice with that as something that was valuable to me. Yes. Right. I had had, as a prayer for myself, opened me. I wanted desperately to be open. That was something that has been fueling me for a long time. So I think that that kind of daily, more than daily, many times daily question.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:26:04  Can you say yes to the world as it is? And let’s be honest, my son was not an easy human. He was an incredible human. He was so funny and smart and anything he put his hand to, he excelled. You know, we started fencing and he won the fencing championship, and he built a computer and won the science fair. And he, you know, he built computers for all his friends. And he, like, he was just so crazy alive. You know, my friend Katherine used to say he was 150% alive, right? So here he is, this incredible, generous, amazing being who loved to push every single button I had. That was his great thrill in life. Was pushing every button right. And poke, poke poke poke. Just, you know, he came into the world and screamed for a year. That was there was nothing perfect about that. That was the beginning of the crumbling of the perfectionism right there. But his life had forced me to say yes to the world as it is, because day after day after day, of being Finn’s mother was an exceptionally difficult thing to do.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:27:00  It was the best thing I did. I loved being Finn’s mother. Still. I love being Finn’s mother, but it was so hard, harder than anything I’d ever done before. And so I think that I had so much practice in saying yes to the world as it is by the time we got to his death. You’re right. I mean, the very first response was, no, but I’ll tell you, Eric, that that didn’t last long, that there was only a moment, really, of No. And it was so final. And so I knew immediately how true it was. Right and very real. And the death itself was graphic enough that I knew very well it was real. Right? So it was through a lot of practice, I suppose, to get to a place where I wanted to. I desperately wanted to meet the world as it was and not say no to his death and say yes to it, and find a way to continue to meet the world.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:57  That reminds me of an idea.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:59  I don’t know who said it, but it was like practice while you can for the times that you can’t. And they were speaking about spiritual practice. They meant practice. Now, while things are mildly difficult, like every life is mildly difficult. You know, when I teach my Spiritual Habits program, you know, we talk about this principle and I’m like, don’t start on the hardest stuff. Like, don’t start with like the things that you know, you most can’t let go of, like start on the easier stuff, you know, but it is a muscle. I do think that we develop over time, where we get more and more comfortable being able to just to say, okay, this is what is what is my skillful response to this to be. And what I find is that for me, when I’m able to do that, I’m actually better able to do what it sounds like you have been better able to do, which is actually process the emotions that are happening because the resistance, the no, it shouldn’t be the that’s all mental.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:29:03  yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:03  For me, when I can drop that, then there’s just the emotional experience and that can be processed, you know, sort of as you were talking about, I can take these atom sized bits of grief. They’re everywhere but one atom at a time. I’m working through it.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:29:20  You reminded me of something else about that time to friend. Is that the word okay. That was really what got me through. Like, I feel like okay was my mantra for the first month. Especially in the day of the day after I heard myself saying it over and over and over. Okay, okay. It was like I affirmed every smallest thing. Like I got to the car door, okay? And I opened the car door, okay. And I sat down in the car. Okay. Like I literally said, okay. Each time the smallest thing happened, like, I met that, I met that, I met that. It was only later, as I started to evaluate it at once, I noticed I was doing it, that I kind of fell in love with this word, okay, because it asks so little of us.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:30:08  And the truth was that saying yes to the world as it is, is way too exuberant for what I was capable of in that moment, right? Like I didn’t know. Part of me was yes, but okay isn’t no either, right? Yeah. It was enough for it to not be. No. Yeah, yeah. And also that it’s not a verb. Right. That it asked nothing of me. I didn’t have to do anything. I couldn’t do anything. I remember calling it at the time, autonomic life, the same way that the lungs are, you know, breathed and the heartbeats. I felt like I was just being lived because I couldn’t do anything, I couldn’t anything. Yeah, yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:46  You used a phrase a little while ago. I don’t know if this is exactly what you said, but it had something to do with being supported by the world. And I’m wondering if you could read a poem called On a Clear Day, which is page 17. That, to me speaks to that.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:31:03  On a clear day, the way the field holds the shadow of the cottonwood. This is how life holds me, holds me no matter my shape. Holds me with no effort, holds my darkness and knows it as weightless as. Transient as something that will shift. Disappear. Return and shift again. It never says no to me. I am still learning to trust life. To trust. No matter how I show up. I will be held. Trust that my life is not a problem. Trust that as much as I am the shadow. I am also the field.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:53  There are several things in there that are remarkable. One is the turn right at the end. Right? The turn right at the end where it’s like, okay, I’m being held by this field. Oh, wait a second. I am also the field as well as the shadow. I mean, as a Zen practitioner, you know, we talk about form and emptiness. Emptiness and form. Right? You’re both those things.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:15  But the other thing that I’m curious about in that poem is when you say, I’m learning to trust life. I’m always interested in the word trust and what we mean by it. Right? Because I’m going to put words in your mouth and you can refute them if you would like, but certainly you’re not trusting that terrible things aren’t going to happen, because one of the most terrible things that could possibly happen happened. So on one hand, you could very much be like, no, I do not trust life, right? Because here’s great fear. Number one, it happened. So what does trust in life mean to you?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:32:55  You’re so right. I wanted so desperately to protect him, right? And to keep him alive, and was very aware that that was a possibility that I couldn’t. Yeah. And then my greatest fear came true. So trusting life doesn’t mean that my greatest fears don’t come true. Trusting life means to me that even when my greatest fears come true, I will be supported enough to be able to show up right that the world Is there to hold me.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:33:24  As I stay alive. As I’m alive, right? If I had to say what is the word that comes to me again and again and again and again, what is the most interesting word to me right now? To continue to explore it is trust. Yeah. Which comes, of course, out of the same word is true. Like and this is what I ask myself every time I sit down to write, I ask myself, what is the next true thing? That’s how every poem gets written is what is the next true thing? What is the next true thing? And so then trust this willingness to be with what is true and this willingness to know that it doesn’t mean it’s what I want. It has nothing to do with what I want. And even then, and especially then, life will show up to meet me and hold me and lift me, carry me, boy me. All these are words I’ve been feeling the embodiment of in this time.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:16  Before we dive back into the conversation, let me ask you something.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:19  What’s one thing that has been holding you back lately. You know that it’s there. You’ve tried to push past it, but somehow it keeps getting in the way. You’re not alone in this. And I’ve identified six major saboteurs of self-control. Things like autopilot behavior, self-doubt, emotional escapism that quietly derail our best intentions. But here’s the good news you can outsmart them. And I’ve put together a free guide to help you spot these hidden obstacles and give you simple, actionable strategies that you can use to regain control. Download the free guide now at one you net and take the first step towards getting back on track. I have a lot to say on this. What I’ll say is that me too, with trust was working with a spiritual director for a number of years, and I swear every single conversation we ended up at trust. Now, after a while, I started to question, does that say more about him than me? I don’t know the answer to that question. You know, I kept asking like, are you a one trick pony? Like, is this the only thing you got in your bag and everybody gets this? Or is this specific to me? But I think trust is so interesting.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:35  And I love what you said about true it coming from that word. That for me was just an insight that I’m going to really spend some time with. Because what gets mixed in with trust to me, is also how much of that trust is coming from me, right? Like, I have a tendency to trust myself. I didn’t always right. I’m a homeless heroin addict, right. So I have I have a history of, you know, there being a lot of time where I simply could not trust myself, but I kind of do now, some of that ends up asking, well, if I have to do it, is that trust right? If I have to be the one that has to put this effort in, if I have to be the one that has to rise to this challenge. This is a quick little piece, but I got sober at the age of 24 from heroin and in Columbus, Ohio in 1994. And 12 step programs were the only thing on tap. And I was desperate and they said, believe in God.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:34  And this is 1994, right? It was not very different now, 1994 believe in God. And that meant, you know, the God, the, you know, capital J God. And I developed this really immature spirituality that was like, if I do good things, then God will protect me. And then some bad things happen to me. You know, after I’d been sober a number of years and that all fell apart. And, you know, I drank again. And when I came back, I was like, okay, I’m back to AA. It’s the only game in town. It still seems there is an element here of turning your will in your life over to a higher power God, as you understand. What does that mean to me? Like, what do I actually believe to be true? You know, instead of trying to make myself believe something which is kind of what you’re talking about. And where I landed was this idea that there were these spiritual principles that if I lived my life by them to the best of my ability, and I asked for the support of other people, I would be able to meet what life brought me.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:34  I mean, it was that sort of basic. I’d be able to stay sober and meet what life brought me, whatever it was. And so that’s worked out to be a remarkably good foundation. The thing in there, though, is there is an element of me living by those principles. Which is back to that question I was saying earlier about my ability. Well, what happens if that ability gets wiped out and that’s that deeper trust that you’re talking about? And that’s where I find myself inquiring, okay. What is that? You know what does hold me when I can’t hold myself at all?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:38:11  Yeah. Do we get to know? I don’t know.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:15  It’s actually just as I said that, it just occurred to me that at least for me, it’s been all kinds of different things. It’s actually not a thing. I’ve been looking for the thing, and it’s actually things. Sometimes it’s this friends phone call, sometimes it’s this song, sometimes it’s this poem, sometimes it’s this book I read.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:37  To me, it seems like support has come in and all these different places and all these different ways. Sorry to be processing my own trust self I love there, but I’ve had two insights thanks to you here.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:38:50  I love that you did. I love that you’re thinking about it too. And of course it’s coming from all over, right? Of course it does. That seems so right to me. I don’t think, friend, that I have a clue what it is, even exactly that I’m saying I trust. Right? That’s why I say I think I trust the world, I trust the universe. I say things like that, I trust life. Maybe that’s the cleanest I can say it. I trust life. And thinking on what you just said, you know, here you are saying it comes from this friend or it comes from this song, or it comes from this, which to me says that it’s coming from a sense of openness right back to what we were talking about earlier, that you’re here, you are, you’re paying attention.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:39:27  And when we are in that receptive open space, I think that’s when life rushes in to support us, right? Because. Because it can. Because it can.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:39  Yes, yes. That’s a beautiful way to put it. I’d like to get a couple more poems before we’re done, if that’s okay.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:39:46  I have an idea based on something you said.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:49  Of a poem.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:39:49  Yeah. You were talking about what is true and how hard it can be sometimes to know what is true. And to me, this is one place where poetry really shines is because poetry loves paradox, which is that when two equal and opposite things are both held up, is true at the same time. And I have quite a few poems that that talk about that.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:15  I would love for you to pick. I have my list, but I’d love to see what you pull out of the hat here.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:40:21  Well, I think maybe there’s so many that could have spoken to this kind of paradox, but this was one specifically about meeting death.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:40:27  And we were talking earlier about there’s so many ways to do it. Right. Meeting your death because there are no clear instructions, I follow what rises up in me to do. I fall deeper into love with you. I look at old pictures. I don’t look at old pictures. I talk about you. I say nothing. I walk. I sit. I lie in the grass and let the earth hold me. I lie on the sidewalk. Dissolve in the sky. I cry. I don’t cry. I ask the world to help me stay open. I ask again, please let me feel it all. I fall deeper in love with the people still living I. Fall deeper in love with the world that is left. This world with its spring and its war and its mornings. This world with its fruits that ripen and rot and recede. This world that insists we keep our eyes wide. This world that opens when our eyes are closed. Because there are no clear instructions. I learn to turn toward the love that is here.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:41:45  Though sometimes what is here is what is not. There are infinite ways to do this right. That is the only way.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:23  There’s a lot in there, and I love that very last line in particular about their infinite ways to do that. That is the way and I think conversations when we talk about dealing with something as profound as dealing with the type of grief you did, I love that you said there’s no right way to do this, because I think we get so focused on, am I doing this the right way? I mean, some of that is just conditioning, but some of it is we just want to be out of pain. You know, what can I do to make this pain better? But recognizing that my way is the way right now, you know, I can look to others. I can look for support. I can look for guidance. But I have to trust myself to some degree. And if we take that and scale it down from the really biggest things, I mean, I think that question is always there.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:12  Am I doing this right.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:43:14  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:14  You know and unfortunately there is no answer to that question, at least to me. There’s no answer to that question because I am not you and you are not me. And we are radically different. And what I need is going to be it’s just all so slippery. And for me, there’s been a great comfort in being able to go, well, that concept doesn’t exist. No. Am I doing it right? Like, if we really understood it, we’d be like, that is a nonsensical question, but it is a question that arises in all of us, I think, so often.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:43:49  Well, I have a lot of thoughts about that friend. One of them is, as a recovering perfectionist, you know, am I doing it right? Has been a leader in my life, right? I’ve certainly wrestled with that in every arena, but somehow not with this, I don’t know. It’s not that I don’t wrestle with it in lots of other places still, but not with this.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:10  Yeah.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:44:11  And I have to say that it was interesting for you to say this. How do I make the pain go away? I haven’t wanted that. I haven’t wanted the pain to go away. It’s not like I’m holding on to it either. I wouldn’t say that I’m holding on to the pain, but I think that’s a mistake that we’ve been told maybe that we’re not supposed to hurt. What does healing mean? Does healing mean that I’m not going to hurt anymore? That I’m going to be fine with it all? Like, that doesn’t seem right at all to me. To me, I think maybe it means something more like that. I’m able to be with the pain and not wish it away. Maybe that’s what healing is, is to be able to meet it without wishing it away.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:53  Have you always had that capacity?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:44:55  Oh, God. No.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:56  Okay, okay. No, I just didn’t. I didn’t know if you were genetically engineered differently than the rest of us. Because I understand exactly what you’re saying.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:07  For me, there has been a fundamental shift in life. It was the fundamental shift that I had to make to get and stay sober, which was I have to stop constantly trying to change how I feel. Yeah. I mean, because I took that to the ends of the earth, right? I can’t do that to the same degree. And so that’s kind of what you’re saying. But it is a very difficult thing to say. I’m going to let these feelings be. I’m going to feel at all when what it feels like is so awful and dreadful. So it sounds to me like that’s something you have cultivated again over the years.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:45:45  Oh yeah. For sure. And let’s be honest, I’m not able to do it in every arena, right? Like wherever I feel, you know, upset with my husband or my, you know, like, I let the little shit get to me, you know? Why does he have to choose so loud? you know, like, why is that such a big deal for me? No, I mean, there’s so many places where I have ridiculous amounts of resistance, right? I couldn’t tell you why.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:46:09  Although I’m really seeing it right now. How different? Maybe because this is the wolf I’ve been feeding, right? I can completely go there with this. And I want to. And I want to. And who could say why I’m so available to it? I don’t know, because I love him so much. Because it matters so much. Because so much is at stake. Whereas with the chewing thing, I mean, it’s just annoying, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:46:34  If you get that one figured out, I will have you back immediately as a guest on the show.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:46:40  Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:40  If you can figure out the small annoyances like that, I’m all ears because believe me, I have looked. Nobody’s writing many books on not being irritated.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:46:50  No, like.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:52  And it’s such a trivial thing, but it’s also such a miserable condition to be in.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:46:56  No, it is. It is for sure. I make myself really miserable with it. Yeah, yeah, but not with this other piece. Maybe, like I say, maybe because I’m willing to give it everything.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:07  Yeah, Yeah, that makes sense. I want to bring up something that I saw on your website, and you have a one word mantra and a three word mantra on your website. And I’m curious if these are still current or, you know, sometimes we put up a homepage in about us and it’s like eight years old. One word mantra is a just the three word mantra is I’m still learning. Do those still feel like, you know, if you had to have a one and a three word mantra, those the two you’re sticking with right now?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:47:32  Oh yeah. For sure. Okay. Yeah. And they both have, I think, nice little stories too. And I think about them all the time that a just came from my friend Jud Jordan Kalush. She lived in southwest Colorado with me for a while, and she went out in a time of drought. And she said to the trees, what do we do? And the tree said back to her, adjust. And I remember in that moment it just went right through me, that kind of resonance of, oh, and there it is.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:48:01  Right? And the word adjust. Then I got pretty obsessed with it and looked it all up and its Etymologies and all. It’s related to the word yoga and yoke, like you would put on a oxen. And it’s literally to yoke ourselves to the moment, to adjust as to allow ourselves to be in tandem yoke with what is, I suppose. So I do love that word a lot and find myself needing to adjust, as we’d all do constantly. And I’m still learning that came from Michelangelo. Those were the last words he said on his deathbed. And I do feel like that willingness to continue to be open and learn and be kind of like, find what’s new and be excited, and to even bring that kind of excitement and enthusiasm to things we think we know. Right? Yeah, I think I know so much about not knowing. So, you know, I think that every time we have that opportunity to be new and still learning is a good way to feed our soul.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:58  Those are great, good mantras and great stories.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:02  Let’s do another poem. We’ll do the question because it references the friend you just talked about.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:49:09  Yes, it does the same, Jude. I have to say, Eric, that I have been deeply, deeply, deeply blessed with some of the most incredible humans in my life. Jude. Jordan. Colossians. One of them. I feel so lucky. You know who? Who do we meet when we’re at our most impressionable moments? And I’m really lucky that I’ve met Jude for sure. The question and I’ll say this to that in this poem, the question that she asks. We had been at a dance concert the night before, and we were in this huge auditorium and all around us, all this talking, talking, talking. And there’s Jude being her kind of Jude self. She says. The question I’ve been asking myself is what is the path of love? And I knew my life changed in that second the question all day I replay these words. Is this the path of love? I think of them as I rise.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:50:08  As I wake my children. As I wash dishes. As I drive too close. Behind the slow blue Subaru. Is this the path of love? Think of these words as I stand in line at the grocery store. Think of them as I sit on the couch with my daughter. Amazing how quickly six words become compass. The new lens through which to see myself in the world. I notice what the question is. Not. Not. Is this right or not? Is this wrong? It just longs to know how the action of existence links us to the path of love. And is it this? Is it. This. All day I let myself be led by the question. All day I let myself not be too certain of the answer. Is it this? Is this the path of love? I ask as I wait for the next word to come.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:08  I love that just as like an orienting intention.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:51:12  Yes, yes. And how quickly? How quickly it changes too. You know, I just feel like the second I think I know this is the path of love, that I really better get curious about it again.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:51:23  I feel like I can’t let myself get too certain about it.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:27  Yep, yep. Well, and also in there, the question isn’t is it right? Is it wrong? Right. Which is we were sort of alluding to a few minutes ago, you know, am I doing it right? You know, is this the Path of Love is a very great clarifying question.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:51:43  Oh, yeah. Yeah. Thank you, Jude Jordan Kluge, for that great question.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:47  Well, I think the other piece, though, that that poem speaks to is that a great question is great, but not if we don’t ask it often.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:51:56  Right. Right.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:58  Like, I mean, like if we just go, okay, well, is this the path of love? And I think about that one time. Big deal. Right. But what you’re doing, if you’re actually able to ask yourself multiple times as you go about your life. At least to me, that’s where questions like that become transformative.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:52:16  Exactly.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:17  They become transformative when they filter into the moments of our life.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:21  You know, I’m at my mother’s right now. I’m visiting, you know, is what I’m saying and thinking and doing. Is this the path of love right here, right now? You know, if I don’t bring that question to mind, it can’t do me much good. And that’s, I think, one of the hardest things in our current culture is we’re so busy. We go from one thing to the next to the next without being able to. Let me say that again. I won’t say no. We’re not able to because actually we are able to without reflecting it all about like what is important about this thing I’m about to do. That doesn’t have to be your question. If that question doesn’t resonate. Like there’s countless other good ones. For me, it’s been about how do I bring these ways I want to be into the world to mind. Frequently.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:53:09  Yeah. How do we do that? How do we do that? Well, Lucas says live into the questions, right? That’s his dictum for us, you know, and I think that that is part at least of why some kind of I think a daily reflective practice is so important.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:53:24  Yep. Whether it’s sitting or walking or writing a poem, meeting a blank page, there’s so many ways to do it, right. Yeah, but some kind of a reflective practice where we aren’t running from one thing to another and open up to that willingness to be with a new question or the same question.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:44  Yeah, I’ve done a lot of thinking about this very question, and it’s part of what the Spiritual Habits program is designed to answer. And, you know, I think we can look at behavior science to talk about this idea of triggers. We all have triggers for good and bad, you know. And if we can start to build triggers into our day. Like, for example, every time I go to the bathroom, right, there’s a trigger. Okay? You know, I’m just gonna, in that moment, go. Have I been on the path of love?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:54:15  What a sweet way to write. Just tie it into something like that. Beautiful.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:19  Yeah, or at a red light, or when I go into the kitchen.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:22  But the Holy Grail becomes when we take our emotions as triggers, which they are, they’re just unconscious triggers, primarily. But when we take our emotions, I’m irritated. Okay, good. I recognize that. Now I can ask, is this the path? Like when that emotion becomes the trigger for a reflection? Like to me, that’s where things for me have really transformed?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:54:50  Well, that makes so much sense. I love the way you said that. It makes me think, by the way, that that whole parable, which wolf are you going to feed? Is that right in that moment of trigger to realize we have a choice. Yeah, that’s the moment to remember. Okay, I’m. You know, you’re chewing so loud. I’m about to, like, fly off the handle. Or is this the path of love? Is this.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:15  Yeah, yeah, yeah, at least for me in those moments. I mean, I don’t have the ability to turn the irritation off.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:55:21  Know.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:22  Right? But I can reflect on. Okay. Just relax. Like, I mean, I can work with myself so that at the very least, I don’t make things worse, right? You know, at the very least, I don’t make things worse. Which irritation often can lead to, you know. Right. My father passed recently, and I think I came by my irritation from him. You know, pretty inherited. I reflect on with him just how painful it must have been to be that way as often. And then also, I don’t think he really learned the skill of dealing with it well. And so then I think then you add the regret of like, well, you know, I’m also letting my irritation seep out too much and like, it’s my least favorite emotion. Maybe because I know what it’s like to be on the other end of someone being irritated. And like I said, it’s an emotion that it is there. I’m just like, well, all right.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:56:20  Yeah, exactly.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:22  So if anybody out there knows how to solve irritation, you can be a guest on the One You Feed podcast. You know of a book. If you know of a, you know, is there a method?

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:56:32  Well, I tell you what I do with it. I have my word of the year. This year is hello. And I’ve just been using hello as a way to recognize the things that show up, especially things that are not positive I perceive as not positive, you know? Hello frustration. Hello irritation. Hello fear. Hello. Stuck. As soon as I noticed that that’s what’s going on in me. Then I greet it. Oh, hello. And I’ve noticed it doesn’t change it, right? It doesn’t change it, but I relax.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:05  Yes, yes, I have told this story before, but it was on a silent meditation retreat, and there was somebody just all kinds of terrible chewing, you know, and sniffing and snorting and just all kinds, you know. And I am getting so irritated, you know, I mean, just and but then, of course, at the same time, I’m like, but you’re on a silent retreat, like, you know, so, so there’s all the judgment and the whole, you know.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:35  So I was asking the spiritual teacher, Audie Ashanti, about this once, and, you know, I was like, well, okay, I know I’m supposed to let it be. So what am I supposed to let be? The fact that that noise is happening? Is that what I’m supposed to allow, or am I supposed to allow the fact that I’m so irritated? And of course, the answer is obvious in retrospect, which is both right. It’s to allow both. But what you said is when that hello comes along and I go, oh, I’m irritated. And I just go, okay, it’s all right, Eric. You’re doing the best you can. Just. It’s okay. Everybody gets irritated, like it gets better. It doesn’t go away. But that whole, like, I shouldn’t be feeling this, you know, I’m bad for feeling this way. Just, you know, makes everything worse.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:58:21  Absolutely. I kind of love that. You also have misophonia. That’s the, you know, the annoyance that people doing.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:58:27  So I’m high fiving you through the screen.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:31  I have whatever misophonia is equivalent is with all kinds of sounds. I am just a sound, sensitive creature.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:58:38  Oh that’s it. Misophonia is all sounds. It’s a sound thing. Oh, okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:42  Well, then I am a misophonia.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 00:58:44  Yes, yes. And by the way, Aja is, my teachers, one of my teachers. Teachers is my teacher. Joy sharp is one of her teachers.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:52  So wonderful I have to look her up. Yeah, he has been incredibly influential, and I’ve had the great gift of being able to sit down with him a number of times with this show and just kind of hang out and spend time together. And so he’s meant a lot to me. Before we wrap up, I want you to think about this. Have you ever ended the day feeling like your choices didn’t quite match the person you wanted to be? Maybe it was autopilot mode or self-doubt that made it harder to stick to your goals. And that’s exactly why I created The Six Saboteurs of Self-control.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:28  It’s a free guide to help you recognize the hidden patterns that hold you back and give you simple, effective strategies to break through them. If you’re ready to take back control and start making lasting changes. Download your copy now at once. Let’s make those shifts happen starting today when you feed net book. Well, I think that is a great place for us to wrap up. We’re going to have a brief post-show conversation where I’m going to ask you to read another poem or two. Listeners, if you’d like access to that, you can get access to that to add free episodes to the teaching song and a poem that I referenced earlier by going to one you feed net. Rosemary, thank you so much. This has been really beautiful.

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer 01:00:15  So fun. Thank you. Eric. Thank you.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:18  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:31  We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

Wise Effort: What Your Regrets Reveal About What Matters Most | Diana Hill

June 9, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Diana Hill explores the concept of Wise Effort and how our regrets can become powerful guides to what matters most. Drawing from psychology, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and Buddhist wisdom, she explains why the things that hurt most often point directly toward our deepest values. Diana also discusses how to work with regret without getting stuck in it, why discomfort can be a doorway to meaningful action, and how to focus your precious energy on what is truly worth your time and attention. Along the way, she explores psychological flexibility, the wisdom found in paradox, and practical ways to align your daily actions with the life you most want to live.

Have you ever ended the day feeling like your choices didn’t quite match the person you wanted to be? Maybe you slipped into autopilot, or self-doubt made it harder to stick to your goals. If so, The Six Saboteurs of Self-Control can help you recognize the hidden patterns that quietly derail your progress and offers simple, effective strategies to move past them. If you’re ready to take back control and make meaningful, lasting change, download your free copy at oneyoufeed.net/ebook.


Key Takeaways:

  • What “Wise Effort” means and how to focus your precious energy on what matters most
  • How regret can reveal your deepest values and point you toward meaningful action
  • Why the things that hurt most are often clues to what you care about most
  • The difference between toxic regret that keeps you stuck and healthy regret that helps you grow
  • How to turn toward difficult emotions instead of avoiding them—and why it changes everything
  • The connection between psychological flexibility, resilience, and living a values-driven life
  • Practical ways to work with worry, grief, loneliness, and other uncomfortable emotions
  • The role of wisdom, mindfulness, and self-awareness in making better decisions
  • Why paradox is an essential part of growth, meaning, and a well-lived life
  • Simple practices for accessing your own wisdom and taking the next wise step forward

Michael Bungay Stanier is the author of many books and is best known for his book The Coaching Habit which is the best-selling coaching book of the century with close to a million copies sold.  In 2019, he was named the #1 thought leader in coaching. Michael was the first Canadian Coach of the Year, has been named a Global Coaching Guru since 2014 and was a Rhodes Scholar. Michael founded Box of Crayons, a learning and development company that helps organizations transform from advice-driven to curiosity-led. His latest book is How to Work with (Almost) Anyone:  Five Questions for Building the Best Possible Relationships

Connect with Dr. Diana Hill: Website | Instagram | Facebook | LinkedIn | Wise Effort Podcast

If you enjoyed this conversation with Dr. Diana Hill, check out these other episodes:

How to Lose Regret and Choose Fulfillment with Marshall Goldsmith

How To Build Mental Strength, Cope with Stress, and Thrive Under Pressure with Amy Morin

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Episode Transcript:

Diana Hill 00:00:00  There’s not just one truth that we’re all trying to figure out, right? There are many. And what I really believe is we are both individuals and we are collective. It’s a both and paradox. And we both have our our genius. But we also aren’t all that special.

Chris Forbes 00:00:23  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:07  My mom passed a few weeks ago, and when Diana Hill asked me in this conversation to name a regret, one came up immediately. I didn’t take my mom back to Sarah Downs, the harness racing track near Columbus, where she grew up. When Chris and I started going. A few years ago, she told me she’d love to go. It would have cost me an afternoon. I never did it. Diana calls this a kindness regret, and she has a sharp way of using it. The ache of a regret tells you what you value. If we stay with that a moment longer, instead of running away from it. It points us towards what matters to us the most. Diana is a psychologist and the author of the wonderful book wise effort. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi, Diana, welcome to the show.

Diana Hill 00:01:55  Glad to be here.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:56  I’m excited to have you on. We’re going to discuss your book, that from the moment I heard the title, I knew I wanted to talk to you. Wise effort, how to focus your genius energy on what matters most. And I will share with you some of the reasons I love that title so much in a moment.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:12  But we’re going to start like we always do, with the parable. And in the parable there’s a grandparent who’s talking with a grandchild, and they say, in life there are two roles inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. They think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Diana Hill 00:02:50  Well, in my life, in the work that I do, a lot of my focus right now is on energy and where we are putting our our energy, our precious energy, our genius energy, the thing that lights us up, that interests us, but also that we care a lot about.

Diana Hill 00:03:05  And when I think about where am I putting my energy moment to moment in my day, and am I putting it into places that feed back to me, or regenerative, or am I putting it into places that drain me? Am I putting it into places that feed into the world in a way that is regenerative, or into the world in a way that’s draining? You know, I just mentioned to you earlier, I’m 47 years old. I’m living with my parents for how many times you have to move back in with your parents. It’s like the walk of shame. You turn into a 14 year old instantly. And just these little interactions that I have with my parents or I have with my husband, who’s also living with my parents or my teenagers, are those moments of which 1 a.m. I going to feed? Like, where am I going to put? If we think about food as a source of energy, right, our our life force, our actions as a source of energy, where are we going to put it? We’re going to put it in a way that feeds back to us and also spreads good in the world.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:58  I love that example because it’s very easy to take the position of. This is awful. I’m living with my parents, you know, to fall back into being the 14 year old again, all of that. And there’s also the ability to take a different perspective, right. Which is that like, oh, my parents care about me enough to have me live here. I get a chance to interact with them in a different way. I mean, I see sometimes these things where it’s clear from the outside which where my energy should go, but often from the inside it’s just not as clear.

Diana Hill 00:04:31  Right. Well, if you ever want to get a practice in working on your posture, go live with your 70 plus year old parents and you will start sitting up tall, drawing your chin in and your your top of your head to the ceiling quickly.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:42  100%. Yeah. Every time I see an old person, I suddenly am like, hang on, I gotta get get enough.

Diana Hill 00:04:48  Shoulders down. Yeah.

Diana Hill 00:04:50  So there’s that, that physical alignment. But then there’s also, you know, in Buddhism, it is often talked about in terms of like bring everything to the path. Everything comes to the path of teaching. And so especially the things that are uncomfortable, especially the things that you wish weren’t on your path, those are the ones to turn towards and welcome them in, because they can tell you a lot about why is effort the unwise move or the unwise effort move is to turn away from that what is uncomfortable for you. And when you do that, you also are turning away from your values. Because what I believe in acceptance and commitment therapy, the practice that I specialize in, is that that which is most uncomfortable is the biggest arrow pointing to what you care about. So if you know you’re struggling in a relationship, it’s because there’s something underneath that struggle that you care deeply about you don’t have that doesn’t keep you up at night when you have a bad bowling game, you know? But it keeps me up at night.

Diana Hill 00:05:50  If I have a bad session with a client like I will. I’ll rehearse it over and over. Where did I go wrong? What if I had done this or done that? Well, that’s an indicator underneath it. Just scratch the surface. There’s a care there.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:01  Yeah. I love your work because I have studied in the Buddhist path a great deal, as have you. And when I was introduced to acceptance and commitment therapy, I don’t know how many years ago I had Stephen Hayes on the show and Russ Harris and I just remember I was like, this seems like my entire life philosophy that they’ve just bundled into an actual clinical practice. So I love your work so much, and I love that idea that I think Kelly Wilson was a mentor to you. Correct. Yeah, I think he said, and I got to talk with him once. I think he said that our vulnerabilities show us our values, something along those lines. And I really love that. I just thought that was a great way of thinking about it.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:45  As you’re saying, it does tell us what matters.

Diana Hill 00:06:48  Absolutely. I mean, think about just on your list of things that irritate you today or the things that are keeping you up at night last night and the worries that you have. Those are the things. I mean, if you’re worried about climate change, if you’re worried about your kid not getting enough sleep because they’re on the screen too much. if you’re worried about your parents because they’re hunched over whatever it is, then, then, okay, those worries can take us off into a samsara of just, like, rumination. Worrying we know is not helpful. There’s, And actually, there’s some research that looked at worrying over ten days. What percentage of the time did your worries come true? Like if if you listed all your worries today and then we tracked you ten days from now, what percentage of the time would those actually come true? And I think the median answer to that question was zero. And I think the mean was something around 10%.

Diana Hill 00:07:46  And then there’s a part of us that goes, oh, no, 10% came true. Well, then that’s where psychological flexibility comes in. But it’s less about getting caught in the worry. And where why is effort comes in is it’s okay. Now I’m going to get really curious about that worry. What does that tell me about what I care about? And then now I actually have an action step, which is, oh, if I could open up to that feeling, then I could probably open up to action today in the here and now. That would help me live out that value. I can align my spine, or I could, if I’m worried about my kids technology, this I can look at my own technology use or if I’m worried about climate change. Here’s one I work with college students. I’m a part of this ten UC campus research study on resilience for climate change, and for students that are worried about it and need to take action, because that’s the only choice they have, right? We hold our class outside.

Diana Hill 00:08:42  If you’re worried about climate change, go sit in the current nature that we have. That is an action step because it shows that worry, shows what you care about. You care about nature, or you care about plants, or you care about breathing a fresh breath of air. And you can do that in the here and now. That’s why Zephyr.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:59  I think this is so fundamental a point that I want to stay with it for a little while. When that uncomfortable feeling comes up, there are a couple different ways we can relate to it. You actually talk about some of these in the book in a framework, but I want to stay with this basic one, which is that oftentimes what happens with that uncomfortable feeling is we turn towards something else that relieves the feeling but doesn’t honor the value, whereas this turning towards is that connection first with like, okay, there’s something at stake here, there’s something that matters to me. And then, you know, what’s one thing I can do? And I always think, like for me, I learned years ago.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:45  Like, if I’m bothered by something. Is there anything I can do right now about it to make it better? It can be so small. If I’m worried about finances, I can sit there on the couch and fret about it. Or I could go gather up the bills that I’ve been avoiding. It’s one small little step, and as soon as I take one step towards that, I start feeling better.

Diana Hill 00:10:11  Well I think there’s a half step. Little by little becomes a lot. There’s a half step before that. One step please. And so, so the half step before we take the step towards what can I do to make it better. The half step is what can I do to stay a little longer, to be to make contact with that which is most painful? This past weekend I have a really good friend of mine who was actually. We were in this women’s group together, and we’ve been in this women’s group for like five years, and about one year into the women’s group, she got diagnosed with cancer.

Diana Hill 00:10:47  And so for the past four years of knowing this woman, we’ve been on her cancer journey. And on Sunday she said, I want you all to come over for a ritual. This group, this group of women. And so we’re all like, okay, great ritual. I’ll bring the sage, I’ll bring the flowers, I’ll bring the poem. And she’s like, no, no, no, no, I’m going to do a ritual for all of you. And we’re like, okay. So we come over and we sit in this circle in this little glass greenhouse that we actually built for her, thinking that at some point she may want to pass in this little greenhouse. So we sat in this little greenhouse in a circle, and she did this whole grounding exercise. And then she said, what we’re going to do today is we’re going to touch my head. My hair is falling out. It’s in my cereal. I can’t stand it anymore. You’re all going to place your hands on my head, and you’re going to rub your hands down my head, and we’re going to take my hair, and we’re going to go give it to the birds.

Diana Hill 00:11:39  And then what I want you to do is you’re going to shave my head. And she said, this is my gift to you because all of you believe that you are this or you are that, or you’re defined by this. But I want you to have the experience of recognizing that you are not defined by your hair or your degree, or your fancy pants, or your whatever it is your face that has wrinkles or no wrinkles. And this is my gift to you. Now, what she was doing in that to get back to this original question, was she was going to the most painful thing. If you can imagine losing your hair like she’s she’s a beautiful, gorgeous woman who’s losing her hair and she’s saying, come touch it. Not only come touch it, come get close to it and find the lesson in it. And it’s my gift to all of you to make contact with this very uncomfortable thing. And it was the best thing of my whole week. I mean, it’s like, okay, well, that was amazing.

Diana Hill 00:12:32  You know, so what we do is we turn away. We don’t want we don’t want to lose our hair. I mean, this is like a topic for many men. I don’t.

Diana Hill 00:12:40  Want to lose my hair.

Diana Hill 00:12:41  You know, because we are identified with that small sense of self. We don’t want to age. We don’t want to not have our book accepted or, you know, have the rejections that we have in life. But if we can make contact with that thing and we can stay there a little bit longer, then yes, then we can make go from that half step. We can make the full step into how can we make it better?

Eric Zimmer 00:13:03  Yeah. I love that description of a half step I’ve often thought about. Perspective is a big thing with me. How you view the world is so much of your reality, and I’ve recognized that sometimes I skip the half step that you’re talking about. I jump right over whatever it is that’s uncomfortable to perspective because I’m pretty good at it.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:23  Yeah, it’s actually one of my skill sets. I’m pretty good at just going, oh, let me place this thing right size to what it really is. And if I do that, I miss what you’re describing, which is that ability to tolerate some degree of emotional discomfort. And so that’s why for me, I realized kind of with you, it’s like step zero, as you call it, is being with that. And you know, I know you have a you have an eating disorder history. I have an addiction history. And I’ve said before, sometimes I think the fundamental skill that unlocks, like sobriety long term, is the ability to recognize that you can be with any emotion and not have to immediately fix it. When I finally got that, I was like, oh, okay, I can do this. Not that it’s easy, not that it’s pleasurable, not that it’s fun, just that it’s doable.

Diana Hill 00:14:16  Yeah.

Diana Hill 00:14:17  A very common thing people say in therapy is like, oh my gosh, I’m just going to die of embarrassment or oh my gosh, I’m just gonna die of like, the creepy crawlies.

Diana Hill 00:14:26  If I have to be around my coworker any longer. Like, they’re so irritating to me. I learned this from I do these act boot camps where I train hundreds of therapists all over the country with Steve Hayes and Robin Walser and Miranda Morris. We’re sort of like this little groupie, and we go and train people and act therapists and act and coaches. And one of the things I learned from her is this line of like, have you ever met anyone that has died of embarrassment? Have you ever met anyone that has died of an urge? Have you ever met anyone that’s died of a panic attack? Have you ever met anyone that’s died of grief? Now, have you ever heard about someone that’s died because they were unwilling to experience embarrassment or an urge, you know, or a panic attack or grief? All the things that we do to escape that experience, and if you actually become a follower of that experience, become, as Frances Wheeler calls an apprentice to it, an apprentice degree. If you become a follower of an apprentice to the feelings and all the sensations that show up under our skin, then we can ride it in that that urge surfing way.

Diana Hill 00:15:37  And you become a better surfer over time and you realize it gets bigger, it gets bigger, it gets bigger. You want to jump off, you think you can’t handle it? Oh my gosh, I’m going to die of it. And it always comes down. That’s the first mark of existence. It’s impermanent. Guaranteed it will shift. But you have to stay. You have to abide long enough to learn that lesson. And we start small. We start small. So we start with that half step. I mean, in the wise effort method, I take people through these three big brushstroke movements. The first one is getting curious, and I see that as I get curious, move. And then the next one is open up. How do you open up to the feeling? How do you open up your mind? How do you open up to your wiser self in those moments? It’s not until the third step that we actually get into focusing our energy. Now what do you want to do? And there’s so much of our psychological interventions that are out there are about the third step, you know, the habits and the blah, blah blah, but not about those first two.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:50  So I want to circle back to kind of the beginning for a moment, back to just the title itself. Why is effort? Talk to me about what wise effort means to you.

Diana Hill 00:17:01  Well, I’ve been circling around this concept for a long time. And the first time I actually heard the word wise effort, it was right effort. And it was from Taiwan when I was 19, out of college. My dad was a long term follower of China, and he used to go every summer to Plum Village and my mom as well. And my mom took me and my at that time boyfriend to Plum Village, France. And I remember very well. Some of his Dharma talks. I mean, he’s he’s very memorable. You can’t forget him, right? So. Right. One of his dharma talks. A soldier raised his hand and said, you know, I it was like the time of the Iraq War. And he said something like, you know, I’ve been here for three weeks, I’ve been doing this retreat, and I don’t really want to go back.

Diana Hill 00:17:51  Like, what do I do? And what Tai said was, you are the one that should be behind that gun because you’ve had this experience and his teaching that that day was on wise effort or right effort. How were you using your life force, your energy, your presence? And actually, there’s no better hands to be behind a gun than mindful hands. Right. So it really shifted my understanding and perspective because I was struggling so much in my 20s. I mean so much with anorexia and bulimia. And it shifted my perspective on what I wanted to do with my career, how maybe this very thing that I have. That I had struggled with, allows me to then be able to serve in a different way, because I’ve experienced what I’ve experienced, and it was about energy. But it wasn’t until just a few years ago when I was I was really interested in writing this book, and I was on a retreat, actually with Jack Kornfield, and I was sitting down with him and telling him about, this is what I’m writing about.

Diana Hill 00:18:49  And he’s like, that just sounds like wise effort. I was like, should it be skillful striving? Should it be, you know, he’s like this just it’s just wise effort. And so wise effort is one of the steps on the eightfold path of Buddhism. We know the Four Noble Truths and the fourth noble Truth is the path. Like, how do you actually awaken and move out of suffering? And it’s quite behavioral. I like to think of the Buddha was very behavioral in many ways, and it’s like these are some of the things you do, you do. Why speech and why is livelihood and why is action and why is effort and why is concentration and why is mindfulness. And if you if you practice these on a regular basis, then you you now have a path. You are charting a path not only for yourself, but you’re also a charting path for others to follow with you. And that’s what wise it is. It’s about energy use, putting it in the right amounts, in the right spots in a way that not only benefits you, but that has benefit to those beyond you and those that which you are interconnected with.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:41  Obviously, I love that reframing from right effort to wise effort, because right is a word that can be struggling word because you think there is one answer. You know, there’s that phrase that comes out of recovery, do the next right thing. And that’s a great phrase, but I prefer do the next good thing, because if I’m looking for the right thing, I can get really stuck on exactly what that is. But good is broader. It lets me say like there’s a very there’s a few different things I could do out here. And I think wise is similar, right? It doesn’t expect perfection out of it. It recognizes complexity in many ways. That’s what wisdom is. Is the ability to take a lot of complexity and turn it into something useful.

Diana Hill 00:20:31  It’s so interesting. We also have to look at how a how a word lands in our own bodies, and then choose the word that lands in your body in a way that doesn’t contract you or restrict you, but that that opens you.

Diana Hill 00:20:43  For me, good constricts me because I’m like, be a good girl. Be, you know, like, yeah, be good. And I have all that perfectionism behind me for somebody else, right? Might sound, you know. Yeah, I feel this sense of like that feels right to me. It feels on the mark, you know? So it’s so much for me. Words are just felt experiences and choose a word that works for you. But with wisdom. I mean, there’s a lot of psychological research into wisdom. There’s things like the Berlin Wisdom Project, or there’s aspects where psychologists are looking at wisdom as this intersection between virtue and cleverness. Right. We’ve all met very clever people that are not wise. We wouldn’t ask them when to put our dog down, you know, even though they have lots of information. And then we’ve also met very wise people. Right. That may not have sort of the cleverness, the problem solving skills, the acute, you know, sort of on the spot in the moment procedural abilities.

Diana Hill 00:21:36  And what I think of in terms of wisdom is this is this space where we have our personal life experience. We have all the stuff that we’ve learned in books. Look, I have my PhD, like seven years of training to get to this spot. And then we also have our wise advisors, our ancestors. We have the wisdom of nature. We have our bodies wisdom, that inner whole body, yes, our whole body know. And then we have our collective wisdom. We have our second bodies, the genius advisors that we lean on, whether that’s your dog or that’s a good friend that you know, like I have, like my little curated friendless, I know which friend to call when I’m in a fight with my husband versus which friend to call when I’m feeling anxious about getting on a stage and they are different friends and I borrow their wisdom. And so wisdom is not something that we own. It’s something that we collectively share, that we co-create. And when we are in wise effort, we’re tapping into that and using that as our guide of where we’re going to channel this life force energy.

Diana Hill 00:22:42  Because your life force energy is different than my life force energy. But we do share collective wisdom. We’re co-creating it right now.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:49  I’ve never heard that the convergence between cleverness and virtue that is really striking and somewhat close to the mark for me, but I love the way you describe all the different wisdoms that are available to us, because I think oftentimes we hear people talk about one of those wisdoms and that that’s the thing you just follow. You follow what your body says. Yeah. And I’m like, that’s a source of input. But sometimes that’s not the right thing, right? I want to borrow all these different wisdom, and that’s for me. How discernment happens is by I’ve never heard it said as well as you just did, but by tapping into these different wisdoms that are available to me so that I ultimately my own wisdom then can make it better rounded choice.

Diana Hill 00:23:39  Yeah, I teach meditation. I’ve been teaching meditation for a long time, and one of my, you know how you have like these one hit wonders and like everyone loves this one, this meditation and one of the meditations that I that I lead, that really helps if you’re stepping into like, I want to make a wise effort decision here.

Diana Hill 00:23:53  Like I need to tap into my wisdom is and people can do this as we’re talking is you basically eyes open. You can do it stepping into a boardroom or to tell your kids you’re about to get a divorce or putting your dog out, whatever it is, you can take on the posture and spine of somebody who you believe and feel their strength. Like if you think about someone that you you think of as strong and solid. Solid as a mountain. Take on that physical posture and spine, and then you can take on the eyes, imagining you’re looking through the eyes of somebody. It could be a spiritual figure. It could be a child. It could be your best friend who sees the world really clearly. And then you can take on the heart, feel in your heart the warmth and the opening of your chest and in your heart, the heart of somebody who is compassionate and caring and can hold a lot. Okay. And then with that spine, with those eyes, with that heart, you take on the voice of your greatest wisdom and you step in with that.

Diana Hill 00:25:02  And that’s where, you know, sort of these practices of like, embodying wisdom, like, and that it’s not just mine, it doesn’t belong to me. When I was choosing my logo for your everything, I was just going through rebrand and I was like, okay, I’m choosing. I want to choose the California poppy because I live in California, Santa Barbara. They’re all over there. Wildflowers. They’re beautiful. They’re orange. All you want to do is go grab it. But at any state, it is illegal to pick the wildflower of that state. So you cannot pick a California poppy in California. And I love that. I’m like, that is me because it’s free to share, you know, like that. You like you offer what you got, you spread your seeds. But don’t try and pick it for yourself, you know, and so we can tap into wisdom physically like that. In embodied wisdom, we can tap into wisdom in a way of just thinking about times in your life when you had to make a hard decision, how did you find wisdom? And then you can also tap into wisdom by looking, I really think, nature and biomimicry.

Diana Hill 00:26:04  I interviewed a woman named Dana Baumeister as part of the biomimicry 2.0 series that I just loved her work, where you look to nature’s wisdom as clues into how to solve your problem. Like how does the oak tree adapt to really difficult adversity? You know, it has really thick bark, but then it also does this thing called crown shyness, where it it leaves enough room for other oak trees to come in, and it doesn’t spread its leaves on other people. And then it has leaf litter where it creates compost. How could I do that in my own life around something that I’m struggling with? So there’s lots of ways to access wisdom, nature, your body or other people.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:46  I can see why that meditation is a hit. It is a banger, as the kids would say, because when I at one point was working on how to lead people through values work, that that is a big part of act. And in general, I obviously reached out to Stephen Hayes and Russ Harris and asked them like, what’s your favorite? Like, what’s your top values exercise? And they both said, pick a guide.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:12  It’s you pick someone and you try and you try and understand what it is about that person that you admire. And that tells you something about what you value, what you just did. I loved because it allowed me to pick different people based on their skills, in the same way that you know what friend is right for this thing, and this other friend is good for the marriage conversation. I love the spine, the eyes, the heart of potentially three very different people. And I know for me, when I stopped looking for one person to have all the answers for me, things got a lot easier or I was able to tap into other people’s wisdom a lot more. In in 12 step recovery, you’re encouraged to pick a sponsor. And I always struggled with that because I was like, well, I like a lot about that person, yet that other person has that and that other person has that. and same with spiritual teachers. I’ve had the same sort of thing. Right. Right. And I love this idea, particularly in an in a way of action that you’ve just given of being able to select the best of different.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:25  I don’t want to say people different wisdoms.

Diana Hill 00:28:28  Yeah. And sort of back to this metaphor of a path again. You know, we’re sort of all walking in the woods and there’s going to be many paths as you’re walking through the woods. And if you come across one, it’s really good news, especially if you’re lost because it means that someone else has walked there. Yep. Right.

Diana Hill 00:28:47  It’s going to be easier.

Diana Hill 00:28:48  Than, like.

Diana Hill 00:28:49  Bushwhacking.

Diana Hill 00:28:50  It, you know? So someone else is walk there. But the other thing about choosing a path in the woods is that as you walk it, you’re creating a path, and you walk it slightly differently in a slightly different unit. Like like the trail tenders. How do people how do people keep trails going? They walk them, right. But they kind of change over time. Like the the trail today is not the trail ten years ago because every person that’s walked it has shaped it. So as you walk it with your wise steps, you’re shaping it for the person behind you.

Diana Hill 00:29:20  And that’s the the flexibility, the iterations, the there’s not just one way, there’s not just one truth that we’re all trying to figure out, right? There are many. And what I really believe is we are both individuals and we are collective. It’s a both and paradox. And we both have our our genius, but we also aren’t all that special.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:05  When I was in New York Last time I was wandering down the street, I saw a sign and it was called the Aesthetic Realism Foundation. I was like, whoa, what is that? I got to go in and investigate this. Well, it’s a school of thought by a philosopher whose name was Eli Siegel. But they had this pamphlet in there and it says, is beauty the making one of opposites? It goes through all these things. It basically says, like, does a work of art show the kinship to be found in all objects and all realities, and at the same time, the subtle and tremendous difference, the drama of otherness that one can find among the things of the world.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:48  Does every work of art have a certain precision about something, a certain concentrated exactness, a quality of particular existence, and does every work of art nevertheless present in some fashion the meaning of the whole universe, something suggestive of wide existence, something that has an unbounded significance beyond the particular. I’m not going to read all these, but I loved it when I thought about like, what makes for me both the best art and the best teachings. It’s that it’s making a beauty out of opposites. I’ve often said my favorite fiction writers are the ones that can make me laugh and cry, and the distance between the two is very short, you know, almost on the same page. That’s what I’m like, okay, this person is a master, and I feel like the same thing is true. And you, you talk about this in your book, in one of the frameworks, you have a step called Enter the Paradox. And that’s kind of what we’re talking about here. But I just thought, knowing what your love of poetry and all that, that you would find these interesting.

Diana Hill 00:31:51  Yeah. Yeah. So paradoxes are interesting. Paradoxes have three components to them. And this comes from Wendy Smith’s work. She’s in a professor of management and studies, large organizations and sort of paradoxes within them, the successful organizations. One component of the paradox is that it keeps on showing up over and over and over again. You know the paradox of needing both margins in your life space, silence, the strong desire to keep moving forward, get stuff done. Yeah.

Diana Hill 00:32:23  You know, be.

Diana Hill 00:32:24  Successful, not successful, but like.

Diana Hill 00:32:26  The urgency.

Diana Hill 00:32:26  Of just creation, right? Yes. The paradox of tradition versus progress. So there they show up over and over again. Another component of paradox is that.

Diana Hill 00:32:38  They need.

Diana Hill 00:32:38  Each other. One benefits the other. So to try and resolve the paradox, to just go yin without yawn or yang or without, you know, ghost, just go yang without yin you, you end up losing something. And and that is like such an important thing to remember.

Diana Hill 00:32:54  And I want to tell you what my favorite values exercise is, because it’s the complete paradox of what Steve Tae’s favorite values exercise. His values exercise exercises. Find an advisor. But mine is the paradox of that. The third component of a paradox is that they are contradictory. You feel the tension of being pulled in two different directions at once, right? So my my favorite values exercise is the paradox of Steve Hayes, which is what do you regret? And when I have people do is I have them and I’m going to actually have you do this, but I won’t make you say your regrets.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:30  Okay, okay.

Diana Hill 00:33:31  So imagine a piece of paper and imagine we were like in a therapy room and you would feel comfortable doing this with me because we have this confidentiality and we’ve developed a relationship over time, and we’re very close at this point. You share everything with me or most everything on one side of the paper. I’m going to ask you to write down four regrets. One regret is a what’s called a foundational regret, something that you wish you have been doing all this time, but that you’re not.

Diana Hill 00:33:56  You haven’t been doing like wearing sunscreen or saving money or getting your quarterly taxes in. Right. Okay. Another regret is a boldness. Regret? A moment in your life when you wished you were more bold, you went for it. Even an interview in the past six months where you wish you said something that was more bold that you didn’t step into as you’re launching this book. Do you have one?

Eric Zimmer 00:34:22  That one might take a little bit longer, but.

Diana Hill 00:34:25  You’re pretty bold, okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:26  I mean, at least at this phase in my life.

Diana Hill 00:34:29  Okay. Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:31  But one will come to me. I’m not perfectly bold and by any stretch of the imagination.

Diana Hill 00:34:36  Okay. So if you have the first one, that’s good. We’ll try a third one. If you have a regret. That’s a connection. Regret. A moment when you didn’t connect with somebody or a rift that you have with somebody that you haven’t repaired. Do you have any of those. Okay. And the last one is a moral regret, something that you regret that you’ve done that’s harmed someone or harmed yourself.

Diana Hill 00:35:00  As an addict, we all have moral regrets that we come on.

Speaker 5 00:35:03  This is the ninth step right here.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:05  I’ve got a reasonable list. Yes.

Diana Hill 00:35:07  Okay, so once you have that list, imagine if people can do this at home. These regrets come from the American Regret Survey, which is Daniel Pink’s survey that he surveyed over 4000 people and was able to distill. Most of our regrets fall into these categories foundational moral boldness and connection. So you’ve got those regrets on one side of the paper. Then I would have you do. If you were my client, is I would say, okay, flip over that paper and tell me, why is it that you care about these things? Why do they matter to you? Why do they hurt so much? What are the values that drive those regrets? So maybe pick one regret. Why do you care? Why does that matter to you?

Eric Zimmer 00:35:46  Well, I’m going to share the regret with you.

Diana Hill 00:35:48  Even better. Even better.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:50  My mom passed two weeks ago.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:52  And when someone passes, there’s all kinds of regrets that come up. But I have a very specific one, and I’m going to go in a couple of days with my friend Chris, and we’re going to go to this place in town called Scioto Downs, where they do harness racing. My mom grew up there to a certain degree. Her parents were really good friends with the people who owned it. She was around the horses all the time. It was something she loved. And my mom lived in Denver for a couple of years before she passed. But before that, she was here. And when I told her I had gone to Sedona down, she said, God, I would love to do that. And I never took her.

Diana Hill 00:36:26  It’s a connection. Regret. Why does that hurt?

Eric Zimmer 00:36:28  That’s what I’m having a I may have to talk it out loud to get to it.

Diana Hill 00:36:33  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:34  It’s that it would have made her so happy. And it would have been so easy for me comparatively. And and so I don’t know if that’s.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:45  It’s a the kind of regrets I have the most these days that come up are regrets of kindness. There was a moment I could have done a kindness and I passed it. That, for me, is the sort of regret that shows up time to time where I walk past something or I drive past something, and then a minute, two minutes down the road, I’m like, oh God, I should have done, I could have done X, I could have done Y, or the the kindness in public that I was too scared to do. On one hand, it shows kindness. You know, maybe that’s the the regret, but it’s also, I guess, it’s connection.

Diana Hill 00:37:23  Yeah. So what I’m hearing in there and correct me if I’m wrong, I’m just kind of feeling it out. Is that something that you value is using your energy when you have it? When it’s when it’s an easy move, when it’s nothing to you, when it’s when it’s, you know, but to to take that flow and put it somewhere that could help somebody out in a kind way, and especially if like a little, little bit for you is a lot for somebody else, that that little by little becomes a lot and that’s what you value.

Diana Hill 00:37:56  You value obviously a little by little. Little by little becoming a lot in your own life, but also that transmitted to others. And when you when you bring it into the arena of someone like your mom. Yeah. I don’t I don’t know what relationship you have with mom, no matter what relationship you have with your mother. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:13  Complicated.

Diana Hill 00:38:15  It’s usually complicated, but I will say she probably did. Little by little becomes a lot for you at different points in your life. Because that’s just the role of most if you lived with her at some point. But if we can actually contact that, if we can take the regret because something like a regret, especially around somebody that’s past that can become entrenched in us, it can be it can eat away at us. We can start to feel this like, wake up in the night and think about it. Oh my gosh, I wish I had done X, Y and Z and that is toxic regret. Yeah, we don’t want that kind of regret.

Diana Hill 00:38:48  What we want is oh thank you. Mindfulness bell That feeling that I have that ringing in my body. The sound of a regret is the sound of something that here and now, today. How can I do a little bit when it’s easy for me and I know it will be a lot for somebody else here today, for Diana, for, the next person that you’re encountering. And then you start to feel the regret because regrets are only healed in the present moment. Technology used to talk about how the past and the future are healed in the present. We heal the past by what we do today. We create the future by what we do today. So that is the power of regret. As Daniel Pink’s book is would say, the power of regret is to take action in the here and now. And I think that’s the very because people don’t come into therapy with me talking about, oh, all the people I admire, they come in and say, I wish I hadn’t done this or I’m doing this right now, and I feel so yucky about it, but I can’t stop doing it.

Diana Hill 00:39:53  Yeah. So let’s go there. Let’s make contact with that and I’ll tell you about what you care about.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:57  That’s such a great exercise. I really love it. And I love what I saw Daniel Pink’s work. I liked it because it was staking a middle ground that I hadn’t fully seen or articulated, because I don’t remember. I think it’s an artist named Paul Westerberg who was part of a band called The Replacements that I loved, and he has some song that basically says, you know, you have no regrets. What’s as cool as that? And and I was like, yeah, I mean, that’s it, right? But what I meant was toxic regret. Whereas people call it different things regrets, regrets. A better word maybe, than guilt, which can be kind of heavily laden. I don’t know if you make a distinction between the two, but I never want to turn off that faculty. I never want to turn off the faculty that can recognize when I’ve behaved in a way that’s not my best self, but I want to be able to use that faculty for good, not for making things harder for myself and ultimately others.

Diana Hill 00:41:02  Right? So it’s exactly what you were referring to before. It’s that that process of the paying or paying of regret. Can I make can I stay there a little bit longer to get curious about it, not just run away from it because I hate that feeling. I don’t like it. I’m going to die if I if I feel that feeling right. But can I stay there a little bit longer to get underneath it so that it can tell me how I want to take action? That is. Wow. I mean, if we could do that in a stay in the conversation a little bit longer, when we feel our cheeks getting red and we’re so angry at the other person and like, why am I so angry right now? Because there’s something that’s getting hurt in here. I take my kids to Plum Village now, my my two boys. I have two teenage sons and we go to Plum Village every year.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:44  I wish I’d been raised by you or your parents?

Diana Hill 00:41:47  Well, I don’t know.

Diana Hill 00:41:50  You may change your mind. Living with me or my parents for a couple of weeks. Okay. Yeah. So we take our kids to Plum Village over and over the past few years, and they, It’s actually pretty cool. They have this teen program. They’re in the teen program now where they, like, camp with the monks. And the abbot of Plum Village is brother who? He has a great podcast, by the way, called The Way Out is In. And I love brother for so many different ways. And I’ve interviewed him a couple of times, sometimes at Plum Village. Actually, I interviewed him in Hahn’s little hut. Oh. And I have all these pictures of how Ty left it from the hut. It’s on YouTube. You can go and see his shoes and his little bed, and then you see the window that he used to look out on that, he said, was his TV of the French countryside. And so I was getting ready for this interview with, with brother Apu.

Diana Hill 00:42:33  And I was asking my son was nine at the time and I was asking him, I said, what do you want to ask Brother Pooh? And he was nine, and he, his big brother, had just moved out of his room. So they had bunk beds and the 13 year old needed to go. Let’s just say you’re a 13 year old boy. You don’t need your nine year old brother anymore. So he left. But my little nine year old’s in the same room in this bed all by himself. And he said, well, can you ask, brother, what do I do when I’m lonely at night? What do I do when I’m lonely at night? And this is a question that all of us could have felt. What do I do when I’m anxious at night? Right? And so I had him record his little voice. And I played it for a brother. Who and what? What brother Pooh said was. Oh, when you’re lonely at night. But I want you to do.

Diana Hill 00:43:21  And this is a step in the open up to feelings part of my book, which is I want you to go to that feeling of loneliness and say hello, loneliness. I’m here for you. And then your loneliness won’t feel so lonely anymore. You know, a few days later, I played it for my son. A few days later I go and I’m, like, moving the dirty socks from his bed and straightening things up in there. And I look up in the little slots that are at the top of the bed, you know, and where they put like their posters and, you know, sometimes their gum. And out there there’s a little, there’s a little piece of paper that said, hello, loneliness.

Speaker 6 00:43:56  I’m not kidding you sweetest. I know, he said. So he wakes up in the night and he looks at it and he remembers he’s not alone.

Diana Hill 00:44:03  Right. And that’s the bit we want to run away. The wise part of ourself, it’s like, can I stay? Can I stay and can I actually take care of this feeling or can I be with it in a different way? Your idea around perspective, can I look at it differently? And then something shifts and then something shifts.

Diana Hill 00:44:22  So there’s so many intersections between psychology and Buddhism. And as you said, like all this stuff is just really Buddhism, but it’s also really gestalt. And it’s all the gestalt stuff is really. And where I see the field of psychology going and where I am invested in is getting out of this the ridiculousness of acronyms. Is it IFS or Act or DBT and that we all have to stake our claim as if we’re putting out countries on a globe and starting to look at the constituents, the ways in which all these different wisdom, traditions, science, spiritual traditions, indigenous wisdom, the continuance of where they overlap and where are the the collective truths that we are co-creating that we can share and that we give in our own individual ways are part of it, like our little piece of the path to this larger path that we’re all walking together, which hopefully is a path of kindness and a path of making this place a little bit better for all plants, animals, beings that are going to inherit it.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:24  That is a beautiful goal, and in some ways, I’ve been trying to do that with this podcast for 12 years is to sort of bring out these themes that emerge again and again from all these different places and make that that wisdom Available in a in a broader sense.

Diana Hill 00:45:42  Yeah, I’m starting this series. I’ve been because I’ve been podcasting for a lot of years doing wise effort and and have spent a lot of time in these like big spaces, go and do it in front of 400 people or online. And there’s like everyone’s in their little squares. And, and this year I just started, I did this like, wise effort move where I asked myself, there’s sort of something I do, which is an energy audit. And I asked myself, like what? Like in my body, what is a whole body? Yes. You know, what am I leaning towards? What what do I what does my body want? And then what is my genius? What am I really good at? So people could ask themselves, what am I really good? What comes easy to me that’s hard for other people? And then what are my values? What’s important to me? Where do I want to contribute in the world? And then this, this fourth piece of how can I be of service to something bigger than me, more than just me and my ego and my brand, you know? Yeah, Yeah.

Diana Hill 00:46:38  So we can ask this an energy audit. It’s a it’s a it’s a process to do an energy audit. But I so I did that for myself because I just was coming out of this book and I was feeling burned down. I was like, I can’t I cannot do this large, you know, talking to 400 people on zoom anymore. And what I, what I came up with was, I what I want more than anything is to be an intimate conversation with people. Unscripted, unedited, no notes. Don’t give me the questions ahead of time. I’m so turned off by how over edited everything is. we don’t know what’s real and what’s fake, and it’s going to increasingly be that way. And I want to talk about what is true. And so I came up with this idea of this series. It’s called Tell the Truth, Tell.

Speaker 6 00:47:23  The Truth of Doctrine.

Diana Hill 00:47:24  And Hell. And we’re going to meet in this like little.

Speaker 6 00:47:26  Downtown.

Diana Hill 00:47:27  Like in the Funk Zone of Santa Barbara Salon series.

Diana Hill 00:47:31  But we’re going to like interview. I’m going to interview rad people, and they’re not allowed to tell me their schtick, Like I’d be like. Tell me the truth. Like Rosemary trauma. Like she’s like my favorite poet of all time. She’s sick. Yeah. She’s coming. I’m like. Tell me the truth about grief. Trudi Goodman, who is Jack cornfields wife? Tell me the truth about what it’s like to be married to Jack Kornfield. I want to know. Yeah. And what it’s like. What it’s like to be a spiritual teacher and on this planet. You know, so I’m going to be doing this series. I’m going to stream it live. But, like, I’m super excited about it because if you think about for you, why is effort coming into this place where you get to combine your genius with what you really care about? And it’s a whole body. Yes. And it’s serving more people than you. Then whether you are a UPS person and you’re dropping off the packages and you love the dogs that you greet and the families that you serve, or you’re doing it in a salon series, you’re contributing to this world, and everybody has a unique way of doing that.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:32  That sounds like an amazingly good series and the conversations that are best. And this I would consider this a really great one, are the ones that I don’t look at my notes barely at all. I have not I have not looked at your notes except to reference where I knew something you had said was, and I wanted to. I wanted to be able to pull it. But in general, we’ve just talked and those are always, I think, the best conversations. You know, those are always the ones that I look back on. I go, that one was really special. There was none of the normal, like, okay, I’m going to lead somebody through their book in order or which is valuable. I mean, there’s not that there’s not value in that sort of thing, right? But for me, what I really enjoy and you sort of talking about finding what, what you most want to do is when we just sort of talk and, you know, I’ve got somebody coming up this afternoon, another conversation that I think is going to be more that way.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:25  Also, we’re just I just not overprepared.

Diana Hill 00:49:27  Right. So we could apply that to podcasting. Let’s start applying that to other things. Let’s apply that to work conversations where we come in with our whole preparation and our plan and all the things that we’re going to say and do to run this thing. If you’re a leader, if you manage people, and what if you came in with a beginner’s mind, you know that this person is going to co-create something with you. It’s not up to you. It’s up to us. And what if you did that at a meeting with your teacher, you know, like a teacher to your kids? Or what if you did that with a stranger on the on the street? And when we bring that curiosity to people, we have a different experience, because if you listen to any interview of me, it will never be the same. It will never, you know, it just it’ll be unique. The one thing the AI is doing in our world is it’s making everything the same.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:16  Yes it is.

Speaker 6 00:50:17  It’s you can read it. You’re like, oh my gosh, this caption, it’s so AI has a short little sentence with the.

Diana Hill 00:50:22  You know, and it starts to have that sound to it. Yes. In the same way that fast food made all the food taste the same in that, you know, category. right? And so what we actually crave as humans is we crave this like closeness that comes from being the truth of who we are. Of being unscripted, being real. And I’ve had I mean, I had I actually just a few months ago, I had a researcher, we were all set up for an interview and she said, give me the questions ahead of time. And I said, I.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:53  Don’t do.

Diana Hill 00:50:53  That. I’ve read all these studies. We’re going to explore these topics. I don’t know what questions I’m going to ask you. I’m sorry. It depends on what you said at the last, last thing I said to you. It’s just an organic, evolving experience.

Diana Hill 00:51:06  And she didn’t want to do it. She said, no, I can’t because I can’t prepare. And I said, well, then, thank goodness, because you wouldn’t have been a good interviewer.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:14  I get asked often for questions ahead of time and I’m like, I don’t have them. You know, I can give you the general thing we’re going to tell you I’ve prepared by learning about your book, like, yeah, I don’t quite know what we’re going to do. I’ve had a couple people decline, like you said, on those grounds. I’m like, wow, that’s that’s unusual.

Diana Hill 00:51:33  Yeah. It’s rigidity. It’s fear. It’s fear of entering into unknown spaces. And what we need more and more is the confidence to enter into the unknown to instead of uncertainty, like without certainty, because that’s what all of it is. We do not know what’s coming next. I mean, I said, the first mark of existence is impermanence, right? The second mark of existence is it’s going to be uncomfortable.

Diana Hill 00:51:56  And then the third mark of an existence is we are not solo selves in at all. So to assume that I have the questions and you have the answers is not the place that I want to be in with people or the reverse.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:11  Yeah, that’s beautifully said. So I’m going to ask you a question. I sent you one of my favorite poems of all time, Relaxed by Ellen Bass, because in your book you had the the story about the woman being chased by a tiger. Do you have a poem that you would love to share with us at the end here.

Diana Hill 00:52:30  Oh, can I give you both a poem and a way to write poetry?

Eric Zimmer 00:52:34  That would be best.

Diana Hill 00:52:34  Yes, I do with clients now actually do this when I train therapist too. So I learned from Rosemarie Trauma, who is my current favorite poet of all poets. Rosemarie wrote her book of poetry, The Landing, after her 16 year old, took his own life. And it’s it’s how she processed that grief. And she gave me this technique, which I started to try out, which is pick anything that you see in the space that you’re in.

Diana Hill 00:53:01  And so it could be like, I have a Pellegrino water bottle here and take a feeling or experience that you’re having like, excitement or grief or anxiety and write a poem about that item and that feeling. And you would start it with today my anxiety is a water bottle half full. So I wrote this poem. I was writing this poem every morning as part of my journal practice. I started writing poems and I wrote a poem about recovery. And it’s very embarrassing. I’m not a poet, but, But this one, is good for you. Okay, so I wrote this in my in my notes section September 20th, 2025. So today my recovery is an old pair of tennis. They were sitting on the couch and laced, battered, worn too much at the toe. I probably need a fresh pair. They’ve lost their bounce. Running the same route? A hundred, maybe a thousand times. Worn out. The pavement is hard. The road silent. Recovery has no fans, no bystanders cheering you on.

Diana Hill 00:54:12  The dog walkers don’t know about the fall you had last week. The ache in your hip. The effort it takes to get up again. Some days recovery is stopping right there, taking off your shoes and lying knees up on the side of the road. But just for today, my recovery is leasing up. Having faith I’ll get a second wind knowing that there will be a downhill today. Recovery is choosing to double, not heading out, trusting in the open road.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:38  That’s really good.

Speaker 7 00:54:40  Very good.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:40  Oh yes.

Diana Hill 00:54:42  But I love that process. That we can create poetry anywhere. And the use of metaphor to understand ourselves and the use of words to get around words. And anyone can do it at any point in time. So art, music, all these things are ways of expressing ourselves in that maybe we can’t quite always get to express with just usual language.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:06  I just came across a foundational regret.

Speaker 7 00:55:09  Oh yes.

Diana Hill 00:55:12  They come to you, don’t they? Good.

Speaker 7 00:55:13  They do. Good they.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:14  Do. And I’d forgotten all about it. So it’s it’s it’s just popped up the minute I thought about it though, I had a regret. So I was like, okay. And it was for a period of time My best friend Chris was also the editor of this podcast. Every morning we co-composed a haiku together. One of us had to take the first five syllables, then the some. The next guy took the seven, and then the same person did the five. And then we reversed those rules the next day, and we had a good long streak of doing those. And now I have a foundational regret that we haven’t kept doing it.

Diana Hill 00:55:44  Fabulous.

Speaker 7 00:55:45  What’s the value underlying back?

Diana Hill 00:55:47  Yeah. What’s the value that underlies that regret.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:49  There’s two.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:50  It’s connection. It’s my love with Chris. You know I mean who’s you know one of the great loves of my life and it’s creation I value creation. And the more I do it, I generally the better I feel. And so that’s an underselling of it.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:05  The more I do it, the more deeply me I feel.

Diana Hill 00:56:09  I bet it opens you up to like, if you could start with a little creative exercise like that, how the next piece of work that you do together would be shifted or different in some, in some shape or form. And so that creativity that you’re putting those two values together and it’s fun. And you can.

Diana Hill 00:56:27  Feel that the vitality of doing things like that. And it’s often those things that we think, oh, I’ll just put that aside because it doesn’t I don’t have enough time. We need to get to our agenda. And what we don’t realize is that spending our time on those actually makes our investment of time so much more meaningful. And when we invest our time in meaningful ways, we actually end up feeling like we have more time in our life. So yeah, that bring back the haiku. Maybe post one for us.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:55  I think, well, Chris is hearing this, so you got to get it on board Chris it’s coming.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:00  And I think that’s a beautiful way to wrap up, talking about how investing our time in the things that matter most is indeed what wise effort is. You and I will continue in the post-show conversation where we talk a little bit more about a couple ideas in your book that I wanted to hit. One of them is one of my favorite words of all time is sometimes. And you talk about that in your book. And so I’d like to explore that. Listeners, if you’d like access to post-show conversations and free episodes and want to support this show that always needs your support, you can go to one you feed. Thank you so much, Diana. I knew this would be a pleasure and it absolutely has been.

Diana Hill 00:57:41  Honor and delight. Thank you for spending the time with me.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:44  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:57  We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity. But we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

How to Tame Your Advice Monster and Become a Better Listener | Michael Bungay Stanier

June 5, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Michael Bungay Stanier, author of the bestselling The Coaching Habit, discusses how to tame your advice monster and become a better listener. Michael shares the surprising story of self-publishing after multiple rejections, and discusses core coaching principles like staying curious longer and asking better questions. He explores paradoxes in coaching, including balancing humility with confidence and being both fierce and loving. Michael also reflects on personal growth, integrating one’s shadow side, and maintaining perspective after achieving extraordinary success.

A Weekly Bite of Wisdom: Want to go deeper with the ideas we explore on The One You Feed? Every Wednesday, Eric shares a short, practical email that turns insights about mental health, relationships, purpose, habits, and personal growth into simple practices you can use right away. You’ll also receive our Weekend Podcast Playlist featuring a recap of the week’s episodes. It’s free, takes about a minute to read, and is enjoyed by thousands of readers each week. Sign up at oneyoufeed.net/newsletter.


Key Takeaways:

  • The 10th anniversary of “The Coaching Habit” and its journey from rejection to self-publishing.
  • The philosophy of coaching and the importance of asking good questions.
  • The concept of taming the “advice monster” and the value of staying curious.
  • The paradoxes in coaching, such as balancing confidence with humility.
  • The significance of recognizing and integrating one’s shadow side.
  • The role of presence and deep listening in effective coaching.
  • The importance of being fierce and loving in relationships.
  • The challenges of personal growth and the internal conflicts we face.
  • The unpredictability of success in writing and the nature of creative work.
  • The idea of holding outcomes lightly while caring deeply about one’s work.

Michael Bungay Stanier is the author of many books and is best known for his book The Coaching Habit which is the best-selling coaching book of the century with close to a million copies sold.  In 2019, he was named the #1 thought leader in coaching. Michael was the first Canadian Coach of the Year, has been named a Global Coaching Guru since 2014 and was a Rhodes Scholar. Michael founded Box of Crayons, a learning and development company that helps organizations transform from advice-driven to curiosity-led. His latest book is How to Work with (Almost) Anyone:  Five Questions for Building the Best Possible Relationships

Connect with Michael Bungay Stanier: Website | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter

If you enjoyed this conversation with Michael Bungay Stanier, check out these other episodes:

Starting Well to Finish Well with Michael Bungay Stanier

The Coaching Habit with Michael Bungay Stanier

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Episode Transcript:

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:00:00  The more you can realize how little you actually know about the person, about what’s really going on, about what’s really hard for them, about what the context really is. The more you can realize how unlikely it is that the advice you’ve got is the advice that they’re actually looking for.

Chris Forbes 00:00:25  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:09  Most of us have what Michael Bungay Stanier calls an advice monster. The part of us that can’t wait to weigh in, fix things, and offer the solution before the other person has finished talking. Taming it, he says, comes down to one big change. Stay curious a little longer. Rush to advice a little more slowly. That idea sits at the center of the coaching habit. The best selling coaching book of the last 25 years, now in its 10th anniversary edition. His conclusion after a decade of teaching it, I need to know almost none of the content to be helpful. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed Michael. Welcome back.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:01:52  Eric, how nice of you to invite me back. Clearly your memory is going because you can’t remember how bad I was the last time, and you were persuaded to bring me.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:00  Back the last three times? Because as I was saying to you before, you are a four time guest, which is pretty rare company. I don’t know if it’s company you want to be part of or not, but it is rare company.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:12  So yes, we had you on in 2016, 2223. I’ve had you more recently than that. You might be a five time guest.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:02:21  Well, maybe what’s happened in the last 2 or 3 years is we’ve gone from knowing each other through podcasts to actually becoming friends and companions. So, I mean, yeah, we’ve we’ve had lots of great conversations about your book, which I’m super excited about and what it means to write a book and what it means to try and sell a book and all of those things. And we’re also connected through J. Klaus’s community, the lab. So I think we’ve just kind of deepened, deepened our friendship a little bit over the last number of years, which has been lovely.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:50  Yeah, that was a way of saying I’ve seen way too much of you like that, wasn’t it? All right.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:02:55  I hear you. I hear the subtext.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:57  So we are going to be talking about your book called The Coaching Habit. Say less, ask more. Change the Way You Lead Forever, which is in its 10th anniversary.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:08  You came on in 2016 and we discussed it. And is it the best selling coaching book of all time? Is that a true statement?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:03:14  Well, it’s the best selling coaching book of this millennia. This is the most dramatic way I can put it, which is like over the last 25 years, it’s sold, you know, a million and a half copies or thereabouts, which, considering it got turned down by a regular publisher and I ended up self-publishing, is pretty fantastic. You self-published.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:34  That?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:03:35  Yeah. Yeah, I.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:37  I did not know that. Wow.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:03:39  I had another book published through a New York publisher called Do More Great Work. And then I bought them this idea for this book, and I literally wrote 6 or 7 versions of the coaching habit, which they kept going. And we like you, but not yet. Go away and have another go at it. And eventually I was like, okay, so you know, you beaten my confidence up a bit, but I’m really sure that there’s something here.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:04:03  So here it is. Take it or leave it, because I can’t take this back and forth anymore. Pretty confident that they were going to take it because, you know, the previous book had sold 70 or 80,000 copies, which is yeah, pretty good.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:15  Very.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:04:15  Good. And they said no. And so I was disappointed because it was the polite way of putting it, and I licked my wounds for a bit, but then went, you know, I’m really going to I really think there’s something here. So I’m going to self-publish it. So I found a designer and I found an editor, and then I connected in the end with a hybrid publishing company called Page Two that had done my book since then. But yeah, I self-published it, which has meant not only has it become a best seller, not only does that make me feel very smug, but it’s also financially more lucrative for me as well. Like, I earn 3 or 4 times the amount of money as a result of that which has has been life changing.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:55  That is a classic example of, you know, there’s that old Taoist story, right? The farmer and the horse. Right? Many people know it, right? It’s basically like something good happens and everybody says to the farmer, oh, congratulations. He’s like, well, you know, maybe, sure, maybe. And something bad happens and they’re like, oh, this is terrible. And he’s like, maybe. And the point is it just keeps going. Yeah. And that’s a classic example of like, okay, the book got turned down by the publisher. I’ve just been beaten about the head for like a year. Yeah, it’s pretty low point. It’s pretty easy to conclude. I just don’t have it. This isn’t any good I don’t. And then bam! I mean, that is that is such a great story. Yeah.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:05:38  It’s one of those great ways of trying to navigate life, which is when do you keep going and when do you give it up? Yeah. And it’s really helpful to understand, there are times where it’s been great to keep going.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:05:52  Like the coaching habit book seems to say, keep going. Keep betting on yourself. Right. But, it’s also. There are times in life where you’re like, you should take a hint and you should actually know when to quit. And one of the things that I’ve been sitting with is trying not to figure out what’s the right answer. Do I keep going or do I not keep going? It’s actually going. What’s my bias? Like, what am I inclined to do in a situation rather than what’s the right answer in this situation? So my inclination in general is to keep going too long. Like I’m I’m a stick with it rather than a quit early sort of person. And you know that that bet pays off, regularly. And also that cost me time and effort and money and relationships as well, because I’ve stuck around too long and it hasn’t worked out. So the wisdom for me in this story is know your bias. And as you come to a crossroads, consider what you’re called to do and then consider your bias and go, what’s this telling me? What’s my bias telling me? And do you need to shift your decision at all when you become more conscious of what your bias is?

Eric Zimmer 00:07:06  Yes, 100%.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:07  I refer to it as tendency. What’s your tendency to do in this situation? And knowing that can be really helpful. For me, I have a tendency to go along to get along. So if I think I should say something, I will talk myself out of it very, very easily. So I have to over correct a little bit. I have to give a little bit more weight to the say something side, because that’s my bias. I know what I, I know what I will naturally gravitate to. And learning that about ourselves is so helpful. We talked on your podcast recently about this idea of like, how do we hold ourselves accountable while being kind? And when I work with coaching clients often, that’s what one of the early things I’m trying to figure out. Does this person have a tendency to just run themselves into the ground with negative self-talk? Okay, I need to correct the other direction. Is this somebody who just doesn’t take enough responsibility for what they do?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:08:03  They’re like, oh, I’m doing self-care.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:08:05  So it’s fine that I didn’t do the thing. And you’re like, okay. So yeah, we’re trying to move you more into that kind of conscious middle.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:13  Yeah, I think that’s what a good coach or teacher does. Right. They know. And so doing it for ourselves is really valuable. That’s a great insight.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:08:21  It’s a paradox really, Eric, which is like it’s like trust your inner voice and don’t trust your inner voice, which is like, get better at tuning in to to what’s going on and what your intuition is saying and what your body is saying. There’s so much wisdom in doing that, but also be skeptical about what’s going on, which is like, you know, it’s like it’s like when your brain tells you that your brain is your most important organ and you’re like, but wait. What? What? Organs telling me that. Yeah, it’s more deeply trust yourself and become more skeptical about the stories you tell yourself and hold both of those things.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:58  Yeah, I could not agree more.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:00  I could not agree more. I every time I have somebody on who’s like, trust your intuition, I’m like, well okay. But like yeah. Yes. And there’s a little more to it here than that. Okay. We have, failed to do the basic premise of the show, which is probably fine. Most listeners are like, do I really need Michael to talk about the parable for the fourth time? They’re going to get it whether they want it or not. And those of you that are new, here you go. This is what you come for. The parable. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. one is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. They think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins, right? And the grandparent says, the one you feed.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:01  So talk to me about that parable through the lens of the coaching habit. Ten year anniversary.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:10:10  Well, what comes up for me, Eric, is an inquiry about how do you keep showing up as the best version of yourself. You know, how which is at the deepest level, what coaching is about? I mean, coaching presents as a let’s get together and figure some stuff out because you feel stuck and you want to make progress. But at a deeper level, it’s like, how do I bring out the very best in someone? And there’s an obvious answer which I suspect you’ve heard more than once on this pod, which is like I try and feed the good wolf and I try not to feed the bad wolf. But there’s something about the power of just recognizing the two wolves, because they’re just both there and me. Nobody wins. My wolves will be fighting forever. Yeah, like I have. I have both of these wolves. And I have a part of me that is kind and generous and thoughtful and all the things that I, you know, I would overtly aspire to be.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:11:11  And I just recognize the parts of me that are malicious and avaricious and self-centered and insensitive and power hungry and status worried and all of that sort of stuff that more kind of, let’s call it the more venal side of me. And it’s just it’s just like they both, they both coexist. And I’m less about these days, probably less about trying to to find a victor. I’m more about just seeing the two wolves and going. They are both true about who I am and I’m never going to have one win over the other, which is great because I don’t want the bad wolf to win over the good wolf. And I’m probably a little one dimensional if the good wolf wins over the bad wolf. My goal, and this is kind of getting into, you know, Jungian shadow work. And I think of people like Dan Siegel’s book Mine Site or Debbie Ford’s book The Dark Side of the Light Chasers is to see what’s true about my shadow self and claim it for myself, not so that I become bad, but so that I recognize that those are parts of who I am, and I’m actually less likely to be triggered by that, or have that behavior leak out because I’m in denial about it.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:12:37  I’m trying to I’m trying to integrate. Yeah. In all the kind of messy catastrophe that I am.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:43  And there is an energy in some of those less ideal parts of ourselves I find, right? There’s energy there that can be that can be used. But I love the fact that you said that, because that’s the thing to me about the parable ultimately, is I just think it normalizes the fact that, like, this is going on inside all of us. And. Right, of course it is. Of course, sometimes you want to be good and other times you want to, you know, walk out a Whole Foods with an entire shopping cart of groceries without paying for that. Like, that’s just completely normal, right? Well, maybe that was a that was a that’s a very specific example.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:13:19  Yeah, exactly.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:21  If you’re listening, if you’re an Amazon employee, please disregard that.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:13:28  I mean, one of the most powerful exercises I’ve ever done for myself comes from this dark side of the Light Chasers book that I mentioned.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:13:34  And I had noticed that I was, in a mental battle with a former boss of mine. Now, I’d quit this job. I’ve moved to a different country, and almost the whole time I didn’t think about that job. But occasionally this guy would enter into my my mind and I’d just get hit up. You know, I just kind of imagine the back and forth where I would finally crush him and and belittle him and prove my birth and his belittling. And I did this exercise. And point one is you think of your your nemesis, your villain, and you write down all the things that just you just hate about them, just drive you crazy, you know? So I’m writing, this guy is status obsessed. He’s money driven. He controls the power. He doesn’t like people. he’s small minded, all of these things. And it was. It felt pretty good writing all these down because I’m like, these are all true. I’m pretty sure about it. But then the second step and the powerful step is you then kind of cross out that person’s name and you go, I am I am power obsessed.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:14:45  I am status driven, I am money hungry, I am, I don’t care about people, I only care about my own self-aggrandizing. And that just was this truth to writing this down as I named and claimed and owned all these aspects about me, which I just couldn’t but deny. But I just had spent my whole life kind of pushing them into my shadows, just pretending that they weren’t part of who I am. And you know, I can’t promise us that it works like this for everybody all the time. But in that moment, kind of in abound, I was free.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:22  Yeah.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:15:22  I have just never thought about this guy again in the same way. I mean, he’s shown up once or twice in conversations or whatever, but I just, I just don’t get hit up about it. I’m like, look, wherever he is, I hope he’s doing fine. I’m totally happy never to bump into him ever again in my life. I don’t want I don’t want to meet him or talk to him.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:15:40  But I’m no longer I’m no longer distracted by him.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:43  I have two things to say that. First is head up an Australian expression.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:15:48  Oh, I don’t know. It feels British to me. You know, my dad was British and I lived in England for a while, so I think it might be,

Eric Zimmer 00:15:55  It might be British.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:15:56  Yeah, but it’s sort of Anglo in some way.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:58  Yeah, yeah, it’s a great phrase. It’s not one I would normally use. The second one is you were saying that I was thinking about one of my most common arguments in my head that runs very often, and it has to do with the guy who’s editing this podcast right now. Of course.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:16:13  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:14  Who for most of the time is a perfectly reasonable and enjoyable human being. But when it comes to certain music that he should like, he doesn’t. And I spend an inordinate amount of time in my mind. I don’t know why I even bother. I argue in my head with him to convince him And I’m realizing now maybe this is a problem I needed.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:16:38  Yeah. Maybe you’ve got some shadow work to do around your crystals. Let me know about your taste of music. And actually, it’s not it’s not that great. So I’m kind of on Chris’s side on this one.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:48  No, trust me, you would not be. You would not be. All right, moving on. All right. The coaching habit. I’m going to make a couple statements about it. You can feel free to disagree with them if you want. But in general, I think it was a book that normalized that having conversations with people in which we’re trying to bring out the best version of themselves is a thing that can happen in a whole lot of situations without the fancy name life coach in front of it. I think that’s one of the things you wanted to do. And then the second is that you primarily made it around asking the right questions. That coaching is, in its most basic, is a form of asking questions so that others can help find their way to the answer Is that generally correct? Yeah.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:17:35  I mean, I agree, and I’ll give you my exact language around how I think about it. The goal was to un weird coaching for normal people. Okay. I had trained as a coach. I could see the power of this as a technology, but coaching still has this. But back ten years ago certainly had just too much woo woo and mystery and black box. And I was like, look, there’s a whole bunch of people managers, parents, teachers, sports coaches who could benefit from knowing how to do this. And I just want to make it easy and accessible for people. So unwitting coaching was kind of the big goal. And then in terms of naming a single behavior change I was hoping to create, it was helping people to stay curious a little bit longer. So I would that’s that’s obviously really closely related to the ask good questions. But there’s a way that staying curious longer. It is not necessarily only about asking questions. It’s about staying present. It’s about taming your advice, monster.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:18:40  It’s about creating more space. It’s about staying a bit more silent and listening a bit more deeply. There’s more to it than just a good question, but in the end, the book says, look, let me give you seven good questions. Let me give you some tips on how to ask a question. Well, and that’s going to carry you a long way down the path.

Speaker 4 00:19:03  How? Do.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:25  You confess in the ten year edition that you originally had 108 questions in the book. Yeah, I, I assume that was one of the ones that got rejected by that publisher. Yeah, right.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:19:40  That was like the third draft where they’re like, oh, go away and write another version of this book. And I’m like, okay, well, okay, what if there’s 100? I like the number 108. And yeah, it was a it was a shocker. That was a terrible book. That was one of the rejected versions of it as well. So, you know, I spent years really playing with the questions and trying to figure out the order and figure out which of the seven, you know, should be five.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:20:02  Should it be nine? Should it be some other number? Yeah. Which of which of them? In what order do I teach them? Yeah, there was a lot of playing around with a lot of scraps of paper where I kept writing things down and moving them around.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:13  Well, I think questions are so fundamental. In questions we ask ourselves, the questions we ask others. I think you are a person who, more than anyone I know, may have really taken that on board. I mean, I believe I was part of a book where you captured collections from. I mean, you might have called them smart people. I’m not throwing myself in that category, but so questions of clearly something you really believe in. And in this 10th anniversary, there’s a new chapter. And one of the things in that chapter is you call it coaching question architecture. Yeah. And so I want to get to that in a second. But before we get into sort of that semi technical discussion, how might we think about coming up with our own good questions.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:21:03  Yeah. Starting with a what if I asked a question rather than offered up an opinion, an advice, a suggestion, a solution you’ve already won? That’s already a fantastic start, particularly if it’s a it’s a genuine question, not a fake question, because sometimes people have gone all questions are good. But let me offer up this piece of advice disguised as a question. So they go, hey, have you thought about. Which isn’t a question at all. It’s just advice for the question mark attached to the end. Yeah, but the first thing to know is, look, if you can, if you can just ask any good question or it’s any question that’s probably helpful a lot of the time. So celebrate that. Then there are just some basics around questions that are good to know, which is it’s good to know just the difference between an open question and a closed question. And lots of people listening already know this, but a closed question typically will get an answer yes or no, or maybe or I don’t know or I don’t care.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:22:02  But it’s kind of a question that often leads to a focusing of the conversation. And they have a place. There’s a way that a closed question can create understanding or create commitment. So it’s not that you should never use closed questions, but if you’re trying to get a conversation rolling, close question will typically have you doing a lot of the work and an open question. You know, it requires a person to give you more than a one or a two word answer, so that’s helpful. The second kind of basic, really essential to understand is shorter questions tend to be better than longer questions. I’m in trouble, though on exactly you and your polysyllabic approach to life. The more cognitive lifting somebody has to do to understand your question, the harder it is for them to come up with a good answer. So one of the things that I see people do is sometimes they feel the need to set context, create a big build up, you know, explain where they went on their family vacation two years ago as part of the lead into it, and eventually get to a question.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:23:08  And quite often, I mean, I sort of say, look, pretend you’re James Bond. You know, in a James Bond movie, the action starts the first second the movie starts. I mean, James Bond is jumping off a dam or beating somebody up or in a car or something. It’s on, so you should get to it fast. The other thing that people sometimes do is they kind of do it like a drive by questioning approach, which is like, here’s 19 questions I’ve thought of. I’m just going to ask you, all of them and hope one of them sticks. And that can be kind of overwhelming. So one of the things that can be really powerful is just shortening a question. So if you want if you want a lead up phrase to it, the phrase hey, just out of curiosity is a really good one. It actually softens the impact of a question that might be difficult. And then just make it a short question. Hey, just out of curiosity, what’s hard about this for you? Hey, just out of curiosity, what do you really want in this moment? Hey, just out of curiosity, if we’re going to say yes to this, is there anything we need to say no to? To make that choice a bolder one and a clearer one? Hey, just out of curiosity, what was useful for you in this conversation right now? One of the questions in the book is I call it the most powerful coaching question in the world.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:24:25  It’s just three words. It’s. And what else? Because their first answer is not necessarily their only answer. It may not even be their best answer. So you know, and what else is an incredibly powerful coaching question? But yeah, make a choice whether you want it to be closed or open. Keep it short. That’s a really good start. And then ask any question that comes to mind.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:48  Well, you did something impressive there. You actually illustrated your point by working in five or so of the seven coaching questions in the book. That was that was very good. If we were to say, hey, AI, take Michael’s advice on asking questions and apply it to Eric’s approach to podcasting, interviewing, and give him a grade, I’m pretty sure I’d be in the D range.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:25:13  So I mean, the upside would be your your interviews would be like 17 minutes rather than an hour long thing. It’s like everybody’s like desperate. We’re like, we should stop talking, Eric, and just get to it.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:24  For crying out loud. I’m sure there’s people who think that. I’m sure there are. At 12 years in, I’m not saying I can’t grow and change, but I. You know, I got a little old dog.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:25:34  Yeah, I.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:35  Just got a little bit of style at this point. Those are all really good rules. And I was thinking a little bit earlier about something that you say at a later point in this new chapter, which is that what people want beyond an answer are three interrelated things to be seen, to be heard, to be encouraged. And I love that you say beyond an answer, because you’re not precluding that. People actually do want answers. Right. I think that we often get into this either or with this. Either I need to see here and encourage and validate or I’m over here giving advice, you know, stepping into solution. And there’s some research out there that seems to show that the most useful conversations are where both occurs. Not advice. Not advice, but something beyond simple validation.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:29  And that’s what I love about what you’re bringing here is it’s a way to see, hear, encourage, validate. And I don’t love this word, but I’m going to use it. Challenge.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:26:42  Yeah. Well it’s I mean it’s interesting you say there’s research out there saying, look the best conversations have have a mix of this. I’ve got a slightly different point of view.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:51  Okay.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:26:52  The best conversations are the ones that are actually helpful to the person who you’re having the conversation with. So ask them how you can be most helpful because it will depend like there’s some times where people come to you and they’re like, they do not want a coaching question. They just want you to tell them where you put the tea bags because they can’t find the tea bags. So they’re like, where are the tea bags?

Eric Zimmer 00:27:19  That’s a real challenge here.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:27:21  Yeah, exactly. How do you feel about tea? And I stop with the coaching question. Give me. Just tell me where the tea bags are. And there are other times where they’re like, they just want you to.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:27:30  They don’t even want you to ask a question. They just want you to say, man, that sounds like it’s hard. Man, I can see why you’re struggling with that. Wow. I’m so impressed that you’re you’re able to sit with this and try and figure this out. There’s no there’s not even any questioning involved. There’s just a kind of a presence to the struggle or a presence to whatever’s going on with you. So, you know, the definition I have for coaching is can you stay curious a little bit longer? Can you rush to action and advice, giving a little bit more slowly? Yeah. So it doesn’t preclude giving advice. That’s one of the things that drives me nuts around coaching, which is like you can never give advice. And I’m like, that feels like it’s a selfish decision. What you’re trying to do is to be as helpful as possible to the person who you’re serving, who you’re in conversation with, and partly you can understand that from what they want. You can ask them, hey, how can I how can I help? It’s actually another one of the questions in the Coaching habit book.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:28:28  How can I help? What do you want from me? And sometimes the more subtle insight here is when they tell you what they want. You don’t have to say yes. You can say yes or no. Or maybe like I could say, hey Eric, how can I help you here? Because like, tell me the answer to this thing. And I’m like, okay, he wants the answer. I’ve got an answer. I will make sure he gets an answer, but I don’t have to give it to him right away. So I might say, and this is a script people can steal. I go, hey, Eric, I hear your challenge, and I hear you want an answer. I’ve got an answer I want to share with you for sure. I’ve got a couple of great answers. but before I give you what I’m thinking, let me ask you. What have you figured out already? Like, what do you know to be true? What do you think the real challenge is here for you and I will get that other person to do the work.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:29:17  I will stay curious longer. And then I’ll bring in my advice and my solution, because I’ve made a promise that they’ll walk out of here with a solution. I just don’t need to give that as the first thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:51  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight, breath shallow. Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday, I send weekly bites of wisdom, a short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show things like mental health, anxiety. Relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day it’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it if you’d like extra fuel for the weekend. You also get a weekend podcast playlist. Join us at one UFI newsletter. That’s one you get and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. What I found in coaching people was at a certain point, people are like, I hired you because I don’t know what to do, for crying out loud.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:51  What should I do? And if I just keep being like, well, you know what? I’m going to ask you this. I could sense of frustration, which is like, I don’t know. Help me. And I love what you said, which is you’re going to get it. I have some opinions. Yeah, but hang on a little bit longer.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:31:07  So when somebody comes to you, go, man, that sounds like a real problem. What have you already figured out? And what else have you figured out? Great. What other ideas have you got? And how else are you thinking about this? This is brilliant stuff, I love it. So having seen all of that, what do you think the real challenge is here? I mean, really for you? Great. What else is the challenge? So what do you think the real challenge is? If that’s the real challenge, what are your first ideas about this? Oh, I love that. What else could you do? Oh that’s interesting.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:31:32  What else could you do? Oh, man. Is there anything else you could do here? Okay, you’ve got some great options here. I’ve got 1 or 2 I can add here. Maybe this and this. now you see all of that. What is it that you want to do? Oh, you want to do that? Oh, okay. So what’s the real challenge here for you in getting that done? and, you know, if you’re listening to this, you can imagine all the other things that are saying on the other side. What I’ve learned is I need to know almost none of the content to be helpful. And I’ll give you an example of what I mean by that. You know, over the years, because I’ve been the book has been out for ten years, but I’ve been teaching this for 15 years. I’ve taught this in a lot of different countries around the world. I have coached people in more than 30 languages, none of which I speak. So I will say to somebody like, I used to work with Nokia, so I’m up in Lapland, northern Finland.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:32:28  It’s like, you know, there’s a Finnish joke which is like, how can you tell the difference between an extroverted Finn and an introverted Finn? Well, extroverted Finns look at your shoes when they’re talking to you, and introverted Finns look at their shoes. But I was sitting in Lapland and I said to them, what’s on your mind? And this engineer from Nokia told me in Finnish what was on his mind. And I go, that sounds like a thing. What’s the real challenge here for you? And he explained it to me in Finnish. I go, great, what else? What else is a challenge here? And he would say a bit more and I go, great, anything else here is a challenge. And he would explain the other aspect of it. In Finnish I go great. So knowing that, what’s the real challenge here for you? And he would go, oh, well. And honestly, that. That already was revelatory to him. I had no idea what was the details of being said.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:33:18  I could tell that it was a real thing. I could tell he wasn’t playacting. I could tell we were having a real conversation. But I don’t need to know the details to be of service. And in some ways, that is one of these kind of counterintuitive insights around almost had a tame your advice monster, which is, the more you can realize how little you actually know about the person, about what’s really going on, about what’s really hard for them, about what the context really is. The more you can realize how unlikely it is that the advice you’ve got is the advice that they’re actually looking for. Before we hit the record button, we were talking about change, and we’re talking about your new book and this idea that when you realize how hard it is to change yourself, you should realize how minuscule, impossible it is to try and change somebody else, even if they want to be changed. You know, you have to allow that agency to stay with them.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:15  Yeah, that is all very good advice.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:19  Yeah.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:34:20  I spent ten years going. I get the irony of me giving advice on how not to give advice. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:26  I’m sure you’ve gotten that before. But, you know, I want to go into a couple of paradoxes that you bring up that are about the coaching mindset or about being a coach. Yeah. The first one you say is be confident and be humble.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:34:43  Right. I think if there was a single lesson I’ve learned over the ten years of talking about the coaching habit and teaching the coaching habit, it’s this is the power of the being of a coach or the being of somebody being coach, like, versus the doing of it. Because the book, the first, you know, the first book is all about the doing of coaching. Here are seven questions. His ways of asking questions. This chapter is about the being of of coaching and how being a role model can be incredibly powerful. When people are working with you. Partly they’re there for the wisdom that you bring and the questions that you ask.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:35:21  Partly, they’re there for you. They see who you are as a as a man, as a human, as a person who’s had this life and had this journey. And you’re role modeling something for them in the way that you just you are in the world. When I think of the people who who are powerful role models, and I think you’re one of these people, Eric, they have this way of embodying a presence that they bring. And when I think about the self that they bring to the world, there’s this idea of this humble curiosity, I’m sorry, this humble confidence. What I mean by that is by humble I the metaphor I use is they’ve got their feet on the ground. You know, there’s actually a connection between humans, which is a word for ground. And this idea of humility, which is like when you’re humble, you’ve just got a kind of clear eye on the strengths and the weaknesses and the complexities and the messiness and the glory of you. I know the things that I’m really good at, and I know the things I’m not really good at, and I’m pretty grounded in that, and I’m pretty relaxed about that.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:36:32  I hold it lightly. And this humility allows people to be less brittle, less less vulnerable to what’s going on. In particular, I kind of imagine they’ve got not just their feet on the ground, but their toes in in the mud. They’re kind of they’re grounded like that literally and metaphorically. And the confidence is I kind of coming back to a sense of self-belief about the value of who you are and the value of what you do. You know, I sign my emails with the short phrase, which is you’re awesome and you’re doing great. And I kind of stumbled across it by accident. I was facilitating something, and in a moment of inspiration, I got people to look at each other and go, hey, now say to your partner, you’re awesome and you’re doing great. Super awkward. The first time the group had to do that, I think we’re in England, which only made it worse because that’s like not what they say in England. But I got them to do another 3 or 4 times over the hour and a half, and by the end they were like, you are awesome and you are doing great.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:37:33  And they were high fiving and some people were hugging and it was great. And there’s something in that phrase which is fundamentally, you know, you’re a person of value. Fundamentally you have. I’m trying not to be cheesy North American here. I’m trying to tap into a real sense of awe, which is like, fundamentally, it is amazing who you are, that you are alive in this moment, the miracle and the glory of it all. And you’re doing great. This as a recognition about whether it’s going well for you at the moment, or whether it’s going bad for you, you’re probably doing your best. You’re probably showing up with as much courage and as much fortitude and as much grit and all of those things as you’ve got. So keep going. You’re awesome and you’re doing great. And this idea of humble confidence is this kind of holding both of these things, which is like, man, I am a I’m a messy and flawed human being. I’m also awesome and I am doing great.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:38:30  And they are both true.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:32  100% humility is a big thing in AA because it’s in one of the steps. Yeah, humility is often thought of as thinking less of yourself, but the understanding I always got is the one that you use. It’s like kind of knowing my strengths and my weaknesses. And I actually find that that humility allows a certain kind of confidence also.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:38:55  I think so each other.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:56  Yeah, exactly. Yeah, exactly. And so I really like that one. Be light and be grounded.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:39:03  Let me tell you, if I made one just final thing around the humility piece. Just picking up on what you said, which is it can show up in kind of two ways that are slightly corrupted to to this meaning that you and I are talking about. One is the sense of effacement. You’ve got to belittle yourself. You’re like, you’re lesser than. And then there’s the whole humblebrag thing, which is like, oh, look how amazing I am. And I’ve just casually mentioned that.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:39:28  And those feel like slightly corrupted versions of, of this sense of humility, which is this kind of, understanding and comfort with the, the complexities that we, we have.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:40  Yeah. And I think you also said it in that just recognition. Everybody’s a mixed bag. We are a mixed bag. Exactly.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:39:48  It’s like we’ve got two wolves fighting, I imagine.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:51  Imagine. All right. Be light and be grounded.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:39:55  Yeah. If the humble confidence is about how you show up. Be light and be grounded. Feels to me like a way you manage process. You manage the way you show up and you do things in the world and particularly in coaching conversations. I remember going to a coaching conference many years ago and being really struck by the lack of humor in the room. There was just this kind of slight self-importance and dour ness and unwillingness to see the absurdity of it all, and also in kind of coaching and in these kind of interactions. There’s a way that things can feel and get a little abstract and highfalutin, and there’s something about the very best of process which feels like it is grounded in the moment.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:40:53  It is grounded in reality. It’s grounded in a practicality around. We’re trying to figure some stuff out so you can get some stuff done, and there’s a lightness to it, which is there is a playfulness and there is a humor and there is a kindness, and there’s a kind of crinkling of the eyes, which is like, even in the toughest time, the ability to have this kind of gift of lifting towards the light feels like it can be extremely powerful. And, you know, an ability to go or it doesn’t have to be all serious, and it doesn’t have to be all grinding it out and grit and getting things done. And it can’t be trivial and it can’t be just like, let’s crack another joke. But there’s this way of trying to navigating the way you interact with somebody, with both lightness and a sense of groundedness, can be really powerful.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:44  Speaking of lightness, this may be the least flamboyantly dressed I have ever seen you. That is true. Is there a wardrobe change for 26? Did I catch you on an off day? What’s going on?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:41:58  I think you kind of caught me on an off day.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:42:00  I think I feel like I’ve let myself down and I’ve let you down.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:03  Go change, go change.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:42:05  Actually, it’s like I’m not wearing any trousers. Does that help?

Eric Zimmer 00:42:08  That does help. It does help. Yeah, particularly for Joe in the engineering booth. He’s. He’s paying much closer attention. All right. Be fierce and be loving.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:42:19  Yeah. So I think of this as the paradox you bring to relationships with others. You know, I’m saying in a coaching conversation. But I’m really thinking of this in any relationship that you care deeply about. So this may be you as a parent or as a child of of parents or for your your closest to friends or for the people you have a coaching relationship with. You know, like how do you show up for this person? What’s the fullest expression of holding the relationships that they feel seen and heard and encouraged. And I think it starts with this kind of love, which is my job, is to want the very best for you. You need to know that I am on your side.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:43:07  I see you, who you are in all your complex messiness. And like my heart is full for that. You know, I heard a Tibetan nun once teaching from a stage saying, you know, when she moves, when she comes into a large room, when she’s on a stage, when she’s presenting, she tries to imagine her sense of love enveloping the entire room. So she’s holding everybody in that space, and I’m like, oh, I love that. I’m not that good at doing it, but I love that, that idea. So it’s like I am full in on this person, you know, even with all the things that I can see are complicated about them. You know, I’m unreservedly on their side. And then the fierceness comes from, If that is true, what needs to be said and done? So you show up with a degree of ferocity for the sake of love, to support them in a way. And it comes from my own. My own shit, really, which is around how often I have kind of whipped out or not stepped up to say the thing, to hold the thing up, to say the truth, to challenge because it felt too hard.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:44:25  And then I kind of convinced myself that actually the the being nice was actually the thing that they wanted from me. And having this sense of a ferocity for the sake of kindness and love allows you to be an extraordinary person in somebody’s life.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:43  Boy, this does seem like one of those paradox that is pretty, pretty challenging. Yeah, right. Because back to our thing before you know. Somebody may not want you to be fierce on their behalf.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:44:57  Right.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:59  In different relationships in my life, I have found that it’s a really tricky balance, because I do sort of I just have sort of a an improvement bent to my mind in general. I can always see like that could be better, that could be better, that could be better, which can translate into you could be better, you could be better, you could be better. And that can be helpful. Right. But it also, I know has made certain people in my life like, leave me the f alone. I mean, and I’m not even necessarily voicing all of that that much.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:35  Right? There’s a way I am that it’s some subtle disapproval, but it’s just this is a really interesting one for me, that I sort of am right in the middle of that paradox in general, in a lot of different ways.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:45:49  I agree. None of these paradoxes are easy to master. I think, and this idea of the fierce love and the fierceness in particular. Eric, one of the questions that I think can be helpful is for whose sake am I genuinely being fierce in this moment? It’s a great question in general with coaching or asking questions, because sometimes you can find yourself as a coach, formally or informally, asking questions that are more helpful for you than they are to the other person.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:23  I often mentioned such a thing often why?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:46:26  Questions are those who say, so why did you do that? And you’re like, what were you actually doing? Often at that moment is you’re trying to find out more data so that you can come up with a better solution to offer them an opinion.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:46:41  And actually, why questions are actually not often that helpful for people because, you know, A they’re ambiguous. They’re like, are you judging me? I you know, it’s like, why the hell did you do that? Are you just trying to find out data for you? Are you looking for justification? Why? You know, the why questions can be can be complicated. So this sense of fierceness, you know, I don’t think it translates into. So I’m just going to tell you every idea I’ve ever got for you to get better. That that explains your first seven failed marriages, Eric.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:16  It’s two, but okay.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:47:20  It is both in a sense of like, I’m saying this because of my love for you rather than my frustration with you. And, it’s really worth sitting with going, it’s like, am I saying it or not saying it? What’s what’s really going on here behind why I’m hesitating to say it or I am, I am saying it.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:40  That is a great question.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:42  Yeah. For whose sake?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:47:43  For whose sake? Yeah. And then. And then there’s also something in this kind of in some ways connects us to the final paradox, which is you’ve also got to not care what they do with this. If they’re like, let me give you this piece of fierce love. And now I’m expecting a change. That is part of the complication. But, you know that famous quote, around. Look, the secret to my happiness is I don’t I don’t mind what happens. It’s like, I’m going to give you this and I don’t mind what happens. You know, this is your life. You’re an adult. You get to to hear it or not hear it. You get to act on it or not act on it. But, you know, even as I say, all of these things, just to keep coming back to the point you’re really making, which is this is a tricky thing to navigate. It is absolutely a tricky thing to navigate.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:31  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:31  And so is Karen. Don’t care. There’s that quote from Krishnamurti that you just mentioned. There’s one from the Third Great Patriarch of Zen, which is a fancy title. He probably had a name also, which is the way is simple for those who don’t have preferences. Something like that. And I’m like, okay, yes, 100%. I agree with you. Directionally, you’re spot on. And you know what? I’ve got a whole lot of them. No matter what I try to do, I’ve got preferences, I’ve got cares. And so this idea of caring and not caring is another one of these. I think these paradoxes here also could be called lifelong questions or lifelong pursuits, because I’m in the middle of it with the book. You and I have talked many times about this book and the marketing of it and what I expect out of it, and I care deeply. I mean, there are a few things outside of the people in my life that I’ve cared about more in some ways.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:32  Right. And I’ve got to disconnect from caring about what happens at a certain point with it. And that’s a really tricky that’s a really tricky thing. And and I think for me, one of the core challenges is that I recognize the deep wisdom in the Buddhist advice like that about clinging, craving. That’s what causes suffering. I get it, I see it clearly. Yeah. And it also seems that that actually you may have just you may have just unlocked the whole the whole game there. What I mean is that I always also feel like it’s very natural to have desire.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:50:13  It is.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:13  But this idea of care and not care is a subtler lens by which to look at desire versus good or bad.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:50:23  Yeah. I mean, like you perhaps like I’m ambitious for a bunch of things that I do. Like, I’ve got things that I would be thrilled if a new book or a new course or whatever happens to it happens to scale a height that I’ve set for it. And I keep trying to remember.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:50:45  So what I care about, therefore, is taking my best guess at what I can do to try and influence this, because I can’t control much of it. But I can, you know, do things and ask, be, be brave and try and pull some stuff off that increase the odds. And I can care deeply, you know, about the quality of the book I produce and the quality of the podcast I go on and all of that stuff, and I can notice myself caring about where my book is on Amazon, which is like, oh yeah, I do actually care about where it is on on Amazon, but I am just trying to hold that thing lightly because I’m like, you know, I’m doing all I can in the process and the outcome. It works or it doesn’t work or it kind of works and, you know, notice the the delight or the frustration or the sadness and try not to get overly entangled in it. But you know, all of this is like a lifetime of spiritual growth as much as it is about.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:51:53  Top tips on book marketing.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:55  So what is it like if you’re open to talking about it? Like you had the coaching habit a decade ago, sell a million and a half copies. Nothing you’ve done since has hit that level of commercial success. What’s it.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:52:09  Like? I think I’ve done since has hit 10% of that level of commercial success.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:14  So how do you work with that? Because obviously you know what’s possible on one level because it happened. Right? And so I’m kind of already like, well, God, who knows what’s going to happen. I mean, but you’ve had a success that’s really big. And then you’ve had since then, by any measure, you’re successful because you get to do what you do as a living, as a way of life. And how do you work with that?

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:52:39  Well, a few ways. One is, and this is a phrase you and I have talked about, is the phrase I’ve already won. And I’m like, man, I have already won.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:52:51  I’ve had this book that has given me financial freedom. I’ve been happily married for 30 some years. I have my physical health.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:00  For time guest on the one you feed.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:53:03  I should have led with that. I have two brothers that I really like and their families I really like. I got to be present with my dad when he was dying. I like my mom. I mean, I’ve just like I have crushed it. So when it’s like I have already won, the second is, or the, you know, the 4 or 5 books that I’ve written since then I am proud of as part of my body of work. So I’m like, look, I’ve created things that are that are that I think are great and helpful and useful. And, you know, partly my job is not to to try and replicate selling a million and a half. My job is to produce the best stuff I can to market it for a while as best I can, and then to let it go. And then part of it is just processing a bit of like, sadness and frustration.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:53:53  But I can’t figure out what the how the hell you sell book. Even though I accidentally did it once. You know, we’re doing this, for the The coaching habit launch. We’ve got this campaign. It’s inspired by a guy called Brandon Sanderson who did this thing called the Year of Sanderson in Covid. Not only did he write the four books that he was obliged contractually to write, but he wrote another four books, and then he launched it and did a Kickstarter. His Kickstarter raised $45 million, which is, like, ludicrous. It’s the most successful Kickstarter of all time. but he kind of did this Kickstarter campaign, so we’re doing a Kickstarter campaign around it, and I am quietly confident that I won’t be raising $45 million as part of this, but I am so delighted by the experience I have in creating these different levels. One of the levels we get to send people a box every quarter with a new little booklet I’m writing and some treats in it, and it’s trying to be present to the the joy and the fun of it.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:54:59  And I was talking to Jill, who is the person on my team leading this, and I was like, maybe I should be reaching out to this type of person and trying to get them interested in the book. And she’s like, you know, this whole campaign is for people who are already really for fans, who are already fans of the book to help them go deeper and, make new kind of connections around this. Our job is to be useful and have fun. That’s our job for this year. And so it’s really helpful for her to pull me back to remembering actually what this is about, which is to. To have fun and be useful. And that allows me to care deeply and care less about the fact that, you know, I got my my I got my book royalties statement the other day and the coaching habit in a quarter had sold, you know, a bunch made made a ton of money. Was excited. Really exciting to see that number. The most recent thing I published called To Do Something That Matters Journal had literally sold zero copies and had lost money.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:56:04  So I had the I had the whole spectrum and I was like, that’s fascinating. All both of these are true.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:10  I’ve remained disappointed that maybe it was your book before that one. How to Work with Almost Anyone? That is still a brilliant title that book should have sold. I don’t understand that because a it’s a great book, it’s a great title. And who doesn’t immediately read that title and be like, oh, I get that.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:56:32  Exactly. Of all the titles I’ve ever come up with, I thought that was the best title and I feel the same, which is like, oh, I really thought that was going to take off.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:40  I mean, the coaching habit, let’s be honest, that’s not a great title. I mean, it’s okay.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:56:44  It’s okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:45  It’s okay, it’s okay. How to work with almost anyone.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:56:48  I feel the same. But it just goes to show, which is like, you know, the coaching habit was the best title I came up with at the time, and it’s worked.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:56:58  Yeah, there’s other stuff. I look at titles on it. That was a good title. That’s not a that’s a less good title. Yeah, but I thought how to work with almost anyone was. It was a stonking really good title. I really thought it was going to take off and it’s sold pretty well, but it hasn’t, it hasn’t come close to the coaching habit.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:13  Well, that’s pretty high. Yeah. Pretty rare error. Yeah. I mean what is it like? You know, probably like one tenth of 1% of all books ever sell that much or less.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:57:23  It’s smaller than that. Yeah, yeah. Something I realized the other day, which is like I’m currently basically a one hit wonder. And you know what’s great about that? I’ve had a hit.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:35  Yeah. Yeah, but.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:57:36  That’s some like, the alternative is being a no hit wonder. And that’s the more likely outcome. So being a one hit wonder is a mark of pride for me.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:45  Before you check out.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:46  Pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change. Feed your good wolf at one you feed your net newsletter again one you feed net letter people who’ve had a big hit. It’s a big deal. Yeah, right. Yeah. And some of those one hit wonders and which I will throw you into the category of, have produced a lot of great work around it. Dexys Midnight Runners are a great example. Come on Eileen. Classic. Huge. I mean, that guy could probably retire 30 generations of his family off of that song.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:58:37  Exactly.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:38  Never had anything else that even got close.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:58:41  Exactly.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:41  And yet the rest of that record and the record before it are genius, right? They are so good. Oh, as an example, as an example.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:58:52  Fun fact my friend Kate lives on the street where they filmed the video for for Come On Eileen.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:59  Here’s another fun fact about a hit. Take on me a massive signal. Who doesn’t love the sweet? Yeah. That song. It’s sort of like the coaching habit. Like they rewrote that thing, like, eight times. Yeah. I mean, they just kept working on that. Yeah, yeah. It was in Song Exploder. I think you hear the first version. Exactly. And you hear the the one at the end. You’re like, I.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:59:20  Heard that podcast as well. I thought it was so good, which is like, oh no, we launched it and it crickets. And then we launched it again in crickets. And then we launched it a fourth time and it took off and became nuts.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:30  Yeah. I found that really inspiring. It just sort of the like, you just don’t know, keep working on what you work on. They loved the song. They cared about the song.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:40  They thought it was good. They kept trying. Yeah. Now, again, for every one of those, there’s a hundred stories of, like, I kept working on the same song and it sucked to begin with, and it sucked at the end, or even.

Michael Bungay Stanier 00:59:51  Even it didn’t suck. But there’s just no way you didn’t find your audience for it. Because, you know, coaching habits, success. It’s a really good book. The fact that I had to rewrite it six times for this publisher made it an even better book. It landed at the right time. Just that weird coaching. It’s very readable. It’s a really short book, and it has a lot of word of mouth that can explain some of its success. But the magic fairy dust. Yeah. They’ve got Supreme Court on it is really what’s amazing. And you can’t replicate that. You just got to get lucky.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:23  To more magic fairy dust for all of us.

Michael Bungay Stanier 01:00:25  I agree with that.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:26  Thank you. Michael. It’s always a pleasure, Eric.

Michael Bungay Stanier 01:00:29  This has been great.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:30  I expect a slightly upscale sartorial approach next time we talk.

Michael Bungay Stanier 01:00:35  Exactly. well, I’ll see you in ten years for the 20 20th edition of The Coaching Habit.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:40  Yeah, exactly.

Michael Bungay Stanier 01:00:41  And celebrating the 10th year edition of yours.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:44  Oh, yeah. That will be ten years or exactly ten years apart. Interesting. All right. That’s good. I like that. I like that symmetry.

Michael Bungay Stanier 01:00:51  Thanks, Eric.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:52  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

What It Takes to Believe You’re Good Enough | Lodro Rinzler

June 2, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Lodro Rinzler discusses what it takes to believe you’re good enough. He explains how guilt, shame, and negative emotions can become mistaken identity markers, and how meditation helps us recognize our inherent goodness. Lodro also shares personal stories about releasing shame, taking responsibility for past mistakes, and the Buddhist concept that we are fundamentally good but obscured by life’s challenges.

A Weekly Bite of Wisdom: Want to go deeper with the ideas we explore on The One You Feed? Every Wednesday, Eric shares a short, practical email that turns insights about mental health, relationships, purpose, habits, and personal growth into simple practices you can use right away. You’ll also receive our Weekend Podcast Playlist featuring a recap of the week’s episodes. It’s free, takes about a minute to read, and is enjoyed by thousands of readers each week. Sign up at oneyoufeed.net/newsletter.


Key Takeaways:

  • Discussion of Lodo Rinzler’s new book, You Are Good Enough. You Are Enough.
  • Exploration of themes related to guilt and shame.
  • The impact of modern distractions on mindfulness and presence.
  • Identification with negative emotional states and their effects on identity.
  • The role of meditation in recognizing and addressing negative mental patterns.
  • Personal anecdotes illustrating the struggle with guilt and the journey of personal growth.
  • The importance of expanding one’s identity beyond limiting labels.
  • Philosophical perspectives on human nature and basic goodness.
  • Practical steps for cultivating mindfulness and compassion in daily life.
  • The significance of holding a nuanced view of oneself and others in fostering healing and connection.

Lodro Rinzler is the co-founder of MNDFL meditation studios, has taught meditation for 20 years in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, and is the award-winning author of 7 books. He has spoken across the world at conferences, universities, and businesses as diverse as Google, Harvard University, and the White House.

Connect with Lodro Rinzler: Website | Instagram | Facebook 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Lodro Rinzler, you might also enjoy these other episodes:

⁠Meditation for Anxious People with Lodro Rinzler⁠

⁠Lodro Rinzler (Episode from 2014)⁠

⁠Hardcore Zen with Brad Warner

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Episode Transcript:

Lodro Rinzler 00:00:00  We are really not comfortable having space in our life anymore. If there is a gap, we reach for that phone and we fill it one way or another. A dating app? A television show. Whatever it is, it’s like it’s all right there. It’s crazy. And we don’t have a preference to put that behind you and say, I can just be here.

Chris Forbes 00:00:26  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:11  Lodro Rinzler carried guilt about a high school breakup for years. He’d ended things badly, he was sure of it. And when he finally tracked her down on Facebook and apologized, she said, I don’t remember it that way at all. It’s a small story, but Lodra uses it to make a point that runs through his whole new book. Most of what we hold against ourselves is either not true or not as big as we’ve made it. The book is called You Are Good Enough. You are Enough. This conversation is about what it actually takes to believe that I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed Lodro. Welcome back.

Lodro Rinzler 00:01:48  Thanks so much for having me back. I was recently reading your book. As I’m sure everyone in the world is currently doing and, I thought it was so sweet that you remembered our early time together on the show. A million years ago, you mentioned it in there. It was very sweet. So thank you for including me.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:06  Yeah, I do not have a good memory, but I remember in those early days, if you had a book, you were like a legend to me, right? You know, in this space. And I remember I emailed you because I’d seen your book. I can’t remember which one it was, but it was one of your early books, I think. And you said. Yes. And I remember telling my friend Chris, we got this guy Load Row Rinzler on this show. I was so I was so excited. So I appreciate.

Lodro Rinzler 00:02:29  Any of you. He said, I have no idea who that is.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:31  Which, of course he did. Of course he did. He still does. And you’ve been on, like four times. No, I don’t know how long you’ve been on. I’m kidding. But, yeah, those early guests were really meaningful to me, and you were one of them, so. Thank you.

Lodro Rinzler 00:02:43  Oh, I was so happy to do it. Yeah. And I am also happy to be here now and to celebrate you and and this incredible run that you’ve had on this show, but also this new book. And as we were talking about before we started recording, it’s just, you know, really cool to see how much is shifted and changed for you and how much you’re helping people.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:01  Well thank you. It has shifted and changed a lot, and I am so grateful for this podcast and all that’s meant in my life and all the people who support it. You and I are going to continue to talk here in a moment about your book, which is called You Are Good. You are enough. Free yourself from the trap of doubt and return to basic goodness. But before we do that, we will start in the way that we always have. And I will read you a parable that you’ve heard before and ask you what you think about it. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with her grandchild, and they say, in life there are two worlds inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. They think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent. They say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you and your life, and in the work that you do.

Lodro Rinzler 00:04:02  Yeah, I was so tempted to go back and hear what my earlier answer was, and maybe I’ll do it after we spent some time together today, because I think it’s also like an interesting marker for how has my mind in life changed that I would come on. So the answer that’s coming up for me today is, you know, I feel like one of the things I am personally struggling with as a meditation teacher is talking to people about their mind and the fact that we can make choices with our mind that like, no one gets to decide which wolf we feed but us. Because I think a lot of people maybe since the pandemic, I think I’ve seen more of an uptick since then. They really identify with their anxiety or their fear or their anger or whatever it is, and they’re like, that’s just who I am. I am an anxious person. I’m a, you know, angry person.

Lodro Rinzler 00:04:55  I’ve just always been prone to anger. And they they don’t realize that that’s a wolf that they have been feeding. Yeah. As opposed to just who they are. Right. So I think that this is the big uphill battle that I find myself facing when I sit down and I teach people meditation online, in person, wherever I am. That the fact that we can actually choose which wolf to feed, you know. And obviously those are two choices there. But I always think about, like, every time we feed into the anxious story that comes up over the course of the day, we are feeding an anxious wolf, right? Like we are just refining those patterns. And every time we acknowledge, oh, I don’t have to do that, I can just be present in this moment. I don’t have to chase that story. We come back, we are feeding that wolf. And that’s all meditation is, frankly. And it doesn’t have to be anxiety specifically, but it’s everything. Yeah. It’s always it’s just us constantly making choices.

Lodro Rinzler 00:05:45  And meditation helps us learn to drop some of the stories that keep us locked in pain long enough to make the better choice.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:51  Do you think that’s changed? You’ve been teaching meditation a long time now. Do you see people more identified with emotional states as identity than they used to?

Lodro Rinzler 00:06:02  Yeah, I do. I was listening to a recent interview. Pema Chodron sat down at the New York Times and was interviewed by Ezra Klein. I shared it online the other day. And in the world that we live in. Of course, you know, I posted to Facebook. Two comments immediately popped up. One said, I love Pema Chodron. They said, f Ezra Klein. It’s like it’s like just two polar opposite ends of the spectrum. I was like, well, in conversation, maybe there’s some middle ground here. So I was listening to this and I never heard someone say it so bluntly, but he he brought up the fact. He said, do you see people being more distracted than they see? And she said, yes.

Lodro Rinzler 00:06:40  And he says, why? And she says, I just think that there is more detraction. There’s more that we can do. And he gave the example of when we used to be on the subway. If we forgot our magazine, we would just sit on the subway and we would see who’s on the subway. Right? Like we were just present. And that was actually a practice that he was engaging in, that he would just be present on the subway when he was on his way to pick up his kids from school. And now we have everything in the world at our fingertips. We can read, we can listen to things. We can, you know, scroll on social media, we can do any number of of things to distract ourselves. So we are so prone to distraction in a way that we weren’t. I would go so far as to say, 12 years ago, you know, when I first started putting out books 14 years ago, definitely like social media wasn’t even a big thing back then, which is crazy.

Lodro Rinzler 00:07:29  It’s been such a meteoric rise. But alongside is this meteoric rise in distraction that we are really not comfortable having space in our life anymore. If there is a gap, we reach for that phone and we fill it one way or another a dating app, a television show, whatever it is, it’s like it’s all right there. It’s crazy. And we don’t have a preference to put that behind you and say, I can just be here. So yes, I do find that, you know, because we are more willing to be distracted, we are more willing to just let our thoughts take over, and we’re less likely to just be present to what’s currently occurring. So again, as I said earlier, it’s like an uphill battle for me as a meditation teacher. I’d be like, hey, let’s all slow down and just I don’t want to say detox from our technology, but, you know, that could be a practice. But I think a lot of the practice is just learning to be present with whatever we’re doing, you know? And we’re with the dog.

Lodro Rinzler 00:08:20  We’re with the dog. When we are taking a walk, we do put that phone away and we just sort of enjoy whatever is on our walk. When we go grocery shopping. We’re not just mentally lost in what needs to happen after. We’re just looking and seeing and being there in this weird little community called a grocery store. You know, if we transform our view around these things and obviously this is sort of a good lead in that book, you are good. You are enough. Because I have a whole chapter, whole section really on society and like the way that we’re constantly co-creating society and influencing society with our choices of how we show up and whether we show up.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:57  Yeah. One of the things that I have seen happen over the time that I’ve been doing this, which is 12 years, is a big shift in the the mental health debate out there. And I’ve seen it go from being still relatively stigmatized as a thing to very largely de-stigmatized today. And almost in certain circles, I see people identifying with a diagnosis as part as part of who they are almost willingly.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:29  And I think it’s interesting now, I have a parallel in my life. When I first got sober, I was very highly identified as a recovering person, and that was really, really valuable for a period of time until it wasn’t. But I do think the more we identify with a way of being mentally. The more we lock ourselves into being that way, and I think it’s always really tricky. I think a lot about this. Like, well, when is the label or identity valuable and when is it limited? And I think it’s different for every person. I don’t think anybody can make that. But I do think it’s always worth in our own lives, asking like, is there a aspect of myself I’m over identifying with? Or I’m saying that’s just the way I am, when indeed it’s more just a pattern of of conditioning and habits.

Lodro Rinzler 00:10:17  Beautifully put. And I’m I’m with you 100%. And I remember early on in my career I was touring for my first book, The Buddha Walks Into a Bar, which, you know, wildly provocative title. And I sat down with a Buddhist group that had a lot of people in recovery in it. It’s a community that really emphasizes that aspect of bringing the two together, and they were actually incredibly, kind of incredibly open. But there was one person who was just like. I don’t think you understand that. This is just who I am. I’m an addict now. Like, that’s just it. And it’s like, I don’t know if that’s it. That is absolutely something that is happening. And that’s absolutely. If it’s helpful for you to hold that label, then that is good. But at a certain point you may find that if that is the only label you hold and the only identity you hold, it can be very limiting for you. And I would like to think that that person took that to heart because, you know, it’s been similar to what you just said about, you know, 12, 14 years since then. And it’s just one of many versions that I have seen. I just had dinner the other night with a dear friend who, because of the pandemic, isolated and fell into pretty abusive drug patterns and has now gotten sober, is in recovery housing and is doing quite well.

Lodro Rinzler 00:11:35  And we had dinner for the first time like I’d been in touch with him throughout all of this, but I hadn’t been. he was in LA. I’m in New York. So he finally came to New York and we had dinner and he was sharing that exact story, which is that there was a time where it was really helpful for him to identify in a certain way and really hold certain disciplines very close. And at this point, he realized he needed to just not necessarily get rid of that. Right. Like, it’s like he’s throwing the disciplines out the window. But he said I needed more than just that. I love that idea of like, we can expand our identity, we can expand our understanding of who we are. And, you know, obviously, as the Buddhist teacher, I have to point out, like, all of these identities are completely ephemeral and impermanent and always changing, and we don’t have to cling to any of them too tightly. If I never wrote a book again, I wouldn’t go around telling my, you know, new people at a party that I’m an author.

Lodro Rinzler 00:12:28  I would I would just, you know, come up with something else. Like, that’s it’s things are always changing with us, and that’s okay. You know, there was a time that I wasn’t an author. There might be a time that I’m not an author. That’s fine too. But, you know, in the meantime, if it’s helpful for me to identify as that and talk to people about books, and ideally they get benefit from those books, then I’ll go ahead and do it.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:29  Ultimately, I think what happened with me and addiction was that there was a lot of I had a lot of ideas about what it meant to be an addict Under that heading, there were a lot of things, right? And in my case, the number of things under that list has come down to about one, which is I should not use mind altering substances. Sure. Right. Like that doesn’t go well for me. Yes. All the other things are just human things that are transient. They come, they go.  I’m impulsive. No, maybe I’m not. I’m. I’m this way, I’m that way. All of that I’ve seen is a lot more, as you say, transient.

Lodro Rinzler 00:14:07  Yeah. And obviously, you know, I read your book and I know your relationship to another thing that comes up for many people who struggle in these regards is guilt and shame. And though I have not gone through a recovery program, you know, I have guilt and shame about things as well. And I write pretty explicitly in this new book about it, you know, like what the process of making mistakes could be, how we hold guilt and shame against us, how that’s not necessarily helpful once we’ve learned the lessons from our mistakes and how we can move forward. And I think it’s just a really potent time right now where I don’t think it’s like I did something wrong and now I’m horrible. I’m like a non-being, right? Like, we sort of say, okay, I have to learn, and I, I grow as a result of this.

Lodro Rinzler 00:14:47  I always think of this moment serving on the board of a organization that helps unhoused youth. And I was teaching a meditation class there, and there was this kid who came up to me after something must have sparked this quote for him. I don’t remember what I said, but I remember what he said. He said, you know what you said reminded me of an old saying my grandmother always told me, which is 100 of the same mistakes is regressive, 100 different mistakes is progressive. I was like, oh, that’s cool. And obviously it stayed with me for a million years. Now that we just keep doing the same thing over and over again, that’s very regressive. But if we learn and grow as human beings, it’s just who we are. That’s just a human being thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:29  I love that quote. I love that whole section. So I guess we’re going to go into the book and then maybe come back around to the top of the book, because you tell a story in there about guilt and shame that I really love, and it’s about how you were feeling guilt towards a previous partner of yours. Can you tell that story?

Lodro Rinzler 00:15:46  Oh, sure. The one in high school.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:48  The one where you thought you’d wronged her. You carried that guilt for all those years?

Lodro Rinzler 00:15:53  Yeah. So I was in high school, and I dated someone for, you know, it felt like forever, but maybe it was 4 or 5 months. Right. I was it was high school, and I broke it off, and I went on this meditation retreat. It’s my first, like, a very long meditation retreat. I was 17 years old. It was monastic. I shaved my head. I took the robes, the whole nine yards. And I had the meditation, which is like, you don’t like even when you’re doing other things than meditating, you still are basically just left alone with your own mind. There are no distractions. I got in trouble for reading a book for school, like a fiction book, which, you know, was considered a no no.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:33  That’s a no.

Lodro Rinzler 00:16:33  No, no, no.

Lodro Rinzler 00:16:34  So you could see, like there’s not a lot else to do. So somewhere around 2 or 3 weeks into this meditation retreat, I get in my head. I go, I was such a jerk to that poor woman who I broke up with, and I really went in on that, and I just wallowed in the guilt and the shame and the mistake and beat myself up. And honestly, I, I say this in the book as well. There’s no one who can say anything that I have not said worse to myself. Like I can beat myself up if I really want to. And I went to dark places. And finally, about three days into the self-flagellation thing, I said to myself, listen, when you get out of here, you’re going to go back home and you are going to formally apologize, and you’re going to make this right to the best of your ability. And I, with that understanding, started to let it go. I emerged from the meditation retreat, I went home, she had moved.

Lodro Rinzler 00:17:25  Her father had gotten a new job. They moved elsewhere. This is pre, you know, social media and all that. Like this is not I couldn’t find her and that was it. Years later I’m in college and I get a ping on Facebook, which is like early days of Facebook, and it’s her and I immediately accept. And I still carried this like I still care. I never said I’m sorry, so I just held it to some form for a very long time, and we chatted for a little bit on that platform until I finally said, hey, by the way, I need to share that I feel really bad about what happened and I was an absolute jerk. And I’m sorry, and you don’t have to forgive me, but you know, I just wanted to say it. And after at that point, years and years and years of me holding this, she goes, oh, I don’t remember it like that at all. Yeah, it wasn’t a big deal. So, you know, like that’s that’s pretty common.

Lodro Rinzler 00:18:18  I think, you know, we can go to any number of versions of the thing I said last night at that party. Everyone’s talking, they don’t remember. They’re thinking about the thing they said. But like, yeah, there’s always some version that we can hold over our head about ourselves. And as that story illustrates, nine times out of ten. It’s pretty useless. It’s not actually helping us grow as a person.

Eric Zimmer 00:18:37  Yeah, I’m going to stay with guilt and shame a little bit and mistakes in the past, because you tell a story in the book about somebody who, during one you’re not best periods in life you caused some harm to, and that you’ve tried to make it right, and that that person still feels very aggrieved. That person has gone out and told the world that they are aggrieved. I think you and I had a conversation about this. I don’t know when this was five years ago, four years ago, three years ago.

Lodro Rinzler 00:19:05  Eight years ago. But yeah. Who’s counting?

Eric Zimmer 00:19:07  Was it really?

Lodro Rinzler 00:19:08  Yeah.

Lodro Rinzler 00:19:09  Yeah, yeah. Go ahead.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:09  Anyway, you gotta be kidding. No, no. Anyway. All right. Eight years ago. That’s amazing to me. You talk about your friend and remembering things differently. Yeah, I’m counting down 3 to 6 months ago. You’re like, no, 35 years ago. I’m. Oh, okay. that’s kind of how time feels anymore. I don’t know if it does for you anyway. Share about as much about that as you’re comfortable sharing.

Lodro Rinzler 00:19:30  Yeah, sure. So as you noted, I had this period of time. I sparked this book on heartbreak called Love Hurts Buddhist Advice for the heartbroken. But there’s this period of time where everything was sort of pulled out from under me. My fiancé broke up with me and moved overseas. I suffered a job loss, sort of a big egoic identity, death as well. With that. And then my best friend passed away. And then shortly thereafter, my father passed away. And this was sort of bip bam boom just left me in a devastated spot, and I was drinking more than I should.

Lodro Rinzler 00:20:03  Period. You know, I had a lot of suicidal ideation. I was at the lowest in this lifetime so far, and I don’t think that there’s anyone who should have come down from on high and saved me. But I do wish that someone had said, hey, maybe don’t like, keep touring and traveling for your book like that came out during this. Like it’s just I should have just like laid low and taken care of myself, but I did. Yeah. And as you said, I inadvertently caused harm. And I carry that shame and guilt to some extent today, right? I still hold, as I said earlier, like anything that anyone says against me. You know, I can do ten times worse. So I, you know, and I work with that. I work with that as a practice. And I went through a whole process where it’s sort of like when you make a mistake, what do you do? For me, I immediately said, hey, I am 100% sorry.

Lodro Rinzler 00:20:53  And I spent a day with this person sort of unpacking it. There’s just a lot of trauma from this person who I didn’t know that up front, and I sort of inadvertently stepped on some big issues that I had not been aware of. So, you know, I apologize. I spent a lot of time trying to unpack this with this person, sought mediation with this person, did whatever I could within the confines of working with this person to try and heal. And then it becomes, you know, at a certain point you have to say, like, then I have to heal on my own to if this person doesn’t want to talk to me or be with me, like, you have to sort of do your own healing work around it through therapy, working with mentors, meditation, all of these things, and then you sort of turn over every rock. You can learn every lesson you can. And you say, well, I’m not that person. I’m not in that devastated, traumatized state.

Lodro Rinzler 00:21:38  I am. You know, I have learned a lot from it. And then you sort of come out the other end and you don’t have to say like, that’s a neat, happy ending, right? As you said, there can still be people in your past. You say like, oh, that was that was a shitty time for you. And like, you were not the best person. And you can acknowledge that. I acknowledge that and be like, that’s also not who I am. So it’s that sense of like identity that we’re talking about earlier. Like that’s we continue to grow, you know, I think like, you know, there might be a cartoon villain version of a Lodro in at least one person’s mind. you know, like the worst exaggerated features in deeds, but that’s actually not who I am. And it took me a while to realize, like, that’s a caricature. That’s not who I am. Yeah. You know, it’s I, I, I had an interview, not so long ago where I literally came to tears because I was like, at the end of the day, it’s like I’m the one of the identities I hold is someone who’s just really trying to help people, and I do make mistakes along the way.

Lodro Rinzler 00:22:31  And I’m very open about being a very human human, a very messy human. And I also believe that we are all inherently basically good. And that’s obviously the topic of this new book. Like, we are all inherently, fundamentally, innately good, whole, complete as is now. Can we hold both of those things in mind? Can we say Eric is basically good and he went through his struggles and made mistakes? Lodro was basically good. He, you know, went through struggles, made mistakes that they’ve learned and that they can also be embodied with that basic goodness. Today, that’s a big question. And I think that’s something that we don’t often give people a lot of grace and ability to do is sort of like, oh, I hear something bad about a person, and that’s just who they are. And I cling to that as their identity as opposed to that is one small piece of who they are.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:19  Yeah. It is so tricky. You know, as our society has begun to have more conversations About harm and things that traditionally have been hidden away.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:29  Come out into the open. And I think there’s a more nuanced version of every public conversation that we have. I don’t think there’s a single one that we couldn’t use a more nuanced version of. I think about this with, you know, with prison and I mean, any sort of thing like that, when, you know, at what point are you not, like you said, not that person or even that one thing being a very small aspect of the whole person. And I just don’t think we’re very good at holding those things. We like good, bad. Yes. Like that. We just like it’s just simpler, right? And that’s what a lot of us want, particularly when we’re thinking about it. Just people in sort of passing, you know, are they good or are they bad? Make it easy for me. And totally I think if you pay any more attention than that, you have to conclude at least I do like. Both. right?

Lodro Rinzler 00:24:24  I talk about this in the book a little bit because my wife had a great question. She just turned to me when she said, at what point do we allow people to change? And it was not about this. It was just a great question. Yeah. And it just stayed with me. At what point do we allow people to change? Like, I’m not the same version of a Lodro that existed a dozen years ago, or, you know, back when all of this happened that was, you know, 2013. So 13 years ago or whatever is I’m not the same person I was 24 years ago. I’m not going to be the same person I am, you know, five years from now. So we just do what we can to make up for any negative actions. None of them means that we’re not basically good. We can be basically good. We could be grieving and having a hard time and acting out of confusion. And can we hold both truths in our mind? That’s the question. And I think that’s, you know, there’s chapters in here just about how we villains people, because it’s not like we’re making it very personal, you and me.

Lodro Rinzler 00:25:13  More often we look at other people and we say that person’s bad because of something, and we start to build a case around it. And yeah, again, my wife is incredibly wise. she is she is she brought up this point that she had I think she didn’t come up with. I think she heard it somewhere, but she shared it with me that there’s sort of two lenses through which we engage with the world. One could be as a lawyer or one as a scientist. A lawyer says, I see something, and I now make a case for why that person is, for example, bad and why they’re always going to be bad. And anything that comes in contradiction with it, they’re giving all their time to charity or whatever it is. We say that’s that’s because they want people to think nicely of them. They’re actually bad and we disregard it. Right. And then a scientist says, I’m going to look at all of the points of data here, and I’m going to make an informed decision. I think that’s such a better way for us to live, because if we just keep making cases against everyone in our mind, good, bad or ugly, we’re going to end up in a pretty divided world. And we already are, which is sort of how we got here, actually.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:42  I talk a lot about the fundamental attribution error, which is this idea that when you do something, it’s a character flaw. But when I do it, or my favorite politician does it, or someone close to me, it’s there’s there were mitigating circumstances, you know, they did it because X, Y and Z. But for you it’s a character issue. And that that that attribution error is a really big problem. yeah. So okay, let’s come back now all the way around because you kind of let us there to the idea of the book that everyone is born with basic goodness. So there are three versions of this story that I think are out there, and there’s probably permutations on them, but version one is a more Christian version, which is that you are fundamentally flawed and born into sin.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:35  You are. You’re bad to start with. You need redeemed. There’s the Buddhist version, which is you are fundamentally good, right? You’re born good. And everything that happens is sort of covering over that beautiful diamond. And then there’s the view that I think I land on, probably, but I don’t know for sure, which is we have the seeds of all of it inside of us. So talk to me about your belief in the second of those that we are fundamentally good.

Lodro Rinzler 00:28:07  Oh, I’m happy to talk about all three. So I, I’m looking over our fence here. My neighbor is a Christian pastor. Sometimes he’ll come over for dinner and we’ll break bread and he’ll look at me and say, so, you Buddhists, you really believe that everyone’s born basically good? That they have the potential for for awakening, for enlightenment. All these things I see. Yeah. Those are usually just teachers have it so easy because, you know, it’s like a different come from than what? Where he starts.

Lodro Rinzler 00:28:36  Totally. Yeah. You know, like. Yeah. So there’s Original sin and we’ve got a tone and all of that. And I understand that a large swath of this nation gets behind that idea and grapples with it is just fundamentally different from how I was raised. It’s so interesting because I was raised Buddhist. You know, it’s not something I just sort of stumbled upon. I had a household where my parents taught me this concept very early, this experience that underneath the stories and things, we are basically good. And I started meditating when I was young, and I don’t know if I necessarily am changed. I’m sure the meditation, it’s just like I’ve been doing it so long, I don’t know how it’s changed me. It’s sort of like, what’s that versus growing up and being an adult. But I do know that this view of basic goodness changed me, that when I was a kid and something went wrong. And it does. I have a three year old daughter now, you know, and I caught myself.

Lodro Rinzler 00:29:27  She was screaming, my poor mother, you know, 85, severe dementia. We took her out for her birthday. My wife was on a meditation retreat. I brought my three year old. I was like, this will be fine. And it was not fine. I know you’re laughing. What an idiot. So, you know, take her out for her birthday dinner. And the kids screaming, oh, it’s the perfect storm is not to throw my again very wise wife under the bus. But she called while we were over on the way there. And so my daughter got like a hint of mom and like was missing mom. And then like, we’d go into the dinner and she’s like, I don’t want grandma, I want mom. And I’m like, we can’t say I don’t want grandma. And I’m just I’m in this point where I’m like, I’m not going to burst into tears, but I’m, I’m I’m so like at wit’s end. And I am like, I’m going to take my daughter outside.

Lodro Rinzler 00:30:13  I’m going to take her for a walk. And I noticed that there’s this tendency, and I’ve seen so many people, friends who are like, you’re being bad. And I was like, nope. It almost came out of my mouth. And I was like, hey, you’re not being very nice to grandma. Yeah. It’s such a slight reframe, but it’s not. You’re bad and wrong. It’s you’re basically good and you’re not being nice to the person. We’re having dinner. Like, it’s such a slight distinction, but it’s. It’s what was imparted to me as a kid. You’re basically good. You’re good. And this isn’t how we behave, right? Like we don’t Skype with grandma and say, I don’t want you, right? Like it’s just. Anyway, this was fundamental to my being. The third thing that you offered, I think, is, is very much in line with Buddhism, though. It’s not. Okay. You’re basically good now. Everything’s fine. It’s we need to continue to develop a relationship to that thing that we have lost along the way, through stories of shame and guilt, through stories of why we’re not enough and we’re not good enough, and all the things we get in society.

Lodro Rinzler 00:31:08  I don’t think I put this one in the book, but there’s these subway ads and they’re often very tasteless. I look at them like, oh, whatever. I forget sometimes how easily influenced we are as children. My wife was riding the subway with and there’s this kiddo, probably six years old woman, a girl, and she was with her dad. And there was this, breast augmentation ad where there was one woman looking sad holding lemons in that area. Same woman smiling, looking happy, holding cantaloupes. Not necessarily subtle, but, you know, and subtle enough for that six year old, says daddy. Why is she sad there and why is she happy there? And this poor dad thrown under the bus just goes, pivoting goes. I don’t know, maybe she just really likes cantaloupe. What sort of fruit do you like? Let’s talk about fruit. Right? Like, just clearly, I hope to be that good. And that’s so.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:58  Smooth.

Lodro Rinzler 00:31:58  Yes. Yeah. But it’s like, oh, yeah, we are taught look like this, act like this, etc. from such a young age that when we don’t meet whatever societal standards are being sold to us, we think the floor is us.

Lodro Rinzler 00:32:12  We think we’re wrong or bad, and we internalize those stories of I don’t have enough. I am, you know, my family’s poor and I’ll never have enough, whatever it is, all the way into adulthood. And we don’t deal with that. We just hold those stories as if we talked about before. Like those identities are true. So, so much of what we’re talking about and you are good, you are enough is letting go of the stories that aren’t serving us so that we can return to that relationship of goodness that we were born with. I think that’s just a really important thing that, frankly, not enough of us are willing to do right now. We’re not willing to let go of the stories that are holding us in pain.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:48  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight, breath shallow? Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday I send weekly bites of wisdom, a short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show things like mental health, anxiety, relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day it’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it if you’d like extra fuel for the weekend. You also get a weekend podcast playlist. Join us at one UFI newsletter. That’s one you get a newsletter and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. 

I certainly think it is a more useful perspective to start from. We are good. And then that gets occluded by the travails of life, then concluding the opposite. When I think about usefulness, because that’s so much of what I’m interested, I mean, certainly truth is important, but truth is a that’s a slippery creature, right? And ultimate truth is you don’t know. So I’m very much into like, well, which of these ways of viewing this is most useful in me being the person that I want to be, you know, to myself, to the people around me, all of that. And I certainly think starting from a place of goodness is a is a much more useful starting frame of reference, I think.

Lodro Rinzler 00:34:27  I don’t know if I’m understanding the third perspective that you offered, that you feel like you connect with more, though.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:32  It’s that we’re neither good nor bad. We have the seeds of both within us.

Lodro Rinzler 00:34:36  We have the seeds of both with us. Yeah, I would say the Buddhist view is just. Yeah, we just that we, we have basic goodness in that. Yeah. We as I mentioned before, we all get confused. We all get confused at times. We all make mistakes from that, acting out of that sense of confusion. But it’s because we’re confused about our goodness, not because we’re bad. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:55  So you have a chapter in the book called The Entire Buddhist Path in two pages. Can you be that succinct in a podcast interview?

Lodro Rinzler 00:35:05  Yeah, that’s a great question. I like that you’re like, by the way. I’ve done this a few times with you right now. Succinct is not in your vocabulary. Let’s see what you can do.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:13  I’m teasing.

Lodro Rinzler 00:35:14  Yes.

Lodro Rinzler 00:35:15  It’s really three steps. Step one is that we make that discovery of basic goodness. And I want to be clear that basic goodness isn’t a concept that we grapple with from a philosophical point of view, it is experience. We meditate, for example, as one way to access it. And we notice there’s this moment, oh, I’m okay as I am sitting here on this cushion. That could be a revelation. Oh, I am basically good in this moment. I am basically good. Once we get a glimpse of basic goodness, we start to see it can be this real source of peace and stability. And that’s where things get juicy. We go to step two, where we deepen that relationship with basic goodness. There’s so many different tools, books, retreats, teachings, things like that, but they’re meant to keep you connected, reconnecting to your innate nature more fully, more frequently. And there are different skillful means that help us train our heart and mind to recognize that goodness within us so that that relationship gets strengthened in the same way that if we made a friend at a barbecue, right, we would just continue to strengthen that relationship over time.

Lodro Rinzler 00:36:15  There’s times where it feels awkward, times where it feels fun. But like over time, we’re just getting to know this person better. Same thing we’re returning, getting to familiar with our basic goodness more and more so that step three we live our life through the lens of basic goodness. So as that relationship grows, it transforms how we approach life. We start to notice our interactions, our decisions, even some of that, like the self-talk that we were just talking about, it starts to shift that we trust in our goodness so much that we start seeking validation from the outside world, and we bring more compassion, kindness to our own relationship with ourselves, with people at work and our family, with friends. We start to see everyone, really everyone as fundamentally good as well. It’s not just I’m basically good. You’re basically just like all beings are basically good, and that’s where it gets really interesting. And then I basically just take that into the three sections of the book. The first section of the book is just discovering your own basic goodness.

Lodro Rinzler 00:37:07  The second one is. Can I start to see it in that person? I don’t like the person I’m villain izing. Whatever it is, the person I do like, the person I love, my child, the people I don’t know that I see all the time. The grocery store example I gave earlier. And then we come to that third section, which is, well, what society, if not the people I like, the people I don’t like, the people I don’t know. And me, that’s everyone. Yeah. Could we realize the basic goodness of society? Not in a Pollyanna way, but in the way that, like, we’re all humans and we can all sort of come at each other from that perspective of there’s basic goodness. And as we talked about, there’s confusion. Sure is. But that’s not fundamentally who we are.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:43  Yeah. And I want to get to each of those. I want to start though, because I love the way you illuminate this through a couple of core Buddhist teachings.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:56  The first is around that all of us, when we encounter any experience, any stimulus. You can say this better than I do. We have either a positive reaction towards we have a negative reaction towards, or we just simply really have a neutral reaction to and that those three things then tie to what are called poisons, which are I’m not sure exactly the words you use in the book, but I would call them greed, aversion and ignorance. And I love the way you then sort of tie that to the way we really relate to others, right? In that some people we relate to, we like, some people we really don’t like and, and most of them we have no opinion about or the background furniture that sometimes gets in the way.

Lodro Rinzler 00:38:45  Yeah, you’re right.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:46  And I say that all fairly well.

Lodro Rinzler 00:38:48  Did you spot on? And it is I it’s funny because I’m actually teaching a course on this exact thing right now, which is that sense of wherever we are, like, right now, I’m here with you and I’m enjoying being with you.

Lodro Rinzler 00:38:59  But then a car went by and I was actively ignoring that car. right? Like it is. I’m just doing it all the time. But I knew it was a car. I didn’t look, I just heard the sound. I know I’m on the road. There’s some sense of always projecting out and trying to fill in these gaps because we can’t deal with uncertainty. So I said, okay, that’s a car, and it’s going by, and I hope it’s not so loud that it shows up in the record like it’s just. And then I don’t like that. I don’t like that there’s this car now that I’m turning my attention to it, because I don’t want that noise to be on the recording. And, you know, there’s always something. My dog, June, is being very sweet and just sort of laying out on the floor with me. she’s gotten in the habit of coming to work with me, and, you know, like that I see her. I like that, right.

Lodro Rinzler 00:39:37  So there’s I’m. But I’m vacillating wildly between wherever my eyes are. Her ears are all of my sense perceptions are making contact with the phenomenal world around me. I’m constantly saying I like, I dislike, I ignore, and then the question is, how far do I go with that? Do I just let that be? Car comes and goes and that’s it because it’s over? Or do I get really mad? I just I can’t work here. I need to get a formal office, and I need to do that. And I need it to be somewhere where there’s never any cars. And, you know, every time a car goes by it, just realize how horrible the situation is, right? Like, it could just be that I could make this my day if I wanted it to. And people do. We do. We get so hooked by something that we just spiral and let that be the day. And that’s the choice thing that we’re talking about with the tools at the top of our time together.

Lodro Rinzler 00:40:23  Do I want to make that choice and continue to feed in that case, the angry, frustrated version. You know, you said, what? Greed, hatred and delusion? Is that what you used?

Eric Zimmer 00:40:34  I think I said greed, aversion and ignorance, but greed, hatred and delusion.

Lodro Rinzler 00:40:38  Yeah. These are good, you know.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:39  Wanting, not wanting. And, yeah.

Lodro Rinzler 00:40:43  These are all good words for it. So but we’re constantly vacillating. And again, meditation is us saying, okay, I’m going to have reactions if a car goes by I’m fine. But it’s up to me whether I acknowledge it and come back to this present moment or whether I just continue to go and go and go. So how far does that rubber band go before it snaps back? That’s up to us. And the more we train the mind, the more we’re able to let rise and fall. We’d say, oh, you know, for example. Oh, I hope I didn’t say something stupid on that podcast, right.

Lodro Rinzler 00:41:12  Like, I could dwell on that for the rest. After this, I’m going to go take my kid to her music class. I could be totally checked out. Not with my kid trying to do this little teacher that she says she’s going to know it, too. She’s gonna immediately call me out like she will see it in a second if I’m not fully there. Or I can be like, yeah, you know, if I did, it’s okay. And if I hopefully I didn’t and that’s that’s it. And like, I just let it arise, dissolve. And then I’m playing with these silly shakers and pretending to be on a choo choo train, like it’s just that’s that’s fine. Right? Like, now I’m here for that. So I think it just allows us to enjoy our life more. It seems simplistic, but going back to the Ezra Klein Pema Chodron thing, he was like, what’s the grand thing that you’ve actually achieved out of any of this? And she said, contentment. And I was like, oh, blessed, because that’s what I always say, too. It’s just the sense of just that we can be present to what’s currently occurring and find a sense of joy. Happiness. Contentment within that. That’s actually a great way to live a life. In my experience.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:08  It’s the whole thing that drew me to the Buddhist and spiritual path and still does. Is that ability to be okay in the midst of whatever’s occurring. And I find those two teachings that you sort of use and then tie into how we relate to others so valuable that that no matter what I do, there’s an immediate I like it, I don’t like it, it doesn’t mean anything to me, like it just arises. I’ve never been able to circumvent that process. It is so instant in me. The process I can circumvent is what’s next, which is the I want more of that. I want less of that. You know, that that pushing and pulling or that leaning really strongly in the direction of those things. But I think those those two teachings are very central to the way I often think about the world, you know.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:56  What am I wanting? What am I not wanting? And to what degree of ignorance am I in about how that shapes the the contents of my life?

Lodro Rinzler 00:43:06  Yeah. It’s beautiful. And you know, sometimes the term ignorance is even translated as prejudice because there’s almost like a really like I don’t want to look at it. I like, I’m actively. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:18  Delusion.

Lodro Rinzler 00:43:19  Yeah. Yeah. which, you know, I think we all almost have our own proclivities for these things, right? You know, and these things can get their hooks in us. There’s this Tibetan term cliché where we basically just get yanked around once. It’s like a fish on a line, you know, it’s just once anger has its hooks in your aggression or hatred or how you want to translate like it once it’s there, once we’re hooked, we can get pulled around going back a gazillion books. You know, I use the example of The Incredible Hulk in The Buddha Walks Into a Bar, because that’s such a like when mild mannered Bruce Banner gets hooked by anger.

Lodro Rinzler 00:43:55  He transforms physically into this giant monster that causes destruction wherever he goes. I was like, that’s anger right there. What a beautiful metaphor, actually. It’s like, if he can acknowledge and come back, he would be fine, but he can’t. He has to keep going. And then it’s just the more he angry he gets, the more destructive he is.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:11  And I think what you just said, there’s a very subtle and important point though, which is we are not saying that having an experience of anger is a problem or having an experience of wanting or not wanting or aversion or greed. That’s not the problem. The problem is what occurs after.

Lodro Rinzler 00:44:30  Yeah. That’s it. It’s that rubber band thing. It’s like, how quickly do we acknowledge it come back? Or how far does that band go before it snaps and we’re going to have reactions? I’m going to go with the previous example. The ice cream truck came by as if it knew we were talking just now. The noises coming on the recordings.

Lodro Rinzler 00:44:47  Yeah, just a moment ago, you know, doing the jingle. And he always goes by it 50 miles an hour down this road. You know, like, you know, he does it twice. He’ll be back in probably five more minutes. He does a loop. And, it’s every day. And I could really, you know, continue to spiral if I wanted to, but it’s like, no, there’s no point in that because it’s not helping me. The Buddha once said that holding on to anger is like holding on to a hot coal. It’s only burning ourselves. We’re only causing our self harm. And the same can be said with a lot of the other things when we get so fixated. I remember, you know, a million years ago when I was actively dating that, you know, I would be like, why isn’t this person texting me back? And I was just like, oh my God, what’s going on? What’s going on? And like, you know, do they reach out to me? Do they want to be with me? Do they? And then they’d be like, oh, sorry, I was at a movie or something.

Lodro Rinzler 00:45:35  Right. Like and it would be, it would pop. But I was like, man, that was a lot of wasted energy of wanting, right? And so we do this to ourselves all the time. We’re just constantly doing it. And in terms of these choices, it’s the old thing of like when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. When you invite the meditation teacher on, he’s just going to talk about meditation, that this is the thing. Meditation literally rewires the brains that we notice. Oh, I’m sitting here. I’m with the body breathing. A story comes up of why haven’t they texted me back? Or why is this ice cream truck doing this loop and never stop? I acknowledge it, I come back to the breath. Same thought can come up again. Again, as you said, it’s not that we’re not having reactions or that these thoughts aren’t coming. I acknowledge it though, and I come back to what’s happening right now. The breath. The more I do that in meditation, the stronger I get at being able to do that in my post Meditation Life.

Lodro Rinzler 00:46:26  So sometimes people say I can’t meditate because I have so many thoughts. Honestly, I started to reframe this for meditation students I work with, which is when we drift off and we come back a hundred times in a ten minute meditation. That’s like lifting a hundred reps of a weight, you know, it’s like it’s that’s giving us the workout. If we only went to the gym and lifted that dumbbell once, that’s not much of a workout. We don’t grow from that. Our muscles stay the same. But if we did it 100 times. My God, yeah. You’re gonna. It might feel uncomfortable to do that. It definitely would. Whatever you’re lifting. But that’s when the muscle tears grows back stronger. That’s how we get stronger. So same thing. We are literally rewiring the brain every time we say, I’m acknowledging the thought, I’m coming back. You do that a hundred times in a meditation. You’re really rewiring the brain in a positive way for the rest of your life.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:17  Yeah, I was having a conversation with somebody today about my book, and we were talking about meditation, and I was saying there were a couple of big switches for me that allowed meditation to become sort of a thing I did regularly.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:30  And and one of them was that exactly that I just flipped it from like, oh, it’s a problem that my mind keeps wandering to, oh, it’s great news that I keep finding it and treating that it as a, as a victory. And I’ve often said, I think what, what meditation gives me more than anything else is what Viktor Frankl talked about, that space between stimulus and response. I feel like meditation increases that space for me. It just gives me more room in there for me to then do what the best version of me thinks is worth doing.

Lodro Rinzler 00:48:06  Yeah. Beautifully put. You should write a book.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:08  Maybe so. Yeah. Maybe so.

Lodro Rinzler 00:48:11  I loved your book. I’m sorry. I’m gonna take us off topic. I really did. I think you have such a knack for synthesizing so many different things from different traditions, different modalities. You brought it all under one roof, and you could be like, hey, here’s, like ten different ways of looking at something like shame and guilt, right? Like, you know, it’s just I thought it was very cool.

Lodro Rinzler 00:48:29  I was impressed by your ability to do that. So yes, I love that Viktor Frankl quote. I love the idea that you’re talking about because that’s that’s the thing we can expand upon. And it is a life changing thing to not to have that gap before we send that aggressive text message or whatever we do as a reaction, right? Like, I don’t have to do it. I was funny because I actually caught myself similar. I was going back to the story of this perfect storm I built for myself, of taking my mother out to dinner with the toddler who had just seen, you know, FaceTime with my wife for two minutes. And I had this tendency to be I wanted to, like, be like Adriana. Like you threw me under the bus by calling right then. Like I wish you would. Just stayed, like, called us after, like we had agreed to. And I just I saw myself texting. I just was like, she misses you, that’s all. That’s actually what’s being communicated right now.

Lodro Rinzler 00:49:18  She misses you. Don’t feel any guilt about that. But, like, you know, I just want you to know it was one of those. But it was it was like, oh, watch me, watch me in this, like moment that I’m at, like my breaking point of like this screaming. Everyone’s looking at us in the restaurant. She wants to run outside. She’s banging on the door. She’s never done this, by the way. She’s not that like not nothing against anyone who’s going to do this regularly. But like, I was shocked, I was unprepared and and Yeah, I just was at that breaking point and I noticed. Look at me wanting to say you’re bad. Look at me. Wanting to blame someone to text them something. And I was like, man, if I hadn’t, if I didn’t have a practice, I’d probably give in to both of those tendencies. And I’m so glad I did that. I could just say, actually, it’s more about like, being nice to grandma.

Lodro Rinzler 00:50:03  Actually, it’s more about, you know, your daughter misses you and, you know, she’s having a bit of a hard time. But don’t feel bad. She’s going to be fine, you know, like that sort of thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:11  Yeah. I love that example for, a whole bunch of reasons. A it sounds like a setup to a joke. I’m half tempted to go try and craft the punchline. yeah, exactly. But what I love about it, and I’ve always admired about you as a teacher, is you don’t pretend that that doesn’t rattle you or that that isn’t hard. What you do, and I think, you know, listeners hear me say this often is that I think so much of the practice is not making things worse. What you didn’t do is you did not make it worse. You could have made it worse by shaming your daughter. You could have made it worse by guilting your wife. You could have taken what was a difficult situation and made it worse. But you didn’t.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:52  You just had the situation, which didn’t make it fun or easy. Right? But that’s a big deal because I am always amazed by our infinite capacity to make things worse. Yes. You know, not that we don’t have basic goodness. That’s not what I’m saying. I’m just saying that. No, I.

Lodro Rinzler 00:51:14  Know exactly what you’re saying, that we just. We are all so good at that. Yeah. Of pushing that button when we know it’s not going to feel good for us or the other person. We for saying that thing that cuts someone down at work, whatever. Like we’re just why did we get so good at that? Yeah. And we know outside of whatever temporary satisfaction like I told them. Like, it just makes us feel shitty long term. And it absolutely hurt the other person. Like, why? Why do we do that? I think that if there’s something that I’ve learned over my years of practice, it is to cause less harm.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:48  Yeah.

Lodro Rinzler 00:51:49  And yes, that’s that’s really it. Like it’s, you know, as I said earlier, ultimately the goal is, oh, I want to help people. And I think the skillful means is through doing as little harm as possible. When I lead meditation teacher trainings and I always tell them, like, listen, you’re going to say the wrong thing. Like, everyone wants to be the perfect meditation teacher coming out of the gate. And I’m like, I get that. And I was there. I remember at one point just, you know, giving a talk and making reference, like making a joke about SoulCycle, you know. And then I looked down and the person in the front row had these massive SoulCycle socks on, and I was like, well, I just offended that person. You know, like, it’s just that you’re always going to say or do something. It’s going to be a thing. You just can’t know, , we can’t know, we’re human beings. We’re like the Korean Zen master. Seung San equated community to dumping a bunch of potatoes into a barrel of water and banging them against each other until the dirt fell off.

Lodro Rinzler 00:52:45  And I was like, that’s it. That’s what we do as humans. You know, the idea is that we just, you know, try to be as skillful and as a hopeful and ideally caused the least harm as possible. But you’re right. It’s like we’re not. I think the idea at some point we transcend and become someone else, or that we transcend and we no longer have difficulties is a fallacy. It’s more about how do we work with our modern world, with all of its myriad distractions, all of its ways of causing us heartbreak and seeing, you know, we’re so exposed to the suffering of the world around us that it’s so heartbreaking right now, and we’re expected to go around and operate like do nine to fives and and get groceries and like, live like normal people in the midst of this crazy time. It’s rough. It is rough. We have to acknowledge that it’s rough. And that doesn’t mean that we aren’t basically good, and it doesn’t mean that we can’t strive to be as helpful and to cause as much as least harm as we can.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:38  Before you check out, pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change. Feed  your good wolf at oneyoufeed.net/newsletter.  Again oneyoufeed.net/newsletter. 

I think that is a beautiful place for us to wrap up. Thank you so much. You and I are going to continue in the post-show conversation, and I want to talk about the role children play in our lives. Similar to the potato banging thing that you just gave. So listeners, if you’d like access to post-show conversations, ad free episodes, and supporting this show, you can go to one you feed net loader. Thank you so much. It’s been, as always, a pleasure.

Lodro Rinzler 00:54:38  Thank you for having me, I will continue. This was the eighth book. You are good.

Lodro Rinzler 00:54:43  You are enough. And I. Every time I have a book, I will say, hey, let’s get together. Because it’s just a fun thing to do. When I, when I was asked, I said, hey, you should go promote this book. I said, I’m happy to do it. I just want to sit down with the people I really admire and really enjoy their company. And you were top of that list as I wrote you. So I’m so glad that we can continue to do this. And thanks for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:02  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity. But we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

How to Live in the Space Between No Longer and Not Yet | Suleika Jaouad

May 29, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Suleika Jaouad, author of Between Two Kingdoms, discusses her experience learning how to live in the space between no longer and not yet. Suleika shares how illness shattered her plans and forced her to confront mortality, finding agency through journaling and creativity. She discusses the difference between pain and suffering, the importance of community, and learning to live in life’s uncertain “in-between” spaces. Following a recurrence of her disease, she reflects on resilience, love, and embracing discomfort as pathways to meaning and growth.

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Key Takeaways:

  • Suleika’s personal journey with acute myeloid leukemia at age 22.
  • The impact of illness on identity and life plans.
  • The psychological and emotional challenges associated with serious health issues.
  • The concept of living in the “messy middle” between past and future.
  • The role of creativity and journaling in coping with illness.
  • The importance of community and connection during difficult times.
  • The distinction between physical pain and emotional suffering.
  • The idea of bravery in responding to hardship and making active choices.
  • The significance of rituals in navigating uncertainty and transitions.
  • Finding meaning and beauty in life despite pain and suffering.

Suleika Jaouad wrote the Emmy Award–winning New York Times column Life, Interrupted. Her essays and feature stories have appeared in The New York Times Magazine and Vogue and on NPR. She is also the creator of the Isolation Journals, a global project cultivating creativity and community during challenging times. Her first book is Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of a Life Interrupted

Connect with Suleika Jaouad Website | Instagram | Facebook 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Suleika Jaouad, check out these other episodes:

How to Find Solace in Discomfort with Lanusha Dameris

Strengthening Our Resilience with Linda Graham

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Episode Transcript:

Suleika Jaouad 00:00:00  Physical pain is not something that we always have control over. Suffering is something we do have agency over to some extent.

Chris Forbes 00:00:16  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:01  There’s an old saying when one door closes, another opens. And I believe that’s mostly true. But what often gets left out is the dark hallway between them, the part where the first store is shut and the next door hasn’t opened, and you don’t know how long you’ll be standing in it. Suleika Jaouad calls that the place between no longer and not yet, and she has spent a lot of her life there through leukemia, relapse and a life she couldn’t plan. Her memoir is called Between Two Kingdoms, and it’s outstanding. This conversation is about learning to make a home in that hallway instead of rushing through it. I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed. Hi, Suleika, welcome to the show.

Suleika Jaouad 00:01:44  Hi. I’m so happy to be here.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:46  Yes, I’m very happy that you are here. Ginny is also with me.

Ginny Gay 00:01:50  Hello, Suleika,Hello, everybody.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:53  We are in person in New York City. And as you all know, I love doing these interviews in person. Suleika has written an exceptional book called “Between Two Kingdoms, a Memoir of a Life Interrupted”, which we will talk about here in a moment. But we’ll start like we always do, with the parable. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:18  One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. Think about it for a second. Look up at their grandparents, say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Suleika Jaouad 00:02:42  I love that parable so much. Feels especially resonant in the context of the last year of my life, which I’ll get into a little bit more later. So as someone who has an overanxious mind, I’m constantly struggling to figure out how to swim in the ocean of uncertainty. And I’ve heard anxiety defined as fear of some future unknown or threat, and the belief that you can’t handle it if it comes to pass. And so that has been my constant work my whole life. It’s been my work in a more heightened way as of late.

Suleika Jaouad 00:03:25  But I would say that, you know, for me, the bad wolf, so to speak, is the temptation to feel like I can troubleshoot or solve for the uncertain. And of course, you know, the forever acceptance that I’m trying to practice, which is that I can’t. None of us can. We instead have to figure out how to live with fear, to coexist with pain without trying to dodge it or numb it, or in my case, fix it.

Ginny Gay 00:04:00  Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. So I think we should start by giving listeners a chance to know your story a bit. I mean, Eric and I have read your absolutely gut wrenching and gorgeous memoir of your story, so I want listeners to know a bit about what you have been through and what has brought you to where you are in terms of today. So in your book, you say it all began with an itch. Can you take it from there.

Suleika Jaouad 00:04:28  Yes. So it was a literal itch, not a metaphorical itch or, you know, a quarter life crisis.

Suleika Jaouad 00:04:35  When I was 22 years old and my final semester of college, I began having these mysterious symptoms. First the itch and then this sort of bone deep fatigue. But youth and health are supposed to go hand in hand, so I didn’t really think anything of it. I felt, you know, this deeper fear that maybe I somehow wasn’t cut out for the adult world. But as the months progressed and I found myself and my first job as a paralegal out of college, those symptoms began to morph and change. And ultimately, I was given a diagnosis of a very aggressive form of leukemia called acute myeloid leukemia. And up until that point, I had been someone who was, I think, first and foremost, a big dreamer. I had my one year plan and my five year plan and my ten year plan, and I had these aspirations of becoming a foreign correspondent or a war correspondent. And with that diagnosis, it was really a cleaving moment for me. There was my life before and everything that came after.

Suleika Jaouad 00:05:48  And overnight I lost my job. I moved from Paris, where I’d been working back into my childhood bedroom in upstate New York, with its embarrassing pink walls and dusty boy band posters, and I prepared to undergo what would ultimately be four years in the kingdom of the sick. And, you know, the one thing that’s in the contract is that we will all at some point have to contend with our mortality. And yet somehow the threat of death always feels like a plot twist. And I think that was especially true for me. At 22, I had this sense of time, you know, time to figure out who I was, time to get my act together, time to find a vocation that not only paid the bills, but hopefully nourished me in other ways. And suddenly it was this very abrupt realization that I didn’t have time. I had about a 35% chance of long term survival. And within those first couple of months in the hospital, I learned that none of the standard chemotherapy treatments were working for me, and that my only shot at the cure was going to be experimental clinical trials.

Suleika Jaouad 00:07:05  And if I was very lucky, a bone marrow transplant. And so that was my life from age 22 until about 27. But I think what was surprising to me was that more frightening than the fear of death, more unsettling than the illness and the pain that came with it, was the sense that I hadn’t done what I wanted to do in my life that I had spent my entire adult life. You know, all you know, whatever. It was four years of it at that point, preparing to be a person I had, you know, spent all nighters so I could get a scholarship to go to college. I had worked really hard to be able to set myself up for some form of independence, and suddenly I found myself in the very opposite place. Then I’d planned in those, you know, first one and five year plans. I found myself back in my childhood bedroom, living between there and hospital rooms and as dependent on others as I’d ever been since infancy. And so it was this rude awakening and realization of my finitude, of our finitude.  And more than that, I think it was a quest for me to figure out what this experience meant for me, and how I could define some sense of selfhood within it.

Ginny Gay 00:08:38  Yeah, yeah. Oh gosh. So much of what you say just really strikes deep chords within me as just so difficult and so true. And I think a universal point of connection there is that like for me, the first lesson of adulthood was like, well, life does not go as planned. You know, we can make these plans, we can have these visions. And inevitably and at some point, you know, sooner or later there’s going to be a plot twist and things are going to be very different from that dream. You sort of held for yourself for that plan that you had. As I read the pages that described the months that you sat in the hospital in isolation because of the bone marrow transplant or receiving the kind of therapy you received in chemotherapy, and then the pain that was associated with that, the physical pain and the mental pain.

Ginny Gay 00:09:21  I just remarked it how you made it through those days, passing the time when there wasn’t an end in sight. I mean, that just to me sounded like those moments could be really anguish inducing. What did you find that sustained you through that?

Suleika Jaouad 00:09:33  So that first summer that I spent in the hospital, I especially when I found out that chemotherapy was not working for me, I me felt so angry. I remember waking up one morning and closing the blinds in my hospital room, and I was very lucky to have a hospital room that happened to face Central Park, which as far as hospital rooms went, was kind of a coveted hospital room to have that I’d found myself in. But I couldn’t stand the sight of seeing, you know, all these tiny little hustlers and their suits going to work, young mothers, you know, wheeling newborns around in prams, people my age who were having fun and, you know, getting ready to have a picnic in the park because it felt like this reminder of what my life could have been and likely was never going to be.

Suleika Jaouad 00:10:22  And more than that, I think it pointed to this yearning I had to participate in the world, and the deep sense of isolation and inability that I felt was my reality. And so all these plans, you know, these aspirations, say, of becoming a war correspondent, felt entirely foreclosed to me. I wasn’t doing any of the normal young people things that I saw my friends doing on Instagram. I wasn’t going to parties, I wasn’t traveling, I wasn’t beginning a career. I was stuck in bed. And it’s around that time that a friend of mine suggested that we do something called 100 Day Project, and the concept was really simple. We were each going to anchor our days around one creative act, and it was something we were going to do together. And my mom, who’s a painter, decided to paint one small ceramic tile every day that she later assembled into a shield and hung above my bed and told me I had protective powers. And my dad, who up until that point had been, you know, a very private man, decided to write 100 childhood memories about growing up in rural Tunisia.

Suleika Jaouad 00:11:34  And he later compiled those memories into a little booklet and gave them to me, and my brother and I really struggled to figure out what my project could be. I could barely, you know, walk around my room, let alone do some big, ambitious thing. And so I decided to return to the thing I’d done from the time I was a child and to journal every day. And I made a couple of rules for myself. One was that I couldn’t go back and read it because I didn’t want to be concerned about how good the writing was, and that it didn’t matter how long or short my entry was. And often it was one sentence, and occasionally it was one word, frequently the F word.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:14  I was just about to say, I think I might know what that word would be exactly.

Suleika Jaouad 00:12:21  but something interesting began to happen in the process of keeping that journal, and I started to use it almost as a reporter’s pad. And rather than feeling, you know, mired and helpless in this situation, I began to observe the hospital world around me.

Suleika Jaouad 00:12:41  I started recording these overheard snippets of conversation by the nurses station. I started writing about the new friends and fellow patients that I was encountering, and a young man a couple doors down from me who was trying to incite a hospital food strike because our meals kept arriving so frozen from the cafeteria. And I began to realize that while this wasn’t necessarily the circumstance I would have chosen for myself, there was a whole world of humanity unfolding right there that I could write about. And little by little, in keeping that journal, although I had no expectations of doing anything with it, I began to find a voice. And I think for me, it was my first indication that while I would never have chosen this new reality for myself. And while I had to cede a lot of control to my doctors, to my caregivers, to the ever changing treatment protocols, to my body, ultimately I did have some agency and that was that. I could make meaning of this experience on my own terms, in my own words.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:59  Yeah, there’s certainly an idea you reference in your book, Post-traumatic Growth, about growing from suffering. And one of the key indicators of the ability to do that is to begin to create a narrative and a meaning out of what’s happening. The other thing I think so instructional in what you said there, and you referenced this a bunch of different times in different ways. But there is a tendency, whether it’s extreme, like you like I have leukemia and the thought becomes, when I get better, then I will X or in our own lives. As you said, there was even some of that before. When I get out of college, I will. Then when I get promoted, we all do it. Then I’ll be a happy and b then I’ll do what I want to do. Then I’ll do what’s important to me. And I think so much of what you learn, and you say so eloquently in the book, is that strategy doesn’t work. There’s a line somewhere where you say, around illness.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:56  I had to learn not to move away from illness, but to move forward with it. Yeah, yeah. You know, and I think that’s just a really powerful idea.

Suleika Jaouad 00:15:07  Absolutely. And I do think, you know, we often feel like we need to check certain boxes or climb certain rungs in order to give ourselves permission to do something that we actually want to do. And I think, you know, one of the things that was most interesting to me in that first year of illness was how quickly my priorities reshuffled themselves. I had very limited energy. I was on a ton of medications. I maybe had about an hour or 2 or 3 on a very good day of usable energy. And what that meant was that I had to get very specific about who I wanted to spend that time with and what I wanted to do during that time. And like I said earlier, you know, especially when you’re young. But I think for most of us, we have this sense of endless time.

Suleika Jaouad 00:15:58  That we can get to it later and overnight. You know, my relationship to time abruptly changed, and I understood that there wasn’t endless time. In fact, in my case, there was likely a very finite amount of time for me to do the things that I wanted to do. And, you know, it’s interesting because I’m very interested in post-traumatic growth now. But at the time, had you told me you can learn something from this, I probably would have punched you in the face as well.

Speaker 5 00:16:28  I’m not a sure. That person. Yeah.

Suleika Jaouad 00:16:30  You know, so I really struggled in that first year. I would seek out illness narratives, and I’d read about someone who had gone on to run an ultramarathon or to start some foundation or to write, you know, a bestselling book. And I hated those stories because they made me feel like there was a right and a wrong way to suffer. And at that time, I wasn’t ready yet to figure out what I might learn from this experience, how it might enhance my life.

Suleika Jaouad 00:16:59  And so what I started doing instead was researching this long lineage of bedridden artists and writers that we have who, you know, wrote or created from the trenches. Frida Kahlo was someone I was very drawn to because she didn’t find herself on the other side of her physical pain. She was in an automobile accident when she was 18 years old and ended up living from bed or from a wheelchair for large chunks of her life. And so what she did, you know, instead of waiting until she was better, was she began painting the self-portraits from bed and the portraits of what it meant to live in a broken body and a pain body, and she engaged with her reality. And so that was, you know, very inspiring to me. And it made me realize, maybe there is a way for me to creatively engage with my circumstances without being Pollyanna ish about it, without putting pressure on myself to find some kind of silver lining or some sort of wisdom. But maybe I can just explore this. You know, the image of a kaleidoscope is what comes to mind, where you sort of twist the cylinder and you see things in a different light.

Suleika Jaouad 00:18:18  And so that’s what I started to do in the journals. But to your other point about waiting for permission. In the lead up to my bone marrow transplant, I realized I had about two months before I entered the hospital, and I knew my chances of surviving that procedure were not very high. And I began to rethink this idea of being a journalist. And of course, there was no way for me to be a word correspondent or to travel to some place. I couldn’t even leave my hospital room. But I began to think about what I could report on from the front lines of my hospital bed. And just that thought experiment alone opened up my entire world.

Ginny Gay 00:19:01  I love that, and I love that you write about the power of story. You talk about how it helps from reducing our life to just inevitability, you know, or something to that effect. The other thing I hear when you talk about this is that you weren’t looking for meaning, you were making meaning, like there’s agency in you having a perspective on what was happening and beginning to connect with that and beginning to own that and write about it.  The meaning was yours to make. Like you were able to show up with what was happening in a way that felt healing and engaging to you, and that that was powerful. And that was it. It wasn’t like you had to go find some meaning or find some purpose, or it wasn’t a passive thing. It was very active.

Suleika Jaouad 00:19:39  Absolutely. And you spent enough time in hospitals, and you very quickly learned that you are not the only one suffering, even though it can feel that way, even though it can feel impossible to think that anything else is happening in the world when you’re sick yourself, or when you’re sitting next to the bedside of a loved one who’s ill. And, you know, I think ultimately that’s what drew me to writing first as a reader and then later as a writer myself. It’s that, you know, when we dare to tell the unvarnished truth, be it in a memoir or in a work of fiction, we learn again and again that we’re more alike than we are different.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:23  There’s an idea in a lot of spiritual circles where a distinction is made between pain and suffering. I’ll just sort of lay it out. But I would really love to hear your opinion on it. And the idea is essentially that there is pain in life. We’re all going to have it. Right. You had an enormous amount of it, you know, an amount of pain that scares me, frankly. Right. But that there is an additional layer that goes on top of that pain that some people would call suffering. And it’s the mental things that we layer on top of it. And so some of it would be the fear, some of it would be the jealousy of other people. Some of it would be the ways we resist it, and that there is a way to, while still being in pain and acknowledging that that pain is extraordinarily real, also lessen the total amount of suffering that goes into that experience. And I’m just curious, does that ring true or resonate with you?

Suleika Jaouad 00:21:22  Absolutely. I think that’s been a core part of how I’ve endured these different experiences. You know, physical pain is not something that we always have control over. Suffering is something we do have agency over to some extent. You know how we suffer. Maybe the question isn’t whether we suffer or whether we don’t, but how we engage with that suffering. And so for me, you know, creativity has always been my way of suffering on my terms and in a way that instead of feeling like I’m prisoner by my suffering, unlocks not only the suffering for me, but often the world around me.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:08  We were talking yesterday with your agent, Richard Pine, and. Well, I’ll let you take this one. Yeah, okay. Actually, I think it’s better. Better to come from you.

Ginny Gay 00:22:17  Well, I just thought he posed such an interesting question because I mentioned to him I was like, so like his bravery, her courage and her bravery. And he said, you know, I wonder if she would describe herself that way. He said, like, I feel like people that have had to endure a lot of pain and inevitable suffering, maybe just don’t see that there was a choice to show up or not. And in how you show up. Or maybe there’s just a desire to be normal, you know, and not be labeled as something like brave. And so it just really got me thinking about a lot of different aspects of that. And it did make me curious to know, like when I say like, gosh, you strike me as so brave. Like, how does that land on you? And how do you consider yourself?

Suleika Jaouad 00:22:55  My answer to that now is very different than it would have been ten years ago. But I think, you know, in general, we often conflate the hero’s journey with the survivor’s journey survivor of an illness or some other kind of heartbreak or difficulty that brings us to the floor. And so when I first got sick, I really resisted the idea of anyone calling me brave or inspiring, because I felt like this is not a circumstance that I had chosen, and I didn’t feel brave or strong or inspiring. I felt like I was in the belly of the beast, and I was really struggling, and I couldn’t really see a way forward for myself.

Suleika Jaouad 00:23:38  What I do feel proud of, and where I will accept that word bravery is not, you know, the mere fact of having been sick or having endured some kind of pain. It’s, you know, where I see that strength is in our response to the inciting event. So I felt brave when I began writing in the hospital. I felt strong when I turned it into this column that I later went on to write. I felt not like a hero. I don’t think I’ve ever felt like a hero. And I’d be very suspicious of anyone who does think of themselves as a hero.

Suleika Jaouad 00:24:20  Yeah, but I felt courageous when, in the aftermath of my illness, when I was really trying to figure out who I was and what I wanted to do with my life, I made a choice to take things into my own hands and to embark on a very long, slightly inadvisable road trip that I went on, because in those moments, I was choosing something. I was not the passive agent and an experience I wouldn’t have opted for.  I was active, I was engaging, I was making decisions.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:13  One of the things I’m always interested in is what is it that causes some people? When faced with enormous difficulty to. In some way, I want to be careful with my words here, but they’re able to make something generative out of it, and other people, when faced with extraordinary difficulty, are crushed by it. It’s a variation on a question I’ve always had as a recovering addict, like, why are some of us getting sober? Why are some of us not? There are some things we can certainly point to. The level of support that you have, the access to, the care that you have, the quality of the care. We can point those out and see those, and yet we can find examples on both sides of the coin of people who had all that and still, you know, were sort of emotionally, mentally crushed by. And on the other hand, people who had none of that. I’m just curious, did you see that in the world that you were in, and was there anything in seeing that any pattern you saw in the people that were.  Again, I like your distinction between surviving and a hero’s journey. And maybe let’s step it back from hero’s journey, right? We don’t need to be that ambitious with the word, but more than just surviving.

Suleika Jaouad 00:26:20  So I became obsessed with this very question when I found myself, you know, on paper, finally cancer free, but off paper, more lost than I’d ever been. And I was really struggling with reentry, which is a word that we use in the context of veterans returning from war. But we don’t use it as much in the context of surviving a traumatic experience like a long illness. And I expected to feel grateful for that. I expected to feel stronger for it, and it was the very opposite of that. I had never been more lost in my life. I knew that I couldn’t go back to the person I’d been pre illness, and I was no longer a patient, but I had no idea who I was. I had no idea how to live my life or what that would look like, and I began to take a great interest in people who had figured out how to move forward without staying crystallized.

Suleika Jaouad 00:27:23  And in that trauma, because we all know people, and I was one of them for a very long time, who stay in that survival mode. And for a very long time, I was more comfortable in survival mode than I was dealing with, you know, everyday life. But I knew intuitively that the key for me was going to be to figure out how to shift out of surviving and into some form of living. I just didn’t know how to do that yet. And so what that looked like for me was going on this road trip and interviewing different people who had experienced all kinds of life interruptions. I interviewed a man on death row in Texas who, at the time that I met him, had spent more than half of his life in solitary confinement and was facing the death penalty and had no expectation of ever, you know, getting out. And something that struck me about him was the way that he talked about community. One of the very first questions he asked me was, how did you spend all that time in the hospital? And I said, I played a lot of Scrabble.

Suleika Jaouad 00:28:29  And he responded, me too, and explained to me that he and his neighboring cellmates would make boards out of scraps of paper and call their plays out to each other through, you know, the meal slots and their cells. And that made a lot of sense to me, because I think that community, whether it’s a pre-existing community or one that you have to construct for yourself in the aftermath of an experience, is crucial to figuring out how to move forward, because of course, you can’t really move on from a trauma. Like we said, you have to learn to carry that forward with you. And so for me. You know, aside from my wonderful friends and family, finding people who had been where I’d been, who were where I was, was really important, and being able to have frank conversations about what that experience was like, where I didn’t feel the self-imposed pressure to say, I’m alive. I’m so grateful. Which, of course, on some level I was, but was glossing over all the complexity and the day to day challenges of really figuring out what it meant to take my place among the living.

Suleika Jaouad 00:29:38  The second thing I’d say is that when you’ve endured a trauma, the impulse can be to stay in a very small, safe place. Because when you’ve had the ceiling cave in on you, you no longer assume structural stability. And that can make the world a scary place to be. It can make opening your heart up a very scary act, because it’s only natural to want to protect yourself against new loss when you’ve endured a loss. And so for me, it was really a process of learning not to do what was my impulse, which was to dodge any sort of discomfort, to numb myself against it, to paper over it. But you really allow myself the time to engage with that grief. But those losses with that trauma, and to find a sort of container where I could explore that distance between no longer and not yet, and to learn to embrace existing in that messy middle where I didn’t know who I was. I didn’t know where I was going, I didn’t know what my life was going to be and ultimately To come to think of discomfort not as a bad thing, but as a necessary passage. When you’re in transition.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:08  Did you say between no longer and not yet? Yeah, that’s a beautiful phrase. I sometimes talk about that, you know, cliché. Like when one door closes, another one opens, which I do believe generally to be true. But I often say what is missed is there’s a there’s often a long, dark hallway between them, like the one door is closed, the other is not open yet, and it’s just scary in there.

Suleika Jaouad 00:31:30  Absolutely. You know, and the title of the book is Between Two Kingdoms, because ultimately, I believe most of us live large chunks of our lives in the in-between, in transition, in that space between no longer and not yet. And once we can learn to get comfortable with that discomfort, with that sense of uncertainty, there’s a lot of richness to be gained from looking around when you’re in that liminal space and really, you know, boring into the unknown. And as someone who, you know, when we opened this conversation about the two wolves copped to having a great degree of anxiety about uncertainty. My impulse is to rush through those transitions. I don’t want to be in that space between no longer and not yet. I want to know exactly what I’m doing and where I’m going, and what my day is going to look like. And my work, for whatever reason, for the last decade, has been being forced to not rush through those transitional moments and and really learning to make a life for myself and a home for myself and the messy middle.

Ginny Gay 00:32:45  Yeah. You say to learn to swim in the ocean of not knowing. This is my constant work. So when you find yourself running up against that edge of like wanting to rush through it, but knowing that being present with it is the way to some freedom and richness for yourself. Like, are there practices or their ideas you orient towards? Like, how do you sort of remind yourself at a at a cellular level to be here and to open to that uncertainty? How do you do that?

Suleika Jaouad 00:33:13  Well, I think the first thing is rooted in historical understanding of my maladaptive coping mechanisms, which is that when I tried to resist grief, when I tried to resist discomfort, I end up injuring myself more.

Ginny Gay 00:33:33  Yeah.

Suleika Jaouad 00:33:33  So that is my bedrock knowledge that I’ve gained by not using tools that serve me and savoring that transition. Journaling has been a huge part of how on a, you know, day to day, I take a little time for myself to tap into the subconscious, to write in stream of consciousness and to allow. You know, whatever pressure valve needs to be released to have a little respite. And I love the journal. I know journaling gets a bad rap as this sort of infantile thing that children do with a diary and a little locket, but to me, the journal feels like a rare space in today’s world where we really get to show up as our most unexamined, unedited, unvarnished selves and where we get to just write. And so I find that all the messiness for me happens in the journal. And that’s the whole point of it. It’s not for anybody else’s eyes. It’s not for public consumption. There’s no, you know, end goal to it. It’s just pure exploration. And so for me, it’s journaling. Sometimes it’s walking or being in nature. But I need to have those Daily commitments to the messiness. In order to stay anchored in it.

Ginny Gay 00:34:59  What I hear you say is that, like journaling is a place where you have given yourself permission to let whatever’s here be here and to let it express itself. I can really relate to that. I mean, I have a daily mindfulness meditation practice where that’s kind of my sacred time to just find whatever’s going on inside of me. I try to connect with it in my body so it’s not so abstract, but just to work with not being so hostile towards it and work with just sort of allowing it to be there and express itself. Yeah. I mean, I just think that’s so powerful because I mean, again, in mindfulness, we talk about like turning towards our pain versus away from it. I mean, I’m a recovering addict as well. And I’ve spent a lot of my life just orienting around comfort and trying to avoid pain, thinking that’s a brilliant strategy.  We just dodged the bullet. Guys like in that. Clearly it ran my life into the ground. So now just that daily practice of turning towards whatever is, and I still find myself resisting it. So the daily practice is to try to drop that resistance and to open to it. It seems like a powerful way to relate to your grief and relate to your pain.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:02  You say at one point the idea of striving for some beautiful, perfect state of wellness mires us in eternal dissatisfaction, a goal forever out of reach. To be well now is to learn to accept whatever body and mind I currently have. And I think that speaks to what you were just saying, Ginny, and what you’re saying about being with what is uncomfortable and recognizing like this is what is here. I interviewed the author, Andrew Solomon yesterday, who’s written very eloquently about families and depression, and something stands out as he talks about being in depression and recognizing, like, you can’t wait till it feels like it’s over because time is happening. Your life is always what is right here, right now, even when it’s really unpleasant. That is what we have to work with.

Suleika Jaouad 00:36:50  We don’t get to skip over the hard work of healing and grieving, or to stow away the uncomfortable or painful parts, because, as we know, the more we do that. The more it comes back for blood. Yeah. And so, you know, before we started this conversation, I was sharing with you what I do when I don’t want to write, which is pretty much most days of the week, if I’m being honest, in part because it’s not fun necessarily to sit with that discomfort. Who wants to do that? Sure. You know, it’s much more enjoyable to binge watch whatever newest show is on Netflix. Right. And so what I often do, and this is a practice the poet Marie Howe  does is when I’m in that space of really resisting whatever it is that I have to say or don’t know how to say, I write in my non-dominant hand and I say I don’t want to write about and then I write into that.

Suleika Jaouad 00:37:51  And so there are so many little tools like that that I’ve had to cultivate, not because I’m some peaceful mountaintop guru that has learned to, you know, lovingly coexist with pain. But because I have to work at it every day and because my survival is tied to it.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:27  Hey, friend, before we dive back in, I want you to take a second and think about what you’ve been listening to. What’s one thing that really landed, and what’s one tiny action you could take today to live it out? Those little moments of reflection. That’s exactly why I started Good Wolf reminders short, free text messages that land in your phone once or twice a week. Nearly 5000 people already get them and say the quick bursts of insight help them shift out of autopilot and stay intentional in their lives. If that sounds like you’re kind of thing, head to oneyoyufeed.net/sms and sign up. It’s free. No spam, and easy to opt out of any time. Again, that’s oneyoufeed.net/sms.  Tiny nudges, real change. All right, back to the show. 

Eric Zimmer 00:39:20  I think that’s such a beautiful point,  because I do think we are in a culture that, well, it’s cultural and it’s human to want easy answers, to believe that pain can be banished, to believe that if you just do this practice or that practice like it will, life will be great. Right. And and I just I don’t believe that. You know, and it’s we talk about these things and we talk about difficulties we’ve gone through. And yet being in difficult times is just being in difficult times. Being in pain is just being in pain. There are more there are more and less skillful ways to do it. But even I think it’s back to what we talked about earlier between pain and suffering. Even if you’re skillfully relating the best of your ability to these challenges that we’re talking about, they are still challenges and they are still deeply unpleasant.

Suleika Jaouad 00:40:15  And life keeps unfolding and time keeps unfolding. And with that comes new beginnings and new challenges and new difficulties. Yeah. So, you know, we opened this conversation speaking about the fear of some future threat happening and the belief that you can’t handle it. And so for me, much of the last ten years was waiting for that ceiling to cave back in. Fearing the possibility that one day might leukemia might return. And I had to, you know, do battle with that fear and that anxiety every day. And last year, right, as I had sort of started to trust the structural stability, my most feared thing did happen, I learned that my leukemia had returned. And it’s so interesting because, you know, I’ve been the sickest I’ve ever been in the last year I had a second bone marrow transplant, and while I’m doing okay right now, I also learned that this time there wasn’t going to be an end date in sight. I’m going to be in treatment indefinitely for the rest of my life. And that word indefinite initially was so crushing to me.

Suleika Jaouad 00:41:35  But I was saying this to my husband the other day. There’s a strange freedom that I feel now that my most feared thing has come to pass. Because I just have to learn to live with it now. There is no expectation that I will ever be on the other side of it. And while that was crushing in a lot of ways, I have no choice but to accept it. I have no choice but to coexist with the facts of my mortality. I won’t say that my anxiety has dissipated, but its shape shifted.

Ginny Gay 00:42:13  Can I connect with you about that point? Just about how that has shown up in my life. So for my entire life, the death of my mother was the thing I feared most. I just did not know how I would go on. I had grown to fear it as just this big looming monster that, you know, unless I died first, it was going to happen one day and I didn’t know how I would survive. I couldn’t see the other side of it.

Ginny Gay 00:42:37  And she passed away in in October. And here I am. Yeah. You know, it was and still can be. It’s full of grief and a lot of sadness. The way you write about losing Melissa and like, The Nevers, like, life goes on. But she’ll never experience the things that you’re experiencing or that one should experience in life. You know, I think about that. It’s the finality of her death that just I still can’t wrap my mind and head around. So not to make light of it and not to say that, oh, it was nothing. It was it was awful. And it is awful in moments. And I’m still here. Like there’s a sense of having had it happen. That doesn’t make sense, but you know what I mean? And it didn’t destroy you right now. Like you’re still around to talk about it. It’s like you’re looking around, like, okay, it happens here I am. There is a freedom in that, isn’t there? You live with the awful, but here you are.

Suleika Jaouad 00:43:26  And we adapt.

Ginny Gay 00:43:27  And we adapt.

Suleika Jaouad 00:43:29  You know, the word resilience gets thrown around. But for us to be here in this room, having this Conversation. Our ancestors had to survive so many things. We have resilience and adaptability encoded in our DNA. And so, you know, thank you for sharing that. And I so deeply understand it. And, you know, I at my lowest point last summer when I learned this news, I was back in treatment. I was using a walker, which at 33 is not the thing that you expect that you’ll be doing. And I had this really difficult moment of realizing, you know, this quality of life is not the quality of life that I want for myself, and I don’t know how to go on. And it was this really scary moment, because I had never really reached the limits of what I thought I could endure up until that moment, and I couldn’t do, you know, the things that I loved for a while.

Suleika Jaouad 00:44:28  I was on a medication that caused my vision to double, and so I couldn’t write, I couldn’t journal, and that felt like such a deep loss. And at the time I thought, I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to do the thing that I love. And yet we adapt. I started using a voice transcription app on my phone. I started painting in the place of writing, which is not something I ever thought I was going to do. And painting has become this hugely important part of my life and now career and a very, very bizarre, unexpected way. And so that’s the thing that I returned to. It’s that, you know, when we lose some part of ourselves that feels integral to who we are. If we can get quiet enough and observant enough to notice what other things start to, you know, appear on the peripheries of that absence. We learned that, well, you know, you can’t go back to the way your life was before. there are new ways of living, new ways of surviving, new ways of interacting with the world around you.

Suleika Jaouad 00:45:40  And so that’s what I’ve been doing this year, is learning to adapt. And on some days it feels incredibly challenging, and on other days it feels thrilling. I feel almost bulletproof because the ceiling has caved in and I’m okay. The other day I was walking my dog and it was a beautiful sunny day and I’m no longer using my walker. And I just had, you know, one of these great New York moments. Someone was playing something on a boombox. And, and I had this moment where I turned to my dog and I said, out loud, I said, I’m outside and I’m living. And it was such a small, thrilling, ordinary moment and it meant everything.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:24  Do you think that coming back to a diagnosis a second time to leukemia returning. Do you think that you are more prepared to handle it than you were? You had leukemia. Then you went on this journey across the country of interviewing these people, and you wrote this memoir, which you’re mining all that for what you learned, what became of you. And now you’re sort of like, all right, I got to do it again. And I assume that there are some ways that you feel more prepared and in some ways, maybe worse.

Suleika Jaouad 00:47:01  All of those things. You know, I think some of it is muscle memory. For example, as soon as I relapsed, you know, my husband and I, within 48 hours, had to pack up our things, leave our home, rehome our dogs, which was the most heartbreaking thing. And I had this feeling of, you know, I’ve been here before. I’ve had this moment of my life imploding overnight, and none of that gets easier. But also, I think this time I went into it without any illusions that I could hold on to the plans that I had, that I could hold on to the person I’d been even 48 hours before. And with that came an openness to everything, to the terror, to the beauty, to maybe even the learnings. And that made it easier.

Suleika Jaouad 00:47:56  The last time I went through this, I was clinging to the person that I’d been. That I was no longer. And I was constantly comparing myself to that person. And this time, you know, I just let it all happen to me. And instead of trying to control or trying to resist, I, you know, tried to flow with it. and that made things a lot easier. the other thing I feel like I learned and I alluded to this earlier from the last time, was how crucial community is. The thing I’m proudest of, my proudest accomplishment in the last decade, is the community that I’ve built of family, of friends, of chosen family, of fellow artists and writers who I learn from, who inspire me every day. And the thing about community is you can’t just create one overnight in a moment of need, and then expect people to be there for you. Right, right. Ideally, your initial way of showing up in a community is one of generosity and one of extending support, long without expectation of ever needing anything in return.

Suleika Jaouad 00:49:08  And so this time around, well, you know, illness, even when you’re surrounded by people, can feel isolating because you alone live in your body and know what’s happening in there. Yeah. I never once felt lonely. I was surrounded by more love than I ever dared dream possible. And ultimately, for me, you know, I feel like love is the crucial, essential ingredient to enduring.

Ginny Gay 00:49:41  You visit on your road trip, Catherine. And she speaks a bit about this going through, you know, something that she thought she could never survive. And yet he or she is surviving. You know, she says you have to shift from the gloom and doom and focus instead on what you love. She told me that’s all you can do in the face of these things. Love the people around you. Love the life you have. I can’t think of a more powerful response to life’s sorrows than loving.

Suleika Jaouad 00:50:07  I love by those words and Catherine has become a dear friend and a teacher to me.

Suleika Jaouad 00:50:13  She lost her 27 year old son to suicide, and then shortly thereafter was diagnosed with a very advanced form of cancer. And long after the book was finished, I actually ultimately went back to California to teach a creative writing course with her for a semester to a group of 16 year old students. And I think to me, she’s an embodiment of leading with love. She has every reason in the world to be someone who feels betrayed by the world, who feels embittered by her losses, who might not even find a reason to get out of bed. And yet she has planted these seeds of love and the students that she teaches, and her children and now grandchildren and the perfect strangers like myself, who she encounters and takes under her wing. And so I try to live my life in such a way where attempt to emulate Catherine and attempt to focus on the love and to cultivate it.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:22  I was going to say we were listening to a song this morning by one of my favorite artists, Jason Isbell, and he’s got a song called I Don’t Know What It’s Called.

Ginny Gay 00:51:30  I can’t believe you’re saying this. I literally was thinking about these lyrics. I think this is what you’re about to say about ten minutes ago.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:36  Yeah, I mean, it’s find something to love.

Ginny Gay 00:51:38  I hope you find something to love. Something to do when you feel like giving up a song to sing a tale to tell something to love. It’ll serve you well.

Suleika Jaouad 00:51:45  I love that so much. And I really love my life. By that. I have a hard time with gratitude journals or gratitude lists just because, especially as a cancer patient, you’re kind of bombarded with messages of gratitude where I have been able to anchor myself as an a practice of seeking out small joys and small loves, because you can always find something to love. The smallest little thing. You know, I mentioned I like to play Scrabble when I was in the bone marrow transplant last year for about five weeks, I befriended one of my nurses, and she would come and play Scrabble with me during her lunch breaks, and we would get fiercely competitive and we would cuss each other out.

Suleika Jaouad 00:52:31  And it was just such a delight and such a joy, and also such an act of love for her to choose to spend her precious, you know, 15 minutes or whatever it was with me when that was her job.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:47  Who wouldn’t want to spend?

Ginny Gay 00:52:51  I completely agree

Suleika Jaouad 00:52:54  Mean, but I believe that you don’t have to find the silver lining. You don’t have to feel grateful for some terrible thing that has happened to you. But we can all find a small thing to love.

Ginny Gay 00:53:05  Yeah, because the beautiful and the terrible coexist. Yeah, right. But how powerful to hear, you know, you talk about it in that way. There’s another connection I want to make. There’s something else just really beautiful and rare. That I took from your book and I take from your story and connected to community, which is, you know, the community that you built in the hospital with the fellow patients that were suffering in their own cancer journeys.

Ginny Gay 00:53:29  But you all seem to connect with one another in the real messy pain of it all, in the most vulnerable and open way, and therefore found a closeness and connection with one another that seemed so sacred and so precious and so supportive to you all. I mean, you were in the hotel room in Vegas. I remember like that scene in your book when you’re talking about all of these things that are like, even at that point you hadn’t shared with one another, but then at that point decided to just how much closer that even brought you to one another. I mean, the way you then travel around the country, opening yourself up to connect your pain with the pain that those you visit have experienced, and then how you found your way forward, how they found their way forward. You know, the community you seem to have built for yourself is built on openness and honesty about your pain. It makes me think about Brene Brown and how she talks about like, you know, fitting in is not about like fitting yourself into some mold. It’s about showing up in who you are. Right. And finding the connection with whom there’s a fit.

Suleika Jaouad 00:54:26  You know, the irony is I’m a deeply guarded person. I’m not comfortable with vulnerability. I have to constantly overcome my own instinct to self protect in order to open myself up to, you know, cultivate relationships that are born of a kind of honest, deep sharing. In part because I know those are really the only kinds of relationships I’m interested in having and that feel worth having. But, you know, this crew of friends who I befriended, there were ten of us. Only three of us are still alive. And, you know, my impulse after that was to never befriend someone who was sick because I couldn’t bear, you know, the thought of losing a beloved again. And yet, you know, my favorite moments in my life have been shared with that group of people. And they really taught me what friendship meant. And I would suffer that loss and that grief and that heartache over and over and over again to just get one day with them.

Suleika Jaouad 00:55:33  But I remember, you know, early on and my friendship with this group of people, they were all in their 20s and early 30s, and we had all been in treatment for quite a long time, to the point that we were going to, you know, chemotherapy by ourselves and trying to do things a little more independently. And we formed a buddy system together. We would accompany each other to radiation. We would answer phone calls in the middle of the night when the panic attack struck. We always showed up when there was bad news, and there was this shared sense of understanding that went beyond the strange twist and fate and malignant cells that had yoked us together. But that was really grounded in something deeper, which was a desire to, like we said earlier, not just survive, but to make as rich and as beautiful and as fun of a life as we could. Even within the fluorescence of the hospital and one of the young women in that group of friends, her name was Anjali and she had no one.

Suleika Jaouad 00:56:34  She was an orphan. Her only sibling she reached out to as a potential bone marrow donor, and he never returned her calls. She was an immigrant. She had had a really hard life and she, unlike me, you know, after her first bone marrow transplant, learned that it hadn’t worked. And she had a few short months to live. And I’ll never forget that last week in the hospice ward at Bellevue Hospital, because she was there and all of us were with her and our varying stages of baldness. And a hospice nurse turned to me and said, I’ve never seen anything like this before. I’ve never seen a patient who is surrounded by fellow patients in their final moments. And to me, you know, that’s what friendship is. It’s, you know, the moment of accountability that all relationships arc toward, which is how we show up in the midst of the hardest things. And they taught me that in spades over and over again, that even when our instinct is to self protect or to shy away from something that might break your heart, it’s always worth it to move through that and to be the person that shows up.

Suleika Jaouad 00:57:51  And it’s an honor to grieve. And I’m not the first person who said this. And it might be a cliche, but I think it’s a true one, which is that grief is a measure of how deeply we’ve loved.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:02  Yeah. And for someone who describes herself as not naturally good at connecting with people. You have done an extraordinary job. If we had more time, I would like to have a whole interview about how you have done it, because it’s remarkable with the cancer patients, with the people across the country, with fellow writers like you really do have a knack of nurturing community. So even though you may not think you’re good at it from an outside perspective, you clearly are. You know, you clearly have figured that out to some degree.

Suleika Jaouad 00:58:35  It’s a muscle I’ve had to exercise.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:38  When you were just describing the group of the cancer patients, it sort of reminded me of my early days in recovery from heroin addiction. There’s a similar camaraderie of people, you know, who are facing not quite as dire a prognosis, but being a homeless heroin addicts, a fairly dire place, let’s say.

Suleika Jaouad 00:58:58    It’s as dire.As the stakes are life or death.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:00  And when they are like that, there is a closeness that emerges. And there are times that I miss those early days of that because there was something so elemental, you know, and just visceral about those connections.

Suleika Jaouad 00:59:15  And I think those moments, you know, you’re brought down to your most savage self. You know, all the varnish has been stripped away. And vulnerability isn’t really a choice when you’re in that place. Yeah, yeah. Whether you want to be or you don’t. That’s what’s happening.

Ginny Gay 00:59:35  Yeah. I love how you talk about the role of ritual when life feels so sort of out of control, and you’re in the messy middle and and the uncertain and the dark hallway that sometimes there is sort of a lifeline we can grab on to, to help pull us to the other side. I don’t know if that’s the right way to language it or not, but you say so. These rites of passage allow us to migrate from one phase of our lives to another. They keep us from getting lost in transit. They show us a way to honor the space between no longer and not yet. But I have no predetermined rituals. These are mine to create. Does the role of rituals still show up in your life, and how so?

Suleika Jaouad 01:00:13  Absolutely. And I have different rituals depending on the week, depending on the month. Ritual is hugely important to me. It creates a sort of sacred container. When you are living in a liminal space. When you are in transition, I mean, we have all kinds of rites of passage in our culture. We have funerals, we have baby showers, we have weddings, and they mark these important transitional moments. And I think the reason that we have so many of them is because, first of all, they invoke community, right? Often these things happen with at least 1 or 2 other humans, if not many more than that. But they also force us to acknowledge the transition, which is what we’ve been talking about.

Suleika Jaouad 01:01:04  To honor what was and to honor what’s to come, even if it’s unclear what that might look like. And so I have all kinds of rituals. I did another 100 day project when I was recovering from my last bone marrow transplant, and this one for me was around painting. I started painting my own kind of Frida inspired, very surreal, fever dream esque self-portraits when I was in the hospital, and I found a kind of language in watercolor that I couldn’t express myself in any other way. And Melissa, my friend, one of my cancer comrades who’s no longer with us, was an incredible watercolor artist, and she used to always say, I love watercolor because it’s messy and you can’t control it like life. And so that has been my ritual. I make watercolors every day. I have no idea if they’re any good and they don’t really care. But that’s the kind of metaphor that I get to embody on a daily basis that helps orient me, that helps me accept what I can’t control, that helps me live in the mess.

Eric Zimmer 01:02:20  As we wrap up, take one thing from today and ask yourself, how will I practice this before the end of the day? For another gentle nudge, join good Wolf Reminders text list. It’s a short message or two each week, packed with guest wisdom and a soft push towards action. Nearly 5000 listeners are already loving it. Sign up free at oneyoufeed.net/sms No noise, no spam, just steady encouragement to feed your good wolf. 

Eric Zimmer 01:02:55  Well, I think that is a beautiful place to wrap up. Thank you so much.

 I know it’s a cliche, but you are inspiring.

Ginny Gay 01:02:57  Well, I have just learned so much from you in this last hour or so. I’ve learned so much from reading your book, and it’s inspired in me the intention to be brave when I feel fear or pain within my life, to be intentional about how I want to move forward. And so I just really appreciate it.

Suleika Jaouad 01:03:19   Thank you both. This has been such an honor.

Eric Zimmer 01:03:21  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

Tiny Movements, Massive Impact: Reclaiming Your Energy in the Digital Age | Manoush Zomorodi

May 26, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Manoush Zomorodi talks about tiny movements and their massive impact in reclaiming your energy in the digital age. Her new book, The Body Electric: The Hidden Health Costs of the Digital Age and New Science to Reclaim Your Well-Being, explores the hidden health costs of sedentary, screen-heavy lifestyles and shares research showing that just five minutes of gentle movement every 30 minutes can significantly improve blood sugar, blood pressure, mood, and focus. They discuss workplace culture’s resistance to movement breaks, the body-brain connection, and practical strategies for building sustainable habits. Manoush also emphasizes that small, consistent changes can yield transformative results, making better health accessible even within demanding modern work environments.

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Key Takeaways:

  • Health impacts of prolonged sitting and screen time
  • Importance of regular movement breaks for physical and mental well-being
  • Research findings on the minimum movement needed to counteract sedentary behavior
  • Societal norms and workplace culture surrounding productivity and sitting
  • Negative effects of sitting on blood flow, brain function, and overall health
  • Strategies for incorporating movement into daily routines
  • Overcoming barriers to establishing movement habits
  • The interconnectedness of body and brain in relation to movement
  • Historical context of sedentary lifestyles and the need for intentional movement
  • Practical takeaways for improving health through movement breaks

Manoush Zomorodi is an award-winning journalist and host of NPR’s TED Radio Hour. Her “Body Electric” project was one of the largest public health studies of its kind. She has received two Gracie Awards for Best Radio Host and a Webby Award for Best Podcast Host. Her first book, Bored and Brilliant was published in 2017.

Connect with Manoush Zomorodi: Website | Instagram | LinkedIn

If you enjoyed this conversation with Manoush Zomorodi, check out these other episodes:

Manoush Zomorodi (Interview from 2016)

Reclaim Your Mind: How to Build a Healthier Relationship with Technology with Jay Vidyarthi

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Episode Transcript:

Manoush Zomorodi 00:00:00  When this research started to come out that a workout in the morning didn’t make much of a difference. If you then sat for the rest of the day, he like decided, well, that can’t be right. I’m going to disprove it. And he couldn’t study after study. Since then has shown that even if you like, kill it at boot camp in the morning. If you then go on to sit for the rest of the day, you face the exact harms.

Chris Forbes 00:00:31  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:15  There’s an idea most of us have been taught for a long time that being productive means sitting down, focusing, and just pushing through. But what if that’s actually working against us? In this conversation, Manu Samadi, author of The Body Electric, shares research showing that the way we structure our days hours of sitting, staring at screens isn’t just tiring. It’s fundamentally at odds with how our bodies work. At one point, she describes the body like a kinked garden hose where everything starts to back up, and once I had that image in my mind, I can’t get rid of it. But the solution isn’t extreme. It’s small, repeated Interruptions, moving, listening to signals that we’ve learned to ignore. We talk about why that’s so hard to do, and how even a little bit of change can shift how we feel. Think and show up. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:12  Hi, Manoush, welcome to the show.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:02:14  Eric, I’m so excited to be back. It’s been a while.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:16  It has been a while and we are going to be discussing your new book, which is called Body Electric The Hidden Health Costs of the Digital Age and the New Science to Reclaim Your Well-Being. Yeah, but before we get into that, we will start, like we always do with a parable. And in the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking to their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:03:07  Well, right now, I guess it’s on two levels. One is like putting out a book into the world. The thing that I’m trying not to get overwhelmed with feeding is what the algorithm wants and, you know, outrage to try and get people to pay attention to my book. But, you know, that’s also how publishing works, which is exhausting. So really, I’m trying to feed the wolf. The one where I remember why I was obsessed with finding the answer to the question I had that really is at the heart of the book, and connecting with the material that I think other people really need to hear, not because I think it will sell, but because I found it so life changing Myself. So I actually wrote myself a note to remind myself every day. Like the core purpose of the book, and that as long as I feel like I can connect with that on a daily basis. The other wolf sort of hangs out and lurks in the background.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:09  Yeah, we were talking about that before we started, how I had a book that came out, boy, a month and a half ago, almost something like that.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:16  You’ve got a book coming out and just kind of how crazy a time it is, and how easy it is to get lost in all sorts of things. Like I, for one, have not asked for any sales numbers because I’m like, I don’t really. Yeah, I’m like, if they’re not good, I don’t know what to do that I’m not doing. And if they are good, my brain will probably be like, but they could be better. And I’m like, I’m just I generally am like, well, I just don’t need information that I, that I’m not going to do anything constructive with. And so I just haven’t asked and I’ve instead tried to, like you say, focus on what’s important about the book. Focus on the kind words that I’m getting, the people that it’s helping. Yeah, it’s a more difficult time. So for you, what was the thing you wrote down that you wanted to come back to and remember about why you wrote the book?

Manoush Zomorodi 00:05:03  Yeah, it really actually reminds me of the title of your book, this idea and the parable that you talk about, this idea that little by little becomes a lot.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:05:12  And in my case, I really felt like something very human had been drained out of me, which was that I was spending day after day on my laptop, and I would end the day feeling like I had just enough energy to crawl over to the couch, to then scroll on my phone or watch a show, or both. And it just didn’t feel like the life that I wanted to lead. And I felt so tired and drained and exhausted and like I couldn’t focus. And like a lot of people are talking about just feeling like crap. Yeah. And, you know, I think combine that with the headlines and with the feeling that the economy is beyond your control and all of these things, and you just sort of it makes you want to give up, right? Just think, well, I’m on this ride. I have no agency. There’s nothing I can do about it. And when I found what is a very small, not hugely groundbreaking answer that actually felt very extraordinary to me and brought me back some optimism and made me feel like I had energy again in the smallest possible way in my little world.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:06:26  That parable makes sense because it was changing a habit that, little by little, made me feel like I got back my energy, that I could focus again, that I was more optimistic, that maybe I could, you know, talk to the school board about making that change. Maybe I could reschedule a meeting just because I needed time. So this idea that just teeny little things you do to change your life, which we can get into what that teeny thing is that made such a big difference.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:53  Yeah, and you’re right that that is right in line with the you know, the core idea of my book is that little by little, a little becomes a lot both in the positive and the negative. And so let’s get into kind of what you found. And I want to start where you talk about early in the book. You said you were afraid to write this book.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:07:16  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:17  So obviously you’re not afraid of the powers that be coming to lock you up. Why were you afraid to write the book?

Manoush Zomorodi 00:07:23  Thank you for that reminder.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:07:25  I was not afraid to be censored. Or that as a woman, I couldn’t express myself. So that is a good reminder. I was afraid because I would have to sit on my ass for hours, weeks, months, years, even to write a book. And the entire premise of the book was that we needed to get more movement into our lives in order for our brains to function properly, and to feel good about ourselves and good in our bodies, and not hurt our mental and physical health. And so the very thought that I was about to commit myself to sitting and working on a laptop, while also writing how I shouldn’t be sitting and writing on a laptop felt like kind of like a meta mind screwy thing. So that was what terrified me. But I decided to walk the talk, as it were, or and talk the walk. So the entire premise of the book is about trying to not feel like crap and trying to understand what happens in our bodies when we are on our screens for hours and hours on end.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:08:30  And it’s based on research that I came across and a guy named Keith Diaz, he is a physiologist at Columbia University Medical Center, and this is a guy who has dedicated his life to figuring out what is the minimum amount of movement that the human body needs, so that all the sedentary screen time we indulge in doesn’t send us to an early grave. And I when I heard this research, it kind of shocked me because what he had found was that five minutes of gentle movement every half hour during those long periods of sitting had outsized results. It slashed people’s blood sugar, their blood pressure. It regained their focus, it steadied their mood. And it seemed to me like, well, it’s free. It doesn’t sound that hard to do five minutes of like, not burpees or sprints. Like, it just seemed like, oh, what you’re saying is that the human body craves movement throughout the day and that our tools, our innovations, have engineered what we need biologically out of the way. We construct our lives and this world that is built around sitting and looking at screens.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:09:47  And so I actually called him up and I was like, this is fascinating. Does it really work? Because I’m pretty healthy. And he said, well, you know, come and join the study. So I went up to Columbia and one day I sat on my butt on my laptop and worked for eight hours. I had a lunch break, went to the bathroom as they monitored, like all my vitals, my glucose, my heart rate, blood pressure, quick checks on my mood, ability to focus, fatigue levels, etc. and then I did another day where every half hour, his assistant kind of tapped me on the shoulder and led me over to a treadmill, where I walked for two miles per hour. So that’s pretty slow. It’s a stroll. And I again, I thought I was like, I noticed that I definitely felt more positive and my mood was so much better, and I actually had energy at the end of the day. So that was a huge like. I could feel that.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:10:42  But then when I got the actual results back, my blood sugar had dropped nearly in half, my blood pressure dropped by five points, and my fatigue levels, like as I measured them were like also essentially cut in half. So like the results were so amazing for something that felt kind of stupid, you know what I mean? So I was like, Keith, why aren’t we all doing this? And he’s like, well, we have created a life where we are told that from the minute we go to kindergarten, sitting in a chair and looking ahead is what a good, diligent worker does. This is how we’ve been taught that butts in chairs. And you know, I’m actually with you right now from San Francisco, the place where they’re developing surveillance technology to mate, you know, to see how long fingers are on keyboards and how long a cursor is in a dock without moving. So like, this is how we measure efficiency and good work is butts in chairs, eyes on screens. He’s like, I don’t think people can actually accept that.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:11:45  These interruptions not only will they save your health, but they will also make you a more productive worker. It’s very counterintuitive to how we think. I said, well, well, let’s just ask them, because it seems ridiculous to me not to try when you have found the answer. So we did a study together, NPR and Columbia University Medical Center, where we reached out to NPR listeners and said, Will you join a clinical trial to see if you can intersperse these movement breaks into your day, and you can try it every half hour, every hour or every two hours, five minutes of movement. And people could like, walk and talk on the phone. They could walk around the house and collect all the dirty dishes to put in the dishwasher. They could march in place. If walking wasn’t an option. They could also use their arms. Just the idea to build up circulation and get things moving. And we had over 20,000 people sign up. And at the end of the three week period, we found that 80% of the people who’d committed to doing movement breaks stuck with it.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:12:50  82% actually liked them. Fatigue was down by up to 28%. And interestingly enough, productivity slightly rose. All those interruptions did not make people feel like they got less work done or worse quality work done, which was kind of amazing. But we also just heard from people who were like, I feel like I’m connected to my body again. I can think straight. My back doesn’t hurt as much as it used to. My eyes don’t sting. At the end of the day, I am more positive. I’m around for my kids, you know, and can go outside and play with them after a day of work. And so it really seemed like just this idea of explaining to people the biology and how it is not compatible with the technology, and that, you know, your computer can be upgraded all the time, and all you have to do is plug it in to power it up. Unfortunately, your body is a little more finicky and works on ancient operating systems as opposed to 5G. So it was an extraordinary experience, and I’ve spent the last few years looking beyond the data and more into the stories to understand how did people do it? How did they change the structure of their days? What did they have to tell themselves to convince themselves, or their boss, or their kids, or their elderly parents? That movement needed to be part of their lives, and that it was something that wasn’t what they had to do, but what they got to do that it brought back this sort of sense of joy.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:14:28  That’s simply.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:47  So I would love to get into some of the how this happens, how people have done it, what has worked for them, what hasn’t worked for them. But before we do that, I want to go a little bit more into the science of it.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:15:00  So yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:01  The first thing is that we’ve heard a lot about how sitting is like the new smoking. Yeah. And it sounds like this gentleman, Keith Diaz, had done a lot of research that showed that it didn’t matter if you even had a very vigorous, once a day exercise routine. That’s good. Very valuable. But it did not offset the dangers of sitting for so long. Say a little bit more about that.

Speaker 4 00:15:29  Yeah. So Keith, as a physiologist.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:15:32  When he was getting his PhD, that research came out, the idea that sitting was the new smoking. So this was like over a decade ago, 12 years ago. And he didn’t believe it because he’d been taught that exercise was golden. It was the ticket to health that anything could be fixed with exercise.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:15:53  And so when this research started to come out, that a workout in the morning didn’t make much of a difference. If you then sat for the rest of the day, he like decided he’s like, well, that can’t be right. I’m going to disprove it. And he couldn’t study after study since then has shown that even if you like, kill it at boot camp in the morning. If you then go on to sit for the rest of the day, you face the exact harms. So first of all, we should say don’t stop working out like you obviously increase muscle mass and cardiovascular capacity and all those wonderful things that happen. However, what then happens if you then sit for the rest of the day, is pretty fascinating. So you have to think of your body as like, this is Keith’s metaphor a garden hose that’s kinked.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:43  That metaphor has really sunk in around this house.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:16:46  Like, can’t unsee it.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:48  Can’t unsee it. Nope.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:16:49  Totally.

Speaker 4 00:16:50  So your body is.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:16:51  Kinked like a garden hose when you sit at your waist and at your knees.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:16:56  And if you think of like a garden hose, that’s king like, the water starts to back up and pressure begins to build. Okay, so that’s blood pressure building. Blood flow doesn’t go through muscles. The leg muscles need to be stimulated in order to pull fat and sugars out of the blood and process them. If you don’t do that, where you start to see people who don’t move a lot, they over weeks, months, years become pre-diabetic or they build up plaques in their arteries. The other thing that happens is that the muscles need to stimulate in order to push oxygen up to the brain. Right. So when the brain is, you know, firing like switching from email to over to Instagram and should I answer that email? And I’m going to go over into this document. And over there, every time you switch you’re using glucose. You’re using oxygen to burn glucose. If you burn through all of that, you start to get CO2 buildup in your brain. That’s when you start to feel foggy.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:17:56  You get tired. You can’t think straight. What is the thing that gets more oxygen up there and refreshes it? Movement. I can keep going. The other thing is, when you sit for a long period, you are like kind of curled, like a boiled shrimp, is how I think of myself. Yeah. Sorry. Yep. There we go. And when you do that, your diaphragm is constricted and you can’t get again those full, deep breaths up into your body to oxygenate your brain. And then the final thing. And this is really where screens create insult injury is there’s a sense that it’s relatively new sort of thing that people are studying called interception. So this is what the body tells the brain you need. So the body might say, okay, you need to take another breath. It doesn’t usually you don’t really register that right. You just kind of do it automatically. Maybe you need a snack or maybe, you know, you need to go to the bathroom, right? These are the signals.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:18:55  This is your introspective sense telling you, your body saying, this is what I need to feel better. But what do we do when we’re on screens? We’re so externally focused. We’re so enthralled by what we’re doing. We’re so captivated by the work we do that we start to ignore what our body is telling us. So your body could be begging for a break. I’m anxious. I’m uncomfortable. My back hurts. My shoulders are curved. I can’t focus anyway. Can we please have a break? And we just ignore it and we power through. Or we tell ourselves, no, I’m just gonna, you know, answer five more emails and then I deserve a break. When really all we’re doing is like, making it less possible to actually write good emails and get our work done anyway. So, like all of these reasons together, if we combine them, it makes you wonder, like, what the hell are we doing? Why or why are we sitting and telling ourselves that we can just grind through, get it done? Because that’s what you know.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:19:55  That’s what a good worker does biologically. That is just incorrect. So once I learned all that and once I also explained a lot of that to listeners. I think that’s why people were willing to experiment with their behavior, because once you understand those things, you’re like, well, I don’t want that. Let’s try the alternative.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:15  Yeah, I’m stretching my legs out right now to try can at least.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:20:19  If at least two.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:20  We should. Well, we’re at the 230 mark. We’re at 30 minutes of sitting, so. But we could.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:20:25  Hang out at eight and keep talking.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:27  We could. But first let’s talk about standing, because just standing won’t solve the problem. Correct.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:20:33  That is correct. A standing desk is stillness just in a different form. You still don’t get that muscle stimulation. So if a standing desk is a way of sort of urging yourself to get more movement, a reminder to get more movement, then great, like stand up and do the shuffle, the zoom and shuffle, as I like to call it, where you just go back and forth while you’re on a zoom or march in place, while you’re talking on the phone.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:21:01  Like, that’s fine, but a standing desk actually meta analysis. And it’s been shown that if you stand for over two hours a day, you actually start to increase the chances of having cardiovascular issues, blood clots and varicose veins. So that’s fun too,

Eric Zimmer 00:21:18  So yes, I tried. My life has been kind of chaos. You and I were on a crazy boat recently. Life has been very interesting. Yes. You know, I mentioned my mother passed. So yesterday was like the first kind of day. Like normal day. Back to work. I’ve had in a while where I was like, okay, I’m about to do what I normally do, which is sit down and be in front of a computer most of the day. And so I tried to try. I tried to try. I tried. There is no try. There’s only do I tried to do every 30 minutes. And I did generally good except for a two hour spot right in the middle where just went right but didn’t happen.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:04  Didn’t happen. And so I’ve observed a couple things from this.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:22:08  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:09  Tell me some of what I’ve observed ties right in with what I talk about and write about in the book, which is that first I need to be reminded. If I’m not reminded, it simply doesn’t occur. Now, maybe over time I will begin to. I’ll start to tune into the signals. But right now, being reminded is really critical. So if I sit back down and I don’t set my next 30 minute alarm, that’s how the two hour block happened.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:22:37  Yeah. So things that you’re starting to observe in yourself, we saw across the board with our people. So first of all, that’s totally great that you skipped a movement break. I’m actually really proud of you.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:51  I skipped two of them.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:22:52  That’s totally fine. What we found was people saw the mental health benefits with even just 4 or 5 breaks per day. And the people that were able to keep up the movement breaks showed themselves some grace. If you’re in flow, if you don’t feel like it.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:23:10  Guess what? It’s okay to skip a break. The point here is not to be perfect. The point is to just do something. Once in a while we are setting the bar incredibly low. It’s to feel good in your body, not to punish yourself in some way. So if that means taking two breaks today, great. That’s two more than nothing. Great. Good job. Yay! You can’t lose it. This, right? Yep. The second thing that you talked about with a timer. Absolutely. The number one way people were able to kickstart their interaction, getting movement into their lives. Their move break habit was by setting a timer. However, what we did here was that by the end of the two weeks, that sense of interruption was developed to the point where many people said, I actually don’t need my timer anymore. My body tells me when it’s time to get up so I can see that in myself. Right now. When we hit the 45 minute mark, I’m going to turn into like a squirmy eight year old boy, essentially, because that’s my rhythm.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:24:14  About 45 minutes to an hour is when I need a break. If I had health issues and, you know, for now, I don’t. But if I did, I think I would try to stick to that five minutes every half hour. Like, for example, we had a woman, amazing woman, who works in HR at a big hotel company who had major health issues, and she just she was doing her morning walk that her doctor had recommended. The numbers just weren’t changing. So she went to her doctor and she’s like, I think I want to try this experiment, this body electric thing. She did it. And within two weeks, her blood pressure dropped by 40 points and she went back down to tapering her insulin. And what ended up happening is it sort of kickstarted a sense that she and her body were not at odds with each other. She started. She did great. She saw results quickly. She felt more positive. She ended up paying more attention to her sleep. She started doing meditation, she changed her diet and she texted me last week.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:25:18  She actually got certified as an official health coach. So over her three year journey, she just she is a happier person. She feels better in herself and in her body. And she just decided that this is and well, and also she doesn’t need to. She’s off all of the medications she needed to be on to manage her biomarkers. So huge result for her. For me, it’s not that dramatic, but it’s enough that I don’t feel like I want to cry and throw my phone into Walden Pond. every day. You know that, like, I can do this. I can work and not hate it. And on the day, there are still days where I’m like.

Speaker 5 00:25:58  Oh, I don’t feel like getting up. And I’m like.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:26:01  But you know how you know you’re going to be back in love with the world after five minutes? So just do it. Just do it. Come on and I’ll do it. And I’ll.

Speaker 5 00:26:09  Be like, oh.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:26:10  Yeah, it works.

Speaker 5 00:26:11  It’s easy.

Speaker 5 00:26:11  It’s free.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:12  Hey, friend, before we dive back in, I want you to take a second and think about what you’ve been listening to. What’s one thing that really landed, and what’s one tiny action you could take today to live it out? Those little moments of reflection. That’s exactly why I started good wolf reminders. Short, free text messages that land in your phone once or twice a week. Nearly 5000 people already get them and say the quick bursts of insight helped them shift out of autopilot and stay intentional in their lives. If that sounds like your kind of thing, head to one. You feed, SMS and sign up. It’s free. No spam and easy to opt out of any time. Again, that’s one you feed. Tiny nudges, real change. All right, back to the show that all or nothing thing is so pernicious. I’ve seen it again and again over the years with coaching clients. I’ve seen it with so many different people that if we can’t do something exactly right, we often just conclude we shouldn’t do it.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:27:19  Is that a particular like personality thing, do you think, or cultural thing, or is it like, what have you observed?

Eric Zimmer 00:27:26  I really don’t know. I mean, I know that, you know, as far back as say, you know, Aristotle was talking about the golden mean right about, you know, right. Don’t go too far this way or that way. You know, the Buddha was talking about the middle way. That’s just one of the permutations of the middle way that I’ve seen. Somebody sent me an email the other day and they said, you know, I’ve gotten a lot out of your book. The thing I’ve gotten the most is that I can show up and do part. You know, I don’t have to do a perfect workout. And this is a person who is a personal trainer. And she said her thing is that if she doesn’t feel like she can really do it right, she just doesn’t do it. Yeah, and I think there’s a lot of that. I noticed this in myself.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:11  I’ve been really trying to spend a little time in somewhere like Colorado, where there’s so little water, you become even more conscious. I mean, I’m always a little bit conscious of become even more conscious, like, okay, how can I use less water? And I notice this in myself. I will forget for a second. Let’s say I didn’t turn the tap off while I was scrubbing something. I noticed it was running, and there’s just this little part of my mind that’s a little bit like why you screwed up, but doesn’t matter. And then I’m like, hang on a second. Like, every little bit matters, you know? It all adds up. So that I think is a real thing to watch for is if I can’t do it right, I don’t do it at all. And yeah. And it sounds like that’s a lot of what you were working with people to understand.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:28:52  Yeah. And I think I’ve seen it in myself for certain, like go big or go home. Right.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:28:58  And it’s taken me a long time to think like moderation. Maybe not as sexy.

Speaker 5 00:29:05  But probably.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:29:06  More effective. And honestly, like this is I want to find things that I can do for the rest of my life. I think as I’ve gotten older, you know, there’s this moment in your 40s where you’re like, this workout is not getting easier. I am just working to maintain at this point. And then you’re just as the years go on, you’re working to not lose what you have built. And so I think that’s like actually a really helpful mind shift for me that like, I’m in a point in my life where I want to maintain and continue to feel good, as opposed to learn how to windsurf and bench press. However many pounds like those are all great goals. But for me right now I’m about feeling good in my body, feeling connected to the world, feeling, like I can think straight and feel positive and stay healthy for as long as I can, and that feels more reasonable and manageable and, and less punishing of myself.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:30:12  Like, I went through my bootcamp phase, Eric, where I was like killing it at the gym. And, and I was really tired the rest of the day. It did not give me energy. That is for sure.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:24  I was I took up surfing in my 50s. Not windsurfing. Did not windsurfing, but regular surfing. So.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:30:30  Wow.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:31  Okay, but I live in Ohio, so I don’t get to do it all that often. But just in case anybody out there is like it’s too late for me to take up windsurfing, I’m like, no, no.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:30:39  Good point.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:40  There was something else I was going to say about what you just said there. Oh, we had a woman on years ago and I’ve kept in touch with her. Her name’s Michelle Seager, and I want to say she’s a researcher at the University of Michigan. I’m not sure, but she said something that I just took to heart all those years ago and continue, which she just basically said, move in whatever way you can as often as you can.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:02  Like that’s the whole game. Just move in whatever way you can as often as you can. And I was like, that’s that’s just solid advice.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:31:11  It’s solid advice. And then of course, my warped mind will be like, well, then I should just be moving all the time because I can move all the time. And so that is actually what Keith would say said was that there’s a fine line. Right? Like people want a dose prescription. Yeah. That they want to feel like there’s some sort of structure that’s scientifically verified, that they can sort of hang their hat on and used to guide themselves. And once you have that, though, that’s where the customization has to come in. Right. And that depends on your schedule, your genes, your setup at home, what feels good to you, what doesn’t feel good to you. There’s so many variables. And I think on the one hand, you know, we always talk about averages in science and talk about the best for you, but we kind of are all special little snowflakes.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:32:05  Yes, we are. And we need to experiment and find out what works for us, because it’s not going to be the same for each of us. I’ve had two children, and my diagnosis means there’s no way I could get myself up on a surfboard, so I got to work on that. I would love to, but that’s okay, I can pretend.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:43  I do think that the five minutes every 30 minutes is a nice thing to aim for. Now, as I’m looking at my life like, right now, I’m like, okay, well, we are at 45 minutes. Ideally, we would have moved 13 minutes ago and being precise and I’m like, if I stand up, then I’m going to be too far from the microphone.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:33:01  And yeah. Right, right, right. It’s the whole thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:04  Now I’m suddenly like, oh, maybe I need to be wearing a headset. But the the point being, when you and I wrap up here, I will have time. I will go out now and.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:13  Yeah. And I’m like, do I go outside because my allergies are so bad? I’m gonna walk. I’m gonna walk somewhere some way for five minutes. And I’ve found that helpful. I’ve been doing it on planes because I’ve been traveling.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:33:25  Oh. Nice. It’s addictive. Right? Like, don’t people sort of look at you or, like or not addictive? It’s a contagious. That’s what I meant to say, that people see you moving and they start to, like, crack their neck and, like, roll their shoulders. And maybe a couple more people get up, too. And like, because I can’t sit now in airports to wait for my flight. So I just walk with my luggage in circles. And I’ve noticed that a lot of other people sort of stand are watching me and then start moving around too.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:51  I’ve mostly just noticed people watching me. Like what? And I’ve just interpreted like, why is this guy going in circles? Why is this guy going up and down this aisle for the fourth time? You know, like but perhaps it is contagious.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:34:07  I love.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:08  It. Yeah, I like traveling with Ginny because one of us can sit with all the luggage, and the other can just move, and then we switch, and then they switch.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:34:17  Yeah. Perfect, I love that. I mean, that I think we saw a couple things too, which is like. So, for example, like people who are in a power position, if you’re the boss and you say walking meetings are acceptable, then you set the tone for everyone. Or if you say, we’re going to change our Google Calendar settings so that all meetings are 55 minutes instead of 60. You know, that’s a power move, right? And I think it’s a good one because it actually shows your team. Like I understand that we are asking a lot of you, the average, you know, information worker uses between 11 and 13 different software tools and platforms every day. And like the way I’m going to use them is going to be different than you. But we all need breaks.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:34:59  Yeah. And then we also saw other people who are like, well, I don’t know what my boss would think about this, but if I see that I’ve got 16 minutes until my next meeting, that’s all fit in a quick movement break and then come to the meeting or I’ll say, like, I’m going to turn off my camera just because I’m not feeling well, and I’ll move around like people just found ways to sort of integrate it into their day as well. I mean, I’m a big fan. Video podcasts make this difficult, but I’m a really big fan of can we not do a zoom call? Can we do a phone call?

Eric Zimmer 00:35:31  Yes.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:35:31  And walking and.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:32  Talking me to and back when I used to work in an office, I used to do as many of the meetings as I could. I’d be like, let’s go for a walk. Let’s go for a walk.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:35:41  Oh, nice. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I actually, you know, we also know that when you walk side by side and your bodies sync up, that actually sinks up your brainwaves, which is fascinating to me.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:35:52  So, you know, you’re not having eye contact, so there’s not a confrontational feeling to it. Your bodies are sinking up. You might find some breakthroughs that you wouldn’t necessarily have if you’re both staring at each other, sort of staring at each other on zoom, which, by the way, has been shown to increase your cognitive load and wear you down even faster.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:11  Have you heard anything about. And I don’t know what it’s called, but it’s essentially the a disorder that comes from staring at yourself all the time.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:36:21  Oh, like body dysmorphia or more just distraction.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:25  It’s not quite body dysmorphia, but it’s something about the fact that, like, right now I’ve maximised you. But yes, at least on Riverside, I can’t get rid of me. So I see myself all, all the time. Some people have theorized that’s not good for us in some way, but I can’t quite. I can’t quite remember where I read it or what it.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:36:45  Was like Narcissa or something like that, but like, I don’t know about the mental health effects, but I can tell you, there’s a guy that I spoke to for the book who’s an Austrian researcher, where they studied the effects.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:36:57  So like how we talk about zoom fatigue. And they were like, well, what? It really is fatiguing and is that real? So they actually did a study where they measured it. And he said that what they saw was even just the slightest mismatch of timing. Like we wouldn’t notice it consciously, but our brain registers a slight change and it’s constantly adjusting for that change that also when you’re in person, you’re getting so much ambient data from someone, from their body language, you know, a furrow of the brow, the tone in their voice, and you’re not getting those over zoom. So you’re you’re constantly scanning, looking for other indications of what someone is thinking and feeling that you wouldn’t get just sort of very quickly if you were in person. And the third thing he mentioned was being distracted and seeing yourself because you’re then having I mean, I don’t know about you, but the conversation I’m having is like, Do I really look that tired in real life? My hair. I love the idea that the researchers studying zoom fatigue.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:38:03  How do they take their zoom meetings? He says that they get on their zoom, they keep their cameras on, and they say hello, just so they, you know, have a minute. And then they all shut their cameras off and they limit their meetings to they try to stick to ten minutes.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:19  The zoom fatigue piece makes sense to me because I do video interviews all the time, and I have found it hard to banter in the same way that I can in person, because there’s the slightest delay. We don’t notice it, but it’s there. It makes it just hard to interrupt you to say something clever Without interrupting you. Whereas in person, somehow we would read that between us and it and it would work. And it’s it’s one of my, one of my frustrations with this format is exactly that.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:38:55  So you and I actually had this experiment because we were on a panel together in person, and I remember looking across to you and having like, the slightest flicker of eye contact about whether I should answer the next question or the other guy on the panel should.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:39:18  And I wouldn’t have noticed if we didn’t then have zoom to compare it to in some ways, like, you know, the things that you just don’t even realize are things until you realize you don’t have them. And there was this philosopher, Tobias Reese, on the boat talking about how nobody talked about the need to get out into nature Until the middle of the 1800s and the Industrial Revolution. And then there was an alternative. People were living in cities and suddenly you realize, oh, nature is a thing. Or like, you know, David Foster Wallace, that story where the fish says to the other fish, how’s the water? And they’re like water. What do you mean, what’s water? And I think it’s the same thing that’s kind of happened for movements. Nobody said like a hundred years ago. Like, did you get enough movement in today? They were like, what are you talking about? But now, since we’re using technology to the point that we barely need our bodies, we’ve gotten so efficient at not needing the human body to do labor or to entertain or connect or get our information.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:40:26  We now have to talk about it. It’s something we have to be intentional and have language for which I find absurd. But, you know, this is where we are, and I. I’m not a Luddite. Like, I love my tech. I love the fact that you are in Ohio and I’m in San Francisco and we’re on a freaking call and people are gonna listen and hopefully they get something out of this. And we’re also dealing with real life and this crazy fire alarm and all the rest of it. Like, it’s kind of awesome. So totally not to be different about it.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:56  Yeah. You mentioned that you discovered a book. I don’t know how old the book was, but a book that essentially talked about a lot of the science that you’re talking about now and the actual remedy for it, but it was not a recent book.

Speaker 6 00:41:13  Oh, yeah. This was really quite funny.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:41:16  Strange. So I was going for a movement break on my block where I live in Brooklyn, and it’s great in my neighborhood, everybody puts books out on their stoops when they’re done with them, you know, take a book.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:41:27  And this book was from 1995, which didn’t feel like that long ago to me. But it is. It’s a that’s a long time ago now, 30 years ago. And it was about repetitive stress syndrome. So, you know, RSI and people. So my whole thing that I had concluded was like, we need to be treating ourselves even if we are, you know, laptops are our football or our violin or our jumbo jet. We have to be treating ourselves like people who use a tool to express themselves, a professional musician or an athlete or an airline pilot. We have to be treating ourselves like information athletes because our brain is our tool, and we’re not treating our brain right when we don’t give our bodies what it needs. And I was like, we gotta be information athletes. And then I came across this book on a stoop, and it had the same concept from 30 years ago, and it didn’t have the studies, but it said, based on what we now know, we think taking a break every half hour is probably a good idea.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:42:35  And I was like, how many times do we need to be told that our bodies need breaks and we just don’t listen? And I think what’s dangerous now is there are some people peddling this idea that AI will set us free, right? That, you know, it will take over all the drudgery and all the annoying stuff we have to do on our devices, and that will give us back our free time, and that this will mean that we can be fully self-actualized humans who can go frolic in fields and write poetry and watercolor and, you know, back to the land sort of movement. And as we know throughout history. And I chronicled this in the book, like going through every time there is an efficiency or an innovation that comes along. If anything, we just move less, you know, from the Threshers that you could sit on to call to. I don’t even know how to speak. Agriculture, to harvesting the wheat to drive through movie theaters and escalators and remote control monitors. And now even less so.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:43:47  The human body has been taught over evolution to save energy, to save calories. And so we just tried to move as little as possible. But we’re at this point where we need to, sort of defy the way that we’ve been. We need to do it on purpose in many ways.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:07  I came across a study. I’ll send it to you, afterwards. That debunks everything. You know, I’m just kidding.

Speaker 7 00:44:17  I’m kidding. I would’ve been like, oh.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:19  I’m kidding.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:44:20  You didn’t tell me that sooner.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:21  Yeah, exactly. I set you up, I let you lay out your case, and now I’m about to take it apart. No, it it’s, it’s in mice. It’s interesting in that it says here’s what it says.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:44:33  Is this mice or rats?

Eric Zimmer 00:44:34  Is it I don’t distinguish rodents. Yeah.

Speaker 6 00:44:37  Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:38  Scientists found that abdominal muscle contractions compress blood vessels connected to the spine and brain, pushing fluid that gently moves the brain within the skull. This physical swaying provides evidence for how exercise might benefit brain health by washing away cellular waste.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:44:56  That is fascinating. Yeah, I would love to learn more about that, I think. To your point, there is so much we are learning about the interconnectedness of our organs. I’ll give you another example. Doctor Peter Strick at the University of Pittsburgh, his who’s this curmudgeonly guy whose kids were like, dad, you got to do Pilates. You got to do yoga to manage your stress. And he was like, why? There is no scientific evidence that shows that that actually reduces stress. It’s all woo woo.

Speaker 6 00:45:27  And then he was like, wait a minute. Is could we find biological proof that this actually.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:45:33  So this happens to be what he studies, which is the connection between the different organs and the brain. And so he mapped what happens when there is muscle contraction in the torso, abdominal region, how that affects the adrenal glands, which squirt, you know, cortisone up to the brain and tell us, you know, fight or flight sort of thing. And he found that there was a conversation going on between these abdominal muscles, the adrenal gland and motor cortex in the brain.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:46:02  So they actually are all talking. And there is a very good biological reason why you feel more relaxed and calm. Or as my Pilates teacher calls it, the Pilates high. After you’ve done it, they these things are all connected. And he says, you know, even if you just stand up and move, you can feel a bigger sense of relief. Now, there’s many reasons why you’re getting more oxygen, all of those things. But there is a conversation happening. So another, one that they’re starting to map over in Pittsburgh is the connection between, leg muscles and the colon and the brain, because we know that, if you are sedentary for too long, you know, you don’t have to go constipation, which can also be a contributing factor to colon cancer, actually. So not the factor, but a factor. You know, it’s just really exciting times in terms of mapping the conversation that’s going on between all the different organs and areas of the brain and muscles. And I think, you know, somebody said to me, he’s like, yeah, I think that we need to rethink it.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:47:12  It’s not a conversation between the body and the brain. It’s just one thing. And they’re all talking to each other all the time.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:19  I agree, I mean, that seems to be, at least to me, that like to talk about a body brain connection is to kind of separate them. I often think this way also about thoughts and emotions. I’m like, I’m not sure we talk about them as other separate. I’m not sure they are. Do you ever get one without the other? Like they tend to travel together? I mean, there are at least, you know, very good friends. There was another fascinating article in the New York Times this weekend about certain researchers think they found a third system in our body. There’s the circulatory system, there’s the lymphatic system. They’ve begun to think that there’s another system. They’re calling it the interstitial system that is passing fluid through the body. And it is an explanation for why acupuncture works.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:48:07  So like facial.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:08  Yeah. But but fluid passing through the fascia.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:13  Yeah. or or between the fascia and the muscles. I haven’t read it fully.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:48:18  Oh, okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:19  And I’m like, how do we miss an entire other.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:48:22  I mean, this is where, you know, it gets blurry, right? Like, on the one hand, like, my Pilates instructor is all about the fascia and melting it and soothing it and how that, like, releases tension throughout the body. And for the longest time, there wasn’t any research. And then the last few years there started to be research that says like, yeah, actually that is pretty important. But then we also have other people peddling all sorts of other names that are not scientifically proven in the slightest. And so.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:54  It’s.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:48:54  Tricky. It’s tricky. And it’s like, you know, something ancient wisdom. Maybe we don’t have the scientific proof, but we have centuries of, of of trying things out. And then we have other things where it’s actually very dangerous. Like it, it worries me like, you know, because maybe the people who can give raw milk as an example, I was talking to someone who was saying, you just need to try raw milk.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:49:20  It’s the way to go. And I was like, yeah, but what about the bacteria? And he said to me, well, you need clean cows. I’m like, okay, guess what? I don’t have any clean cows. And maybe the people who do and whatever fancy people can pay for their extra special clean milk. But when we’re talking about the majority of people who do not have access to even basic health care, I think we have to be looking out for the most vulnerable and the people who could use the most help. there’s always going to be people who can take crazy peptide shots and see their gurus, and they’ll probably be okay, even if they do some of these less scientifically convincing things, because their basic health is cared for majority of the time. So that was my little soapbox there, Eric.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:11  Well, I agree, I think this is part of what’s so challenging about science and and trying to sort of base your life on. What science is sort of saying is that I feel like it’s always incomplete, meaning something we know today to be absolutely sure.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:30  I don’t know what thing that we believe. To be absolutely sure today that science is telling us is wrong. But some of them are. Yeah. You know, I wish we knew which ones they were because you’d be like, discard that. But some of the scientific consensus around something is wrong. We just don’t know what it is. It’s why I always have been like, I kind of love it when, like, multiple things verify something for me. Yeah. So for example, I’m like, okay, well, oh, you know, Buddhists have been saying this for a long time. That’s interesting. Okay. That’s that’s one source of information. Okay. Oh, and now science is coming along and sort of saying like, yeah, a lot of that I think is true. Oh, and then the third sort, you know, the third source is like, oh, I seem to get benefit from when I do it and when, when I get that, it’s sort of like ding, ding, ding.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:17  Then I’m like, okay, this I feel like I can sort of trust. So like this 30 minute movement break, like there’s good science to show it. I think it’s common sense. And I’m going to try it and see for myself. Like, do I feel better if I do it, you know, on a regular basis? And I think that’s kind of what we all have to figure out is what science do we trust him because it is just so hard to know.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:51:41  Yeah. Be skeptical, then verify and then experiment. And I think.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:45  That’s a good way to say.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:51:46  It. Yeah, it reminds me that I love this high school teacher who took the body electric study and decided that she was going to use it in her classroom. She didn’t want to be like kids. We’re all moving now because they would have told her to f off, right? But she decided to use it as a way to teach data journalism, and health and wellness claims to question things. So they did it in sort of a meta way.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:52:15  They were like, okay, if we take part in this experiment, what is the data collection? How is the data? Good data. What does it mean to do an experiment over two weeks? What’s a baseline establishing week that they’re talking about. How does that work. How do we collect our data. How do we process it at the end? What are the claims that they’re making and why are they making those claims. Can we trust them? And then also where does the placebo effect fit into all of this? Like you feel better. Is that because you’re being asked like whether you feel better? Is like, you know, where does that fit into it? So I said to her, I was like, do you think that you change their habits in the end? She’s like, I think I taught them to be better consumers of health journalism. I think I taught them that they don’t have to be passive consumers. They can question these things themselves. And also if they’re like, oh no, my chargers upstairs and they’re like, Actually, it’s a chance to get in a flight of stairs if they think that once that is a win as well.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:53:20  And I love that idea that like media literacy, it is health literacy these days.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:27  As we wrap up, take one thing from today and ask yourself, how will I practice this before the end of the day? For another gentle nudge, join good Wolf Reminders text list. It’s a short message or two each week, packed with guest wisdom and a soft push towards action. Nearly 5000 listeners are already loving it. Sign up free at once. You feed us. No noise, no spam, just steady encouragement to feed your good wolf. That is a great story, and I think that is a great place for us to wrap up. Thank you so much much. I really enjoyed the book a lot. As I said, I cannot get the garden hose kinked garden hose metaphor. Both Jenny and I are like kindergarten.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:54:13  And you’re welcome.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:14  Yeah, exactly, exactly. It’s a good one. But the book is really good, and I learned a lot from it. And I always love talking with you.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:22  So thank you so much, Eric.

Manoush Zomorodi 00:54:23  You know, I’m such a big fan of you and your work and your book and the community that you have grown and tended like a beautiful garden over the last decade. Really.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:34  Thank you. Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking. I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the one You Feed community.

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