Episode 105 - Digital Harmony: Navigating, Coping, and Thriving Online

Shownotes:

Just in time for summer when kids (and some adults) have more time for screens, let's talk about digital harmony!

And you can choose your adventure with this one - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both. And you can find the article on Thrive Global! Digital Harmony: Navigating, Coping, and Thriving Online

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠LainieRowell.com⁠⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠⁠

📚➡️ ⁠⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 104 - Dark Work and Identity Shifts with Anthony Trucks

Shownotes:

In a world where change and challenges are constant, how do we adapt and optimize our identity for peak performance? Anthony Trucks, former NFL, three-time American ninja warrior, author, and international keynote speaker, offers compelling insights into this question. In an empowering chat, Anthony offers his message of hope and tactical strategies for handling life's transitions, leading us to excellence in defining moments. As we dive into his teachings, let’s commit to looking for a microstep from Anthony that we can integrate into our life immediately that will compound over time.

About Our Guest:

Anthony Trucks is a former NFL Athlete, American Ninja Warrior on NBC, international speaker, host of the Aww Shift podcast, author of the Identity Shift book, and the founder of Identity Shift coaching. He uses cutting-edge research in science and psychology to upgrade how you operate so you can elevate your life and business to reach your full potential. After being given away into foster care at 3 years old, being adopted into an all white family at 14, losing his NFL career to injury and more he learned how to shift at a very young age, and now his life mission is teaching others how to do the Dark Work to Make Shift Happen in their lives.

Thrive Global Article:

Anthony Trucks on Mastering Dark Work and Identity Shift to Achieve Excellence

Connect with and learn from Anthony Trucks

Website
Books
YouTube
LinkedIn
Facebook
Instagram
X

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: Hello friends. I am so excited for today's guest. I mean, you're going to hear it in my voice. I'm going to try and play cool. We have today Anthony Trucks. Hi, Anthony. Thanks for being here.

Anthony Trucks: Thank you for having me. Excited to chat with you.

Lainie Rowell: I would love for you to just share a little bit of your story.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah, yeah, well I had somebody one time give me some good insights.

He said, it's not your story. It's your experience. It's the world's story and so with that It belongs to the world and my job to give it as a gift. So I never have a feeling of like, Oh, I've said it before. I go, man, I get to say it again. So I'm happy to share it and hopefully people can pull something from it.

But for me, I was given away as a kid into foster care at three years old and I kind of dealt with the whole really heinous foster care system. I was in for 11 years six houses got adopted at 14 by an all white, very poor family. So I had to kind of navigate the sense of who am I? Where do I fit in?

Tried my hand at something. Football wasn't very good. Decided after kind of checking out, I want to check back in. and leaned in and did some things that were uncomfortable. They didn't feel like it was who I was to do them, but it produced a stronger athlete, a more confident athlete. They got a scholarship to go play football at the University of Oregon, where I met my biological father on a kind of weird process.

Had my first son with my high school sweetheart at 20 years old, a sophomore in college. I don't recommend doing that. And then I navigated that, got a chance to play in the NFL for three years, tore my shoulder, came home, had to figure out who I was without football, had two more kids with my wife now, like that time with my wife, so we had twins, and just life blew up.

I didn't know who I was without the game and had to kind of find a way to go to the darkness really, really dark times, I'll call it, and got divorced, so it wasn't very good, and then after three years divorced I remarried my ex wife, we have an amazing marriage, and the things that I've learned from those periods of time have been really for me, the catalyst to finding some way to make use of it.

Did that make sense? Like it was the, because you go through dark times, it doesn't have to be a reason to do poorly, it could be a reason to do great. And so in my life now, I show up and I teach from my life experience in ways that people can apply to their own lives.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, and there's this thing we talk about in psychology that people don't always know about, and it's post traumatic growth.

And a lot of people have heard of PTSD, but a lot of people have not heard of post traumatic growth. And when I have delved into your experiences that are now the world stories and thank you for that gift, I see how you have gone through the darkness and come to light. And. One of the things, I've read your book, Identity Shift, Upgrade How You Operate to Elevate Your Life.

One of the things that was really profound in there to me was when you said it was a commitment to doing what it took to be great without a promised return of actually being great.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah.

Lainie Rowell: That, wow, like that really took me back because it got me thinking about how sometimes it isn't even about you.

It's. trends and forces and just how things have come to be that were out of your control. And so I'd love for you to just share a little bit as you reflect on your experiences. You know, how has this commitment to just doing the great things without the promise of that return? How has that kind of helped you transition through challenges?

Anthony Trucks: Well, I'll start with this. I believe individuals need to fall in love with the day and not just the destination. There's this really good connection, like what's it gonna be when I win, when I have, when I get, when I attain, when I achieve, and it goes great, right? The problem is every day when that's your goal and you wake up and you have that as a goal and you go to sleep and don't have it as an achievement, you start to feel a certain way that's not positive always, you start judging and, you know, comparing why don't I have this so far, but for me, I realized a lot of individuals because of that having been an issue, they won't even start in the first place because the last time it was hard, so they quit too early, but if you fall in love with the day, which is I go, I'm going to start with great effort before I know I'm going to be great, what happens is you start loving the journey.

You love the day, you love the process, and you're going to spend more time on the journey. It's like you're going to spend more time climbing the mountain than at the peak of the mountain. If you hate the climb, you're not going to reach the peak. So what I've looked at like when I was a kid is this is when it actually took place.

I was 15 years old. I wanted to play football, tried it out. I was horrible at it. I wasn't very good for a couple years, in fact, and at one point I checked out and then a moment of kind of like waking up took place and they go, I want to try my hand at this. And I go, what do people that have this as a reality do?

And I looked at the things and they were not things I did. They didn't seem comfortable for me to even, you know, pursue these actions. But I realized that if I could fall in love with them, like, they would just get done. And if they get done, I get the outcome. But if I'm battling myself to do it every day, it sucks.

And it's just a bad journey. It's not fun. So what I did is I started kind of loving the dirty, dark, gritty part of the work, which is what I now call dark work. And it's interesting is that's the stuff that when you fall in love with that, and you commit to the great effort before you know you'll be great, well, you'll just give your all.

And no matter what it is, the price of success is your all and then some, just so we're clear. A lot of individuals, they go, well, I did everything, I did my best, your best sometimes isn't good enough. I'm sorry to tell you that, but it's a genuine truth, but you can get better. And so if you give your all, you have a better shot.

And you have a better opportunity to climb and you'll know what to do, but if you're always basing it on I don't know if I'm going to work out, I don't know if I'm going to get the outcome, you will never give your all, so you never have it. So for me at that age, I go, I'm going to give my all, and I did.

I showed up, lifted weights, ran routes, things that didn't feel comfortable, that were not my, you know, sense of self. And after seven months of doing this, I show up the next year to football, I'm an animal. I'm faster, I'm stronger, I'm bigger, I'm meaner though. I had this mentality of, I've done too much work in the dark to lose in the light.

I'd given this, this deposit of energy and my return was the sense of pride, self esteem, and actually skill set. And so when I went out there, like I shined differently. And so for individuals who are sitting there going like, I want to work towards something, I just don't know if it's going to be, you know, worthwhile.

The truth is, it's not going to be worthwhile. It's not. And it's going to say, it sounds weird to say this way. It's not going to be what you think it is. It's going to be better, way better, because you haven't realized what you have when you get there is something great, but you haven't realized who you feel like when you get there.

And you never touch that, you haven't tasted, but when you have that in your soul, it's a different sense of like, I could do this. And so for me, I started out, and that was my first foray into it, and over the years I learned to do it again and again, and now when I approach something and I go, this isn't going to be fun.

I hate doing this. This action is suck to go. How can I fall in love with these things? How can I get to a point of like joy, weirdly, around this thing that everybody else hates doing, because if I could find joy somewhere in it, and I don't do this only because it's gonna work out, and I just do it because I love to find a way to do these things.

I'm going to do them. So on day 72, when they stop, I'm going to day 772, I'm going to win eventually and win big. And I'm going to love the journey of it all because I started to become the person that does these things. And sure enough, I get that achievement. And then I get more and more and more and more.

So if you can let go of the, I got to make sure I'll get the outcome first. You let go of that and go just work every day and fall in love with that. The outcomes will come faster, they'll come more frequent, and you'll actually have a greater feel than you can imagine.

Lainie Rowell: One of the things that you said that stuck out to me was Well, you can find the joy in it, right? Even if it's something that you don't necessarily want to do, there are ways that you can bring joy into it and really fall in love with that process, even if it's maybe not in the beginning something that you're like, I can't wait to do these reps.

I can't wait to do this, right?

Anthony Trucks: Yeah. I mean, it's actually, there's psychology around this. When you have a clear plan of what you're going to get done and you know the steps, the milestones to get there. Even when they're hard fought, you get a little dopamine dump when you make a step. You actually feel good about doing the little thing that got you closer, but here's the other part about it.

The harder the thing is that you actually accomplish or get done that day, the prouder you are of yourself. It's like, I always talk about this cause it's true. And I didn't notice until recently, but people like the first rule of CrossFit is always talk about CrossFit, right? It's like what they talk.

It's like the unwritten rule. Oh,

Lainie Rowell: I think everyone's doing a good job on that.

Anthony Trucks: You know what I mean? And I go, why is that? And my wife, she's amazing. She's had three kids and like. When she's around ladies, it's like, how many kids you got? Three. What was it like in labor? They start talking about, and there's like, they, they sparkle, their eyes are lit up.

I'm like, what is so joyous about this thing that she hated in the moment, right? And, and what it is, it was hard. So hard, CrossFit's hard, birth deal's hard, business is hard, and when you've done something hard and you've overcome and you're on the other side of it, God, you have this chip on your shoulder that makes you feel so great.

Why rob yourself of that?

Why not lean into it? Why not embrace the suck of whatever it is, knowing that when you get through this thing, it's hard, because it was so hard, you'll have an amplified sense of confidence in self and you'll actually in time find a joy around it.

Lainie Rowell: And that gives us so much hope.

And actually, going back to, I referenced post traumatic growth earlier, and I don't think I explained it well, but just even knowing that it's possible after something is hard to grow and to be happy about something, or at least be grateful for something, that's, enough, actually, even just knowing that this is possible, and so you're giving us that gift of knowing, like, when you accomplish these things, you're going to feel better about it, even if you're not feeling great about it in the moment, so.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah, yeah, no one's ever done a hard workout and go, man, I hated that I got that hard thing done so well. Nobody, I mean, it's just, it's always something tied to that, like, it's really got to be something when you lean into that being the fun part of it.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, well, I think this is a good opportunity to talk about the key stages of operating, and you share this in your book, The Three Stages of Operating, how you plan for future moments. How you handle the planned moments when they arrive, and how you handle the unplanned moments. So could you tell us more about this? Because I think this is a really important tool to have to understand.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah, so we all have these ideas of what's going to happen, and they say life is what happens between your plans.

So, you got an idea of what's gonna take place, and, and on, you know, rare occasions, I'll genuinely say, it pans out the exact way you expected, right? It's like, I planned for this and it worked. And then you have these moments that, you know, that, that come across, and there's, there's a few, but the ones that I look at are like, here's the moment I planned for, here's the moment I didn't plan for.

And those are the two heavier ones to me, but what happens is, is we show up to moments that are unplanned, or something happened we didn't expect, and we have never thought about how we should react in that moment, we never process what, what we could do, or ways we could react, and so I like to tell people, like, when you have something coming up, you got something starting, What I'd recommend is going, hey, if this doesn't work out or something goes wrong, how am I going to stop at that moment of realization and process it?

Am I going to freak out? Am I going to yell at somebody? I just had a project that's coming to the back end on my, on my home here. And there's a lot of things that go wrong. Now, I knew from language and people that go, hey, it's going to go way over budget, which we went way over budget. They go, it's going to be, there's gonna be random headaches.

We had a guy drill a nail into a one inch. pipe that has a whole bunch of power cords in it. Killed the power in the house. I'm surprised the dude didn't hurt himself. Like it could have been very bad. And so it's these things where I go, in the moment of it happening, I'm not freaking out and yelling at the guy who's doing it, because I told myself early, hey, it's going to be a long project.

There's gonna be things that happen when something happens, not if, when something happens. Here's how you want to do it. Pause, breathe, ask yourself. Was it intentional? If he didn't do it intentionally, it's an accident. He probably feels just as bad. If he doesn't feel just as bad, you probably shouldn't have hired him.

And so, but he feels just as bad. How do we solve the problem? So I do that and I was actually to track me. And all of a sudden I get an alert from my ring alarm. It goes, hey, all the power in your house is off. And I told this guy, don't do this in this area. So when it happened, by deduction, the only thing that could have happened was that.

So I'm like sitting here going, I'm, I'm five hours from my home. I can't get there fast. I don't know what's going on. The cameras aren't working. I call the guy. He's not even there. His worker's here doing the work. And so I'm figuring out little by little like what's going on. I'm like, dude, get back to the house.

Make sure he's okay. I told him not to do this, and I think it happened. So lo and behold, he did it. We had to dig the concrete up, all this stuff. We had to go down the floor. I mean, it's a whole thing. And the dude was deaf. He wasn't answering my calls. Deafly afraid of it, talking to me. I finally got him on the phone.

I go, look, let me start by saying this. I know you didn't do it intentionally. I know it's purely an accident and they happened. All I want to know is how are we gonna solve this problem? And so we figured it out. He got, it was done by that night. He had, he had a guy come in, took care of fixing it. It cost him the money to deal with it, which was fine.

But imagine if I just like, what did you, and went off, he's, he's gonna get mad cause he's, and here they go, I didn't do it on purpose, right? These guys yelling at me. I'm a grown man. I'm going to be like, and all of a sudden it might not get done, right? But I pre planned in advance how I would respond to a situation like this.

So because of that, I navigated it better. Now this can happen while I was at my house. It could happen in your marriage. It could happen in your business. It could happen in your health. It could happen in some goal. If you want to launch a podcast, right, and something doesn't get done, if you look at what the goal is to have, the outcome isn't goal.

That's the goal to be. What's the best way to respond if and when something goes wrong? Well, when something goes wrong, it won't derail everything. Cuz all that could happen is more bad. If I yell at him, he doesn't do it. You know, I got to delay a part of the project, everything else gets spun out, right?

All because my emotion or my inability to plan what I want to do and let my emotions run the show. It happens and too many of us have that. We let the emotions take over and run as opposed to going to any kind of logic. And when emotions high, the functional intelligence gets low. I'm going in the directions of, of just seeing red, and that thing's running the show, and that shouldn't run the show, you know?

So that what happens is that I'm navigating things that were pre planned and I'm running into a wall that I knew I was going to run into and I go, here's the tool I brought to climb this wall, let's now apply that tool.

Lainie Rowell: Hope for the best, I expect things could go wrong.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah.

Lainie Rowell: And then,

Anthony Trucks: but plan for the worst though.

Yeah. Hope for the best, plan for the worst.

Lainie Rowell: And so this intentional approach to how you're going to have this interaction with the person who made the mistake. Because the best possible outcome is that you work together. in a state not filled with anger, which of course is a very justifiable reaction.

You like, I told you don't do this. But I can say that in every aspect of my life, I can look back, whether it's with my kids or with my peers or whoever it is. And freaking out as a response has never gotten me the best results.

Anthony Trucks: No, and then I'm just mad that I didn't get the outcome I wanted and then I get frustrated.

I think I'm frustrated at the thing not getting completed and I'm more frustrated at the fact, probably subconsciously, that I hindered it getting done because of how I handled it. And I heard this thing one time recently, I might have been like last week, and I don't know where this has been all my life, but it says an individual is only as big as the smallest thing that can take them out of their pocket.

Like, whatever my pocket of excellence is, whatever thing can remove me from that, that's as big as I am. And so, when I have situations pop into my life, in the last, like, week, it was perfect timing when it came in. I'm having to deal with some craziness. Not bad, but it's just, you know, business stuff. It's part of the journey.

But as it comes in, I go, well, like this guy drilling a hole in this thing. I'm like, I told the team, don't nail or screw in this area. It's like a four inch space. Just not here. Of all the areas, that's where they went. And so I go, well, if this is a thing that can unrattle me, like it just shakes me a little bit, unravel who I am, then this is as big as I am and I'm bigger than this.

It's like, all right. I can handle this. So I'm, I'm bigger than this smaller problem, and that's been an active thing I can think about. I'm going to think about that a lot over the years from now on.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, I think one of the things I truly appreciate about your work is this sense of personal responsibility.

There are things that are out of our control, but what are the things when the time comes, what can I do to have a positive impact for me and for others? And I think that, yeah. That really shines through in all of your work.

Anthony Trucks: Thank you. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, a lot of it may not be my fault, but it's my responsibility.

I think that Mark Manson, the guy that, you know, subtle R of not giving a F. He goes, it may not be your fault, but it's your responsibility. Like, my foster care life, that wasn't my fault I was in foster care. I had a mom who couldn't handle it, but it was my responsibility to make something of myself from it, not to make it a reason to do, you know, criminal acts.

And so the truth is a lot of us, we, we feel like a leaf in the wind. And it's crazy because the only reason we feel like that's because we don't act. And I don't know if we don't act because we think we can't change anything, or think we're not at fault so we shouldn't have to, but the truth is, whether you cause it or somebody else did, no one's gonna come save your life for you.

You better act. And then in acting, you can solve things. Now, truth is, you know, we're the common denominator in all of our problems. Either we caused it or we're allowing it to happen.

Lainie Rowell: Right.

Anthony Trucks: And if we can step into that role of going, Alright, I allowed these people into my, my pocket of, of peace and, you know, I, I should have filtered it better.

Now I can take some ownership and go, You know what, alright, I need to filter people better. That's an action for me. And they, they made this issue arise. While they did it, it's their fault, they're not gonna fix it the way it needs to be fixed. It's my job to do it, so I step in and do it. But then also, there are things that are my fault, that I don't want to pay attention to, because having to chip away at my own ego is hard.

Like, for everybody, it's hard to accept that I'm not the greatest in the world. Although we'll tell people, I'm not perfect, right? But the moment something arises that goes, you're not perfect, you go, wait, wait, wait, wait, no, I didn't do that, it wasn't my fault. Like, no, chill, just accept the fact that you're not perfect, you already said you weren't.

And in that, you can go. Maybe it might be partially something you did and that's okay. So now that it is, guess what? Because you had the power to create the problem, you have the power to solve it. But it doesn't, it's gonna come with a little bit of a poke or like a little jolt of like, Oh, that was partially me.

Cool. Let that, let that ride, absorb it. Let's now move forward and fix this. So it becomes part of a great story. I watched a video yesterday by Alex Hormozan. He says his dad gave him one piece of advice, that winners write the history books, which genuinely is true. He goes, so all the crazy bad thing that's happening, when you get to the point of succeeding and you win, you can rewrite it for all of whatever purpose it needs to be.

Yeah, you stumbled over this and messed it all up, but look where you're at now. But if you let that thing drag you into the ground, history's already been written.

Lainie Rowell: I love that nuance of partially responsible, because it's not an all or nothing. It's not just, well, this happened to me and I had no control over it.

Or, oh my gosh, I'm such a failure, how could I have done this? It's, it's a subtle, like, Okay. I had some role in this, whether I meant to or not. This is where we're at, and now I'm gonna take responsibility and get where we need to get. So I think that's really empowering.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah. It, it doesn't feel good, but it is, like I, I write my book and you read like I, I had my wife had an affair and like our marriage fell apart, we're now remarried, have an amazing marriage.

But the truth is it took years to get to the point of realizing she made a choice. And it was a horrible choice. We take nothing from that. She'll accept it and embrace it. It was a crappy choice. But I had to realize that it took two people in that relationship to get her to a point where she even thought she had to make a choice like that.

And so I didn't take full, like there's definitely 50 50 in that aspect. I absorbed, like damn, I wasn't a present husband. I put her in a position to have to make a choice like that. Again, her choice, take nothing from it. I don't take still that choice, right? But I had to take my role in that. And so it wasn't full, but it was partial.

But that partial, here's what it does. Before that moment, In my head I go, I don't know if I can trust women ever again.

Lainie Rowell: Right.

Anthony Trucks: Because I had no control over the situation happening. I could have been the best, I was the best guy in the world. And I was, I was amazing. I never hurt her, I never did that to her, right?

So what's the, what if I get in another relationship and it happens again? I don't know if I want to give my heart, and you start walling your heart off. Because you wouldn't accept, I'm saying me, you wouldn't accept that maybe you had some role to play, boss. And then once you do go there, okay, dang, I had a role to play.

While it sucks that I did, I can empower myself to be a better person next time so I can ward this off in the future. Which is how my marriage works so well now. I'm aware of things that took place back then that, that had me away. Like, and what her, her, you know, needs are. Like, there's certain, I felt it, I understood it.

It's a responsibility. So that I could actually with that have trust and hope and make something better in the future.

Lainie Rowell: When I hear about your experiences, I see this through line of, obviously, resilience, perseverance, and when I say resilience, I don't mean just in the, like, bounce back to where you were before, I actually, as Tal Ben Shahar would say, Resilience 2.0, again, I keep coming back to that post traumatic growth, but I see that in you, as it might not happen day one, but, you know, after something like, what happened in your marriage, you took some time, figured things out, and then came back stronger. And now you're in this relationship that's better than it's ever been.

And that, I think that just gives people a lot of hope that it's not just a, okay, well, that's done. And I have to move on from that. It's like, well, what can we do to improve and make it better and make ourselves better.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah, you learn from it. You don't wall it off, you don't have so much pain around it, you won't revisit it, you actually dive into it full force and unpack it painfully, but it creates a promise for the future.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, that continuous improvement is not like a steady all up hill like it's that zigzag, right? It's messy.

Anthony Trucks: It'll eventually it keeps going up right but there's definitely shooting up and down if you look at the stock market same thing like it's up and what it was 20 years ago, but it goes down a lot, too

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, absolutely.

I want to make sure we talk about another tool that you share in the book, and that is the H.A.R.D. Approach, which is part of your shift method. Would you be cool with sharing a little bit about that? Because this is so, I really, I mean, I love the whole book, five star review already submitted to Amazon, but I really, yeah, please, I won't, I won't do justice, but habits, reactions, drivers.

Take it away. Yeah.

Anthony Trucks: Yeah. So it's funny, I was at Google two days ago and we actually unpacked this process 'cause change is hard. It is. Robin Sharma says that change is hard in the beginning, messy in the middle, beautiful at the end. And I love it 'cause it is the beginning of, it's all hard, but I wonder, you know, why is it hard?

I question that. I go, what's a process I can apply? And somebody, once I said, call it the easy method, and I go, I don't wanna lie to people. And I want you to embrace the hard stuff. That's why my brand is called Dark Work. It's that work you do in the dark that's difficult. It's supposed to be unsexy. You know, not, not appreciated, misunderstood at times, but that's what gives you that chip of like, I did that anyways.

Now what it means is if I, if I set my sights on something, I'm approach a change in my life in some manner and I call it an identity shift. It's going to be hard and it is. It's a collection of habits, actions, reactions, and drivers. The habits are the things that are going to be We'll call it active things you do little by little by little that compound.

And I'm a person that say, I don't think you should go big in life. You should go really small in a really big way. A small, simple thing you do that compounds over time. There's great books on this of habits, like Atomic Habits, and Mannerist Success Habits, and High Performance Habits. There's great books that talk about habits, right?

It's really the same thing, is do something small in a really big way. Stick to it. But you're also gonna have along the line some big actions that have to be taken. Those big asks, those, those big ends, those big stops, right? There's big actions, and those ones are gonna, they're gonna be scary. It, it just, it is.

It makes your butt pucker. It's like, ooh, I don't want to do this, right? But that's the natural part of your body going like, hey, I'm afraid of this. Why? Because it's probably important. So I fear it. And so there's gonna be big actions along the way. We then go to the R, which I kind of talked to earlier.

What's the reaction I'm gonna have if it goes well, or if it goes poorly? If it doesn't go as planned, what am I, am I gonna shut down and cry? And, and, you know, if something doesn't pan out perfectly? No, I'm telling myself now my reaction is to pause, cry for five minutes. Settle back in. Get back on the saddle and go.

Right? That's your process. Cool. We're gonna do that. So when it happens, go back to that. And also if it's great, what happens if it goes great? All right, I'm not gonna squander my money or my time or my newfound success. I'm gonna be smart with it. Great. I have a reaction to when something goes well. So plot that.

Plan that. So when things go as they go, because again, it's what happens between your plans, you got a reaction in place. It'll drive you in a direction because it's pre thought out. The D is a driver. Meaning what's the thing that drives you to do this? The sole reason, like the why, that underneath, like what's the desire we'll call it?

Because for a lot of people, they'll get in the middle of these things and go, this is hard, I don't even know why I'm doing this anymore. And you fall off track. But if you've written down, okay, I'm gonna put this group of habits in, it's going to be hard. I'm gonna make these big actions and asks. It's gonna be hard.

I'm gonna have this as reactions. Gosh, it's gonna be hard. Why am I doing this? The driver. Is it because you want to have an amazing marriage? Is it because you want to be a great parent? Do you want to have a successful business? Do you want to be able to employ great individuals? Do you want to change the world in some manner?

If that's what's underneath it, you know why. When faced with that moment that's like, why am I doing this? You can go back to that. And that's how you push through the hard moments to make, in time, life actually easier.

Lainie Rowell: Oh, I love it. I want to share something that towards the end of the book you say that I think ties to stuff we've been talking about throughout and just I find really profound. You say, "my identity is not tied to what I create, it's tied to my efforts to create." And I love this focus on process over product. And so if you want to expand on this, I'd love to hear more about it.

Anthony Trucks: So if I go back to the books called Identity Shifts, and there's a level at which we will do certain things that drain us.

It's all willpower, right? Because it's not who we are to do it. When it becomes who you are to do it, it's actually effortless effort. Right as a kid, it was like, oh, I gotta brush my teeth. Nah, right now. It's like I just brush my teeth It's it's who I brush my teeth. I don't want stanky breath, right?

Simple way to look at it But there's gonna be things like that for all of us. I don't want to do cold calling now I'm like, I'm a Cold Call King, right? Eventually become the person that does this thing and the reality is you have to focus on that in a stance of like it's It is hard and is energetic.

But if you're a person that goes into a stance and go, I don't know how to do this yet. What you'll typically do is go have that imposter syndrome and go, I don't feel like the person that does this it's going to be too hard. I'm never going to flip that. I mean, we actually shut down. We make really good excuses to tuck away from it.

It's because people identify with the outcomes. And what I found in my work is like my focus when I say lean into Dark Work, which the goal for you is to optimize your identity for peak performance, to perform at a high level and what I call a dominator's identity, a sense of I can govern and control in defining moments.

It's really what I want you to have. You step to a moment that's defining and have power inside of you. The way you get there, is that you look at this and go, all right, I may not do this thing, but I'm gonna try it. But if I wake up every day and go, I'm not the best singer in the world, and that's all you're measuring against, then after a while, you're never gonna, you're gonna stop.

'cause you're like, I, I can't keep feeling like I'm not the best singer. So I go, no, no, don't identify with the outcome. Identify with the effort. So what do the best singers do? They spend three hours a day doing whatever. Okay, cool. I'm gonna spend three hours a day doing that. What do the best athletes do?

They spend, you know, the first month doing this and the second day doing this, and they just, they do this. And whatever it is it's outlined. I'm going to identify with doing the actions. The thing is, is when you identify with doing the actions long enough, you do the actions, there's this moment in time that pops up and none of us know when it happens.

You usually will never, and honestly you'll never notice it, you'll notice that it happened, which is I wake up and go, I'm a damn good tuba player. I'm amazing out here on the soccer field. Like it's crazy how good I am. Because at some point it just became who you were to do it because you identified with the actions.

I'm the person who every day I get a hundred dribbles on the soccer ball, right? I'm the person who every single day I'm gonna, you know, spend three hours on a violin. That's who you are. And then when that's who you are to do those things, eventually become the person who does it. And now you can't go to bed without doing it.

It becomes effortless effort. What was hard to do is hard not to do now. And that's the catalyst for me. I look at everybody that makes people great. And so whenever you step into the world of what you do, that dark work I'm talking about, it's identifying with the efforts of what it takes to become that person, not the outcome and measuring yourself to a place you obviously are not at just yet.

Lainie Rowell: I just love that. I really appreciate that. And you mentioned for habits, James Clear and Atomic Habits.

And he says most people think what they need is intensity and what they really need is consistency and that's what you're talking about and that's what you really inspire people to do and I appreciate that. So, I'm going to ask if there's any other words of wisdom that you just really want to make sure, you've given us so much, so I feel selfish and, and greedy in asking this.

Anthony Trucks: There's so, I mean there's too many, that's the thing, there are too many things I could throw out there, I could talk like this for hours and hours and hours, I do, I talk about things like this all the time. I think the world that I live in is one where, I find we're all looking about, you know, creating, developing, accomplishing.

One I would say is set your own scale. I think that's the most critical part of all this is I think your scale needs to be something that you develop in private or with your loved ones that lets you know what success looks like, like when you've crossed that finish line, because without that, the finish line will never stay still.

It'll always move. And no matter what you accomplish, it'll never feel good enough. And if you borrow the world's scale, there's never enough. There are trillionaires who want more money. So what ends up happening is a lot of us step into a world where we're not realizing we're setting ourselves up for failure because we have failed to create an outcome that is what I desire.

And if somebody challenges it, I can go, great, but I still like what I got, you know? And so what I do is I set my scale. I have my client set their scale. I go, Hey, let's, let's fast forward a year from now. What is genuinely life look like in a way where you go, I love this. What does it look like? Are you, are you traveling a little bit?

Traveling a lot? You making more money? You making less money? Do you have more time with your family? Like, for example, in my world, I speak. I love speaking. I'm great at what I do, but I only want to do 24 speeches a year. I don't want to do more than that. There are some people that go, I'm gonna do 150 a year.

That makes me, I want to throw up at the thought of that. Not because it's a lot of speaking, because I'm gone from my house. More than half the year. I don't want to do that. I'm in season of dad. I want to be home. I want to wake my kids up and be here when they do wake up. I want to get them from school.

I want to be at their sports. That matters to me. So because of that I turn things down or I raise my rates and and I've had a lot of people to go But and you could be on so many stages. You're right I could but I would miss out in the stage of life of being a parent I want to be a father and that's my scale. So when somebody goes, but you could be doing this I go, I'm glad you see that. Awesome you feel that way I still feel great because last week I got to be at my daughter's thing My son's thing go see my wife do this That for me is way more important than speaking to 5, 000 people and having some good social media posts, but that's my scale. Doesn't diminish anybody else's. I'm not saying you should do what I want to do.

I'm just saying it fits for me. But if I didn't have that in place, I would feel FOMO, comparison, every single day, and I'd feel like empty at the accomplishments I have. So when I set my scale, it gives me a North Star to move towards it, and it helps me answer every hard question. Will it help me be in Season of Dad?

If not, it's a no. If yes, let's do it.

Lainie Rowell: I think that's really important to, I mean, anything to avoid the comparison hangover, nothing usually good comes from comparison it's good to have aspirations and to be inspired by people, but trying to compare your chapter 1 to someone else's chapter 20 is, I think, something people have said that's usually not great.

So I love that you're talking about set your own scale and, and not just what. the general public or other people in your field would think is the sign of success. What does it actually look like for you? And I can, as a speaker, I can really relate to that because I, I don't want to be on the road all the time.

That would, that would mean I don't get to be writing as much. Obviously I wouldn't get much time with my family. So that's not the order of priority, family first, then writing, but. Yeah, so I completely connect with that. And speaking of connecting, let's tell people how they can connect to your work.

Obviously, I'm going to put everything in the show notes, but I just, in your own words, what are the best ways for people to stay in touch with you and your brilliance?

Anthony Trucks: Yeah, yeah. So I'm not sure when it's going to come out, but we are finally launching the Dark Work website. So if you go to darkwork.com, there's an assessment on there that lets you determine or actually see what your Dark Work Identity is essentially what it is a whole assessment of what's called your dominator's identity.

I had a PhD helped me create this so it's a pretty awesome one So that'd be a good place or just go to my social media at dark work or at Anthony trucks Likely at Anthony trucks has a lot more traction where I'm personally located. But that's that's the place man go see what I do and see if it's engaging and fun And if it is I say apply something I've taught it's really all it is just snag one nugget, say I'm gonna do that and then go do that thing,

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, and wherever you are and whatever type of work you're doing, really to be thinking about where do I want to be a year from now and trying to think about what are the habits, the actions, the reactions, and the drivers for all of that, right?

I guess that year from now is the driver, but you know, what are the habits, actions, reactions that you're going to need to get there? So, so much wisdom, Anthony, I feel all the happiness chemicals flooding my brain for this time with you. Thank you very much for being here and thank you all for listening.

Anthony Trucks: Welcome. Thank you for having me.

Episode 103 - Junk Dopamine vs. Healthy Dopamine

Shownotes:

You can choose your adventure with this one - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

And you can find the article on Thrive Global!

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 102 - Passion Struck with John R. Miles

Shownotes:

Join us for a captivating conversation with John R. Miles, a trailblazer in intentional living and the force behind the Passion Struck® philosophy. In this episode, John shares his unique insights on how to embrace your authentic self and lead a life filled with purpose and passion. Learn about the practical steps and transformative framework that can empower you to make profound changes in your life. Don't miss out on this deep dive into personal growth and leadership that could redefine your path to success. Tune in and start your journey towards a more intentional existence.

About Our Guest:

John Miles is a master at guiding individuals on a transformative journey to unlock their ultimate potential and embrace their authentic selves. As the visionary CEO of Passion Struck®, bestselling author, keynote speaker, and host of the #1 Alternative Health Podcast, Passion Struck, John merges deep insights from peak performance and behavioral science with an innate understanding of the human psyche. His mission is to inspire and empower a global community to live intentionally, moving beyond conventional success to lead lives of profound meaning, passion, and authenticity.

John R. Miles brings to the table a distinguished 30-year career that spans across military leadership, entrepreneurship, global business and technology operations, life coaching, and strategic innovation. His leadership foundation was laid at the United States Naval Academy, marked by distinction as a Division 1 athlete, class secretary, and brigade honor staff member during a significant chapter of the academy’s history.

His approach embodies the rigor of his naval training, enriched with a deep understanding of business dynamics and personal growth, guiding both individuals and corporations towards unparalleled success.

Thrive Global Article:

Igniting a Life of Purpose: John R. Miles on Being Passion Struck

Connect with and learn from John R. Miles

Website
Book
Podcast
YouTube
Instagram
X

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: [00:00:00] Hello, friends. Welcome to the show, John Miles. John, how are you today?

John Miles: Lainie, I have been looking forward to this for over a week, so I am so glad to be here. Feel so honored to be able to speak to your audience.

Lainie Rowell: Oh, I feel very honored to have this conversation. I am a huge fan of your podcast, and I've read your book, which this is an audio podcast primarily, but I just want, you to see there's There's some markups, there's some post its, it's been well loved, and I'm excited for you to share your message.

First, I would love for you to just kick us off talking about why is it so important to live intentionally?

What does that mean to be living an intentional life?

John Miles: Something I tried to do throughout the book was to utilize a bunch of quotes from who I thought were vanguards throughout the book to highlight different points of it. And the quote I'm going to quote here is one I wish I would have put in the book and I left out unintentionally.

So speaking of intentionally, but it's by Sharon Salzberg, who I absolutely love and the quote is, there's no commodity we can take with us, there's only our lives, and whether we live them wisely, or whether we live them with ignorance, and that is everything. And the reason I bring this quote up first is there have been a couple works, both scientifically and in palliative care, that really shows the results of what happens when we don't live intentionally.

So one of these that comes top of mind is the book by Bronny Ware about the Five Regrets of the Dying. and her number one regret really complements research that came out of Cornell University led by psychologist Tom Gilevich in 2018. What they're both showing is that when people look back on their lives and they were both looking at people who were in their third quadrant of life, 76 percent of all humans have the same regret, and that is not pursuing their ideal self.

It's not the mistakes that we make in life that we regret. It's the what ifs, the should haves. And so to me, that all comes from when we're unintentional about the life that we are crafting. And it's really, sings true to what Sharon says in her quote, that we can either choose to live our lives wisely, or we live them in ignorance.

And to me, that's the demarcation point between living intentionally or without intention.

Lainie Rowell: I really hear you on that inaction regret, right? The things that we just didn't think to do, didn't maybe take the leap to do. And you mentioned Sharon Salzberg, and you have had so many, I mean, you said vanguard thought leaders, just really, amazing guests on your podcast.

So what I love about the book, and I wrote lots of things down that I love about the book, including the five star review, which I, whenever I find a book is important, I have to do a five star review on Amazon. I think that's like my love language. But what I love is that you take these people who are doing tremendous things in the world and you make it so compelling, so comprehensive, and so actionable.

To me that was how I read the book, is you are taking your wisdom and your brilliance and you're also bringing in all these other people and what they come on the show to share with you. So is it, is it fair to say that's kind of how that relationship has been between the podcast and the book, that there's definitely been some, some feeding of each other?

John Miles: Yeah, I mean there's, that's absolutely the case although many of the interviews I did for the book were before The podcast even existed because it's kind of a funny story how the podcast came to be. I am a first time author and had not historically been an author. I was a business executive for most of my career.

So when I started down this path of wanting to write Passion Struck and it turned out to be written very differently from the way I thought it would be written in a positive way at the beginning. But I would. Talk to agents and I was striking out left and right. I think I reached out to about 80 agents and not one of them was interested.

And they all came back to me and said, You don't really have a platform and no one knows much about you. You're this business guy. How do you even know any of this stuff is going to resonate? And I didn't, to be honest. And so they said, you need to go out there and do public speaking. I started this journey right at the onset of COVID.

And so that was next to impossible. And I'm not sure your experiences with doing virtual talks, but it's not as if you can read. The faces of the audience or know if it's resonating or not. And so after doing some gut searching, I thought that the best way to test this was doing a podcast. And so that's really why I went down the path.

I did have it in my mind that I was going to at least do it for a year because I wanted to give it a fair shot, but I really used it as a litmus test to decide whether or not I was even going to put the book in the world. So, 40 million downloads later thankfully it has resonated.

Lainie Rowell: Well, I'm so glad you shared that, because I didn't know your entire backstory, and I've read your bio, and I know so many things about you, and I haven't even had a chance to So thank you for your service yet, but you have a military background, and if you want to share any of that, please feel free to do so, but I, I really didn't realize the book was first, I kind of thought maybe you started the podcast first, and I mean, if I, if my math is right, you're going to hit 500 episodes this year?

Does that sound about right?

John Miles: Yeah, we just crossed 442. So, at three a week, definitely on pace to do that. And you, you asked me about the book and how I approached it. I read so many books, given I'm a podcaster like you and I read all the books from the guest, I do over 100 books easily a year.

And so I've really trained myself to speed read. But as I have read all these books, And thank you very much for the five star review. There is very much a difference between a book that's actionable, I've found, and a book that you read and it sits on your bookshelf and you never do anything about it.

So when I was writing this, I didn't want it to be a book you read. I wanted it to be a book you lived. Kind of like this book by Sharon Salzberg I'm holding here. Loving Kindness that sits next to me almost every single day and I constantly refer to it for guidance and so that's how I tried to approach the book is I wanted it to be Relatable that people could get through it But also be science backed so that they the reader understood that it wasn't just john pontificating It's these things are really backed either by psychology or behavior science or neuroscience.

Lainie Rowell: And that comes through. So to me it is that beautiful, we know it's evidence based, we also see it in practice through these tremendous leaders and through your work. Tell us just briefly about the Passion Struck model. What does that look like for people?

John Miles: Okay, so, let me give the best kind of manifestation of what this thing looks like. So, I'm gonna go to something that everyone in the audience will recognize, and that is Mickey Mouse. So, imagine you've got Mickey Mouse staring at you. So, the Passion Struck model, if you think about this, it's how I organize the book around this model, but it has really four core components.

The first you can think of as Mickey Mouse's left ear, and that's something that I refer to as mindset shifts. And your mindset is really tied to the purpose that you have in life and your passion, because you need to have that ignition that passion brings to shift the way that you're operating and your mindset really influences your why and how you approach the actions that you take.

And in this model, I also included different components of the Stoics in this. And so it also has reference to those core aspects of the virtues that the Stoics thought were vital. And so that makes up one ear. The next ear, if you look at Mickey Mouse's right ear, is behavior shifts. And your behavior is very much influenced by those mindset shifts.

And it, you can think of, is the how. You put these actions into place and it's really the what that you're trying to accomplish. And then if you think about Mickey's nose, that is what I call the psychology of progress, which is really this whole concept of taking deliberate action, which is based on the stoic virtue of courage and intentionality.

And then you can think of Mickey Mouse's mouth as the last aspect. And this is intrinsic motivation, which is the fuel that powers the whole model. And underneath the whole model is driving our lives in a significant way. In a way that we feel like we matter, not only to ourselves, but to other people, and that we're making a difference for humanity.

So those are kind of the core tenets. And behavior shifts are really powered by perseverance. And as I mentioned before, the deliberate action or psychology of progress is really underpinned by our intentionality.

Lainie Rowell: I love that you talk about the mindset shifts versus the behavior shifts. And I actually want to focus on a couple of the behavior shifts that you talk about. And one of them that I think whether we're talking about in education, or in the corporate world, or wherever the listener happens to be, I think this concept of gardener leader is really very fascinating to me, and I wondered if you'd be willing to talk a little bit more about the emphasis on eyes on, hands off.

John Miles: Yeah, I would love to do this, and this is one of the chapters I enjoyed doing immensely, because it has Two people who I actually believe are two of the best leaders in the world right now.

One of them is General Stan McChrystal, who I interviewed for the book. And the other is Keith Crotch who has been a mentor of mine for, gosh, 25 years now. I met Keith when he was originally the CEO and founder of Ariba. He ended up selling it to SAP. He then became If people don't know his backstory, the chairman and CEO of DocuSign took that to a billion dollar exit, and then most recently was the assistant secretary of state in the Trump administration, although what his focus was on was really trying to blow up entrepreneurship in the U. S. because it's been on a 30 year decline. So as I was thinking about this need to change our leadership paradigm. I was really brought up in the concept of being a servant leader. And for most of my career, I think it really served me extremely well. However, I think that our times are drastically changing and the way that we're operating is very different because the key tenants of a servant leader for me really meant that I had to be face to face with the people I was leading and really serving their needs.

And we're at a point in time now where more people are distributed. Let's just face it. COVID really brought upon a a completely different change. So at the heart of a gardener leader, you can think of it as just as a gardener nurtures their crops, a leader needs to intentionally nurture their team's growth.

It's the process that's involved in having a deep understanding of each individual's unique talents and potential, but it's also coupling them with the right environment and resources for them to thrive. And so at the heart of this is something that I call the eyes on, hands off approach. And if we go to General McChrystal, This is something that I have heard him talk about, but he discusses it in a way that will make it obvious .

If he was the leader of SOCOM or he was the leader of all forces in Afghanistan, he's going to have missions going on all throughout the country or world potentially. There is no way that he can oversee a mission that a Delta Force team is doing or a Ranger operation or a SEAL team and trying to micromanage it.

He needs to understand that he has given his troops the training to understand what they need to do, the guidance and support that they know someone has their back and the ability to be creative in solving whatever issue they come across. So you need to be eyes on and understanding that you train and give your people as much support as possible, but you also need to be hands off in letting them have the autonomy to take the risks and do what needs to be done in that situation at hand.

And I think the same thing applies to whatever work situation you're in as we need more environments where adaptability and responsiveness are really in high focus. We need people throughout organizations with a longer term perspective, but most importantly, we need to cultivate a healthy work environment where we have an emphasis on nurturing and care and creating a positive and supportive work culture. So that's what this is all about.

Lainie Rowell: And to me, I made the connection to an interview that I had done previously with Geoff Cohen, the author of Belonging. And when he described Belonging talking about, it's not that we're all the same.

It's that we all have unique things to bring to the table that once we all are there, and in the right conditions like you're talking about, that's where we can all thrive, right? It's not that we all need to be exactly the same. We're seen and valued for our unique talents, like you said. You also mentioned creating the conditions, and then that creates the sense of belonging, and that can really be something that helps us in this shared purpose that we're in, whatever the field is.

And I love how you are always talking about intention because I think that's something that's really important. And I think it's really easy to lead a distracted life.

We've never had more things vying for our attention than right now. And so I love this constant focus on intention. It does have to be constant. And then I was wondering if you could also tell us about another one of the behavior shifts, and that is Conscious Engager. And you talk about how important it is to be consciously engaged when we're living a Passion Struck life, and so what are some of the strategies or practices we could do to live like that?

John Miles: Yeah, this was the actually the last chapter I wrote for the book, and It wasn't originally one of the principles and as I was going back through my research and the back story of this is I've ended up researching about 750 different individuals to look for commonalities on what differentiates the people who I consider to be Passion Struck from those who are not.

And I kept coming upon this theme that I can't believe I had missed which is the need for intense focus, which is really at the core of being intentional. And so in this chapter, I really talk about the difference between consciously engaging in life and how so many of us go through our lives just subconsciously engaging with it.

And I use the metaphor in this that we often hear that we're operating on autopilot or we're living our life on autopilot. And as I started to think about that, as I was writing the book, I just thought it was the wrong analogy. I don't think that that's how the majority of us are living because when you're living on autopilot and I fly a lot, hopefully the pilot's still putting the autopilot in the positive direction that you're trying to go in, even if they're doing the same things over and over again.

I think the better analogy is that so many of us today are living our life like, we're a pinball in the game of pinball, where we are so distracted by the elements of life, which represent the sounds, the bumpers, all the distractions that fill up the game of pinball, the same thing is happening to us in our life.

And to me, when that pinball is going around aimlessly, and we're distracted by everything around it, and it goes down the gutter, that's the epitome of what it's like to live unintentionally. And so to me, this chapter is really about the principles about what does it mean to, instead of being played by the game, learning to play the game on your own terms, learning to live life on your own terms.

And it really is understanding the core essence of making the most important thing in your life, be the consistent, most important thing in your life. And I borrow some of the work by Stephen Covey in this chapter. Because it really harkens back to one of my favorite ministers when I was going to a Methodist church back in the mid 2000s who did this whole sermon for us that the main thing about the main thing is keeping the main thing the main thing.

And it just sounds so easy when you hear it, but it's so difficult to do. And in this chapter, I also introduce the importance versus urgent matrix, which is a great way for people to analyze how you're living your life. And are you really focused on what you think are the most important things in your life?

Because I find so often that we're focused on what appears to be urgent, but is not important at the detriment. of doing the most important things that are urgently needed in your life. So, those are just some highlights about the chapter, but I I end it by talking about two of my favorite historical figures who were both living pinball lives Abraham Lincoln and Winston Churchill, but through the power of intentionality and changing their life and becoming passion struck in the twilight of both of their lives, completely transformed the way that history sees both of them because they ended up becoming passion struck.

Lainie Rowell: The stories are how we remember, right? And so I do appreciate that you bring to us practices and stories and they're are people who we go, Oh, wow, that's like a really successful person or that person is so wise. And so it really helps us to make those connections.

I didn't mean to hone in on two of the chapters that happened to be right at the end and literally next to each other, but those spoke to me.

Are there any other ones that you want to touch on? Maybe one of the mindset shifts that you want to touch on?

John Miles: Yeah why don't we talk about being an action creator? Because I mean, if, if there's any fault for the book, it's that I've been repetitive on this need for action.

And it is a core theme that I talk about throughout almost the entire book. And the reason I keep bringing it up and I'm repetitive about it is because it's so important. I wanted it to be anchored in people's minds that It is deliberate action in our lives that either culminates in a tsunami of greatness or a valley of despair.

And you talked to me about intentionality, and I think it's important for people to understand what I mean about in intentional action. We were just talking about the difference between being an unconscious engager and a conscious engager. Intentional action is what anchors us in the present. Our lives are all about the power of choice.

And the choices that we make every day, the steps that we take toward a goal and how we navigate our daily lives. And so being intentional is so critical because it's all about the execution of our plans. It's the embodiment of our commitment to growth and progress. So you can think of intention. In that it differs from mere desire.

Intention is the pursuit of a specific meaningful goal. It's a point of achievement that we set for ourselves. It's not just any target. It's a milestone that aligns with our deeper values and purpose. And achieving the goal is fulfilling. It's a chapter in our larger life story. And so when I talk about this, it is really being intentional about making sure that you're aligning the actions that you're taking in the micro choices of your day with your midterm ambitions and your longer term aspirations.

And so I think we get this confused that action, ambition, and aspiration are isolated variables and they're not, they're interconnected and interdependent. Because we can track our actions. We can analyze our productivity and evaluate our efficiency, but these metrics only gain true meaning when they're connected to our ambitions and aspirations.

And so I think that is a really important part that listeners need to understand and educators need to understand. For those who are in the audience, this is something that I'm really trying to get teens and young adults to understand because I think that this is the key to making lasting self improvement on your journey.

Lainie Rowell: Absolutely. I love that. So we've talked about a mindset shift, some of the behavior shifts. I mean, this is a very rich, rich book and I do think it's one that you'll be very happy and get to pull out and get some inspiration, get some practices. It's very actionable. I know I've said that a few times, but that's my favorite type of book. It's going to inspire me, but it's also going to be actionable.

So I want to ask you one last question before I ask you to share how we can stay in touch with you for those who are listening. You've had a lot of amazing, amazing guests.

I know you already mentioned Sharon Salzberg and you've mentioned some of the others, but is there any thing that you from one of your guests or you yourself just cannot tell people enough? Like it is such an important piece of wisdom. that you just love to jump on tables and yell about it until everyone understood properly.

John Miles: Yeah, well, I'll take one from a person who's in the book and I'll take one from a person who's not in the book only because I didn't get a chance to interview her for the book. So the one that I'll talk about that is in the book. is I interviewed a very close friend of mine. He's a Naval Academy classmate of mine.

I've known him since he was 17. And that is astronaut Chris Cassidy. And Chris, if you don't know his backstory, we went to Naval Academy together. He ended up going to basic underwater demolition school and became a SEAL. Ended up being awarded two bronze stars, one for valor. And I cannot tell the audience what he did in. The citation. I have actually read it, but it's classified, but it was probably one of the most profound actions of the war in Afghanistan. And from there he ended up going to MIT and then became an astronaut and eventually became the chief astronaut. And today he's the president and CEO of the Medal of Honor Museum that's being built in Arlington outside of Dallas.

What is so, to me, important about what Chris talks about And I use in the book is this idea that we end up not realizing how important our power perspective is and how we can reframe cognitive restructuring the life that we have around us. And he gives a couple of examples that I put in the book.

One happened when he was doing an EVA or a spacewalk and another one was his experience going through BUDS, but I'll just use the one from BUDS. And that is that. He learned that trying times end, and that in order to get through BUDS, or any hardship, or anything that we want to accomplish in our lives, A great way to think about it is, as if it's an elastic rubber band and that the time horizon can be expanded or compressed.

And so what got him through BUDS, and not only did he get through it, he was the honor man for his class, was that he looked at the micro moments that made up the day. And for him, he stretched the rubber band enough just to make it to the next iteration of training, whether that was trying to get through the exercise he was doing or trying to get to the next meal.

His time horizon was very short and he was very focused on what he needed to do to get through that without worrying about the next step. And I think that that's something that we all can use in our life when situations come our way that we think are never ending, but we can naturally work through them by really boiling it down to the micro moments that we have to get through.

And then another interview. that I did was more recent with Gabby Bernstein. And this interview was one that I got rejected 12 times by her before it came into being over about 30 months. But I had always just wanted to interview her because I think that she just, you know, has a raw, very intentional way about the way she talks and shares her life.

And something profound that we talked about is she was already very well known. Oprah actually named her as being an influencer when she was 34 or 35 who could change the world. And I might have her age wrong, but it was in her early thirties. But at that same time, She has publicly said this, so I'm not sharing anything she hasn't, but she came down to a profound choice.

She had seen a person who gave her a reading and made a tape about it and told her how destructively she was leading her life. She was chasing a whole bunch of addictions because she was dealing with past unknown trauma. But it was causing her to have a drug issue, an alcohol issue, a compulsive work addiction, and a dating addiction.

And her life, although it seemed incredible, was spiraling out of control. And basically the reading was, you have a choice, like we all do in life, like I was talking about earlier. And the choice was, you can either keep giving in to these addictions that you have and not dealing with your trauma or you have a choice to solve that trauma and change the world because you're not going to be able to do both.

And she ended up making the choice to get clean and she's now been sober for years and to deal with the rest of her addictions and you can see what her life has catapulted to now with four or five number one New York Times bestselling books, sold out tours. I mean, you name it. I mean, she was just on the Today Show the other day, but to me, I look back and you can look at her and say, she's done all these amazing things, but it all culminated from a choice that she made to change, and I think we are all faced with those choices in life, and it's what do we do at that moment that defines us, and like for her, it wasn't an easy change.

The changes I've had to make aren't easy changes. And I think the thing that ends up happening is we see people like I profiled in the book, Chris Cassidy, Oprah Winfrey, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, whoever. And we think that their life has been all rosy, but every one of them, when you look at their backstory, there were times in their life where they faced these choices and they choose to pick ones that ended up leading to where they are now.

And it's not just one choice. It's a consistent reinvention of themselves over time Because becoming Passion Struck is a continuous journey. It's not a one time thing So those would be the two that I would highlight.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, and there's a theme of impermanence through both of those, right? and so impermanence good impermanence keep pushing yourself like when it's rough It will change and we have a lot of things that we can do to move out of that.

And then also the impermanence of like, we need to keep moving forward and stretching ourselves with intention so we're not living a pinball life. So thank you so much for sharing so much wisdom in that little bit of time that I was blessed to get with you.

What is the best way for people to connect with you on the socials, your website, all of that? I'll be sure to put it in the show notes as well.

John Miles: The best way to follow me on any of the socials is to use John with an H, middle initial R. Miles. But you can go to my website, johnrmiles.com or PassionStruck.Com. And from there you can get to the book, the podcast, coaching, everything else that we're doing.

Lainie Rowell: So I'm just going to take a moment to say that your website is amazing, and one of the favorite things, and friends, you may see something like this happen, for Evolving with Gratitude, inspired by John here, the starter packs is such a brilliant way because you have such a huge library of amazing episodes. Again, you're going to hit 500, not too far off from here, but the starter packs are a really nice way to go see, you know, here's what these amazing women are doing. And I love that idea. So I think that's something I might be borrowing if you don't mind.

John Miles: I talk about it at every episode because it is difficult to explore the podcast now that we've had so many interviews and they're difficult to find. But I find if you put them in convenient playlists that maybe pique a person's interest, that it's much easier to consume them and understand what's on the show.

Lainie Rowell: Absolutely. And I really appreciate you packaging them that way for us. So, all right, John, I know I need to let you go. Thank you so much for being here and thank you all for listening.

John Miles: Yeah, Lainie, it's truly been an honor. Thank you so much for having me.

Episode 101 - Conquering Those Feelings of Indebtedness

Shownotes:

You can choose your adventure with this one - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

And you can find the article on Thrive Global!

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 100 - What Makes a Great Principal with George Couros

Shownotes:

🎉 Here we are at the 100th episode milestone, friends! I'm overjoyed to welcome back George Couros, who kicked off this journey with us as our very first guest. Returning with his boundless energy and profound insights on educational leadership, George and I explore his latest book, What Makes a Great Principal, the transformative power of consistent mentorship, our enduring passion for education, and ways to continuously grow professionally. Whether this is your first episode or you've been with us since that inaugural episode, prepare for a session packed with empowering strategies and inspiring stories. Don't miss this landmark episode—it's a full-circle moment filled with heart and wisdom!

About Our Guest:

George Couros is a worldwide leader in the area of innovative teaching, learning, and leading, and has a focus on innovation as a human endeavor. Most importantly, he is a proud father and husband.

His belief that meaningful change happens when you first connect to people’s hearts, is modeled in his writing and speaking. In his 20-plus years in the field of education, he has worked at all levels of school, from K-12 as a teacher, technology facilitator, and school and district administrator, and is currently an Adjunct Instructor with the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania.

George is also the author of the books, The Innovator’s Mindset, Innovate Inside the Box, Because of a Teacher,  Because of a Teacher 2, and his latest release, What Makes a Great Principal.

Thrive Global Article:

I recently interviewed George about his health journey for Thrive and you can check out that article here: George Couros on Optimizing Health and Life

Connect with and learn from George Couros:

Website: ⁠⁠georgecouros.ca⁠⁠
X/Twitter: ⁠⁠@gcouros⁠⁠
Instagram: ⁠⁠@gcouros⁠

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: All right, friends. I have a real treat for you today. The return of the George Couros. Hi, George.

George Couros: Let's go. I am so pumped. I'm number one, number 100. And so, I don't know, maybe 1, 000, right? Is that what's happening?

Lainie Rowell: No, we're gonna, we're gonna get you back before then.

George Couros: I don't know.

Lainie Rowell: I should have probably made it like every 10 episodes.

So you could have been 10, 20, 30, 40. But I have been anticipating and we have been plotting this for a very long time. I guess I'm the plotter. You're just, you're just kind and giving me your time. But I have been so excited to have you as episode 100. You are episode number one. Like you said, you are still the most listened to episode of all time.

George Couros: Really? Well, it's probably just because I'm, like, ahead of everyone.

Lainie Rowell: Nope, nope. I, it's it's, it's a, it's a good, steady lead. Like, you're

George Couros: Okay, let's, let's, let's, let's, first of all, before we kind of get into any of this stuff, Like, first of all, congratulations on doing this because to actually get to a hundred podcasts means you have to have some consistency and a lot of people like get excited about this stuff.

They do it and then they quit right away. And I think that's like a huge issue in a lot of the stuff we do. Like, think about education. A lot of school districts. You know like, ooh we're like so into this, and then, it's like, by the end of the episode they're like, nah, we're doing a new thing. And then it's like, oh why are people so frustrated.

So good for you, because I think that consistency and you know, putting yourself out there, having guests, inviting people, elevating them including myself. is a, is a huge kudos to you. So I, I am honored to have been on here twice, right? I'm the only person who's been on twice too, right? That, you were the first

Lainie Rowell: person, okay, let's be clear.

You're the first person I asked to return, but I saved you for the spot 100.

George Couros: I gotcha. Okay. Is

Lainie Rowell: that fair? It's not fair.

George Couros: Whatever.

Lainie Rowell: And I also.

George Couros: I'm honored, I'm honored. I'm very proud of you for. All you put out there too.

Lainie Rowell: Thank you. Well, and you are such an amazing, not only one of my besties, but such an amazing mentor.

You're so patient and so kind and you lift so many people up and even before we hit record, you were coaching me up on some things that I could do and I really appreciate it because I listen to everything you say and I do my best to execute on it because it's brilliant advice. I don't always execute as good as I could but I'm trying and so thank you for that.

George Couros: I don't, I don't, this is the thing about me and people know this, who are, I don't waste my time on people who don't like listen to my advice. Right. So like, if you're, if I know you'll never listen to it, I just, I don't even bother and I know, and that's the thing. Right. So I know you probably heard me tell the story before I ref basketball.

I know people are like, Oh, he's already talking basketball, but yeah,

Lainie Rowell: I'm here for it,

George Couros: that's what happens. So when I ref basketball like, and I got to a very high level and this was something I was considering doing professionally, it was really important to me. The thing that was really interesting is that you'd ref a half and there'd be, you know, a high level games and there'd be an evaluator sitting in the stands.

And then the evaluator, you'd go in at halftime and they would rip you apart. There's no positive sandwiches because, because there's no time, right? They got to tell you what you're doing wrong because you got 10 minutes. So they're like, don't do this. This is wrong. This is wrong. This is wrong. And the referees that always do the best in the sport were the ones who took the advice and tried it in the second half. And so if you're like I need to think about it and all this other stuff, like you're, you're done. You're, you're out. Right. So, and it doesn't mean that you always took it and you kept it forever, but at least they saw you are giving an effort to get better.

That's what matters, that you're open to the advice. You're open to trying new things. And so I always think about that because that was something I look forward as a principal, I look forward when I worked in central office. Who are those people that were open to challenge, to, you know, learning new things.

And I try to model this myself, like I am constantly tweaking stuff that I'm doing. I am in pursuit of the best habits in the world. And I will, I will take what works, I will get rid of what doesn't. But I'm always trying to learn. I'm always trying to get better with this stuff. So, you know, I, I don't ask anyone to do anything I'm not willing to do myself and you are so willing to try these new things.

So I'm very, that's why I'm very proud of you is that I know you don't listen to my advice a hundred percent and that's okay, but you, you're a good 90 something. Right. But it doesn't mean you stick with it. It doesn't mean you stick with it, but I know you'll try. You'll try. Cause you want to get better just like I do.

Right.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah. Well, in I love that example you're giving of the evaluator giving halftime advice and the people who improved the best were the ones who were implementing it in second half. And I think that's relevant to pretty much any sort of improvement that you want to do. I mean, we know this for professional learning.

If you don't implement it right away, it's never going to happen, right? That's just, that's gone. That's gone.

George Couros: It is. And it's totally, and it's actually one of the things I really encouraged, I was in Comac in New York, it's a school district in Long Island, and what was, one of the things that I thought was really powerful is they had students there, something I worked with them, said like, hey, make sure you have students on the PD day.

And what I love about it is that when the kids are hearing what the, what the staff is learning, there's more of an accountability. Cause they're like, are you going to do any of that stuff? Like, are you just like, what are you doing? Right. And I think that there's some power in that when you have students involved in professional learning, you're getting their feedback.

And as someone who comes in to speak to districts, the first people I go to after like, I'm done talking is, is the students. I'm like, what'd you think? What, like, what did you like? What didn't you like? Because that's who I'm ultimately trying to serve, right? I'm not like, I, I always talk about the importance of student voice, but actually it's not like I just want to hear it.

I want to build upon it and try to get better and like understand it. So that's something I think is really important because a lot of times we walk into these professional learning sessions and we don't do anything with it. And one of the things I've talked about quite a bit lately, you know, this whole notion, I, I don't think I've been to a bad PD in 15 years.

And it's not saying the presenter has been bad or you know, the content's not great because I don't depend on someone else making my learning happening for me. I say, okay, what am I getting from this? What am I going to take out of this? How will I use this? And so I always own it and I'm never dependent upon that.

And I think that's a really important aspect is there's a really great Stephen Downs quote. I cannot remember. It's like like basically we have to understand that learning is not something provided for us, but it's basically something we create ourselves. And that's, I've really embraced that and you do this too.

I do this. You don't take everything I say a hundred percent, you make it your own, but you still try in some way. And I think that's what matters. It's not like just listen blindly to people and do whatever they say. But it's like, Hey, like what, what works there? What doesn't, what works for you? How do you make that your own?

That's, that's, I think is really important.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, it's about, okay, well, here's what you're trying to accomplish. Here are some things that you could do, but make it your own. And I really appreciate, like, even in the conversation we had before we hit record, you were giving me some advice, and you were giving me the room to make it my own.

Like, it doesn't have to be exactly how you've done it or someone else has done it, but these are principles of what's going to give you the best outcome, if you will?

George Couros: Hey, I'll tell you this straight up. This is going to sound very arrogant. I am 100 percent the best version of George Couros.

Nobody can be George Couros like George Couros can be George Couros, right? And so, if you try just to replicate exactly what I'm doing, and you try to be me, I'm going to always be better at you than that. But if you actually focus on what is, what's really Lainie about this, that's where that power comes in.

I think that sometimes we just try to like, emulate other people, and then we lose ourselves in the process. Right? I'm not saying George is the best person. I feel like this is a Seinfeld episode where I'm referring to myself in the third person, right? I'm not saying George is the best. I'm saying I'm the best George Couros.

That's it. Because I'm like, I'm authentically me. I stick to what I believe in, what matters to me and what are my strengths? How do I bring that out? And so that's why that's so important is that if you emulate everything I would do, you're trying to be me and I'm always gonna be a better me than you could be me. You gotta be you, right?

Lainie Rowell: Right, I know exactly what you're saying. And it's not that I want to be just like George, although that sounds like a pretty amazing deal. But what I hear you saying, and what I kind of took away from our conversation earlier is that personal responsibility, that personal accountability, like do things that are going to serve others well, do it to the best of your ability, and that will help, everyone.

George Couros: 100%. That's 100%.

Lainie Rowell: Well, speaking of your wisdom, I want to make sure we have ample time to talk about your new book baby and so would you please be so kind to tell us what we get to experience, and I feel very spoiled because I've got an advanced copy, so I've already read the masterpiece. And so, tell us about the new book.

George Couros: Well, actually with Allyson Apsey, who is someone I, I really appreciate and love. She has a great writing style. We actually co wrote a book called What Makes a Good Principal. It should be available now. I don't know when this is, unless you're live streaming this, and it's not available now. But if you're giving it a day or two, it should be available.

And so Allyson we, I, it's always kind of weird. Cause like I say, like her and I coauthored it, but we also had 15 contributors. And I think what really makes this book special is Allyson and I kind of tell stories, do the research on like, what are the five pillars of what makes a really great principal?

But we also have former principals or current principals talking about how they met those pillars. What that looks like, stories about it, but this is the most important element. We also have teachers and students saying like, I have this great principal. And here's how they did that for me.

Cause we always say like, Oh, we need to, you know, listen to those we serve, except for like, no, we like, maybe we never actually do. And so it's kind of like, yeah. So, if you are a principal, aspiring principal, and what was really cool about the book is I didn't write it cause I'm like, Oh, I'm the best principal and like, I'm going to share my wisdom is like, I had such a great principal who changed my life.

And really wrote that to honor her and what I learned from her. And I always say like, if I could have 10 percent of the impact that Kelly Wilkins, that person, who kind of inspired the book had, I would consider myself extremely successful. She is an incredible person and. Just totally changed not only my professional life, but my personal life as well.

I can say that cause , she took me from like someone who was like, I'm done. I hate education to like, I cannot imagine doing anything else. So I think that that was really important in reading the stories from the teachers and the students. I'm sitting here, writing this book and going, Oh, I wish I would have known this.

Like, there's so many things that I was like, This is such a good insight and I'm so glad we put the book together this way where we had teacher voice talking about what makes a great principal. And there was actually one criteria for the people who wrote in the book. There was one question Allyson and I would ask, Hey, have you ever had a great principal?

And if they said no, that's it, they're out. Like, they had to have someone who they considered a great principal. They cannot like, no, I have someone who's alright.

Lainie Rowell: No, and it comes through and actually, my story in Because of a Teacher was about a great principal that I had and they're totally transformative.

They're life changing. I'm on a completely different path in my life because of Monique, who was a principal that I wrote about because of a teacher, and. So one of the things that I loved as I read the book is I felt completely transported into these stories where people were talking about these outstanding principles and it was so fun because I mean you only get to experience so many principles as a student, and you only get to experience so many principals even as an educator, and you and I travel around all the time and we see a lot of principals, but when we're in and out, and I'll just speak for myself, when I'm in and out, I don't get to see all the millions of little things that are making the difference.

George Couros: Yeah, so like it actually, it's interesting to kind of come back to something we were talking about earlier. When Allyson and I talked about, like, we were like, Hey, what are these things that really make up great principles? Like, what are these? And we called them pillars, right? And we talked about these kind of big ideas.

And I actually wrote about this in my newsletter coming up the notion of visionary that, a principal has to be visionary. And one of the things that really mattered in that is we're not saying you as a principal coming into a school should create the vision yourself and decide it for everybody.

Right? In fact, being visionary is actually what we said is the last pillar you should focus on. Mm-Hmm. . 'cause you gotta know who you serve. You gotta know what you have access to. And that's gonna be different in different school communities. And so the vision is something you create together with your community.

But my vision that I create with my community versus someone else in like let's say in a California versus a Canada versus wherever is going to be different. And so when we kind of come back to the conversation earlier, Allyson and I identified these five pillars, but we also said, you have to make this your own.

Like, what does this look like to you? How do you actually create this? And even the pillars you could, it was interesting that just the cover of the book, each pillar looked different. And what people said without us saying anything about the book was it's really unique because each one is unique showing how you know principals can be really effective but totally different.

And so that's something, you know, like I don't know if you've ever seen this. There's a lot of a lot of commentary like, Oh, like introverted principals are way better than extroverted principals. I'm like, that's not true. There's no way that's true. And I'm not saying it's the opposite. I'm saying that some introverted principals are amazing and some extroverted principals are amazing, but it's like, you don't become the opposite because you're a principals.

If that makes sense. Yeah. I got, I think that like, There's no way that it's like one is better than the other. It's. Who are you? What does that look like to you? How do you bring that to life, right? And so like, as someone who is a principal, who is very extroverted I hired a somewhat introverted assistant principal because I didn't need another me.

I needed someone who was very different, who appealed to different people, and I talk about that quite a bit in the book, is like when we talk about, you know you know, really like, do we actually bring in different viewpoints or do we just bring in clones of ourselves? Because like, I can get that way cheaper because I already think the way I think.

I don't need someone to reaffirm it, right? I need someone who challenges me and makes me think differently about things. And so I think that's part of it too. There's no like perfect principal personality. Woo. Was that alliteration, right?

Lainie Rowell: Rolled right off the tongue for you.

George Couros: Perfect principal. Yeah. There's so many different versions. Like I've had, I've had really great principals who are very quiet and shy and don't like speaking in front of people. And I've had principals who were, you know, would be in front of the school every day and you know, it's, it's different. I think that's so like, you know, but you know, connecting with people really matters, no matter if you're introverted, extroverted, you know,

Lainie Rowell: And it's also contextual, right?

I mean, there's some situations where I feel like I'm an extrovert and others where I feel like I'm an introvert. So thinking about like in this situation, I'm going to be this type of person. If I can find someone that complements by being this type of person, if that makes sense.

George Couros: You're an ambivert, actually.

Did you know that?

Lainie Rowell: I, I have heard that. I have heard that.

George Couros: I'm that same way, right? Like after an extroverted conversation, I am exhausted.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, it's like that little battery on your phone.

George Couros: Extroverted people actually get energy from people, whereas, like, ambiverts typically become introverted after being extroverted.

Lainie Rowell: I think for everyone there's a little bit of contextuality, but yes, absolutely, there's, there's definitely some of us who, after a lot of energy put out, they're like, okay, now I need to find a dark room to sit in quietly, but.

George Couros: Right, right.

Lainie Rowell: Well, so the five pillars, if you don't mind me sharing them, because these are the universals.

And then what I think is so beautiful about the stories is, here's an example of this pillar, Relationship Builder. And it gives multiple examples, and so you get to see different slices of what a Relationship Builder looks like. Not to say these are recipes, this is how you would have to do it, but here's how it works for this person.

So we've got Relationship Builder, Continuous Learner, Talent Cultivator, Resource Maximizer, and Visionary, which you mentioned earlier, actually comes at the end because it's not just one person's vision, it's a collective, it's co created. So, are there any of these that you want to like, maybe tease into a little bit?

I have to say, I really love the stories in all of them. I think maybe the time of year that this is coming out, and I'm not going to push you into this, but if you want to talk a little bit about Talent Cultivator, as this is kind of the hiring season,

George Couros: Right. Well, so, so actually like because of a teacher, which you wrote for, right?

You're actually the first person I talked to about the idea, if you remember that.

Lainie Rowell: Oh, I remember.

George Couros: Yeah. It was a Saturday evening. Yeah.

Lainie Rowell: I can tell you where I was standing at Fashion Island in Newport Beach when we were having that conversation. Yeah.

George Couros: Very cool. Very cool. Yeah. And I, I don't, I, no personal boundaries here.

Like, Hey, I need to talk to you right now. I don't care what you're doing. Let's go.

Lainie Rowell: You were not,

George Couros: this idea will be gone.

Lainie Rowell: No, I was ready and happy to have the conversation.

George Couros: Okay. So coming back to that book, one of the, I asked three questions and the book came from my podcast. Who is a teacher that inspired you? Who is an administrator that inspired you? What advice would you give to your first year teacher self, right? And so, in Because of a Teacher, we have, you know, three parts answering each one of those questions from five different perspectives. The thing with the talent you know, when we're talking about like maximizing talent, being a talent cultivator, one of the things that is so universal in the response is when I hear about great administrators, great principals, is they saw something in me I never saw in myself.

Like, it is absolutely amazing to see that. Like, that is a consistent messaging. Like, you know, I never wanted to do this, and then I had this principle, and then this changed in me. Even talking about Kelly, I went from, I hate education, to becoming an assistant principal a year later. And, and loving education, because I didn't like, man, I hate education, now I want to boss people around.

Like, that, that wasn't the shift for me. It was like, yeah, this is. You know, I see something in me that Kelly, I had no interest in doing that. I was never, that was never, but Kelly saw something in me that I didn't understand. And seeing that, and I think it's really kind of bringing out the best in people.

And one of the things that I talk about quite a bit is when Kelly, Kelly was really powerful in the sense that she had huge turnover in her staff, but not like 2024 turnover, where everyone's leaving. But it was like, If you went to her staff, she elevated, people to, they become administrators or whatever.

She just kind of like knew how to bring something out of you and you like kind of move on. And what was interesting, it attracted people to come to the district because they knew I got a chance to work with this person. She's going to take me to a different level. Right. But there was also some people that would never leave because they're like, I want to teach.

I love being in the classroom. This is where I want to be. And she'd bring out the best of them in that practice as well. So I don't want to think like every teacher has to become an administrator or whatever, because we all know this, right? Some of the best leaders in our schools are teachers. And some of the worst leaders in our schools are administrators, right?

Leader and administrator. I actually distinguish that very distinctly in the book. So I think that's part of it is bringing that out in people is really, how do you actually bring out the best in people? And even the interview process, I'm telling a lot about the book, the interview process was so unique when I met Kelly.

Cause it wasn't like there's 10 people around the table, just firing questions at you, making no expressions. Her and Carolyn Cameron, who is the assistant principal, who has also became an amazing principal. They gave me a list.

Like it was either 10 or 15 things. And it's like, Hey, pick like five of these things that you want to talk about. And then just kind of read it over and then we'll just have a conversation. And I was like, Oh, it's kind of interesting. Like that's very, I was a little terrified. And I'll tell you in that interview, I was. balling? I was like, what is going on? Right? And it was just, I was really passionate what I was talking about. It was like, that was so unique. But it was actually like a really interesting conversation in the sense that it kind of mirrored how you would talk in a staff room kind of mirrored how you sit in an office and talk to your administrator, but there is no time where it's just like, like you're getting, if you're getting questions like this and you're actually a teacher, you're probably getting fired.

It's almost like a litigation and that really changed things because I didn't apply for like a math position or a science, I applied for a middle school teacher position. Like, that's all it said. And so she was like saying, okay, let's, let's see who's out there because we don't want to limit it to like grade seven science, even though we have a grade seven science teacher leaving and let's find the best person that we can find that fits our school community.

Right. So it didn't limit that. And so she was like, okay, this person is really good at this. Here's what we're missing in our school. Can we like make some moves in our school amongst our staff , cause he doesn't want to teach this. He'll be terrible at that. He's really good at this. So she put you in a position where your strength complimented what was needed in the school.

And then you'd be really excited to be at work every day. Cause you're like, Oh, I'm doing the thing that I want to do. And that was like, that was part of, that was amazing. Like, it was just such an incredible thing because if you like have like a grade two teaching position, then you're never going to get someone who taught, you know, high school science, you know what I mean?

Cause you're limiting, cause they're not even going to interview. Maybe it's a K to nine school. I don't know. Right. But she, you know, if you put elementary, you're going to get a different group of people who are there. If you have like K, you know, five to nine, you're a different group of people. Then it's five, nine science.

Right. So I think that, that to me was, was really, really powerful. Cause she kind of like stepped back to this person's good. Can we make some moves here? to actually tailor something to build on their strengths. And then of course you're going to do well. If someone's tailoring something to your strengths.

You're going to do well. Right. But if they're like, Hey, we're just going to fit you in. wherever, then, you know, it's not necessarily the best thing.

Lainie Rowell: Well, to have such an innovative approach to the process, not being so narrowly focused that you miss out on someone's greatness and that you can make other moves, and then also even in the actual interview, creating the conditions that would mirror the environment that you would be going into, rather than, like you said, it's not just like, we're gonna just throw a bunch of questions at you, interrogate you, make you uncomfortable like really putting you into more of the situation that you would be in if that was to happen.

George Couros: I, I had an interview about two weeks prior to that interview. And it was for like a tech position and there was 10 people sitting at a giant round table and they each asked a question, no expressions. And I was literally sick for two days after it was, it was just, this is not realistic. This is not a thing, but you know, it just, it just wasn't.

And you felt like it made you feel like, is that, that's the first impression that I'm getting? Let's say I got the job, right? Then, yeah. So, you know, it's like, if it felt like a firing squad, to be honest, it was like, It was terrifying, and it was like, this is a Like I'm also making a decision as well, right?

So I think that's, you got it. We got to think about this a little bit differently. Like, and why do people do the interview that way is that's how they were interviewed and whatever. So I just, I appreciate, you know, having people who are, are questioning and saying like, do we really need to do it that way?

Like, why are we doing this? And, and asking that question and Kelly was always good, you know, and like. She knows, and the beautiful thing, I tell her how much of an impact she's having on me, and she's just like, ah, whatever. She's just like, because there's like, you know, hundreds if not thousands of people she's had the same impact on.

Lainie Rowell: Right, right. Well, and I, and even tying how the process of hiring is, You're still wanting to build on all these pillars. It's still a part of relationship building, right? That's your very first impression. And so if you were to have had those two interview experiences within the same day or two, and they both come through with an offer, you're obviously, no question about which one you're going to go to.

So I think it's really important you're mentioning this is a two way, you're making decisions too. It's not just, it's not just those who are interviewing.

George Couros: And like, you know, that, that was a time where it was like, I was desperate for a job and I would have probably taken anyone, but I would have been mad, you know what I mean?

But now people have to see, you know, people are like, I don't want to be, that's not what I want to do. This is not what I want to, you know, I don't want to feel like this when I come in here. And I want, like we're always talking about welcoming and warm environment for our students while we're crapping on the adults.

Right. So I think that to me is that really, really matters. So it, and it, it totally, when I did interviews, I stole all that stuff from Kelly. Like its very different. And one of the things I can't remember if I talked about this in the book. So this might be a little bonus. , if you didn't get the job, if you did not get the job with me and like, let's say we interviewed four people, only one's getting the job.

I like took hours of my time having conversations with the three people who didn't get the job to help them and say like, Hey, here's something I would consider. Here's something, you know, here's something really good. Here's something to do this. And because I don't want to say like, Hey, thanks for coming, but you didn't get the job and just have that.

It's like, these people are going to go work with kids somewhere. So I want to make sure they, I set them up for success. And here's what's beautiful. I remember one teacher. I like gave her so much advice when she didn't get the job. And a week later, she's like, I just got a job and it is totally because you sat down and talked with me.

So she's now advocating for me. Like she wants people to go to my school, someone who I didn't hire loves me, because I helped her in that too. I always think about how important it is that we set up people for success, whether they work in our school or not, right?

Because they're going to be working with kids somewhere, you know, like, Hey, I really love kids except for those ones. I don't like those kids. I hope they all fail because they don't make us look better. No, you're like, you know, you never know who's going to be teaching who and you want to set them up for success.

So that was really important to me and that's something that, you know, I've learned from having really great principals, great leaders in my lifetime.

Lainie Rowell: Amazing. I love it so much. Okay. I know I got to let you go here, but I want to make sure people know What Makes a Great Principal, by the time this comes out, it will be available.

So I'll make sure to put the link to purchase in the show notes so people can grab their copy. So excited. Allyson has been a guest on the show. Now you've been a guest on the show twice. Thank you both for your time here. And what are the best ways for people to get in touch with you, George? I'll put it.

George Couros: The best way is to actually get a copy of Evolving with Gratitude by Lainie, because that's a wonderful book.

And I think that, you know, I am saying this because I'm very grateful for you, but you know, for me, you can find me on just Google George Couros. You'll find all my stuff. So but make sure you, yeah, as much as I love for you to get pick up a copy of What Makes a Great Principal, Evolving with Gratitude is also a great book.

So, you know, you can kind of combo them, buy one as a present for yourself, one as something for someone else, but make sure that you, you pick up a copy of Lainie's books because they are absolutely wonderful.

Lainie Rowell: You're so, you're so kind, George. Oh my gosh. I don't know how to follow that, but I do appreciate you.

I hope people grab a copy of What Makes a Great Principal. And sure, get Evolving with Gratitude. George is in there too. Got a story in there too. So you can get it. You can get them in both places, but definitely check out What Makes a Great Principal. I'll put a link to it in the show notes. Thank you for sharing your time and your wisdom.

And you are constantly inspiring me. Thank you, George.

George Couros: All right. See you at episode 1000. I've already confirmed the spot.

Lainie Rowell: It's yours. Locked in.

George Couros: Bye, everyone. Have a wonderful day.. Thanks.

If you're grateful for this episode, please be sure to subscribe today. And if you're feeling really thankful, please submit a review and share with others so they know the value. One last thing, please connect on social media using the hashtag EvolvingWithGratitude to share your gratitude stories.

Episode 99 - Distracting the Amygdala and Thriving with Charle Peck

Shownotes:

Get ready for an enlightening episode with Charle Peck, a powerhouse whose journey from high school teacher to clinical therapist is nothing short of inspiring! Discover how Charle harnesses her profound insights into adolescent minds to revolutionize mental health in schools. Prepare to be intrigued as she shares how simple, playful strategies can drastically shift the energy in classrooms and beyond, transforming challenges into opportunities for growth!

About Our Guest:

Charle Peck is the co-creator of Thriving School Community, a revolutionary program designed for schools to improve mental health. With over 20 years of education and mental health leadership experience, she has the unique lens of both a certified teacher and a licensed clinical therapist specializing in trauma. 

Charle holds an MS in Education and an MS in Social Work. Her role as a high school teacher coupled with her work with children and families in crisis gives her incredible insight into solving youth mental health problems stemming from our schools. 

She is the co-author of Improving School Mental Health: The Thriving School Community Solution and a global keynote speaker delivering powerful messages of hope to educators.

Connect with and learn from Charle:

Website: thrivingschool.org
X: @CharlePeck
LinkedIn: @charle-peck
Podcast: Thriving Educator

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: Hello friends and hello Charle. Welcome to the show.

Charle Peck: Hey, thank you so much for having me on here, Lainie.

Lainie Rowell: I am so excited. Friends, I have to warn you, this is someone I could talk to for hours and hours and I'm going to just try and be so good about watching the clock so I don't take up too much of her time, but I'm thrilled for the time I do get with you, Charle.

And so I'm going to start off with kind of a wide question, but you have such a unique perspective and background, having been a high school teacher and then a clinical therapist, which I'm just so fascinated to learn a little bit more about your journey, your story.

Charle Peck: Yeah, well, you know what, when you teach adolescents, you learn so much about them.

They divulge so much information about their, their lives, but my curriculum was pretty amazing. I got to teach about personal and family relationships and you know, Problems in society, ultimately, and there's a lot more in between. But what happened is kids were telling me their problems and, it organically came up and I didn't realize why they were struggling so much.

I couldn't understand it. And so, because I got to teach about mental health and talk with them and teach them about their brain, I got really curious about, How can we solve this problem? I mean, there's so many of us adults surrounding them, but they're still struggling. So I, I did some leadership on the district level and I did some in the school and, and did some professional development and all that.

But instead of going the principal route, which is where I was headed, I, Pulled out of that and I decided I'm going to go get my Master of Social Work degree so that I can understand structurally what was going on to contribute to these darn problems and that was one of the best things I could do because it gave me that perspective and I knew I needed to become a clinical therapist.

I wanted to work clinically. but also specializing in trauma. And so trauma is one of those words that gets eye rolls because people don't understand it, so I don't always use it. But I'll tell you, it does help me understand what's going on in the brain and the body and why our kids are showing up with these behaviors that are making us uncomfortable in education.

So that's the gist. I could go on and on, but I'll stop there.

Lainie Rowell: Well, I'm going to ask you to clarify because I was a psych major, so I do know what clinician means, but to someone who may not know that terminology, what does that mean? How is that different from. Maybe another avenue of social work that you could have gone down.

Charle Peck: Yeah, well, I mean, there's lots of different ways to, to help people, right? And if you think clinical, you think like people are, you're going to go into a doctor's office or, or something, but it's, it is about treatment and it's about looking at somebody coming to me and saying, this is the problem. This is what I'm going through.

And how can we apply a treatment plan and especially working with a group like when I worked at a hospital in a hospital setting in crisis, it wasn't about let's use theory to help them think this through. It's how can we work together as a team and come up with a treatment plan for this patient.

So it was, it was more like that. And it also goes beyond research and it uses research to apply to just help people feel better and function better.

Lainie Rowell: , I love that you did that, and I also love when I hear you talking about theory to practice, right, like you want to actually be on those front lines to say, like, we tried this, this worked, obviously knowing that we're all unique and dynamic, but I know that you took it even further than that. with your book, right? Because, and, and I'm actually holding your book right here for those, I know, I don't do video, mostly because I don't want to see my own face, but I don't do videos, so you can't see me holding it up, but I have Improving School Mental Health by Charle Peck and Cameron Caswell.

I have it well marked up. I'm going to go to one of the things that you said, because I think this is maybe something that we want to talk a little bit about. It says, on page 33. It says "the problem is we're trying to teach students to better manage themselves, but then throw them right back into the same stressful environments that caused the issue in the first place. This leaves them little chance to thrive." It breaks your heart. It just totally breaks your heart. And I think, like, I, as I read through the entire book, that one stood out to me as a, this is why people should read this book. And I don't use that word should lightly, because I know that that can be triggering for some people.

And I, you and I both actually have written, I've seen it, that where you can cross out the should and say could. But I actually think this is one that is very important for people to read. And so tell us a little bit about kind of the catalyst for writing Improving School Mental Health.

Charle Peck: Yes, and it's important that you pulled out that particular piece because it is essential.

It's foundational. I mean, I've been thinking about this, Lainie, for over 10 years about this problem and how we can solve this for kids. And part of what I started thinking about is we're teaching SEL. We're teaching advisory. I mean, we've been teaching SEL for over 30 years now, which is great. I mean, it's, it's great.

There's great evidence for this. Now, the problem is, as we teach this to kids, and how many, how many sessions have we been through in PD where it says, okay, help the kids be resilient, help the kids do this. And relationally, how many times are we trying to fix the other person? And so when I was thinking about kids and Cam and I were talking about this, like, why are we worried about equipping these kids so much when we're throwing them back with these adults who are not equipped themselves?

And the data kept showing me, too, is, you know, 93 percent of our educators who are out there teaching kids on the front line They want to support kids, but they don't feel equipped to do that. I mean, 93 percent of them are reporting that and they're frustrated. And these behaviors that show up in front of us that make us so uncomfortable, we don't know how to sit with it.

We don't know how to guide them. We don't know what to do with it. We're putting all the ownership on kids to make this better. It just didn't make any sense to us. So that's why we came up with skills that are actually something that you can infuse into everyday practice that you can pick up pretty quickly.

That's where my background as an educator and my background as a clinical therapist really works well because I was sitting in those therapy sessions with these kids and families and like, well, we can do this in our schools too. By the way, teachers could do this with you. Why aren't they doing that now?

So that, I mean, that's a lot, a lot to take on and think about, but that's exactly why we wrote that.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, I think it's important to realize, and Marc Brackett was just on the podcast, and at the very end, I'm like, what's one thing that you just really want to make sure people know?

And he said it's about creating the communities, creating the spaces where we can take care of each other. It's not enough to figure out how to regulate on your own, or how to figure out, you know, anything, how to deal with those feelings. It's if you're constantly being put in an unhealthy situation. And so with, of course, the best of intentions and educators are so hardworking, so dedicated, and they do so much.

But as you said, a lot of them don't feel equipped to handle it. And so I think what the good news is, is that there are actually really small practices. It would be really hard if our message, and I think our work aligns so well, but I think it would be really hard if our message was, you're going to have to throw out, all the academics, you're going to have to throw out the things that maybe brought you into teaching that you love the most and you're going to have to focus on SEL all day, every day. I think that would be like a really tough sell, but the good news is it's not that. It's actually small things that we can do to retrain our brains and to help the community thrive.

Not just the individual, but the community too. I think that's so important.

Charle Peck: It is. It's got to be the community. Think about somebody who's trying to learn a language. If we're teaching kids language, we have to be teaching that too. We have to be talking it. We have to be living it. We have to talk about all the cultural aspects that come into play.

And by the way, it's not adding it on piece by piece. It's about living amongst it. And it, but it has to be so simple that we'll actually do it, especially because we're in the midst of crisis. It's just like the work that you're doing in gratitude, Lainie. It, it's, there's tons of evidence behind it, but nobody wants to hear about that.

They want to say, well, how can I use it and how can I do it so simply that it will work?

Lainie Rowell: Okay, so my five star review came through on Amazon yesterday. So you can, you can see that because that's, that's my love language. And so one of the things that I talk about in that review is that this isn't just a book, it's a tool.

One that educators, administrators, and mental health professionals can all use with confidence to foster this supportive and understanding and healthy environment. And so one of the things, I mean, I could go on and on about how I really love the smart moves that you and Cam made as far as graphically and just like where you place things, but I won't nerd out on that as much, but I do want to nerd out a little bit on what are some of the, you know, I love practical and actionable and you have in the book these rapid resets and I wonder if you could just give us a little taste and maybe one of your favorite rapid resets or maybe one that people would be surprised because they've never heard of this one before because there were ones in there that I had not heard of before.

Charle Peck: Yeah, well some of them I just adapted on my own because It was just in the moment with kids, working with kids. And by the way, we do this with adults too, but rapid resets, the reason we call it that, you would think of a brain energizer. Everybody knows about brain energizers. It's about retraining the brain to do something or refocusing when you need it.

I always say it's about switching the energy in a classroom or a meeting, a meeting too. But also this worked in crisis when I was working with kids and oftentimes there would be kids who were, you could tell that they weren't regulating or they were anxious. And what we needed to do was to distract their amygdala.

So there's a lot of training I got in CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy, DBT a lot of all of these technical trainings that I got, even in trauma processing. And I thought, well, gosh, there's a basic underlying piece there. We need to distract the amygdala. We need to find our calm, but nobody likes to be told to calm down or to just breathe sometimes.

Right. And so it needed to be playful. And it also needed to be something that would just work in a moment's notice very quickly that teachers could do to benefit themselves as well. And in front of a group where you need to change energy, sometimes where it feels so overstimulating and loud, we need to calm that down.

Or, sorry, but sometimes, you know, you don't have your kids engaged and it's kind of low and you need to bring the energy up. So there's a million different ones. One that I always do that captures people and I'm going to explain it and Lainie you can try it and I know your listeners are just hearing this so I'm going to explain it in a way that you can just hear it through auditory and practice.

This is my favorite one. Everyone seems to love it and remember it. So you get one of your thumbs up and then you, Point with your pointer finger at your thumb with your other hand, okay? So one hand has a thumb up, the other hand has a pointer finger pointing at your thumb, and if you've worked with me before, you know exactly what we're gonna do next, and that is just simultaneously switching.

Okay, so now my other thumb went up on my other hand, while my finger on my pointer finger on my other hand Pointed at that thumb. Okay. And now you're just going to switch back to the other way. And then you're going to go really fast like this. And some of you are going to be like, what the heck? I can't do this.

What? And that's because your brain has not rewired to that learning yet. However, it's a great lesson, not only to refocus, it's a great lesson for growth mindset that listen, I didn't get it the first time, but boy, I'll get there. And it's playful and fun. And you get people laughing and it shuts down the stress response system.

And all of a sudden you've shifted the energy in your classroom. or your meeting, by the way. I use this even with superintendents. And and then it just, it's, it's a way that you'll notice with your kids that one is about to say something or do something that's going to throw the whole group off.

You're like, okay, everybody, I noticed that we need to do this. Let's do it. Right. So there's lots of ways to incorporate it for fun and for reason.

Lainie Rowell: And I'm so happy that this is audio only, and Charle, you did a really good job at not laughing at how badly I did that. Thank you for that. But it's because I haven't done that practice before, so I do have to learn how to do that.

But it is really fun, and it's something that you would think is so easy. It's so easy, but it's actually challenging if you haven't done it before, so give that a try. There are so many rapid resets in the book, and again, that's, that my favorite is practical and actionable books. There's a lot of really good books out on theory, but if it's something I can't put into practice with the people I serve, that for me is not going to carry as much weight.

Charle Peck: Right. Well, and I also like part of that. I like that teachers can use that for themselves because part of, part of my message is that you have to be able to manage your own mental health and wellness. And folks, this does not mean that we step out of things when they're uncomfortable. That's what we've done.

We've done that. And we don't know how to sit in that discomfort. And then when kids don't know how to do that and their behavior shows up in ways that we're like, it gives us an emotional charge. We don't know how to manage ourselves and we certainly don't know how to respond to them. The best thing we can think of is, Oh my gosh, we've got to stop everything right now, or I can't handle this and I'm out.

So I am telling you there is hope because we can manage and then stay and feel excited about the work we're doing.

Lainie Rowell: The quote that keeps popping in my head Dr. Aliza Pressman, Raising Good Humans. Podcast. Talks about all feelings are welcome, all behaviors are not. And I think that's maybe a way to, to try and process through what can I think sometimes feel like mixed messages, because it sometimes feels like we're saying there are no bad emotions, because there aren't, right? All emotions serve a purpose.

So we can welcome all the feelings, all the emotions. What we don't welcome is all the behaviors. And I think that's where it's really important. And so when it comes a time where the behavior is not appropriate in the context, it's time to shift. And so these rapid resets, whether it's to shift up in energy or like you said, to calm down, bring it down.

We want to distract the amygdala so we can get back to behavior that is appropriate. fitting for the circumstances.

Charle Peck: That's absolutely right, Lainie. And it's important that we understand that that there's a brain body connection. So no kid is saying, I want to act like this, and look like this, and even feel like this.

And I don't want it to show this way, but, Oh my gosh, my body is responding. And so that's part of the teaching we do is, is we have this wheel of reactivity and it's, it's about, well, how is your brain that that's going off for that amygdala, because it's part of our nervous system. How is your nervous system responding to that right now?

Because right now we need to develop skills to go back to that word that you said before I think it was when I was interviewing you for my podcast is notice, notice, is essential because if we're not noticing, we can't catch ourselves and then make the shift. So I'm glad you had mentioned that. Yeah.

By the way, listeners, you need to listen to Lainie's amazing, amazing interview on my podcast called Thriving Educator, because that's going to be, I can't wait to release that too.

Lainie Rowell: Well, thank you. And this is what podcasters like to do. We like to talk to each other and hit record. And so, and I was just looking forward to getting you on this show and I want to go back to something that has has been kind of a theme here is that it's not just for kids.

It's for adults as well, right? It's that we are creating communities and these communities consist of adults and kids. And then also, even just in the workplace, and it's funny because you and I do a lot of work where we're sometimes only interacting with adults. It's funny because we do a lot of work in education, we do work outside of education, but even when we're in education, we're only doing stuff with the adults.

And I do the same practices, right? Because this is stuff that is just about being a human. It's not specific necessarily. There are considerations for developmental and all of that, but these are practices that are just across the board, good for humans.

Charle Peck: They are. And that's why there's a couple of industries that have been connecting with me.

First of all, college level programs are now contacting me to teach their college students this, especially pre service teachers. I mean, we need to get them skilled before they get into the darn classroom. Even with this stuff, it can be packaged. This is what people are coming to me for. They're like, this is classroom management strategies too.

And I said, yes, it actually is. It definitely is mental health rooted, but it absolutely is classroom management. We're looking over after our own needs and then responding effectively to conflict and reducing that conflict. But you know what, who else has been, has been coming to me, these Fortune 500 companies are coming to me and they're saying, we need this for not only employee wellness, but employee investing in our employee workforce, giving them skills because it's investing in human capital in their workforce.

So it's just, it's exploding because it, it does get back to some of the basics that we all just need to have to thrive.

Lainie Rowell: Absolutely. Charle, one of my favorite things about bringing in brilliant people like you is you're not here to just point out the problems, you're coming with solutions. So, tell us how does this work in a system, in an organization, in learning communities?

Charle Peck: Yes, oh my goodness. So because it's been based on needs and I've been customizing for several years to the different districts and companies that are coming to me, it's helped me to really see a longer term solution.

And so part of that is you can bring me in and do professional development. I do the half days and full day PDs and I equip. teachers, essentially, and then school counselors, I work with them, and district leaders, principals, and all that. What I had to decide is how are we going to make this long term sustainable, how are we going to build autonomy within these school districts and schools, and how are we going to make it affordable and something that we can use over and over and over to have a real transformation culturally.

That's really the goal. And so I developed this program where I, I train people. It is, it's like a train the trainer model, but not so big. And some people could just learn the skills on their own and just be done there and, and acquire those in a self paced way. And that's something that's, that's already out there.

Something else I've been working on is PD, because that's where they're like, I want more. How do I get more of this? And, and then. Are you hiring? They ask me that a lot. Or how do you equip me? So I devise this plan. It's the level two. They become, become a facilitator. So we can do that virtually. I come on site.

I can train people, a group of the mental health team members there, or I just started a retreat, which I'm excited about, which is a wellness retreat, but also they get trained and certified to run this stuff. I give them all the facilitation. And activities and all that afterwards too. So that is how we have to do it systemically.

I will not be the only one doing this. I have to equip the people already within the system who know their own system well and can work from the strengths.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, a solution that is sustainable is so critical and I think that so often we see that not happen and then budgets change, attention changes, whatever it is, and then things fall apart.

Well, that didn't work. Well, you have to have it. It has to be sustainable. That's just the only way. And so I love that you offer so many different solutions. And, I want to ask you one more question before I get to how can people connect with you. But that's coming, friends, so stay tuned, okay?

So I want to ask you this question that I love to ask, and that is, what is something you either can't share enough, I mean, something you could just have said a million, million times, but you could say it a million more times and be happy. So something you can't share enough, or something you haven't had a chance to share before.

Charle Peck: If we're not willing to make any kind of change, change will not happen. And that's exactly why Josh and I got together. I mean, I have this book of nine skills I'm really proud of and they are, they are working well, but there has to be something before that to get people ready to acquire them and use them in a way that they're going to be meaningful, not only for ourselves, but for others and learning to step outside of ourselves to create that secure space.

So that's, That's why Josh and I are writing this book about how to get there, how to get that, that mentality ready in a very easy, easy, quick way. So I'm excited about that, but listen, if we're not willing to do this, then we're not going to make the change. I just ask people to just challenge themselves.

Are you ready?

And when are you ready? And let's do this because we can.

Lainie Rowell: Absolutely. Well, I am so excited that Improving School Mental Health, the Thriving School Community Solution book, is already out, so people can grab this today, and where is the best place for them to get it?

Charle Peck: They can get it right on Amazon, just, just look at Improving School Mental Health and our solution, the program is the Thriving School Community Solution.

It's kind of a mouthful, but that's the best way to say it. It's a community wide approach.

Lainie Rowell: And hopefully I said it right. Did I say it right?

Charle Peck: You did. You did.

Lainie Rowell: Sometimes I go back and I listen to these episodes and I'm like, what was I saying? Those were not the words that were in my head. They came out of my mouth all different.

So I'm very excited that people can go get this right now. And then when does the Peck Stamper masterpiece hit the stands? Do we look for that soon, hopefully?

Charle Peck: Yes. Well, actually it was moved up. So we're supposed to be finished with it in August. And it's supposed to be out by early fall, even maybe August.

So we're definitely pushing for it to get out there. It's a lot of people who are asking for it, which we're really excited about.

Lainie Rowell: Well, I am very excited for that. So, Improving School Mental Health on Amazon right now. Go grab that. And then also, we've got something to look forward to from Charle Peck and Joshua Stamper.

And Charle, what is the best way for people to connect with you? I'm sure there's some spaces where people could find even more about you.

Charle Peck: Well, the easiest for everybody to remember is just go to thrivingeducator.org. That's where everything is. All the information, the speaking, the PD, that program I mentioned before.

But if you want to email me, please do. My first name is spelled C H A R L E and then at thrivingeducator. org. Reach out. We have a lot to talk about, a lot of work to do.

Lainie Rowell: Yes, and it's my job to make this as easy as possible for people to get to you and your amazing resources like the book. So I'm going to make sure everything's in the show notes.

So friends, if you're driving right now, you can just wait until you are safely parked and then go into the show notes and tap away. And we are so excited for people to get a hold of all of these resources. Have Charle out. She is such a delight and a just the wisdom, the brilliance. I really encourage people to connect with Charle Peck.

And Charle, thank you so much for being here.

Charle Peck: Wow. Thank you so much, Lainie, truly.

Lainie Rowell: And thank you all for listening.

Episode 98 - The Surprising Way Sliding Door Moments Can Lead to Profound Gratitude

Shownotes:

You can choose your adventure with this one - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

And you can find the article on Thrive Global!

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 97 - Dealing with Feelings with Marc Brackett

Shownotes:

Join us for an eye-opening chat with Marc Brackett, where we unravel the secrets behind emotional intelligence and bust some major myths about our feelings. Marc takes us on a journey through the emotional landscape, showing us why there’s no such thing as a "bad" emotion and how understanding our feelings can transform our lives. With a mix of personal stories, science-backed insights, and actionable strategies, this episode is your guide to dealing with feelings. Don’t miss out on this engaging exploration that’s sure to shift your perspective on feelings and emotional intelligence!

About Our Guest:

As the founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, Dr. Marc Brackett is professor in the Child Study Center at Yale, and author of the best-selling book, Permission to Feel , which has been translated into 25 languages.

An award-winning researcher for 25 years, Marc has raised over $100 million in grant funding and published 175 scholarly articles on the role of emotional intelligence in learning, decision making, creativity, relationships, physical and mental health, and workplace performance.

Marc is the lead developer of RULER, an evidence-based approach to social and emotional learning (SEL) that has been adopted by over 5,000 schools across the globe, improving the lives of millions of children and adults. RULER infuses the principles and skills of emotional intelligence into school systems, enhancing how administrators lead, educators teach, students learn, and families parent. It has been proven to boost academic performance, decrease school problems like bullying, enrich classroom climates, reduce teacher stress and burnout, and enhance teacher instructional practices.

Thrive Global Article:

From Theory to Practice: Marc Brackett on Dealing with Feelings

Connect with and learn from Marc Brackett:

Website
Book
LinkedIn
Facebook
Instagram
X

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: Well, hello, Marc. Thank you so much for being with me today.

Marc Brackett: My pleasure to see you again.

Lainie Rowell: So I'm going to say, and I'm not trying to embarrass you, but years and years ago, the first time I met you in person, you were keynoting an event and You absolutely crushed it. It was the first time I'd heard you speak.

You just completely wowed the room, me, and then the organizers happened to sit me at the table. I was a speaker there as well, and you ended up sitting right next to me after your speech, and I didn't even know what to say. I was so like, oh my gosh, this guy is like really smart. I don't know what to say to him, but you are the most nice, genuine, brilliant person.

And I just, I just had to get that out there.

Marc Brackett: I appreciate you saying it. And it's been a lot of fun watching your career as well.

Lainie Rowell: You've been very supportive and I appreciate that. Had to get a little bit of gratitude out there. And I'm so excited to talk about your work.

One of the things that I really appreciate that you share through your books, through the web series, the webcast, all of it, is you say there's no such thing as bad emotions. And I think this is really important because I think a lot of us get it wrong thinking things like anger and stress and anxiety are bad.

But, You like to use the word unpleasant instead of negative emotions, if I've caught that correctly. Can you tell us a little bit more about why you feel like that's an important distinction?

Marc Brackett: Yeah, I think it's mostly because the way it's interpreted. So in psychology, you know, people talk about negative and positive emotions.

Happiness is a positive emotion. Sadness is a negative emotion. You know, people figure that out pretty quickly. But I think then the problem with that language is that it, it makes us think that we don't, like nobody wants to be negative. And so that means that the goal is to get rid of the negative to be positive.

And I wish it were that easy to just like get rid of the negative to be positive. Now that also makes an assumption that being positive all the time is a good thing. And it's not a good thing. Actually I did research on this that was published recently, that when people are overly positive, you know, they make sometimes worse decisions even about their health.

So, going back to the pandemic, people who are happier took more risks and didn't wear masks as much, which is interesting. They didn't engage in social distancing as much as others. And so you know, when you, you know, think about it, like even when you're spending money, right, it's like you're in a good mood.

You're like, yeah, I'm going to buy that outfit or that piece of furniture that might be more expensive than you want to spend. And so again, assumption is that positive emotions are the ones you want to grab and have all the time and negative ones, the ones you want to dump and get rid of. And so when you go to the negative emotions, which I call unpleasant feelings or emotions, Anger, right?

It's a real feeling, you know, and certainly we've seen in our own society very legitimate reasons for different groups of people to feel angry and to say that that's a bad emotion just makes no sense because it's a signal that there was an injustice that needs to be dealt with. And so I hope that kind of makes it clear.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, I think it does. And if I'm understanding correctly, I feel like we first of all want to have the full human experience. It just wouldn't be...

Marc Brackett: even if you didn't want to have it, you're going to have it.

I mean, like, let's face it, the pandemic hit, you know, we're spraying our groceries with Windex. It's not the most pleasant feeling.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah.

Marc Brackett: And so life is, you know, couple of years ago, I lost one of my close friends to cancer, you know, not a pleasant feeling, but a feeling that I had to deal with, you know, of loss and sadness.

And so to deny people, you know, those feelings, it's to deny people what it means to be human.

Lainie Rowell: And I do think that's one of the things that's really challenging, is finding that point of, okay, how can we help people live their best life, to flourish, if you will, without overly imposing, like, this is what you need to feel, because maybe it makes me feel uncomfortable if you don't look happy or it's like, I want to take care of the people around me, but to me it feels like a difficult needle to thread.

Marc Brackett: Well, it's also, there's assumptions in there, which are that, when we're angry, we're irrational, that when we're sad, we can't be good friends or we can't be present.

It's like, these are kind of stereotypes that we've created around emotions. And I think we have to move beyond the idea that, for example, like, in the parenting world, you know, it's like, it's gotten to a place where sometimes people feel like, well, my kid is sad, so he can't be in school and learn.

It's like, well, you can be sad and still be in class and still learn. You know, sadness is part of reality. We're just going to give you strategies to manage that sadness, because that's what people are missing, are the strategies to help them deal with their emotions. And dealing with your emotions also doesn't mean getting rid of them, you know?

So for example, there's good research to show that just the sound of, of someone you love is a healthy strategy. And think about that for a minute. So just having someone with a soothing, loving voice can help make you feel less activated or unpleasant. And you know, my point of saying this is that, a child, for example, who's in school, who has a parent who may be ill or who is going to be away at work for a few months, you know, and they're feeling lonely or sad. You know, the assumption is that that has to be solved in order for them to be good learners. They have no control over the fact that the parent has to go travel for work or that their parent might be ill.

And so what we have to do is help kids understand their feelings better and have good strategies so that they can have their feelings and also function helpfully too.

Lainie Rowell: That's helpful.

Marc Brackett: I mean, it's a lot.

Lainie Rowell: It's a lot.

Marc Brackett: That's why this is so interesting. It's a lot, but it's just, this is life.

And you know, life is not simple.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah.

Marc Brackett: It's like achieving your dreams in life. You know, it doesn't just happen. You got to work for it.

Lainie Rowell: It's a lot of work. And there's nuance. And I appreciate that. And, with that idea of the nuance and kind of how messy and complicated us as humans are, you have worked in collaboration with others on the How We Feel app.

This is actually an app I use regularly. My son asks to use it. It's really been helpful. And I wonder if you want to share a little bit about this tool that is available to everyone for free.

Marc Brackett: Yeah. Thank you. So something very kind of pleasant happened to me during the pandemic, which was that the co founder and former CEO of the company Pinterest had read my book, Permission to Feel.

And he said, you know, I'm really interested in these concepts. Maybe we could work together to figure out what we can do in terms of building tools to support people and having greater well being. And so we decided to take some of the tools that were in my book and some of the principles and other principles and strategies, too.

And we worked together, a team that that he created and a team that I created. So the scientists and the engineers and the designers, we all came together. And just spent a lot of time thinking about how do you display this in a beautiful way? You know, what are the strategies and tools that people need?

And so that's the How We Feel app, and it has a tool that we call the mood meter that's been around for a while that then asks you to describe your feelings and you can tag your feelings. It has amazing beautiful technology to support you doing breathing exercises or cognitively reframing. We've added new tools like seeing your best self.

And then it has tracking abilities so that you can look for patterns over the course of a week or a month. And you can analyze your data like, is it when I'm with my partner that I'm in the red, you know, or is it when I'm at work that I'm in the green? And then kind of just, you know get some meaning out of that.

Lainie Rowell: I love that you can look for the patterns. I definitely feel like it helps with developing emotional granularity, being able to really with accuracy say this is what I'm feeling right now. Because a lot of times I know I'm preaching to the choir here, but we get into just saying, I feel happy.

I feel sad. It's like, well, what are you really feeling? Right.

Marc Brackett: Yeah, and this is my work in schools primarily, which is giving children specific words to describe their feelings and feelings are made up of other feelings, right? There's some complex emotions. You know, I was doing a lesson actually in California just last week with a bunch of fourth graders on the feeling word of regretful, which by the way, I was going into this lesson thinking to myself.

Like, I have to really sit with this. Like, do I even know the definition myself? You know, like,

Lainie Rowell: Am I going to regret going into regretful? Yeah.

Marc Brackett: Exactly. But the kids were incredible. And I asked them to come up with other feelings that are associated with regretful. Like some kids said, well, sometimes you might feel shame because, you know, when you're regretful, sometimes you might feel guilt.

Sometimes you might feel trapped. Like these were fourth graders having this conversation with me, which, you know, I give the school a lot of credit because they've been working with RULER, which is our program now for 10 years. And so these kids grew up with a lot of emotion talk. But like they understood that concept extraordinarily well.

And they understood the difference between feeling regretful and just feeling sorry or feeling regretful and feeling guilt. And that's what this work is about.

Lainie Rowell: And I love how when you identify where you are. it asks you, do you want to shift? Do you want to move somewhere else?

Marc Brackett: Do you want to not? You must.

Lainie Rowell: Exactly, which is, is very important. And then, like you said, it's, we want to be able to, to identify the emotions and then have strategies if we do want to move. So I think that's really helpful. And I also love the idea of the patterns, which when I share this app with people, I do encourage them to use it to look for the patterns to see, is there something going on that maybe is, is there that we didn't see before.

And so, this is all connected to your book, your best selling book, Permission to Feel, and can you tell us a little bit about that? I know it's a wide question, but you talk about being an emotional scientist, not judgmental, why is that important?

Marc Brackett: Well, you know, I think, the term permission to feel sometimes, you know, throws people off, right? They're like, who are you to give me permission to feel? I've always had the permission. And I question people when they say that too, you know, some people have, you know, so for example, I recently interviewed a professor friend of mine, Ethan Kross, who studies cognitive strategies.

And he's like, you know, I really did grow up with a family that gave me permission to feel. And he's one of the rare people that have. It doesn't mean he still didn't struggle with his feelings, but he always felt like he could be his true, full feeling self and talk about his feelings. I didn't have that.

You know, he was like, I want to interview you, because when he was sharing his experience with me, I'm like, that sounds like a really different childhood. And I had good parents. They loved me a lot. But they didn't really know a lot about feelings, neither their own feelings, and they certainly didn't have to support me with mine.

And I don't blame, you know, now that I'm a 54 year old psychologist, I think back, like they really did the best they could because they had no education in emotional intelligence. They didn't know what to do. And so the Permission to Feel is a longer story, but it's just, it's about my own journey.

In terms of feeling trapped with my emotions as a kid because of abuse and bullying, and then having an uncle who was a teacher who came into my life at just the right time and asked me that question, which was, how are you feeling? And he didn't want to leave me with those feelings. He wanted to make sure I was able to do something with them that was going to be helpful.

And you know, you fast forward, that was 11 or 12 years old kind of completely put me on a different trajectory. And then I went to college decided that emotional intelligence was the thing I wanted to know more about. And then I took my uncle out of retirement and we started writing a curriculum together that then became my whole career.

And so I argue just in a very little piece of the book, it's the opening chapter, the whole book is much more skill based, but that we need feelings mentors. We need people who are deliberately in support of our healthy emotional development and who are making efforts to help us be more aware and helping us to learn strategies to deal with our feelings.

And I, by the way, have now, since my book has come out, launched a whole research project on this where tens of thousands of people have completed my research and people who report having had someone who gave them the permission to feel versus not having had someone, have different lives.

They're much more satisfied in their life, they have more purpose and meaning in their life they have better mental health, better physical health, they sleep better at night, and so there's something to this feelings mentor.

Lainie Rowell: I feel like we live in a time where no matter how amazing the work is, no matter how important the work is, you're gonna get people that push back.

And I'm just curious, what are maybe some of the misconceptions or pushback, if you will, about really encouraging the development of the emotional intelligence, becoming an emotional scientist, what have you experienced there?

Marc Brackett: Yeah, I think there's a lot of misconceptions, firstly, the one misconception is that the field of social and emotional learning, Emotional intelligence is just trying to get people to talk about their feelings all the time.

And I'm the first person to say, like, I don't want to talk about my feelings all the time, and nobody wants to listen to me talking about my feelings all the time. That would not be productive, right? I have a friend who is an oceanographer. I can tolerate maybe 15 minutes of a conversation about oceanography, and I'm like, you gotta go talk to somebody else about it.

And so, we're going to have feelings throughout the day. We want to be aware of our feelings, want to know if our feelings are helping us or hurting us achieve our goals. And then we want to have strategies to deal with our feelings. And so even research would show that it's not productive to just endlessly talk about feelings.

And, you know, we get pushed back on this in the field because some people are like, I just want to vent. And it's like, I know that's what you feel like doing, but actually it's not that productive.

Lainie Rowell: Right.

Marc Brackett: What's more productive is having someone like me or a friend. Listen to you and then say, you know, like, I hear you.

But let's think about what might be helpful for you right now. You don't want to perseverate. That's not helpful. You don't want to ruminate.

A friend of mine posted something online about something that was unpleasant that happened and then everybody commented on that person comments on top of that.

And I was like, Oh, you know, it's just like, that's not helpful in general. We think it is because we want to just get it out. We want to tell everybody what happened, but it tends to not be great for us to do that. What tends to be helpful is getting perspective and kind of managing it effectively, which doesn't mean denying the feeling.

Lainie Rowell: Right. That's where there's nuance.

Marc Brackett: Yeah. Yeah. It's a nuance, but it's a really important piece for people to know. Firstly, I mean, that's just the core that people have feelings. Those feelings need to be expressed. Otherwise, they're controlled or repressed or denied or ignored, they show up in other places like ulcers, like aggression like not living the life you want to live because you feel emotionally stuck, not helpful either.

I think really importantly for your audience, is that it's very, very clear now through multiple which are studies of studies. So recently, my colleague, Chris Cipriano published a paper with a bunch of other friends and colleagues showing very clear effects on the impact of teaching social and emotional learning.

It's like incontrovertible evidence, that you teach these skills and not only do you get better physical and mental health and better relationships, but you do better academically in literature and math and other subject areas. So when people start saying, well, this is taking away from academics, or it's not good for kids.

I always just say, how much have you looked at the research? And by the way, I'm biased because I am, I'm both a program developer, I'm a writer, a researcher, speaker on this stuff. So maybe you don't want to listen to me, even though everything I say is based in science, I don't make stuff up. But if you don't want to believe me, look at the larger studies of studies, and you'll see that it's very clear that these skills are helpful in achieving some of the most important things in life.

Lainie Rowell: You and I both spend a lot of time in education and knowing how, yes, it is going to help us physically, emotionally, also the activating the learning and, That's all really, really important and I wonder what you've seen, because your book is for everyone, it's not specific to education, although you give examples of education, what have you seen in the workplace regarding Permission to Feel?

I'm just kind of curious.

Marc Brackett: Yeah, interestingly enough, so I've done some research, and I also have a company that does training and consulting for big companies, specifically emotional intelligence in the workforce. A.. People are hungry for it. And B, believe it or not, more people feel like they have someone to talk about their feelings with at work than they do at home, which is interesting.

And I've questioned people about this and I think the rationale behind it is that, like, you're a mom or dad or whatever, you have kids and you are, like, you're kind of, you're stuck in a relationship. Right? Meaning that, like, the feelings never go, they're always there, you know, in the morning to the evening to the night, whereas, like, if I have a friend at work who's going through some difficulty and they want to chat about it, we go out for lunch, we talk about it, but then they go home, I go home, and we kind of move away from it.

And I think there's something to that in terms of why it's easier at work than it is at home. But I have found that workplaces are hungry for this. As a matter of fact, I just got off the call. I just literally, as I was taking a walk about an hour and a half ago, I had a phone call.

I can't mention who it was with, but it was with a university department that is falling apart because of the lack of emotional intelligence in the leadership and among the adults. And so they're like, can you come in? This is the best of like, can you come in for a 30 minute workshop to teach everyone how to regulate?

And like, we have to talk about this way. This is a little bit more complex than the 30 minute workshop. But so here that's another one of the challenges, something I'm writing about at present, which is that I think we've identified that people need strategies and skills, but we are a quick fix society, and some people, of course, need to take medication to support their mental health, and I'm a firm believer that that's important for a lot of people.

The question is, for how long do you need to take that? That's one big question. The second is, is it helpful? The third is either way you still have to relate to people in the real world and you need real cognitive and relational strategies to support you in dealing with your feelings because, you know, every time someone triggers you at work, you can't just pop a pill, right?

You've gotta like have a workmate, you've got a boss, you're gonna be in team meetings. Yeah. And we need to help people learn strategies on how to, A, be more emotionally intelligent in the way they interact. And I just published another study in schools, actually, I dunno if you saw this paper just recent.

Schools where there are leaders with higher emotional intelligence, there are teachers who are happier and healthier, more productive. And we even showed that during the pandemic it mattered, that it was actually more important. So if you were an educator who was, impacted, strongly by the pandemic, whether it would be that you got COVID or someone died in your family, something, you know, heavy.

If you worked in a school where the leader demonstrated higher emotional intelligence, you were less burn out, you were more satisfied with your job and you were less likely to wanna leave your job.

Lainie Rowell: Is part of that modeling, is it emotional contagion? Is it both? How is that transferring?

Marc Brackett: Yeah, that's a good question. So there's two ways to think about it. More than two, but I'm just gonna give you two right now. One is the interpersonal piece of it, right? That like, do you ever like, have you been around people who really can't regulate?

Lainie Rowell: Never. Yes, I have.

Marc Brackett: Even for themselves, right? They're, they're just for self regulators.

Like you watch them, you know, just not do a great job at dealing with their emotions. Either they, you know, whatever they do. And then sort of like that, that kind of like, you might lose some trust in that person as your leader, right? Like, my goodness, my boss is falling apart. They can't handle the stress, so how are they going to be helpful for me?

So that's one piece of it. And then the other piece of it is that the interpersonal aspects of emotional intelligence are really important. Meaning that you have to know how to talk to people. You have to know how to say, like, if I come to you as my boss Lainie, and I say, you know, Lainie, I'm just like overwhelmed, you know, and if you say to me, like, Marc, get over it.

Not helpful. If you say, let's talk about it for the next three hours,

you know, you're not going to get anything done. I'm not getting anything done. But if you have ways of kind of supporting me and saying, I hear you, why don't you try this? Or, let's try this.

Or even if it's in a team meeting, like for school, if a principal is hiring an emotional child, there's a pandemic, right? The principal can walk into that meeting and say, I'm just letting you know, like, I'm, I'm freaked out. The world's coming to an end. And like, I don't know what's happening with anything.

And everybody's like, oh shit, you know, like versus someone who comes in and says, you know. These are really weird times and none of us can make the predictions about what's going to happen. There's a lot of unknowns. A couple of things I want to share. One is we're in this together. I got you. I'm going to be here for you.

We're going to find ways for us to get together, have conversations around it, to help each other, to co regulate, maybe not using those terms, but to be supportive of each other. Totally, same exact feeling of anxiety. One is expressed that activates everybody and makes everybody freak out. The other does it in a way that is helpful and supportive and makes people feel held.

Lainie Rowell: Yes, and that reminds me of, I don't know who came up with this saying and let me know if you don't agree with it, but that concept of be a thermostat, not a thermometer, because that thermometer is just saying, it's hot in here. But that thermostat is regulating the temperature and trying to make a difference.

And so when you gave that example of someone like a principal coming in, that's anxiety I'm feeling because now I'm like, Oh, I don't, I don't know what's coming.

Marc Brackett: Yeah,

Lainie Rowell: it's contagious. I might have walked into that meeting totally fine, or, at least, better than when I walk out of it, right?

It is really contagious, so. Ooh. Now, moving into the webcast. Am I saying that right? You call it a webcast?

Marc Brackett: I do. It's not the most probably popular term, but it's all I could think of,

Lainie Rowell: No, it's fine because you know, podcast is like saturated. So I like that it's something different to say.

So in Dealing with Feelings, you have a focus on emotion regulation tips. And you're bringing in these thought leaders and you're interviewing them and you're really asking for them to share what are the evidence based strategies that you use. So tell us a little bit more about the webcast which just started. Ethan Kross came out today and I haven't had a chance to listen to it but I'm very excited to because I really love his work, but I listened to Jewel and I listened to Angela Duckworth, so tell us more.

Marc Brackett: Yeah, so I decided to do this project because for two reasons.

One is that I use social media and I was getting really annoyed with what I was seeing celebrities or influencers just saying stuff like, you know, throw your anxiety out the door and I'm like, really? Like that's your advice? You know, it just, it was really irritating for me.

And I noticed that a lot of the YouTubers. that were doing the work, or Instagrammers, TikTokers. It was all like big personalities, kind of know it alls. And it just, it really was offensive to me, you know, as a neurotic introvert, who's also a scientist, and I'm like, not working for me and not really sure it's working for anybody because it's not actual thoughtful content.

And so I said, I know that people don't love long form content. But I wanted to show people what the research shows is helpful, and I also want to do it with interesting people. And so Jewel I've known for many years, and she had a very serious mental health crisis growing up, and she's dedicated a significant aspect of her life to healing and also helping.

And so what I wanted to do was interview her to see and learn what she had learned and then pull what I heard from her and then for other people show that that actually is a research based strategy. And so like the way she was using self talk or the way she was reframing or the way she was doing breathing exercises well, you know, she's not a licensed psychologist.

She's learned from many people. And so like Let's pull and show people that what she's doing is actually research based and helpful, and how do you do it? It's the how that people want to learn. And with Angela Duckworth, interestingly enough as the person who studied grit and wrote a book on it she basically said, that she kind of lost her grit when she was working on her next book, and like, confidence was really low, and I was like, what's your strategy?

And her number one strategy was social support and perspective taking, not. Just staying up three to four o'clock in the morning and trying to write when she was kind of losing it. She kind of took a step back and just sort of like talking with people about what was going on and hearing what they had to say.

And I appreciated that. And there's a lot of research that shows, that getting some distance from whatever is bothering you can help you deal with it better later on. Ethan is going to be talking about distancing. I have James Gross coming on in a couple of weeks.

And then I have also some really interesting people, one, her name is Dr. Alfie Berlin Nolan, who studies Black mental health, and Dr. Jenny Wang, who studies Asian mental health. So really getting a cross cultural perspective on this and how different identities may require different approaches to dealing with emotions.

Lainie Rowell: I'm hooked already. I'm going to listen to every episode. Thank you, very much. Thank you. I, I really do think it's very empowering and it was really helpful to me to hear that even someone like Angela Duckworth can have struggles because, you know, she's a best selling author, she's brilliant, U Penn, all this stuff, and so when you get to hear that it's not sunshine and rainbow and chasing bunnies through the field for everyone and that there are times that we all go through.

That was really, really helpful for me. And I love, I won't say it correctly, but I love when she talks about, the thing about perspective taking is you don't always know when you need help getting a perspective. And so I'm,

Marc Brackett: yeah, when you're in it, when you're deep in it, you don't know that you need it.

It's just like when you're yelling and screaming at someone, you don't realize in that moment that your emotions are driving your behavior, right? Otherwise you'd be like, well, why am I doing this?

Lainie Rowell: Exactly. Marc, what is something that you just cannot say enough? I mean, you would stand on rooftops and yell it. You just can't tell people enough. You really want them to understand this message.

Marc Brackett: I think, you know, again, this varies by day, by week, by month for me, because I have so many things that I think are important. Right now, what I'm thinking about is that it's not on the individual to develop emotional intelligence.

It's on the community and that to do this work, it has to be done, across communities. So that means homes, schools, workplaces. We think of a skill development as like, I'm going to go learn how to do the skill. This is different. You need to be developing these skills on your own when no one else is developing them is not as helpful.

Lainie Rowell: It needs to be contextual, right? You need to be in those experiences to develop and practice. Is that fair to say?

Marc Brackett: That's the second piece of it. Actually, it's a little slightly different, which is also really important. What I'm saying is that, a kid who's being bullied in school can't go to emotional intelligence training only by themselves to figure out how to deal with the crappy environment, right?

That we've got to create emotionally intelligent environments, which means that the other kids in the classroom have to be learning this stuff, the teachers have to be learning this stuff, the bus drivers have to learn it, you know, the community members need to learn it because we want to create emotionally intelligent communities, not just emotionally intelligent individuals.

Lainie Rowell: So Marc, I get the sense with the Dealing with Feelings that maybe there's more to come and you know this already, 'cause I've told you this, I've read your book twice.

Permission to Feel, I've read twice, so I'm very much anticipating I've heard you say there's another book coming. Any, any little hints you wanna give us about that?

Marc Brackett: Yeah, so Permission to Feel was my first kind of book for the real world. I've done a lot of academic stuff, but I wanted to put out something that would help people understand why emotions matter and why we need to give each other permission to feel and learn the basics of emotional intelligence. And that's been around for a couple of years now. It's still doing well. I'm grateful for that. But what I learned throughout the pandemic was that people want more around the regulation and I wanted more around the regulation.

And, you know, for me one of the things I always say is that I don't really think I know something until I can write about it. And so until I can explain it well, that other people can understand what's going on in my head and what I know and what I read about it doesn't feel real to me. And so that's when I decided to write a second book called Dealing with Feelings.

Which will be out in about a year from now, meaning like March or April of 2025. And one way to do that was to start my webcast so I could interview really smart people and learn from them because I don't know everything for sure and I wanted to kind of meet smart people and, and ask them questions that would help me think more critically about my own work.

Lainie Rowell: It's so great. I will be eagle eye for the pre order link when that comes. I know we've got some time, but I'm eagerly anticipating it. And I know that people are going to want to connect more with you and your work. So Permission to Feel the book, I will put the link in the show notes. I will also put a link to the webcast for Dealing with Feelings.

And how else would you suggest people connect with you?

Marc Brackett: I think, you know, my website, which is, I've just redone, which is just Marc with a C, Brackett, B R A C K E T T dot com. It has links to everything from our school based programming, which is RULER, to the How We Feel app, to my work in organization, which is called Oji LifeLab, to the webcast.

If you want to read recent articles that I've written it's all there, so just MarcBrackett.com, and then you can follow me on socials from there as well.

Lainie Rowell: Marc, I know I mentioned this at the front side, that you have been not only an inspiration from afar and watching all the great work you're doing, but you have been very generous to me, dare I say, as a friend.

And so I am very grateful to you and the work that you're doing for me and for others. So thank you for this time.

Marc Brackett: You're welcome. I appreciate the work you're doing.

Lainie Rowell: Thank you.

Episode 96 - Does Flourishing Mean We Need to Be Constantly in Bloom?

Shownotes:

In case you haven't heard, I'm thrilled to bring you something new: I'm aligning podcast episodes with ⁠⁠⁠⁠Thrive Global articles⁠⁠⁠⁠ so you can choose your adventure with each story - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

This episode is "Does Flourishing Mean We Need to Be Constantly in Bloom?" and you can find the article on Thrive Global!

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 95 - A Limitless Mind with Jim Kwik

Shownotes:

Have you ever wondered what it takes to transform your brain from being your biggest obstacle to your most powerful ally? Let's dive into the world of Jim Kwik, a renowned brain coach whose life-changing journey from a childhood brain injury to becoming a global leader in accelerated learning and brain performance offers invaluable lessons. In our chat, we discuss the power of meta-learning, and navigating the digital deluge. Our conversation also ventured into the areas of brain nutrition, nootropics, and the fascinating concept of identifying your "brain animal type." This is one episode you don't want to miss!

About Our Guest:

Jim Kwik, the founder of Kwik Brain, is a world expert in speed-reading, memory improvement, brain performance, and accelerated learning. After a childhood brain injury left him learning-challenged, Jim created strategies to dramatically enhance his mental performance. He has since dedicated his life to helping others unleash their true genius and brainpower to learn anything faster and live a life of greater power, productivity, and purpose. 

Thrive Global Article:

Your Brain is Your Superpower: Jim Kwik's Guide to a Limitless Mind

Connect with and learn from Jim Kwik:

Website: JimKwik.com
Instagram: @KwikLearning
LinkedIn: Linkedin.com/in/JimKwik
Facebook: facebook.com/KwikLearning
Twitter/X: @JimKwik
YouTube: youtube.com/c/JimKwik
Book: Limitless EXPANDED: Upgrade Your Brain, Learn Anything Faster, and Unlock Your Exceptional Life

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: [00:00:00] Well, hello, Jim. Thank you so much for being here.

Jim Kwik: Lainie, so good to be here.

Looking forward to this conversation.

Lainie Rowell: Oh, me too. By the way, is it okay if I call you

Jim Kwik: Jim? Yeah, yeah, of course.

Lainie Rowell: You know, I always like to hear people's backstory. There's no one that's more important to ask this question to than you, and I want to frame it in a way that is very specific to you. I'd love for you to share a little bit about your origin story.

Superheroes have, right? Superheroes have stories, and I think you're a superhero, so.

Jim Kwik: Oh, you do your research for sure. Yeah, I mean, my inspiration was my desperation. You know,, by trade, my mission really as a brain coach is to help people have their best brain possible.

I didn't have one for a good part of my life. When I was five years old, I had an unfortunate accident, or fortunate, depending on how you look at it. In kindergarten class, I took a very bad fall headfirst into a radiator, and I had this traumatic brain injury. And from it, I had these what people labeled as learning disabilities, processing issues.

At the age of five, six, seven, I would get these migraines every single day, really poor balance, poor focus. Teachers would repeat themselves over and over again, and I would just pretend to understand, but I didn't really, nothing really registered. It took me three years longer to learn how to read, and when I was nine years old, I remember slowing down in class, and I was being teased by the other kids, because I just didn't understand the lessons like everybody else.

And a teacher came to my defense. She pointed to me for the whole class and said, leave that kid alone. That's, That's the boy with the broken brain. And so that really became my, my moniker, that label became my limit. And it's something I heard on a, on a regular basis. Not only being teased using that, you know, broken brain, but I said it to myself all the time.

So every single time I did badly in school or wasn't picked for sports or you name it, I would always say, Oh, cause I have the broken brain. And eventually when I was 18, I met a mentor that turned me on to some more resources and resourcefulness. And I really got curious about how the brain works so I could work my brain.

Like, how does my memory work so I could work my memory? How do I learn how to learn as opposed to just learning what to learn? Like math and history and science all the classes they teach in school And so really what I'm known for the past 32 years is teaching people two things, Brain optimization in terms of really taking care of the hardware that three pound matter between our ears, which is our number one wealth building asset that we have and Also the software which is how to focus how to concentrate how to how to memorize things how to read faster and understand more how to think more clearly how to solve problems.

I want this world to be just better and brighter one brain at a time.

Lainie Rowell: I've read your book, Limitless Expanded Edition just released in November, which I really encourage people to read my five star Amazon review already out there.

It just is such a compelling story, and even if someone hasn't had something to the extreme of the brain trauma that you experienced, I think there's a good portion of us that can relate on some level to school not working for them. And, there's such importance in your work, and particularly, this, learning how to learn.

And you overcame such tremendous struggles. And I even just talked to you about the migraines, like migraines are so debilitating. It's such a lot to overcome. And then you made it your mission to help everyone. Can we talk a little bit more about meta learning and how important it is to learn how to learn?

Jim Kwik: Yeah, so meta learning is the art and science of learning how to learn. So Limitless really is a book on brain optimization, mindset, and learning how to learn with chapters on memory and focus and studying. And I just always thought it was interesting. And again, in school where they teach you what to learn, but not how to learn, you know, you go to somebody and say, like a teammate or your children, or whatever, say focus, or remember, or study. It's like, kind of like going to somebody saying, play the ukulele, who's never really been taught how to do that. And I think if there's one skill to master today, it's our ability to learn rapidly, and translate that learning into action is an incredible competitive advantage.

In a world where there's so much information, I believe the faster you can learn, the faster you can earn. Because knowledge, today, is not only power, knowledge is profit. And I don't just mean financial, that's kind of obvious. When you can easily remember client information, product information, and give sales scripts or speeches without notes.

When you can read substantially faster and absorb more information, clearly you have a big advantage in your career, in school, in life. But I also mean just like all the treasures and, you know, for your relationship, everything gets better when your brain is better and everything gets better in your career and your personal health and your productivity and your overall performance.

So yeah, and it's one of those things in school where I feel like they take it for granted, where you just assume, you know, how to be able to memorize something. It's really hard nowadays, especially with technology to maintain your focus with our devices, right? With every ring and ping and ding and app notification, social media alert, we're like, driven to distraction.

We're also driven to overwhelm. Nowadays, to keep up with, you know, your industry or your schooling, your subjects that you're studying, it feels like you're taking a sip of water out of a fire hose. And it's just gonna get worse, that distraction, that deluge, you know, that Another thing about forgetfulness, they call it digital dementia, where we're outsourcing our memories to our devices, and it's storing everything you need to remember.

It's keeping your to dos, it's keeping your schedules, it's memorizing, it's holding all your phone numbers, all that stuff. And again, I don't want to memorize hundreds of phone numbers, but it should be very concerning when we've lost the ability to remember one, or remember our PIN number, our passcode, or something we just You know, we're going to say, or something we just read, or something that was said to us, or somebody's name.

I feel like when we, we have these lapses, we lose time, we lose precious opportunity, we can lose trust. And on the other side, you know, it's been my experience. We have the largest academy on accelerated learning and brain optimization in the world. Students in every country in the world, so we get a lot of feedback.

I, I realize that regardless of your age, your background, your education level, your financial situation, gender history, IQ, you know, certainly genetics could play a part of it, but really we have more control than we realize. And it's important to be able to really delve into our brain.

I often wear brains on my shirts or points to my brain in photographs. Cause I want people to just, realize that we need to take care of the thing that we don't see all the time. Like, you see, your skin or your hair, your clothes, your car, so you know when it's kind of getting messy or deteriorating, but we don't see the thing that controls everything in our life which is our brain, and I really think it's our superpower.

And so, yeah, it's a real mission.

Lainie Rowell: When you talk about the digital deluge and the digital dementia, that really resonates with me. I have almost tried to gamify the gamifying that I know is happening to me through my phone. So I'm trying to use some of the things that are in there to not get distracted all the time. So there's parental controls and all these things.

I turn time limits on for myself. I have it on my phone that I actually cannot get to any social media until a certain time of the day. Because I just find, for me personally, if I start my day...

Jim Kwik: How's that been for you?

Lainie Rowell: It's been life changing. So I have for years had my phone on silent. Do not disturb is basically how I live, which can sometimes be annoying. And I do sometimes have to turn it off. Like, our house is quiet because no one has notifications turned on at our house.

My husband has his phone on silent, I have my phone on silent.

Jim Kwik: Wow.

Lainie Rowell: But I will have guests stay at our house sometimes, and their work doesn't permit that. They have to be available. It is anxiety for me. I am so stressed out when I hear it. I know not everyone can live in silent or do not disturb, but it's been life changing for me.

Jim Kwik: Yeah, I think do not disturb. I think airplane mode are two of the most important functions on our phone. I'm pretty pro technology. It allows even this conversation to happen. It's a wonderful way to educate, to empower people, but sometimes our devices do drive us to distraction or forgetfulness, or sometimes our devices do the thinking for us, or sometimes with all the information and doom scrolling, we can be overloaded, overwhelmed, and it could zap our mental energy, and we wonder why we're just spent so early, or we feel like a little bit sad or depressed because there's all this comparison online that we have unconsciously, and, you know, just to remind everyone who's listening.

And they might be listening on their device which is pretty meta. I would say that technology is a tool for us to use, but if the technology is using us, then we become the tool. And I think you're a great example that we can influence and control these devices to really manage the input.

And because I feel like sometimes it's important to disconnect, to reconnect to ourselves. And it's great when you're using technology for something that's purposeful, even entertainment or distraction, if you need that. But if we're doing it out of like habit, because we're conditioned to do it because every like, and share, and comment, and cat video, whatever, we have this dopamine flood, the molecule more, and it just makes us like keep on going to infinity then I, then I feel like if it's taking us away from the things that are important in life, then we should have some kind of intention or mindfulness to the things that we put our focus on.

Lainie Rowell: I love technology. I worked for Apple for six years. I was in the room when Steve announced the iPhone.

I am a huge advocate of technology. I'm also a real advocate of just being super intentional. Everything you're saying, like just being really thoughtful about when is it helping and when is it hindering. And that's such, to me, an important point in your work is you're talking about well, yes, we want to use the device to capture the phone numbers.

But when are we challenging our memory? When are we exercising that muscle, right? So what are some tips you have for helping us to either improve our memory or be less distracted? Something to get out of that digital deluge and digital dementia.

Jim Kwik: Yeah, we could go through quite a few practical, pragmatic things that I feel like could really make a difference in our productivity and our performance and definitely our peace of mind.

So obviously I don't think anyone would say it would be good to be on their phones all day, 24 seven, right? And also I think everyone could agree, you know, zero is not really an option, you know, in today's age. So there's something in between and it's always different for, for each person.

There's a quote in Limitless Expanded that says life is the letter C between the letters B and D or B stands for birth and D is death and life is C is choice. That we always have a choice. to, to engage into something, you know, we always choice what, what to eat that day or who to spend time with or what we're going to feed our minds, you know, and so much more when it comes to our devices my protocol personally, and I invite people to just maybe test it and on themselves, because ultimately I think the listener is the best expert about themselves.

I have a non negotiable where I just won't touch my phone in the first 30 minutes of the day in the last 30 minutes a day. It just works for me. I'm not saying it's practical for every single person, but here's why. Because behind every principle, there's a promise. When you wake up in the morning, you're very relaxed and you're very suggestible.

And if the first thing you do is pick up your device, which I did for years, I just feel like afterwards, I'm very sensitive to how I feel. And I don't feel any more mentally healthy after everything. I feel very distracted. I feel more overwhelmed and very reactive, meaning that I feel like when you pick up your phone, it wires your brain in that very relaxed state when you first wake up to be distracted.

And you wonder why you can't focus later on that day because the first thing you started your day with was flexing your distraction muscles. And whatever you do consistently, you get better at. And I think we're getting better at being distracted. And we wonder why we can't focus with our significant others with, people at work, with our clients and customers, and it's not only just making us distracted, it's making us more reactive, meaning you can get one message, social media message, a voicemail message email, all day.

text message, WhatsApp, whatever, and it could highjack your mooood for hours! And I just don't know anybody who could build a quality life to the way they want if they're just reacting to things, as opposed to being proactive. For me, the alternative is what do I do? I mean, I have my morning routine, which people can see online.

And I'm not saying do everything, but just everything is very intentional and I have a family, and I have a pretty, pretty intensive career, but I still make time because I think if you want to win the day, you just have to win that first hour of the day.

So what I do is I just, , for my mind's sake and my mental health sake and my performance sake, I would just keep my eyes closed. When I wake up instead of grabbing my device off my nightstand, I just don't keep it on my nightstand. I keep it in our bathroom. So it just, habit design 101 is in your environment, setting you up for success, and you wanna make the things that are good for you easier and you wanna make the things that are not so good for you, more difficult. So you don't have to use willpower. But I just lie in bed for two minutes and I imagine myself coming back to bed like.

I finished the day and my wife asked me how my day was and I just imagined myself saying, wow, today was really great. You know, we crushed it today. It was amazing. And then I asked myself what had to happen in order for me to feel that way. And then I work backwards from there because it's clear in let's say sports when you celebrate, because there's a clear scoreboard, but I don't think people have a really scoreboard and most people use our to do list. I don't think that's probably the best way because we can have 100, 200 things on that to do list and never get through those things.

So I go backwards, I say, in order for me to feel that excited about how that day went, what are three things personally and three things professionally that happened? And I focus on those six things throughout the day, because it's not even about time management. For me, it's about priority management.

And the maxim there is the most important thing is to keep the most important thing, the most important thing. And I make those six things the most important thing that day, and it's very achievable. I find that if you're persistent, you could achieve it, but if you're consistent, you get to keep it, right?

And so I focus on those six things. I usually don't touch my phone, honestly, until I get one of those six things done. So that's kind of my. Just simple things that I do. And then the last half hour a day, I just don't want to touch my phone for a number of reasons. One is the light that comes out of it.

You know, could fool your mind into thinking it's still daylight and you know, create that melatonin, which is the, the hormone to help you relax and kind of a trigger to. to go in that parasympathetic, rest and digest, that sleep kind of space. But I also don't pick up my phone, not only for that, is I just don't want to see a thousand different contexts.

I don't want my executive functioning to be stimulated like that, especially a lot of the stuff that's coming in unfiltered. And I think it's so important to stand guard to your mind with all the news and some of the things that might not be the most empowering thing to look at before you want to just rest and be safe and go in that place. And so I just make the choice not to do those things. And instead I have like an evening routine that just really works for me to get good sleep and perform well the next day.

And then throughout the day, there are times where like, like even now I haven't been on my phone for the past couple hours and I just, I feel like I'm more creative that way.

And again, Not everybody can do that. So I'm not suggesting that they can, but when I'm on it, I mean, I'm not so strict about it where it creates anxiety. It's similar to diet. I realized that when I was so strict with my diet, it kind of canceled out. I had so much anxiety around eating that I, it just canceled out any benefit that I would get from that specific diet.

We always make these choices. There's always a trade off for it. And, you know, if I need to just turn off and just kind of binge watch something for half an hour, then I'll do that because it serves a purpose. But I also won't complain about the things like, so I don't mind people could do whatever they want to do.

Who am I to. just, you know, to impose, like, you know, my thoughts on people. But if people are complaining about things and they're not doing something about it, then I feel like that we can't be upset by the results we didn't get from the work we're not doing. And if our devices are keeping us from doing that work that could advance some area of our life, then I feel like then it's, it's something we should.

Be intentional. More intentional about.

Lainie Rowell: Absolutely. And I really appreciate you framing it, how you're starting your day and ending your day. And when you're managing those priorities, you are allowing yourself to be in a better state of learning and flow, which to me, flow is really important.

That's just something I wanna get into is often as I can, ideally at least once a day. So you have to make that space. I appreciate that.

Jim Kwik: No doubt. Yeah. Yeah. I hope everyone who's listening would challenge themselves they don't have to take our words for it, but maybe they could see how they react, you know, and maybe do a little bit of a a digital detox or set borders and boundaries because I think part of self care is not just eating well and going to the spa. I really think part of self care is putting borders and boundaries around the things that are important to you. Like, your peace, your time your relationships, , the place, because sometimes we do just doing so much and people get burnt out.

And I found that sometimes we're Burnt out not because we're doing too much. Sometimes we feel burnt out because we're doing too little of the things that really matter. And sometimes what's taking us off the things that are focusing on things that matter and things that don't matter as much. And those could include our devices.

Lainie Rowell: Okay. I have like 20 questions for you.

Jim Kwik: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Let's go. We could do rapid fire.

Lainie Rowell: What are some of the things that we can do to increase the health of our brain. I'll let you take it there. If that's cool.

Jim Kwik: Yeah. There's a whole chapter in the new book on brain nutrition. This is something that people often ask about.

And I think it's important again, taking care of the hardware, right? You can learn the processes and we have plenty of free content online and podcasts and teaching people how to read faster and improve their memory, but you also have to take care of that three pound organ between our ears called our brain.

So there's a higher science called neuro nutrition. And these are elements that help you to be able to have the best brain possible. Now, I always prefer people can get it through food. We talk about some of the best brain foods like avocados and everyone's a little bio individual, right?

So take that in mind. Some people have certain allergies to certain foods or food sensitivities, but generally Some of my favorite brain foods, avocados, which are high in monounsaturated fat and your brain is mostly fat. Blueberries, I call them brain berries. They're very neuroprotective. Broccoli has an ingredient called sulforaphane, which is very important for cognitive health and performance.

Olive oil You know, we've heard a lot about olive oil, eggs if your diet allows, the choline in eggs is a nutrient that plays a vital role in, in brain health. It's a critical component of acetylcholine, which is a neurotransmitter that supports memory and cognitive function. Wild salmon and sardines.

Again, you hear about the omega 3 fatty acids. So if you're not getting like the choline from eggs or potentially other different sources like soybeans, you might want to supplement with it. If you're not getting the the omega 3 DHA, those fatty acids that are crucial for brain health from like fish clean, clean sources.

You might want to supplement with them, but supplementing with the B vitamins are so very important to brain health. You know, B6, B9, B12, Magnesium is vital for brain health, promoting better learning, memory also your mood. And then there's an area that we talk about in the book called nootropics or nootropics.

People pronounce it differently. And these are a little different than supplements. These are very specific substances that can enhance cognitive function executive function, memory, creativity, mental energy, motivation. So, so we put A lot of them in the book and reference the human studies in there.

People get a comprehensive list at BrainNutrition.com as our gift. BrainNutrition.com. Some of the ones that I'll highlight in this conversation, Ashwagandha. Ashwagandha is an adaptogenic herb. It improves mental and physical resilience and may help you to reduce stress. And we know chronic stress has been shown to shrink the human brain.

So it helps with stress, anxiety, improves cognitive function. There is a whole coffee fruit extract that I write about in the book it's a by product of the coffee plant, so it's usually discarded, it doesn't have any caffeine, but it has strong antioxidant effects, a positive impact on cognitive function, there's another nootropic, nootropic called phosphatidylserine, which is a phospholipid, and these are kind of, you know, kind of big, big words for people that didn't Study this, but it's an integral part to brain cell membranes, it's been shown to improve memory, learning, cognitive function.

There's another favorite is Altheanine, which is an amino acid found in green tea, which is if you're watching this on video, I'm drinking it now it's a popular nootropic, it promotes relaxation without the drowsiness, and it can enhance brain function Bacopa. is another one probably aligned with that.

It's an herb used in Ayurvedic medicine to improve cognition and memory. And then going back to the foods, turmeric is a brain food, but it's the active ingredient, which could also be useful to supplement with as curcumin which is a potent anti inflammatory and toxin and benefits. It's been shown potentially to cross the blood brain barrier.

Could lead improvements in cognitive function particularly in patients with Alzheimer's. And so I'm very passionate about that. I lost my grandmother to Alzheimer's when I was seven years old. So these are just some of my favorites. And again, people can get a comprehensive list at brainnutrition.com. And we update it regularly with the ones that that I'm, I'm excited about in our team and our family uses.

Lainie Rowell: I really appreciate you pointing out the bio individual, as I believe I phrased it. And I think this transcends every aspect of our life. We're all unique and dynamic.

So there's no like one recipe for this is how to do it for every single person, right? So that's why going back to when we were talking about being intentional with our devices, there's no recipe. It's like, that's what works for you. This is what works for me. Same thing with the neuro nutrition. And I also think it's helpful to kind of know, and you talk about this in the book too, the brain types by animal, you, can you, I can't, I'm not going to explain it well, so I'm just going to throw it to you, you can go from here.

Jim Kwik: That's a great, that's a great transition. Similar to how foods, people are bio individual. And not everything works for everybody, whether it's supplements or food. Same thing with learning. I realized that after coaching, you know, for as long as I have that some people will really thrive with a technique.

Other people, it won't really work for them quite as well. And so, because everybody is different, have. Different kinds of brains and we've kind of identified four different brain types. And just like there's personalized medicine based on your genetics, or personalized nutrition based on like your microbiome.

You know, so you can see what you really would thrive with. There's personalized learning and leading based on your, your dominant brain type. And so There's an assessment we put online at mybrainanimal.com, mybrainanimal.com, and it's a four minute assessment. There's also a full chapter in the book, and in four minutes, very easy, you could see what your dominant brain type is.

And just really as quick summary, think about brain code, CODE, and these are the letters and it's an acronym. The C is your cheetah, and the cheetah , their dominant trait is action, and so they have strong intuition, they're very fast implementers, they thrive in fast paced environments because they can adapt very quickly, and you might identify as a cheetah or know somebody, you know, who would fit those traits.

The O in code are your owls, and your owls, their dominant trait is logic. And so they love data, they love facts, and they love figures. They make decisions very rationally, right? And these two animals, they would invest different, they would buy different, right? They would also read and remember differently.

So we give people a personalized learning track based on their assessment after they take the assessment in the book or online. The D are your dolphins, and their dominant trait is creativity. They have very strong pattern recognition, great problem solvers. They could often have a vision for themselves or maybe their business or their brand that other people can't yet see.

And they're very passionate about what they see in their minds. And then finally, the E are your elephants, and these their dominant trait is empathy. And these are your community builders. These are people that they have high levels of empathy, so they are very compassionate, they are very supportive, they bring people together.

And it was interesting, when my team took this assessment, A hundred percent of the people on our team were on my customer service team. They're elephants because they, and we didn't hire for them, but people will go and choose roles and responsibilities based on their strengths. So they, they have high empathy.

There are community builders in our app and, on social media. They want people to feel seen and heard. Our CFO, they took the test and they are, they are an owl. And I assume you want an owl, someone who loves numbers and loves the data, could do forecasting and projections and expense reports.

My business partner, our CEO, she's a dolphin. She has this vision, you know, like a Walt Disney or a, And JK Rawlings. And she's bringing us closer to that vision and mission. And so everybody's a little bit different. But I realize, you know, again, after three decades, it's not, it's not how smart you are. It's how are you smart?

It's not how smart you are. It's how are you smart? And we all have ways of expressing genius. And so this way, once you understand your brain type, then we give you protocols on how to read better based on which animal you are and how to remember names based on which brain animal you are.

You could also use this for parenting to see what your kids are, what your spouse is. You can use this for hiring. You can use this for managing. You can use this for sales, right? You know, a cheetah wants, if they're selling to you, they're going to get right to the point.

They don't want to waste time beating around the bush because they have a very clear goal in mind. They sprint, right? But an owl could respect a well thought out presentation, social proof and case studies showing that your product or service works. A dolphin, you would sell them by talking about the vision and how their future aligns with that vision.

Or an elephant. If you're selling to an elephant, great, give them facts, you know, and, and great, give them a set goal and a vision, but really what they want is the relationship, right? They want to feel that they trust you, that there's a rapport, that they feel seen, that they feel heard, and those elephant qualities.

And we're not anyone one animal, just like if you're right handed doesn't mean you don't use your left hand. It's just, we have a natural propensity to go to our strengths. And when we understand what our strengths are, we could find roles, responsibilities, career paths, where we could be in our element, where we really thrive, where there's less friction and more passion and purpose.

And so I feel like it's so important nowadays to, to have the curiosity to know yourself. And that's why people. You can go to therapy or you journal or you meditate or you take assessments like this because it gives you greater insight and introspection to who you are. And then once you have the curiosity and know yourself, also having the courage to be that person, right, to be yourself also to be bold.

And then I feel like. Life is difficult for one of two reasons, either you're leaving your comfort zone, right, and sometimes it's hard to be that person that you think that you are, you claim that you are, and then I think life is also difficult if we stay in our comfort zone too long, and life can get very difficult also, and so I feel like there's this balance, and even getting that flow state is that balance of where challenge and competency, you know there's a collision there where the challenge is not so great where in our competencies isn't so high where we feel bored, but also we don't want to be in an environment where our challenge is so great and our capability is too low, then we're stressed, right?

But again, in a flow state where we lose a sense of self, lose our sense of time, where things become effortless, where we'd be able to feel our best and perform our best, part of that is really understanding who we are and leaning into it, because I truly believe to all the listeners and readers that there is a version of yourself that's patiently waiting, right?

And. The goal is we show up every single day until we're introduced, because you are the greatest project you're ever going to get to work on, and so we need to take time, make time, to to create magic.

Lainie Rowell: That was beautiful to me, especially what I hear you saying is know yourself and also know that you're not finished.

I always say unique and dynamic because I think we are all so different, but we're also constantly changing and evolving and that's. That's the goal, right? We're getting better every day. I hope to be better tomorrow than I am today. Okay, I'm looking at the clock. I would talk to you for hours if I could, but I want to respect your time.

So, first of all, I want to just say I really want people to check out the book, check you out on the socials. What would you say is the best way for people to connect with you and your work, Jim?

Jim Kwik: In whatever the learning style they prefer, if they like to read Limitless Expanded is we're very proud.

Limitless, the first edition, which came out a few years ago, did over a million copies. So we donate all the proceeds to charity to build schools for children in need and Alzheimer's research for women. Women are twice as likely to experienced, experienced Alzheimer's than men. If you'd like to listen, certainly the book's on Audible.

And we have a podcast, 400 episodes. Roughly every episode is only 20 minutes social media is a wonderful place I mentioned a couple of assessments and downloads at brainnutrition.com and mybrainanimal.com, but yeah, 95 percent of what we put out there is absolutely free, and so we really want to democratize this and bring this information out to the world, so I really appreciate the opportunity to share this with your community and, I want to thank you so much.

I feel like nowadays so many people like out of fear, they're shrinking what's possible to fit their minds, and I understand that because, you know, fear, you want to be safe, and maybe, and be a little bit I don't know, Less risk averse, but I feel like also that we could do the opposite.

We could expand our minds to fit all that's possible and that would be my invitation to everybody to take one small simple step. I don't know what it is maybe it's taking a screenshot of you know, wherever you're consuming this and tagging us both there so we get to see it and share one choice that you're going to make for a better, brighter brain or share your brain animal or, you know, share one thing you're going to do.

Maybe it's not going on your phone in the morning first thing or at night, or maybe you're going to eat more blueberries or you want to share your brain animal or something like that. But I feel like when you share it, you get to learn it better because when we teach something, we get to learn it twice, and that way your fans, your followers, your family, your friends, whoever is following the person listening or reading this right now can have a positive impact also, you know, on them.

Lainie Rowell: Oh my, okay, so my K 12 educator heart is just bursting because I love, I always talk about teaching others.

Because that is one of the best ways to learn. Also, you've universally designed, we talk about universal design for learning in K 12, you've universally designed your content, you make it so accessible and that is just so powerful. So thank you so much for your time. I know I have to let you go. I'm going to put all of your contact information in the show notes.

Thank you so much, Jim.

Jim Kwik: All right, have a great one. Bye now.

Episode 94 - Emotional Contagion: Catching Feelings That Improve Well-Being

Shownotes:

In case you haven't heard, I'm thrilled to bring you something new: I'm aligning podcast episodes with ⁠⁠⁠Thrive Global articles⁠⁠⁠!

That’s right, my friends, this means you can choose your adventure with each story - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

This episode is about "Emotional Contagion: Catching Feelings That Improve Well-Being" and you can find the article on Thrive Global!

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 93 - Shattering Collective Illusions About Learning and Working with Todd Rose

Shownotes:

Join me for an eye-opening chat with Todd Rose, where we dive into the intersection of neuroscience, psychology, and learning. Ever wondered why the one-size-fits-all approach in schools and workplaces feels so limiting? Todd's here to explore how we can move beyond that, appreciating everyone's unique talents and paving the way for systems that truly nurture individual potential. This conversation is all about challenging the status quo and discovering how we can all thrive by being ourselves. If you're ready for a fresh take on unlocking human potential, this episode is for you.

About Our Guest:

Todd Rose is the co-founder and CEO of Populace, a nonpartisan think tank committed to ensuring that all people have the opportunity to pursue fulfilling lives in a thriving society. Prior to Populace, he was a faculty member at Harvard University where he founded the Laboratory for the Science of Individuality and directed the Mind, Brain, and Education program. Todd is the best selling author of Collective Illusions, Dark Horse, and The End of Average. He lives in Burlington, Massachusetts.

Thrive Global Article:

The End of One-Size-Fits All: Shattering Collective Illusions About Learning and Working

Connect with and learn from Todd Rose:

Website – ToddRose.com

Books – Collective Illusions, Dark Horse, and The End of Average

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: Hello friends. Wow. Get ready. Todd rose is someone I have had on my guest wishlist for a very long time. So I'm super excited to share this conversation. Where we're going to talk about the intersection of some of my favorite topics, neuroscience, psychology, and learning. Todd is absolutely brilliant and he makes these concepts.

We talk about very accessible. We're going to get into the importance of appreciating the unique and dynamic in each of us. We talk about challenging. The one size fits all model that we see in education and the workplace. We also talk about designing. Cultivation systems that unlock human potential.

A little bit about Todd before we jump in.

Dr. Todd rose is the co-founder and CEO of populace, a non-partisan think tank committed to ensuring that all people have the opportunity to pursue fulfilling lives in a thriving society. Before. Populace. He was a faculty member at Harvard university where he founded the laboratory for the science of individuality. And directed the mind brain and education program. Todd is the best-selling author of collective illusions, dark horse, and the end of average. I am a long time fan and follower of Todd's work. And you're going to love this episode with that here's Todd.

Welcome, Todd. Thank you for being here with us today.

Todd Rose: It's great to be here.

Lainie Rowell: I'm very excited to chat with you about your work.

You have been someone I have been looking to and following for quite a while, not to creep you out, but I am very familiar with your work and so I'm excited for this conversation. Now, this is me partly being a linear person, but also I just don't feel like there's any way to not start with your story.

So can you tell us a little bit about just the early days that whole journey, if you will.

Todd Rose: Yeah, no, I think, I think you're right. I mean, in this case, there, it, there's a through line. Yeah, so I grew up in, you know, rural America, and for me, which is sort of funny given the things that I do now school did not work.

And, and I will say, I, I definitely contributed to that not working, you know, I probably was not the easiest kid, but, as you know being in education, as you are, the way our system's structured now, if you struggle, that tends to compound, you know what I mean? You don't learn certain things, you get moved on, and then you just, it, it culminated for me I like to say I chose to drop out of school but in reality, they just kicked me out, because it was like, early in my senior year in high school, I had a 0.9 GPA, and there's no way I can graduate, so the principal called my parents and said, He's just messing around so I will say we mutually agreed that I would leave I was oblivious to like what that could actually mean for my life That's fine. It'll be fine. Shortly after that my girlfriend at the time found out she was pregnant.

We got married It ended up by the time I was 20, one we had two kids And I'd had a string of minimum wage jobs probably a dozen of them and we were on welfare and it was just not going well. And so, really out of desperation, it wasn't out of like an epiphany of like, I knew a lot, I just knew this wasn't working.

As you know, look, when you have kids, it's your life. It does change. You feel a responsibility for these innocent human beings. They didn't ask to be born. They didn't ask to be born to me as a parent and so I decided, I was like, I don't know what else to do, but my dad was the first high school graduate in our family and the first college graduate, and I watched him go back to school, and he was a mechanic and became a mechanical engineer, and I watched that change our lives, And so I thought, well, maybe that.

So I got my GED and I went to school at night at Weber State University in Ogden, Utah. It was open enrollment. And we had just enough money, my parents and my in laws to pay for one year of school. And they just said, basically, if you want it badly enough, you'll figure out how to get good grades which I've never done.

And so that was the beginning, right? And, I'll say, I'm happy to keep rolling, because Weber State taught me so much that would then shape everything if you don't mind.

Lainie Rowell: Please, please.

Todd Rose: Okay, great, so at Weber, here, here's the thing, you know you're on the clock, if I don't figure out how to make it work, I have to go back to, like, which just didn't work, I, it was so bad, and so all I knew was that the way I had done things in the past didn't work, and so I was paying a lot of attention.

I knew a lot more about myself. Not, not great, but I was making choices that were closer to who I was, the kinds of classes I would take, the kinds of professors I would engage with. I started learning what didn't work. But there's this like really, really pivotal moment for me.

I'd been there for about a year. I was actually doing okay, just out of like brute force, I have to make this work and I'm sitting in a, a big history class in an auditorium, which didn't work very well for me, but I couldn't get out of it and I was complaining to my, my buddy Steve about this just does not work.

I've got to figure out how to pay attention and do okay. And he said, oh, this is nothing compared to, he was in the honors program, he told me, and I didn't even know what that was, but he starts explaining that he is, oh, I wish it was just lectures, he's like, in the honors program, there's no lectures, there's just 10 to 12 students, you sit around in a circle, and you, you talk, and he's like, there are no tests, you just have to write things, and he's like, I don't think there are right answers, He said, all we do is debate.

And I was like, this sounds so amazing. Like, I, I honestly, I honestly thought that can't be how education is. He was like, no, this is, so I, as soon as class was over, I made a beeline to the honors program, which was the top of the hill on the second floor of the library had its own floor. I went right in, went up to the secretary, a woman named Marilyn Diamond.

And I said, I want to be in the honors program. And she said, great, let's have you meet with the director, see if I can get you in. They did. I sit down with him, and he's so nice, and he's like, hey, we're really proud of the honors program, I'm excited that you're excited, here's just formality, let's just go through, let's fill this out together, and we'll get you going.

But pretty soon we get to the, so, so what was your high school GPA? , I said .9, and I'm not kidding, his response, he actually said, what .9? Like I had left off the most important number there, and, and, it's in that moment, it dawns on me, that was impulsive, what am I doing?

This is really embarrassing. And I said, well, 0.9, and I was gonna say a bunch of stuff, but then he just kind of, he was really nice, I will say, very kind about it, he, but he said, I'm sorry, you can't be in the honors program. And so I was humiliated. And so I'm gathering my stuff as fast as possible and I'm going to just get out of there.

Like go crawl into a hole, leave, and I go out the door and Marilyn Diamond, the secretary, her desk is just right outside the door and one of those life changing moments I rush out and she actually just grabs my arm, gently, as I'm walking past. And she said, Hey, I overheard the conversation. If you want this, don't take no for an answer.

And it didn't dawn on me that that was an option, right? So she tells me to sit down on the couch and I did. And it felt like an entire day. It was just a couple of hours probably. She's like, just wait. And the director had to go teach a class. He's like, what are you doing? You know? So funny. He comes back.

And he says, all right, come, come in here. And he said, why do you want to be in the honors program? Because on paper, it doesn't make any sense. So I explained what I'd learned about myself in the year and in college, and that I actually thought this was a really, really good fit. And he said, well, you know what?

I can't let you in, you know, permanently, but what we can do is create a provisional acceptance. And he said, I want you to pick one class and if you do well, I'll let you pick another, and we'll go from there. So I did, and it turned out to be , I mean, just perfect, the best fit, like it was such a good fit to who I was.

And flash forward, I ended up graduating from Weber State with a 3. 97 GPA as the honor student of the year. And it was amazing. And I, I tell you this story for a couple of reasons, one, it does tee up a lot of things that we'll talk about in a minute, but there's two things that I think are really important to that story.

One is, the profound importance of fit, because we often think that people are just talented, or smart, and especially kids, when you're in these standardized environments, and they don't go well, you just assume it's you. Why wouldn't I assume it's me? Some kids are doing just fine. Some kids are doing really well.

So it must be me. But just to live that, to feel the difference between an environment that didn't fit my individuality very well and one that was just perfect for me. And just what it unlocked in terms of not just my ability and my potential, but my confidence in myself was just, I never forgot that and that will play a role as we'll talk about, but there's a second piece that I think is critical because we'll talk a lot about individuality, which I think is really, really important.

But we often, if we're not careful And think of that as like selfishness or isolation or whatever, right? Like individualism. But for me and this Marilyn Diamond thing is like, I worked really, really hard. I put the work in and I'm proud of what I accomplished. But let's be honest, if there's no Marilyn Diamond, this is a different story.

A couple years ago, I got asked back to Weber State, I got an award, for whatever, and I'm there, and it turns out Marilyn's retiring that year. And I thought, what a great opportunity to tell some version of this story, with her in the audience. So I did, and it was great, and the dean who's kind of emceeing, he says, Well, Marilyn, you want to come up and say a few words?

I thought, this is amazing. She comes up, she gives me a hug, she grabs the mic, and she said, You know, it's a really nice story, Todd I don't remember it. And, I thought she was saying, like, you're lying, like it didn't happen. But what it really was, was that everybody had a Marilyn Diamond story.

It was just the way she was as a person. So, what was funny to me, and I think that the takeaway is like, how much we depend on each other, and how much we can do for each other. Because, for me, it was literally life changing, and for her, it was so inconsequential, she didn't even remember it. And I think that's how supporting each other really works.

We tend to think that it's going to be this heavy lift, but once you start to realize, you're part of other people's context, and the things you can do if you're thinking about it right can have life changing effects on other people, and really not be that big of a lift for you.

Lainie Rowell: I really make the connection to, I work deeply in gratitude and thinking of the definition of gratitude is noticing the good, but also acknowledging that often it comes from sources beyond ourselves.

And I appreciate that you're teasing out individuality versus individualism. It's not saying like, we're only out for ourselves, but honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic and I appreciate that. And I just want to go back to the part of your story where you're talking about at the university, you've got someone, your friend who has been kind of progressed automatically into this program for honors, and he sounds like did not appreciate it, didn't like it, like, you know.

Todd Rose: No, in fact, in fact, he ended up washing out of it.

Lainie Rowell: And I'm not surprised, and I think this is something that we see in education, is that certain individuals who like to perform a certain way will do well in certain contexts.

I tend to think about I have a child, I'm taking them both down by not naming which one, but like very much into, they both like to please, so don't get me wrong, but whose motivation for doing well academically has been to please others, and just, I want to get the A, and I want to do well for others.

But the motivation hasn't necessarily been intrinsic, like, I want to learn. And when you don't have that, and you're getting into this honors, where it's a very innovative approach to honors, by the way, so kudos to Weber State, because I don't know that that's how a lot of honors programs were working, because that's very different from what the K 12 experienced.

Todd Rose: And they have, and they have most honors programs are rigidly like standardized tests, grades, it's about prestige. I will say that one of the things I'm most proud of is because of my achievements at Harvard and beyond Weber State changed their honors program permanently. So they actually have interviews.

It's about explaining the fit and it's not about test scores and grades, which I love.

Lainie Rowell: I love that too. And so, yes, and let's not leave out that part of the story because I think that's interesting that you had the 0.9 GPA and It wasn't a fit at the time. You weren't motivated at the time. Is that fair to say?

Todd Rose: That's definitely fair to say.

Lainie Rowell: And so I relate to this and I was one of my children who, for a good portion of my K 12 experience, I just cared about making good grades for my family and for the teachers and this is what I'm supposed to do, so I'll do it. And then I got put into a different education experience where things were very different and I was like, oh, I don't know if I can do this.

And I did not thrive and then I thought, well, that's who I am. I don't thrive anymore. And it took me a really long time. It wasn't actually until I did scrape by to get into college. But it wasn't actually until college that I actually started to love learning again. And it wasn't until almost the very end of college.

But so fast forward in your really inspiring story, you end up getting your doctorate at Harvard.

Todd Rose: Yeah. Yeah. It was funny, at Weber State, I was getting fascinated about individuality mainly out of like, it was a good explanation for my own experience, but at the time there was this rise of what was called the science of individuality, which was a new approach to science in general, which was getting away from aggregate data groups and, and being able to truly study individuals.

And that was so fascinating to me. It was rooted in complex systems instead of just statistics, and I was like, this is amazing, and I was reading up on it, and I read about this scholar, Kurt Fischer, and I was like, whoa, wow, this is amazing, I wanna work with this guy, and at the time, I was reading papers by him, and it said he was at the University of Denver, and I was like, hey, that's like eight hours.

That would be doable. So I got really excited and it turned out my advisor at Weber State knew him and he was like, Oh, this is gonna be so great. You guys are gonna, you have similar backstories. You're gonna love it. So we start talking and it turns out Kurt has moved on to Harvard, which I didn't even know where Harvard was.

I honestly didn't. It just was not even part of the world for me. But I was like, well, I really want to be a part of this. And so, I thought, well that's too bad. Like, it's too bad that he's at Harvard, cause obviously I'm not gonna get into Harvard, but luckily I did and packed up everything we had in a minivan and drove across country and ended up in Cambridge and had a really interesting and bumpy experience, it's like a whole nother country, basically, but had a wonderful education and then I graduated and then I was fortunate, Kurt Fischer had founded the My Unbranded Education Program at Harvard, the first interdisciplinary program in the world that integrated neuroscience, psychology, and learning.

Applied. And one of the things I was most proud of is when he retired, I became the director of that program and was a faculty member, maybe 10 to 12 years at Harvard, and then I left right before the pandemic.

Lainie Rowell: Well, so that's just like so close to my heart because I was a psychology major, went in to be education and have a new fascination with neuroscience, so those all coming together is really a beautiful place to be, right?

And, and I want to say that one of the ways that I came across your work is I do work in universal design for learning, a good portion of my work is professional learning and a lot of times it's for educators and that's one of the things that I'm trying to to move the needle on because we are all so unique and dynamic and you'll hear me use that phrase which I get from one of my besties, Dr Katie Novak because to me it's not enough just to say unique, it's the dynamic that we're constantly changing and your story is so clear that in a different context with different motivation you're thriving compared to in a system that was not serving you well that you were not excited to be in and gladly left as soon as you could.

Todd Rose: Right?

Lainie Rowell: Until you came back.

Todd Rose: You're really hitting on something important and I love that, and Katie's brilliant, obviously. The unique and dynamic because this is all part of it, we're distinct not only in our composition at any given time, but we change systematically depending on the context we're in, and we change over time.

Which is funny, right? Because we often don't take that into account, and especially in education now, look, the idea of, like, mass educating the public is one of the greatest accomplishments in human history, and back in the day when we did that, when we started that, you know, over 100 years ago, there was only one way to do that.

It was either everyone would get a one size fits all education, or rich kids would get bespoke education and the rest of us would get nothing. That was really the bargain. And so if we were having this conversation 100 years ago, I would have been the biggest champion of mass standardized education there was.

Not because it was the best way to do it, because it was the only way to do it. And what I think people have to appreciate now, and I think if we can get there, we're going to be able to get somewhere really great in education, which is That was never optimal, it was just practical, but things have changed so substantially for the better.

Our technology has changed, our understanding of human dynamics, human uniqueness, has changed, right? Such that we can do something about it. It's actually not impossible to give every single child in this country a phenomenal individualized education. That is doable. And, you know, one of the things that is my biggest pet peeve, if you don't mind, just so I can be frustrated by it, is even as we recognize kids, their distinctiveness, we often, and this will get back to the universal design for learning, we often still keep putting in these kids in these environments that are standardized.

We give them standardized learning materials. And then as a cop out, we tell teachers to differentiate their instruction. Like, that's ridiculous. Come on. Like, how about we expect the stuff that we pay for to be flexible and responsive to the known human differences that you will see in every learning environment?

And that, I think, is the genius of Universal Design for Learning, which is, it doesn't capture all human uniqueness, but there are dimensions of how we process information, how we engage, and how we actually demonstrate knowledge that you know in advance. people will differ on. And if you know it in advance, and it's not so idiosyncratic that like, you can design for it.

So, it's like, why not expect that these environments are designed as flexibly as possible, that then supports the human to human relationship, the teacher, the student, the student, the student, that is the actual core of great learning. And so, it's like, we're sort of stuck right now because we have all this capability, but we've got a mindset that is still, like, a hundred years old.

And so, I think that the good news is, is that we're on the cusp of something pretty profound, and I think education is going to look extremely different in the not too distant future.

Lainie Rowell: I agree. And I do appreciate you bringing up technology. Couple things I wanted to process through with you.

One, technology is giving us opportunities to scale that universal design in ways that just were not there, definitely not a hundred years ago. And it's so interesting when you just take a step back and you think, Oh, wow, like our system's only a hundred years old in the grand scheme of things it's just so recent but it's incredibly hard to adapt the system, but we can, we can. And another thing I wanted to say you are so good at acknowledging how amazing teachers are and they're in a tough situation with the system that they're put in, this very resilient system but universal design for learning is upstream it ultimately is what has to be the way that our system is designed because otherwise we are just playing whack a mole trying to differentiate downstream, when we can already assume variability, we can already assume, I know that I'm going to have some kids who are really gifted in understanding scientific concepts, but reading is going to be the barrier.

I know that I have some kids that are going to understand a piece of literature in a way that I can't even understand, but if I ask them to just write it versus put it into art or articulate it verbally. I'm not going to get what's inside of them, right?

Todd Rose: Well, and I think that, one of the unfortunate consequences of having a standardized system for a hundred years, is there's other ideas that kind of came in through like eugenics and some of the darker things which have such a well dark view of human potential and capability and so they give you the bell curve they give you the like only some kids are capable and so what we've had as a result is a zero sum system of education that is really it's just a selection mechanism right it's like let's give everyone some basic experience And then we can't give everyone everything so let's figure out who deserves more resources. And look, if those assumptions were correct, that's a reasonably fair way to do it, right? If we're living in scarcity, if not everyone has potential, then a selection system makes sense. None of those things are true now, none. The I idea of a bell curve is the most nonsensical thing on the planet when it comes to people.

It's demonstrably false. This will sound like a bumper sticker slogan, but I think one of the most important assumptions in modern education and the workplace has to do with human potential. To put it bluntly, I think it is objectively true that every human being is capable of excellence of some kind, which means they have something meaningful to contribute to society.

They do. And we've learned, despite all my colleagues who love IQ tests and other things, notwithstanding, because of the complexity, because of the distinctiveness, the uniqueness, and the dynamics of human beings, you don't know in advance what any one person is capable of. You just don't. You can pretend you can force them into your little world, but it's not how it works.

And so I believe that the major change to education now is that it is not a selection system anymore. It is a cultivation system. And when you realize that the goal of education is the cultivation of every child's God given potential, if you just think of it that way, then it starts to make a ton of sense why it would be unacceptable to do anything other than universal design for learning.

Because anything short of that flexibility is an arbitrary obstacle to the cultivation of some child's potential. Right? It also then leads naturally to, well, why wouldn't we use bell curve tests? It's because they're just, they're just comparative. We're going to use mastery based assessments, right?

Once you just get over that hump of like, oh, no, everybody's got something to offer, our job is to cultivate their full potential, then a lot of this other stuff you and I are talking about it just makes a lot of sense for people.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, and I have a book coming to mind.

Katie gets twice the love in this episode, but George Couros and Katie Novak wrote the book, Innovate Inside the Box. And this is where I think our amazing teachers can get creative. And yes, there are going to be some constraints that they can, you know, advocate. I don't want this, but maybe they don't always have the choice.

But there's still a lot of things I feel like we as educators have the ability to make a change.

Todd Rose: I do not envy the place that educators are in right now. So, you know, my background, my interests now are in, this will just sound wonky, but paradigm shifts.

This is where we're at, we're in a paradigm crisis. The fundamental assumptions of society are up for grabs, and it can go bad, it can go better and so we work to actually shift, like, what can democracies deliver on? What can our society do that it doesn't do now? And in education, the transformation of this institution is what's taking place right now.

We can talk about why I think that's the case, but like the trick , is you're not going to just close down shop and open up five years later under new management. You have to literally like transform this institution while you're still participating in it. And that means that there's no more important constituency than teachers.

And I think that teachers have a really important role for parents in that they can signal that this is valuable. That things like mastery based learning, like flexible time, flexible design, that it's actually valuable, that it's good for learning. Because all of our research shows parents look to teachers to know about that, and then they look to local and regional employers to tell them whether the outcomes are okay.

Lainie Rowell: Well, and I want to connect it to that too, because, to me, this is a system that is so incredibly resilient, it's also the system that Virtually everyone goes through, and I think this feeds the workplace in some of the ways that I would love it if the workplace was more universally designed, if the workplace was more focused on cultivation versus selection, and so I think there's some opportunities there, and I've heard you talk about this before, the principles of scientific management.

I mean, that's what influenced a lot of things, right?

Todd Rose: Yeah, it's rare that when you look back and say, man, who did this to us? That it's, like, one dude, right? Frederick Taylor in the late 20s, early 30s. He's obsessed with the idea that one of the problems in society is we had a lot of waste.

That wasn't wrong. He was right. And that we could be better off if we were more efficient. Also correct. But he believes in this very top down, like this idea that everybody has autonomy and capabilities and potential, he just thought was ridiculous. And the scientific management is probably the most important idea that we all live under that no one knows about.

This is the guy literally that invented the concept of a manager. His proposal was I can give us more stuff by making us more efficient. If you become a cog quite literally, let's divide up labor, the workers, just do what you're told and do it well and do it fast and have managers that plan everything and then we'll all have more stuff.

Which, by the way, he was correct. We got a lot more stuff that way, but we sort of lost our soul. Right? And at the end of the day, what's the point of life? It's not just more stuff. It's the joy. It's the psychological abundance. It's whatever you want to call it, right? Flourishing, self actualization.

But that always depended on things like autonomy and self direction and the ability to pursue fulfilling lives, not just do what you're told. And so that idea of scientific management, it transforms work. And then not surprisingly, what happens in, in the business world will eventually trickle down into education, because if we're all having factories and we're having, you know, standardized systems, then what's the point of education except for to feed that?

And so you see that creep in and things like bells, you know, and rotating through classes and all, okay, fine, whatever. But the idea is we're still like, We're still stuck with that, right? Work is sort of this devil's bargain that like, okay, it's not meant to be enjoyed, you just go do it so they can go find fulfillment somewhere else, but at my think tank, Populace, we have more private opinion data on the American public than anybody else.

And I say private opinion because no one's telling the truth about what they think right now. And so you've got to have methods to get around that. And some of the most interesting things to me, of all the work we've done have to do with the transformation of the workplace in terms of what people really want out of work now, and then also what they want out of education.

And people don't want a better mousetrap. They don't want more of the same. They want pretty profoundly different things. So, for example, at work, the trade off priorities for people are about being able to do work that has a positive impact on other people, to, to be able to show up as yourself, right? That craving for authenticity, which to me is just the expression of your individuality. And yeah, they want to get paid a decent wage. They want, you know, all the normal things, but there's this aspect of they don't need work to be everything, but they do now expect work to be a positive force for the life they want to live.

Same with education. If I could tell you like the one line to sum up what's going on in education in America today is that people want different, not better. And so they want a different purpose for this system. Again, they don't want the selection system anymore. They just don't. They believe their kids have something to offer.

They believe other people's kids do. And they are expecting that this thing actually cultivate that. And it's just that gap between what they want and the reality of the system as it is right now that is causing such a lack of confidence and trust in the System.

Lainie Rowell: When you're talking about your work at Populace, I want you to just quickly explain, because I think the methodology is really interesting, how you get to the private opinion. Because your most recent book, Collective Illusion, talking about, how we are beings of conformity, and so we tend to say things that we think, you'll say it better, so I'm going to stop talking, but you know, kind of, how do you see all that?

Todd Rose: Collective illusions are just basically social phenomena where A majority of people in a group end up going along with something they don't privately agree with just because they incorrectly think most everybody else in the group likes it or believes it, right?

So, as a result, entire groups end up doing something that most nobody wanted to do. Now, we've actually known about these things for a long time. You think about, like, the Emperor's New Clothes, is a, Cautionary tale of that, right? Everyone just keeps going along with this naked emperor, right?

Like, whatever. But the scientific study of it is about a hundred years old. And up until ten years ago, you could have counted on one hand the number of societal Influencing Collective Illusions that existed. But since the rise of social media, for reasons I'll explain, like they're just out of control.

Like if you name anything that matters in American society today, it's a 50 50. Like it's a coin toss whether you are even right about what the majority believes. It's shocking. And so the underlying reason for this is, as you mentioned, all human beings have a conformity bias. We all do. We are not a lone wolf species.

We're a pack species, right? And all that means is, all else equal, you'd rather be with your group, not against your group. This is a survival thing, right? It also is how we get culture and social learning. So we don't have to learn everything the hard way. So there's some benefit to conformity within reason.

But for conforming to work, you actually have to know what your group thinks. Because then what are you conforming to? And this is where we get in trouble. So, your brain for how awesome as it is, it's actually not terribly smart. Because, here's how your brain estimates group consensus. This is no kidding.

Your brain assumes the loudest voices, repeated the most, are the majority. So, let's just focus on social media for a second. So on what was called Twitter, or on X, Pew Research has shown 80 percent of all content is created by 10 percent of the users. And it turns out those 10 percent aren't even remotely representative of the general public.

They are extreme on almost every social issue. So you can see the problem. If 10 percent of people hold an idea, but you think it's 80%, unless you're willing to go against your group, you're gonna either say nothing at all, or you might even lie about what you think to go along with the group. But if enough people stop talking, they start self silencing, then the only voices anybody hears from are these fringes and The Results of Collective Illusion. So, this is where we're at today. We have research on this, but so do a lot of people, that consistently, somewhere between 52-60 percent of Americans, admit to self silencing. Admit! Those are the people who will admit it! That they're, oh yeah, I'm not, I don't, I can't tell the truth about my opinions on most things, like, and so, how does a democracy function if we can't be honest with each other?

We knew for the things we want to do in terms of paradigm shifts, we had to have an accurate understanding of, what do people really want? And it was funny, we started into the private opinion stuff right after the 2016 election, because it was like, well, I mean, whatever you think of that, that was not what anyone thought was about to happen.

And, so, it turned out that there's all kinds of methodologies in academia. For how you get around, say social pressure, complex trade-offs. It's just they weren't widely applied because they, they take a level of sort of expertise. They're, because it's not just polling. They're expensive to do and they're time consuming.

But, from our standpoint, it was like, but if no one's telling the truth, what choice do you have, right? You, you need to do this. So we started doing that and to your point, how do you get to private opinion? Every method that works offers some combination of anonymity and plausible deniability.

Like, that's the key. Here's what's interesting. So we have a couple of methods that we use. We have one coming out in about a month called the Social Pressure Index that literally is measuring across the entire landscape of American culture where are we flat out lying to each other?

Not just self sciencing. We are lying. And what's the truth. These kind of methods, the one I'll talk about right now that, that is, we've done a lot in education is, you can't have everything. This is the funny thing. Like, in education, there's not enough time and money to have everything. So it's not enough to say, do you want social emotional learning?

It's not the right question. Lots of people will say yes to that. What will you sacrifice for it? So it's about trade offs. So we have this methodology we've used called conjoined analysis, which is widely used. In fact, here's my, you know, iPhone. Apple uses that methodology to decide what combination of features and price point go into an iPhone, right?

Because if I say, do you want an OLED screen? Of course, you're going to say yes. But do you want that if it costs $300 more? Do you want it more than you want more memory? Like, those are trade offs. So, Conjoint, instead of saying, Do you want X for education? What we do is we build all these attributes that everything in education could be.

So the last one we did was like, 60 some odd trade off priorities. From outcomes, to processes, to assessments, to what they learn, to who decides. And it's kind of cool. If you take this instrument, and You're never just point blank asked one thing. It will be like, hey, we're thinking about the future of education, like if you're making a choice for your child or for whatever, and you're shown two education or school A, school B.

And it just randomly grabs five of the attributes from the pool of say 60, and that's what school A has. School B has randomly grabs five other ones. That's all you know. Okay, if those were your two choices, which one is a better education to you? And then you do it again, and again, and again, and unbeknownst to you, you're literally trading off every attribute against every other attribute.

Why that works so well is, let's say I'm like, oh, I know I'm not supposed to say, college prep should be the goal, but college prep will show up with other things you care about, it'll show up with other things you don't, so you can't really game it, and we were the first to apply that socially the New York Times ran a front page thing on, eventually showing it's the best predictor of elections, that methodology, so now everybody likes it, which is great but it's into that space. We always do it where you, we can develop a model of like, what are your trade off priorities personally, for education?

And then we always do it again with you saying, what do you think most Americans would say? So now we know what you want, and we know what you think everybody wants. And, it's just ridiculous. When you look at the American public's trade off priorities for K 12, in private, it is all the things we've been talking about.

It's individualized, not standardized. In fact, every individualized attribute ranks higher than every single standardized attribute in America now. When you ask about the purpose, it's like people want to be prepared for college, but they don't want it to be the purpose. It's about prep for careers and meaningful work for kids.

And it's really pretty remarkable. Mastery learning, not standardized assessments, bell curve assessments. Okay, great. Everything you'd hope for, you'd want flexible learning environments. When you ask them what they think most people will say, You get a completely different picture. You get something that looks exactly like the system we have.

They think that the number one trade off priority for people for K 12 is college prep. It's just not true. So we're operating under these illusions. And that, that might sound, okay, well it's just an illusion, well the problem is in education, I can't solve that myself, right? Unless I go to private school, it's sort of like, if no one else wants it, why am I going to agitate for it?

It'll never change. So we all want something different, we don't think we all want something different, so we're all ticked off, right? So we do a lot of work shattering those illusions, using pop culture. television, movies, where you just seed the private opinion in the backgrounds of things that people watch, and you can, you can have quite an effect.

But, I'll just say, the good news is, the fact that these illusions exist, history shows us if you can shatter them, you can unlock change at a scale and a pace that would seem unimaginable otherwise.

Lainie Rowell: I think it's so fascinating how, especially because kind of what I'm hearing, and correct me if I'm wrong, is that we're potentially closer together and more in alignment in areas than we think we are, but we don't want to speak out because we feel like we're the minority, but we're actually the silent majority.

Todd Rose: It is shocking, and I'm not just trying to have good things to say. So we have studied private opinion on everything from K 12, higher ed, the workplace, criminal justice, health care, broader culture stuff, our views of success in the American dream, our aspirations for the country, you name it, right?

Yeah, we are divided on a few things, but you will be shocked in private how much common ground we have. The problem is, we just don't think that's true. We genuinely believe that we're in this minority. When we are a silent majority, and so the problem is, is it becomes self fulfilling, right? You're sitting in a society going, I don't want this, but I am pretty sure everyone around me...

Imagine if you thought that most everyone in your neighborhood would steal from you if they could. How would that change how you treat them? You know what I mean? How you engage. This is true in our most fundamental principles, our values, our aspirations for life, for our country. We are walking around, with so much in common, but we believe we are so far apart, and so we behave that way.

Lainie Rowell: And our brains, trying to be efficient, are making these assumptions. We just need to stop assuming we know what people are thinking and feeling and be more curious. Ask the question.

Todd Rose: That's it. That's it.

Social media and our broader technologies have led to a place where you can no longer trust your brain to tell you what your group thinks anymore. And that's never going to change. The good news is, the easy way out of this is a deep commitment to tolerance. Pluralism, right? Knowing that, that every time we try to silence someone we disagree with, we are contributing to these illusions.

And at some point, we have to know better. And we have to know that the only people that don't want you to speak up are people who know they are in the minority. Because it is the only tool they have to win. Because if you really believe that most people agreed with you, all you would want is for people to be able to speak freely.

Right? So, just know, if I had one call to the audience is, we can get somewhere pretty amazing as a society. We're not in decline. We're a young country. We're going through our adolescent phase, right? Little identity crisis. Every one of us has a role to play. And it will sound so simple, but I promise you, you will be amazed where we can go together if you do this basic thing.

We've got to find the moral courage to be honest with each other about what we believe. Doesn't mean we're right. We could be terribly wrong. So we can do this respectfully, but you, you owe it to each other to be honest about your views. And we have to find the civic courage to make it safe for other people to do the same thing.

If we do that, these illusions will shatter, our shared values will be revealed, and those will help guide where we go together as a society, including in education.

Lainie Rowell: Moral courage, civic courage, and intellectual humility.

Todd Rose: Absolutely.

Lainie Rowell: I love that. Okay, I'm so sad to end this conversation, but I gotta let you go.

What's the best way for people to connect with you?

Todd Rose: So you can find me online, ToddRose.com. All of our research is at Populace.Org but just Google. It comes up.

Lainie Rowell: Amazing. This has been super enlightening for me, and I'm really familiar with your work. I hope others will check out Collective Illusions, your most recent book.

There's also Dark Horse, the book before that, and The End of Average, where I became a super fan. So, Todd, thank you for this time, and thank you all for listening.

Todd Rose: Thank you.

Episode 92 - The Art of Doing Less and Overcoming Overfunctioning

Shownotes:

Are you an overfunctioner? It’s not a feeling, it’s not a way of being, it’s a way of doing (constantly). And this behavior can lead to loneliness and threaten others’ sense of belonging.

BTW- In case you haven't heard, I'm thrilled to bring you something new: I'm aligning podcast episodes with ⁠⁠⁠⁠Thrive Global articles⁠⁠⁠⁠!

That’s right, my friends, this means you can choose your adventure with each story - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Art of Doing Less and Overcoming Overfunctioning⁠⁠⁠ on Thrive!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 91 - Nourishment for a JoyFull Life with Radhi Devlukia

Shownotes:

Have you ever had such a joyful conversation with someone that you find yourself fully immersed in the experience? That describes my wholehearted conversation with Radhi Devlukia. Adored by millions of followers on the socials for her dedication to cultivating a mindful lifestyle with her vibrant, delicious recipes, wellness insights, and genuine authenticity, Radhi brings deep joy through conscious cooking and eating. As Joyfull, her brand new book, makes its way into our hearts, minds, and kitchens, I’m delighted to share the wisdom and inspiration that flowed from our chat.

About Our Guest:

Radhi is a plant based cook and recipe developer, mission-driven entrepreneur, a fitness & well-being enthusiast and a trained dietitian, nutritionist and ayurvedic student.

Whether it’s her recipes for a hearty main dish, decadent desserts or lighter bites, Radhi creates recipes to bring more joy into your life, more spice into your kitchen and more vitality into your body!

Thrive Global Article:

JoyFull Cooking, Eating, and Living with Radhi Devlukia

Connect with and learn from Radhi Devlukia:

Book: Joyfull 

Website: RadhiDevlukia.com

Instagram: @radhidevlukia

YouTube: @radhidevlu

TikTok: @radhidevlukia

Facebook: @radhidevlukia1

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: [00:00:00] Hello friends. I hope you are ready to be joyful because that is what you are going to get from this episode.

I was incredibly blessed to have this powerful conversation with Radhi Devlukia .

I'm so deeply inspired by her work in cultivating a conscious lifestyle through her recipes, health tips, wellness videos, and so much more. You may have already seen her on Instagram. And as we're releasing this episode and I'm sharing the article on Thrive Global, her book Joyfull is being released. No matter when you're listening to this, you are going to get so much out of this conversation. We talk about our relationship with food, the journey from being a seeker to a sharer. We talk about gratitude and savoring. She shares a hugely important practice that is highly underrated and very impactful. There's so many important topics that come up in this conversation that I think we connect to all different aspects of our lives.

I'm so excited you get to hear Rahdi's wisdom. Enjoy.

So welcome, Radhi. How are you today?

Radhi Devlukia: Yeah, I'm doing really well. How are you?

Lainie Rowell: I'm amazing now that I get to talk to you. And I'm so grateful to your team that they gave me a sneak peek at the book, Joyfull, coming out... By the time people are listening to this, it's out. Like, launch day is when I'm releasing this.

Radhi Devlukia: I know!

I'm so glad that you managed to look through it. Did anything scream out at you?

Lainie Rowell: I actually made a recipe for my family last night. And. I just couldn't wait. And so I got a chance to start looking at it. I was like, I'm going for it. And first of all, the recipe started with "one- pot". So you had me right there.

And it was Lemony Spaghetti. And I'm, I'm like obsessed with lemon. It's one of my favorite ingredients. And so I made that for my family. I actually have quotes for you that I want to share from my kids because my husband's out of town so he didn't get to try it. He's very jealous because we had a lovely meal without him but he's he's away on work and he'll get to have some when he gets back.

So my daughter who's 13, Kendall said, "I'm super selective with my food and I loved it." And then my son Blake who's 10, his... first of all his eyes just completely lit up when he took his first bite and he had it without the gremolata.

So he had it without that first and then I'm like, do you want to try it with this on it?

And he's like, yeah, I'll try it. And he goes, wow, that's even better. And I was just like, that's amazing. So he said "it's my new favorite pasta".

Radhi Devlukia: Oh my god, you know what? Hearing that from children, because children have very specific palates as well. I find that, you know, if, I always think that if my niece and nephew love, I do like a 10 minute pasta sauce for them.

And when they tell me they love it, it means way more to me than when, you know, even a food critic comes and tells me that they love the food. I'm like, this is everything.

Lainie Rowell: Well, I had to start off with sharing that because, first of all, My daughter, she called herself selective. There are other words that other people would use, but I appreciated her word choice.

And so she doesn't have a huge spectrum of foods that she selects from. But my son, we actually think he might be a super taster because he has like, he doesn't, he doesn't like chocolate, which sometimes, I don't know if this is like a myth or not, but sometimes they say super tasters, people who are really sensitive to taste don't like chocolate.

Anyways, they both loved it. We are super excited to make our way through the book. It's just amazing.

Radhi Devlukia: Well, thank you so much for trying the recipes. That honestly is like, there's one thing about buying the book and one thing about having the book, but then when people start just, you know, diving into it, like that's why you write it because you want people to experience it.

And so thank you. Thank you for introducing it to your children. That has made my day hearing that they enjoyed it. And yeah, I can't wait for you to try more and give me some good feedback about them.

Lainie Rowell: Well, we're super excited.

Let's take a step back. I just, I couldn't wait. And by the way, I I've been through the whole book. It's so beautiful. And it's really more than a collection of recipes. And I want to hear about your relationship with food, how you went from you know, to use your words, a serial seeker to authoring this book that is about really conscious cooking, conscious eating, and just thriving.

So tell us a little bit about the journey.

Radhi Devlukia: Yeah, sure. So I born and raised in London. And I come from an Indian family where food was and is and always will be the center of everything. It's how we share love, it's how we share laughter. It's how we just create our relationships with each other.

It's always been through eating great food every single day. And my mom had a full time job when I was growing up. And still every single day there was fresh breakfast, lunch, and dinner that was served to us from so much love. And I, at the time, you know, it kind of was so normal to me because that's what I had grown up as.

But as I grew up, I realized how sacred and how wonderful that is to have a mom that has been able to create, not just You know, so it's such thoughtful meals and they were just vibrant and delicious. And she would think about all the ingredients she was putting in and how she was nourishing us. And I grew up and I was born vegetarian.

And so and obviously from an Indian background. And so all the flavors were just so colorful and vibrant, so many spices in there. So I think I feel like a lot of my. love for food and my elevated palate, as I definitely feel like I had growing up was because I experienced her, my mom's love through cooking and then also experienced such delicious food.

And so my palate and my love for food definitely comes from experiencing that love through her. And then I actually studied nutrition and became a dietician in hospital for. For my college degree, that's what I did. And it was great because I always wanted to be in a patient facing job.

At first I wanted to be a doctor, but I didn't get the grades for that. And so I ended up doing nutrition, but I'm so grateful that I did that because it just began this journey of having a healthy relationship with food and really understanding like what food does to our body, how it fuels our body, what it breaks down to and how those different parts affect our body and how it can cause disease in our body.

And it was the foundation of understanding the science behind food. And then I moved to New York and I started, I came across the practice of Ayurveda. Now Ayurveda for anybody who doesn't know is a Ancient health science over 5, 000 years old, and it's all based on holistic and natural means of healing our body.

And what I realized was I had already been practicing that from a young age because so much of it was passed down from my ancestors to my parents, my grandparents, and they passed on through our family. And so whether it's having specific spices when we've got a cough or a cold or whether my mum's making a tumeric patty to put whenever I've had cuts or bruises on my leg, you know, spices and healing the body through nature has been such an integral part of my growing up.

But when I got the opportunity to study and learn about it, it felt like. You know, when you find the people that feel like home, this practice felt like home to me because it felt like the most natural way of connecting to my body, the most natural way to connecting to people and the environment around me.

And so I just fell in love with it. And so that brought me closer to the way that I wanted to live my own life. And so I tried out all these Ayurvedic practices, the way you can, the way you cook your food, conscious cooking, mindful eating. And it really is just a practice of understanding your body. Iro means life, by the way, and veda means knowledge.

So essentially it's a, it's a science of life. And so essentially what it teaches you, it sounds more complicated than it is, but it brings you back to yourself. It teaches you how to take your health back into your own hands, how you can understand your body deeply, what it needs on an individual basis, not based on what this influencer told you or what this book told you to do.

No. What does my body need? How do I tune into it? And how do I create an environment externally and internally to have optimal health? And all the different ways of doing that. So that's basically what I've done in a nutshell and how I got to write this book is honestly, I see myself as a grateful student of many incredible teachers, and I'm so my way of showing gratitude to the teachers that I've had in my life is by pouring it into a book where I feel I can share them with other people.

So really, I see myself as a bridge and a vessel for people to connect to them and the knowledge that they've given me, but for me to be able to, I have a platform for me to be able to share it with, it would be a lost opportunity when I've gained so much from it. And so my teacher once said, knowledge is so useless unless it's shared.

And so it's just my way of trying to, yeah, share whatever has brought me joy in my life and, and give it to other people.

Lainie Rowell: It's so beautiful. So I'm just gonna, you know, Amazon doesn't let you do a review for a book that you can't actually hold in your hands yet. , and so I have it.

Radhi Devlukia: I know. I heard about that.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, so, but I already have it written, and so I will, as soon as soon as...

Radhi Devlukia: You're just so sweet. Thank, thank you.

Lainie Rowell: Oh no, it's my love language and so gratitude, and when I hear you talking about it, and that's one of the reasons that I am so drawn to you and the things that you share. And I love how you're talking about this conscious cooking, mindful eating, and you know, gratitude is a huge part of my life, that is my focus for the last, you know, so many years.

And I love that on your website, every recipe you end with, say a prayer of gratitude, serve with love, and eat with joy. And it's just like I'm getting like all the warm fuzzies just right now even just reading that it's such a beautiful like take a moment And I just wonder if you want to expand a little bit more on kind of what should we be doing to be more consciously cooking, consciously eating?

Radhi Devlukia: For me, it starts with everything from when we just start to pick the ingredients that we're cooking. And so what I mean by that is, one, is this going to benefit my body? Is this going to benefit the people that I'm about to feed?

Well, whoever you're cooking for, taking into consideration from the moment you start buying those ingredients, how is this going to affect me? And so whether that means looking in at the back and looking at the ingredients. List trying to identify the things that you don't necessarily want to invite into your body and you don't want to have in your body to picking foods that might be seasonal, to really help to nourish your body in that environment.

That it's been, that it's been growing in and that it is used to. Am I picking foods, which will affect my body in the right way for this season that I'm living in. And so we can start from when we're buying the ingredients and then when you get to cooking it, there's a, there's so much evidence around.

You know, I don't know whether you've heard of that study where they play different music to different waters, and then they froze them, and then they saw all the different particles and how they combine after having been played all these different types of music, some aggressive, some calm. And so, what that taught me and what Ayurveda taught me is that energy is everywhere.

It's in everything. And so we have the ability to transfer energy. And so through our hands, through our intentions, when we start to cook, not only do we have the opportunity to fuel our physical body through the food we're eating, yes, but we also have the ability to fuel someone even deeper than that through what we pour into the food, which is why when you eat your mom's food, there is nothing like it.

It's not the food. It's the love that gets poured into it. And so the next step would be, what am I pouring into this? What do I want to feed this person, not just physically, but emotionally and spiritually for them to feel more than just a physical nourishment. And so there's that process of when you're creating the meal and then there's a really beautiful practice where you know, everything that we receive and everything that keeps us alive comes from the universe.

It comes from the earth that we live on and so there's a lovely practice in my culture and in Ayurveda where you offer back whatever the meal that you have got in front of you, you offer it back to the universe, you offer it back to everyone and everything that has been instrumental in bringing that dish to you, to your plate.

And essentially what that brings about is gratitude. And so having a moment of prayer or a moment of gratitude before you eat. You know, there's been studies to show that when your body's in anxiety and it's doing so many different things, you know, eating your burrito while you are, do reading something or while you're online, your body actually doesn't get a moment to realize that, oh, food is coming.

Let me start creating the enzymes on my tongue that is necessary to break the food down. Let me start creating the juices, the digestive juices that need to be flowing through my stomach to get ready for the food that's coming. We forget to send those cues because we're so distracted. And so the food actually digests so much better when you have a moment just before where you are having peace, mindfulness, and a little bit of gratitude.

And people may say, you know, I don't have time for that. Well, it takes 10 seconds. "Thank you so much for this food that's been put in front of me. I appreciate it so deeply, and I hope that it nourishes my body, my mind, and my heart." That took like 10 seconds. And so having that practice before you eat, and then, you know, conscious eating is... Consciousness just means presence. I'm presence. Am I being present with this food? So when I'm eating it, what can I notice? What flavors am I picking up on? You know, what, how is it making me feel as I'm eating? Is there a warmness that comes by eating this comforting food?

Is it salad that's making me feel a little bit lighter in my body? You know, starting to recognize how the food we are eating is also affecting our body. And so that can be when eating and then afterwards It's starting that process all over again when we eat our next meal. And so it can take us all the way from buying the food to the moment that it actually comes through our body.

Lainie Rowell: Basically to me, the book is about nourishing the body, the mind, and the soul. It's really very, very, I don't have a good word for it right now, but it's, it's all encompassing. And the love that you talk about with like a mom making food for her kids, like that comes through in the book, you to us, like I feel that. And so there's so much in the book. There's There's a grace that comes through in that you're making recommendations, but you're not trying to push something on people in a way that's like If you don't do this, you have failed or, you know, there's, it's such a, it's such a lovely way that you approach this.

Radhi Devlukia: Through my life, I think about the ways that I've learned and deeply been able to create change in my life. And it's never through fear. It's never through feeling someone is pressuring me into something. It's actually either having seen people lead by example and watching and observing them.

Or it's been through love and knowledge. And so I've noticed that in my life. And so for me, I don't even think about like the, the idea of judgment or scaring someone into something doesn't create sustainable change at all. But education and love has like the power to do that completely and, and create such transformative behaviors and habits.

And so I'm so happy that you felt that through the book too.

Lainie Rowell: The love and the knowledge come through and even when you're giving recipes and you're saying you could use this and then in parentheses or this and it's, it's very freeing and liberating to feel like, okay, it's not a, it has to be so rigid and this, or it's not good at all.

And so that to me is just something I wanted to share as, as a reader and a fan. Now again, this is more than a collection of recipes. There's so much you share in Joyfull. One of the things that you say is, "what you eat, along with your daily habits and the thoughts you think, has the ability to completely transform every aspect of your health".

So I would love for you to share a specific practice or, I love the word ritual, because to me ritual is hopefully more mindful, but something that is underrated yet impactful. Something that you're like, I wish everyone knew this.

Radhi Devlukia: Breath. Honestly, breathwork has changed the way that I exist through the day.

Like, whether it's breathwork that eases my anxiety in the morning, that energizes me midday, or that puts me to sleep and relaxes me in the evening, I use breath to really navigate my emotions and my moods. So, when I first, before I came onto here, I took three deep breaths and when I notice myself speaking really fast and I'm getting a little bit excited or anxious, all I have to do is actually notice my breath and pay attention to it and it completely changes how fast my mind is going, how my body's feeling.

Just by taking three breaths now, if anybody just did it that's listening, you'll notice your shoulders soften, you'll notice things like slow down in your mind, your body, everything just changes and so One of the biggest powers that I have found that has helped me strengthen my workouts when I'm wanting to do an intense workout, my breath will help me get through it.

And so every part of your life is impacted by breath. And actually it's in Ayurveda it talks about how nowadays there's very few of us that take actual deep breaths. We all live in shallow breath. That's how we function throughout the day. And so that one reduces our energy levels because we're actually not efficiently breathing.

We're not getting enough oxygen through our body our mental focus, our attention, our anxiety levels, like all of that is impacted by just not breathing right. And so it's something we take for granted because we do it however many times a day, so many times a day. But how many times are you paying attention to it?

How many times are you noticing, Oh my gosh, my breath is only coming up to my neck. Do I actually take a full deep breath where I feel the air travelling down my throat, my chest, my stomach, and into my entire body? How often are we doing that? And so Breath has been really powerful for me, and so breath is definitely, and actually in the book I talk about the different types of breathworks that there are, because depending on the speed or the pace or the style of breath you do, there's different breathworks that do different things for your body, which is incredible.

And so I share a lot of the different types of breathworks you can do to induce a different effect on the body.

Lainie Rowell: It's so powerful. And I'm just going to share a quick little story. Cause this is, this will start to sound like a champagne problem. I don't get massages very often, but I remember years ago,

Radhi Devlukia: I love a champagne problem hit me with it.

Lainie Rowell: Years ago, I was getting a massage and I had a masseuse that was a very loud breather, but intentional. I now realize what this masseuse was doing. They were intentionally trying to get me to breathe more deeply and more intentionally because I'm in a massage and I'm shallow breathing and I'm like, I'm like tense in a massage.

This should be when I am really relaxing. And so ever since then, I have been so much more aware of how it's contagious and you can actually do this. Like, if you're not going to want to say like. Hey, you should do this breath, like. Do it kind of loud and exaggerated and the person around you will actually pick it up.

It's kind of amazing.

Radhi Devlukia: Definitely. I found that in my yoga classes and honestly, even my niece and my nephew, like whenever I find them, I'm like, let's just breathe together. Like just for a second, if you're getting, if we're getting overwhelmed, you're getting upset, like, let's just breathe for a second. Me, I mean, I do that with Jay as well.

I'm like, if we're in bed and he's like, Oh, I'm struggling to sleep. Or, you know, if we're, we're talking a lot, I'm like, okay, let's just, let's just take three deep breaths together. And it makes such a difference. But just, again, that's through observation, right? If you end up doing something, it filters out through to everybody else that's even around you.

So I do that when I see someone, you know, it's like when we see someone yawning or you see someone take a deep breath, you're like, Oh, okay. Yeah, that felt good.

Lainie Rowell: It really does. And one of the things that I noticed throughout the things that you share in your work is this appreciation for the unique and dynamic.

Earlier you were talking about with your diet, the seasons in your life, there might be different choices that you make for that. And then I hear that in the practices you're sharing too, right? Because you do the three deep breaths, and you were mentioning there's different breaths for different purposes.

And so. Is, is the three deep breaths, is that your, is that your go to, is that your favorite, or do you have some that you're like, these are my go to?

Radhi Devlukia: Yeah, so if I'm trying to just get out of my mind and be present again in my body, like they say, your breath connects your mind back to your body, so usually when we're in anxiety it's either we're worrying about the past or our mind has flown to the future.

And so breath can be the anchor between our mind and our body. And so, for me on a, if I'm doing it, like just before this interview, I will take three deep breaths. And what I mean by that is exactly what I said before, where you're taking the breath through and you're noticing it traveled down your throat, your chest, your stomach, and then filtering out through the rest of your body.

And that is a deep breath. And you're feeling your stomach being, you know, blowing up like a balloon as you're breathing in. And when you're exhaling, you're emptying the breath from the stale breath that's stagnant in you, the energy that's stagnant in you, you are pouring it back out. And so that is usually my go-to as I'm making my way through the day, if I'm like, got a hundred things to do and suddenly I'm like, okay, wait, lemme just take three deep breaths.

But then there's breathwork. That does different things. So one of my favorites you know, when you get that midday slump and you don't want to reach for a coffee and you don't want to reach for any kind of caffeine or sugar, there's this one breath called Kapalbhati, which translates to skull shining breath? That's essentially what it translates to because it just increases the oxygen that travels through your body. And so it's this practice of you're doing fast, short exhales with deep inhales. So should I give you an example of what it sounds like?

Lainie Rowell: I'd love that.

Radhi Devlukia: Okay, so this is how it goes.

Radhi Devlukia: And so essentially what you're doing is short, short, deep exhales and deeper inhales. And what that does is you'll suddenly find yourself going a little bit lightheaded. Like you do 20 of them and you, you will suddenly notice this tingling in your head. That's because there is so much oxygen kind of traveling through your body.

And so I use that midday to really get my energy levels back up to get me focused and attentive. So if you're struggling to pay attention and you're scrolling and you're all over the place, try that breath out. It's great. And one more I will share because there's the left side and the right side of the brain.

I'm like, constantly in a creative mode where I can just be all over the place. I'm like, let me do the bit of this and then a bit of this and then a bit of this. And so if you need to be logical when you're someone who's used to being quite free and creative or the other way around, our left and right hemispheres of our brain are connected to our left and right nostrils.

So left connects to right and right connects to the left. And so to rebalance. And to get back into like a, a balance zone, if you've been using one side more than the other, there's a breathwork called Anulam Vilam, which means the alternate nostril breathing. And essentially what you do is you are closing one nostril and breathing in from one side blocking the side you just breathed it in from and then releasing from. So breathing in from the left, releasing from the right, breathing in from the right, releasing from the left. And so you hold each side as you're doing it, each nostril. I mean, if anybody's listening and they didn't understand that, there's so many, you know, Google, you can Google it and you'll find it, but that is an amazing one to help just rebalance both sides of your brain and to become neutral with both. So I, I love that breathwork.

Lainie Rowell: That's a good one. I know, I know some breathwork and I hadn't heard of that one. So that's a very good one. Is that one in the book?

Radhi Devlukia: Yes. Yes. Both of them are in the book. And there's a few other breathworks in the book too to invoke different things in your body.

Lainie Rowell: So I hope those who are listening slash reading understand that there's so much to the book and I wish I had a more powerful word to describe how it is just about living well. And that's really it really is.

Radhi Devlukia: A little bit more Joyfull like every single thing that we do throughout the day. It's like, Every single little thing that we allow into our senses that we do every single day has the ability to either bring us joy or take us the other way.

And so it's about creating these little tiny moments throughout the day that slowly increase the joy that we're feeling. And I think it doesn't have to be, you know, we always end up thinking things have to be a big leap or a big practice and huge changes. But actually, it just takes these little things, like breath, like eating food that makes us, that doesn't just, and that was one of the reasons I wanted to call it Joyfull too, was because, like, we shouldn't have to choose, and I think we've gotten used to thinking we do.

We don't have to choose between food that makes us feel good and brings us joy. Food can be both. That can be both. And so I think we're so used to thinking if I want to be healthy and if I want my body to feel good, I have to eat food that doesn't taste good, but that's not the case.

And so I really wanted to marry the two and remind people that, you know, food can make us feel good and bring us a whole lot of joy too. And we don't have to choose between that to feel great in our body.

Lainie Rowell: Thousand percent. And that actually brings me to... we talked about the importance of family and how that's part of your story, is that this was how love was shown to you and how you're now sending it out to the universe.

For those who are working with littles, whether it's through parenting or maybe they're educators or whatever their role is, and they want to really promote this healthy, mindful lifestyle, what are some things they can maybe do to involve kids or bring kids into this?

Radhi Devlukia: Yeah, good question.

I think as soon as children and even adults get to start playing with their hands and using things and touching ingredients and different textures and experimenting with things, I think allowing a child to get into the kitchen and explore is such an important part of them creating healthy habits with food.

So even if it's a little bit, like my, my sister does this with the kids, they'll take part together in making the food and it may just be a small part where maybe they get to have their little plastic knife or whatever, the safety knife and they get to do a bit of the chopping. And then introducing new, different flavors all the time.

You know, we think that with children, we should limit them to really simple flavors, but actually spices are such a beautiful way to elevate the palate of children from a young age. So they get to experience not just the flavors of the food, but the benefits of them to the benefits of the spices and the healing benefits of them also.

And so I think actually incorporating more spices and more flavor from a young age is a great way to create that relationship with food from a young age. And then I think it should be okay where if, you know, if you think about how fast our palates change, there'll be, you know, a few years ago I really didn't like okra and now I love okra.

And so I feel like we have to give children grace also where if they said no to something last week, let them try again this week. And they may still say no, and that's fine. But we all have gone through our experiential phase of knowing what we like and don't like. And so allowing children the space to do that too.

It's okay if they say this week they don't like something, but then maybe next week or next month they might. And trying to cook it all in different ways. You can hide vegetables in a lot of ways. And you can hide a lot of things by making them just look cute or pretty or doing them in different shapes, you know taking a tomato and like cutting it into different shapes or, you know, making the salad feel a little bit more exciting with colors. I always think when you have a variety of colors on your plate, whether you're an adult or a child, it makes it so much more exciting. So when you're doing your shop, like pick colors that are different from each other. Pick colors of vegetables that are from different parts because that also allows you to have more nutrients in your diet because the colors represent different vitamins and minerals that are in the foods, but also makes it feels so much more fun.

Lainie Rowell: It does. Eat the rainbow, right?

Radhi Devlukia: Eat the rainbow, exactly. Yeah.

Lainie Rowell: You want all those different colors. I learned that from you watching one of your Instagram reels talking about you really want to try and get all these different colors so you can get all your different vitamins. So, always learning from you.

I know I have to start to wrap up because you're launching a book! And so.

Radhi Devlukia: This went so fast. It was such a great conversation, wasn't it?

Lainie Rowell: I am so excited for people to get their hands on Joyfull and you've shared so many nuggets of wisdom and it's just, I'm so happy for you to get to put this out to the world. I'm happy for everyone who gets to, to be a part of it. And just what is your biggest hope for what people take away from Joyfull?

Radhi Devlukia: Good question. My biggest hope is, yeah, my intention around this book was one for people to connect back to their own bodies, to connect back to the food that they're eating, and for them to become active participants in their health, to really know that they can have the ability to transform their health just through the choices that they are making on a daily basis.

I also want people's spice cupboards to be filled by the end of this book. This book is about creating vibrant, delicious food that is also healing for their body. And spices are such an integral part of that. And I have a whole table in my book of all the different spices, their benefits, and how to use them.

And so I hope and pray that this book allows you to explore more into spices. And thirdly, what I said before that, you don't have to pick between the food that makes you feel good and brings you joy. It can and should be both. And I hope this book serves as a reminder of that.

Lainie Rowell: I am happy to report that my spice cupboard is fuller, thanks to you.

It still has a little bit of room. I'm going to keep adding as I go through Joyfull. And it's really, I'm not going to give this away because I want people to get the book, but there were some real aha moments I had about ingredients that I had been putting in food to get a certain type of flavor that in small amounts is actually good for you, but as I was reading I reflected on Wow, these ingredients are like base in most of my recipes and the results are not good and wait a minute this is all starting to fall into place like oh I think I'm starting to like connect the dots here so that's it.

Radhi Devlukia: I know exactly what you're talking about but thank you for leaving us a little cliffhanger for people.

Lainie Rowell: Little teaser, you gotta, you gotta grab your copy of Joyfull. Which by the time people are listening to this or reading the Thrive article is out and I already pre ordered my physical copy again thank you to your team for getting me a a preview copy, but I want to hold it in my hand and hug it. That's what my friends and I do we hug our books.

Radhi Devlukia: Can't wait!

Lainie Rowell: Well, where can people purchase Joyfull and how can they stay connected with you?

Radhi Devlukia: Yeah, so the book is available at www.Joyfullbook.com, so that's J-O-Y-F-U-L-L book com. And I'm @RadhiDevlukia on Instagram and I share recipes there, wellness practices and everything that brings my life a little bit more joy.

Lainie Rowell: Well, you are in my feed and you bring me joy. I love you are so authentic, so real, and it is very much appreciated that you put out things that make, make me feel better. So, and

Radhi Devlukia: I just want to say that I honestly feel, you know, you, you mentioned that you had been practicing gratitude for a good few years now, and it's been a focus of yours.

And I honestly feel such genuine, loving energy through this laptop from you, like the way that the enthusiasm that you felt about my book made me feel more enthusiastic about my book. Like it's been so wonderful speaking to you and honestly, you've made me feel excited and more confident about my book just through speaking to you.

So thank you for that.

Lainie Rowell: That's so nice. Thank you so much.

Radhi Devlukia: I mean it.

Lainie Rowell: I talk about, I struggle with indebtedness, so I'm going to, but I'm going to take that fully because that was really lovely of you to say that. Thank you very much. Okay. We're going to, in the show notes, make sure all the links are there to connect with you.

I really want people to just reach out. And obviously I've said it a few times, but I'll say it one more time. Grab Joyfull. It's amazing. And okay. I just have to throw this out there because. The first impression is the visual, right? So, wow, just like stunning, like stunning, your food, your photographer I have so much love and respect for photographers.

It's not an easy job. Good ones make it look easy, but wow. Wow.

Radhi Devlukia: She's incredible. Alana, shout out to you. You are phenomenal. You made all my visions come true for the book and I could not be more grateful.

Lainie Rowell: So it is, it is a delight for the eyes as much as the mind, body, and soul. Again, Radhi, thank you so much for being here.

Radhi Devlukia: Yeah, it was so nice to to speak to you and hopefully we'll get to meet one day. I'd love that.

Lainie Rowell: I would love that.

Episode 90 - Unlocking the Power of Heartfelt Praise: The Magic Ratio for Stronger Relationships

Shownotes:

Podcasting is one of the most rewarding ways I learn and I’m delighted that I get to share it with you. 

And now, I'm thrilled to bring you something new: I'm aligning podcast episodes with ⁠⁠Thrive Global articles⁠⁠!

That’s right, my friends, this means you can choose your adventure with each story - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

This episode is about "Unlocking the Power of Heartfelt Praise: The Magic Ratio for Stronger Relationships" and you can find the article on Thrive Global!

I hope you enjoy whatever adventure you choose!

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 89 - A Guide to The Good Life with Dr. Robert Waldinger

Shownotes:

In this heartwarming and eye-opening episode of the pod, we dive deep into what truly makes life meaningful with Dr. Robert Waldinger. He shares groundbreaking insights from the longest scientific study of happiness ever conducted on how relationships, attention, and gratitude shape our well-being. Uncover the truth behind lasting happiness and how simple, everyday practices can lead to profound joy. Join us for a conversation that could change the way you see your life. Tune in and transform your approach to happiness!

About Our Guest:

Dr. Robert Waldinger is a distinguished American author, professor, and Zen priest. He is the director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, one of the longest studies on adult life, emphasizing the importance of relationships for well-being. In his psychiatric practice, he uses psychodynamic therapy, exploring unconscious impacts on mental health. Dr. Waldinger’s work bridges scientific research with spiritual practice, offering insights into living a fulfilling life.

Thrive Global Article:

Beyond Happiness: Dr. Robert Waldinger's Guide to The Good Life

Connect with and learn from Dr. Robert Waldinger:

Website – RobertWaldinger.com

Book – The Good Life: Lessons from the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness by Robert Waldinger M.D. and Marc Schulz Ph.D

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

[00:00:00]

Lainie Rowell: Well, hello friends.

As someone who is endlessly fascinated by the intricacies of human behavior and the secrets to our flourishing, I was delighted to have the privilege to interview Dr. Robert Waldinger, author, professor, Zen priest, and leader of the world's longest scientific study on happiness. As Director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, Dr. Waldinger watches entire lives play out over 85 years and two generations. His insights, offer practical wisdom and inspiration for anyone seeking a fulfilling life.

On top of that, he was just genuine and kind. He even said I could call him Bob. I felt like we became friends. It was so joyful having this conversation. And I hope that you feel that as you hear us talk. And really one of the many things he does exceptionally well is how he has this compelling blend of science and storytelling.

It's just amazing.

I know you're going to love it.

Bob, thank you so much for being here, and I really want to open up with kind of a background question, if you will. You are the director of the world's longest scientific study of happiness. And I'd love for you to talk more about it. And I just want to say, as a psych major, who, I'm going to date myself here, but. I was a psych major before the positive psychology movement. So a lot of my coursework was about how can we identify what's wrong with people. And I feel like this study was so innovative because it wasn't about what's wrong. It was about what's right.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: It was so innovative in 1938. No one was doing that when the study was founded, you know, and we were founded as two separate studies at Harvard that didn't even know about each other. One was a study of Harvard College sophomores, 19 year olds.

And the idea was to study normal development from adolescence to young adulthood. So, of course, if you want to study normal development, you study all white guys from Harvard, right? But at that time, that's what they did. And then the other study was a study of juvenile delinquency, and particularly, how some children from really poor and disadvantaged homes managed to stay on good developmental paths and thrive. So they were both studies of thriving, of what goes right in development, at a time when almost all the research had been about what goes wrong.

Lainie Rowell: And labeling it, right? This is what's wrong. This is what we can call it. This is how we can diagnose it. To me, that was just one of the things that I was so drawn to is like, wow, this is about what went right.

And I didn't know before that it was actually two different studies initially. And how did this keep going for this long and it's still going? This is fascinating to me.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Well, it's almost unheard of. So, you know, most studies stop before the 10 year mark because they, they fall apart.

Too many people drop out. The study directors lose interest. So many things happen, right? So almost every study stops, even when they intend to go longer. This study was granted so much luck and also the dedication of my predecessors. So I'm the fourth director and the first three directors and their staff were so dedicated and dogged and they kept writing to the participants and say, will you please participate with us again?

And, and they'd send thank you notes when they returned a questionnaire. They'd send birthday cards. These young men would come to us and say, I need a doctor. Can you find me a doctor? I need a therapist. And the study would find them help. And so we were not a hands off study, which is kind of interesting.

You know, in the purest science, you're hands off completely. But I think one of the reasons why we were able to keep people involved with us was we wanted them to feel like they were part of a community and that they mattered to us.

Lainie Rowell: Well, in perfect alignment with the findings and I know you are very good about saying, as far as we know, the world's longest scientific study of happiness, so I always appreciate the intellectual humility.

I love this term that is in the book. And for those who are not familiar, I cannot recommend this book enough. I already gave it the five star review on Amazon. It didn't need my help. There are plenty of other five star reviews on Amazon. Greater Good Science Center, one of their favorite books of the year.

I mean, it's editor's choice. There's so many accolades for this book and so well deserved. The book is called The Good Life. And please, at any point, dig into the book, but one of the phrases I love that you talk about in the book is social fitness and that's, that's a really big idea.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Well, and we made that up.

And I'll tell you why we made it up. We realized that the best analogy we could think of to doing your relationships well throughout your life was an analogy with physical fitness. You know, with physical fitness, we go and exercise and then you don't come home and say, Good. I'm done. I don't ever have to do that again.

We think of it as an ongoing practice. And what we found with the people in our study who seem to have the strongest social networks and the best relationships was that they kept at it. It was a practice for them. And so social fitness was a way to signal this is something you want to do every day, every week, small actions, just to keep contact with the people you care about and to strengthen the connections you have with the people who are most important to you.

Lainie Rowell: Another reason I love the phrase fitness, yes, it's an ongoing, it's a never like, okay, check the box, we're done with that. In my mind, directly connects to physical health and I feel like that's one of the big takeaways, right?

It's not just about happiness, it's not just about mental well being. It's also about physical well being.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Well, that's the thing. When we first began to see in our data that the people who stayed healthy and lived longest, were the people who had the best relationships, that it was more important than your cholesterol level and your blood pressure.

We didn't believe it at first because, you know, it stands to reason that you'd be happier if you had more relationships, better relationships, but how could having better relationships predict that you'd be less likely to get heart disease? Or type 2 diabetes or arthritis? Like how could that even be a thing?

And then many other studies began to find the same thing and we began to realize, okay, this is a robust finding. This is a real finding. It wasn't just a fluke in our study. And then we began to work on trying to unpack, well, how does that happen? How do relationships actually get inside us and change our physiology?

So we've been doing a lot of work in that area for the last 10 years.

Lainie Rowell: Now, is it fair to say, this is not my original thought, I think I'm borrowing from you, but does it have to do with the fact that the good relationships are stress regulators? Is that kind of what's impacting the physiological benefits?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: That is the best hypothesis we have, with some pretty good data, that relationships seem to help us manage our upset, right? So if you think about it, like stressors are happening all day long. I might have something happen an hour from now that's stressful. My heart rate will go up. My blood pressure will go up.

I'll start to sweat. I'll have, you know, higher levels of cortisol circulating, right? That's normal. So what we know is that the body is meant to go back to equilibrium. That's normal. And what we think happens is that if we have somebody we can talk to, you know, if I go home tonight and I can complain to my wife, or I can call a friend and say, you wouldn't believe what happened.

I can literally feel my body start to calm down. Right. And if you don't have anybody, if you're lonely, if you're isolated, what we think happens is that your body stays in a low level fight or flight response with all those stress hormones. All those, you know, weakening of the immune system, all that stuff going on and on and on, rather than subsiding as you get help with stress relief.

So that's how we think this happens.

Lainie Rowell: Again, appreciate the intellectual humility always. The evidence is suggesting that's the best explanation.

If you're open to it, I would love to, talk a bit about attention.

This is something that fascinates me. In the book you talk about the power of attention in relationships. And I think this is a really tough thing.

We're leading very distracted lives. I've heard the cell phone referred to as the dopamine casino, and (laughter)

It's a good one, right?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Yeah, I like it.

Lainie Rowell: And as much as they can be used to make connections, they are more often than not causing us distraction. So we have to get better at that.

And one of the things that you say in the book is attention is the most valuable thing we possess. And so what can we do to really nurture these relationships using our attention? What are some practical strategies?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Much of it is just being aware of it. So noticing when am I giving my full attention and when am I not?

My wife and I come down to the kitchen every morning for breakfast and she's looking at her email and I'm on my phone scrolling through the news and we realize we're not looking at each other. We've hardly said good morning, right? And so what I've had to do personally is stop and say, wow, I haven't paid any attention to my partner.

Right? And you think about that at work, like, what if you are multitasking? What if you're looking at your computer screen and you're also talking to your colleague who is trying to get your attention? Or, you know, as a doctor, many doctors feel that they're forced to look at their computer screens while they talk to their patient.

It's really difficult for your patient to feel like you're there with them, giving your full attention when you're looking at your computer. So we're trying to find all kinds of new ways for doctors to be able to do it differently. But all of this involves simply noticing first. Am I giving my full attention or not?

So here, I have a second screen open here because of the way my Zoom is set up, but I am only giving you my attention. I'm not looking at this, and it's very deliberate, because if I looked at this, I'd go down some rabbit hole, right? There was a study that showed that when someone has their cell phone out, even if it's face down on the table between you and another person, the conversations are less deep than when there's no screen or cell phone in sight because the subliminal message is, we could get interrupted at any moment.

So part of it is not just to give someone your full attention, but put those screens away.

Lainie Rowell: I have a daughter who at the time of this recording, she's about to turn 13 and I'm probably not the most popular mom on the block for this policy I have, but when there's a group at my house, I collect their cell phones.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Yes!

Lainie Rowell: And I just say, we're gonna be cell phone free to enjoy each other's company, because otherwise it's just so easy to get distracted. And I think especially when we're talking about kids who don't have the life experience or the abstract thinking, it's pretty easy for them to take it personally that they're not getting the attention from another one.

Even though you and I have the life experience to know like, oh, that thing is distracting so I appreciate you sharing that study too about even just having it in the physical proximity.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Well, and how do the teenagers do when you take away their phones?

Lainie Rowell: Oh, they play music and they're doing crafts and it's, it's a completely different vibe. And it's just, I can be the bad guy for that.

Oh, well, thank you. That wasn't meant to be a humble brag, but it's...

Dr. Robert Waldinger: No, no, no, no, no. It's an important message to get out there that it's possible to do this and that people have different experiences when they do it the way you're doing it.

Lainie Rowell: Well, and this is an interesting age, too, because you have the spectrum of who's had a cell phone since eight years old, I don't want to come off judgy and there's circumstances where that's required, I get there's family situations where that's required, but that was too early for our family, and so she's the last one in her friend group to have one.

So we have a different perspective and we're trying to do our best and there's things we'll look back and go, oh wow, why did we do that? But to get back to what you were talking about with the attention, I have become profoundly aware of the word noticing or notice.

And my work with gratitude, I, look Dr. Hussong and her team out of University of North Carolina talking about the four essential elements of gratitude, notice, think, feel, and do. And as I'm aware of that noticing is a really important thing in many aspects of our life.

And it's also one of the hardest things right now.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Absolutely. And the thing about gratitude is it's noticing what's not wrong because our minds are built to notice what's wrong. It's actually protective. You know, if you, if you notice the threats out there, you can protect your family, you can protect yourself, right?

It's good to notice what's wrong. But the problem is that these minds that evolved to pay most attention to what's wrong aren't very good for keeping us happy. And so if we deliberately notice what's right, what's okay, It makes us happier. One of my Zen teachers, Thich Nhat Hanh, who you may know.

He once, he said something which is repeated a lot. He said, let's celebrate because today is a no toothache day. And he means, you know, there's so much that's right that we never celebrate, right? We take for granted.

Lainie Rowell: It's so true. I remember having shoulder pain years ago, and I went and it ended up being I was dehydrated, I wasn't drinking enough water, started drinking the water, and then I went back to the doctor and they're like, so how's it been?

And I go, oh, it's actually been good. I hadn't really noticed. It's like you just are, cause that negativity bias and you're always looking for the threats and so I can tell there's something wrong with my shoulders, but I don't go, there's nothing wrong with my shoulders, my shoulders are amazing today.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: You know what else older people get better at it, because as we get more aware of our own mortality, it turns out to make us more grateful for being alive and for feeling okay, right?

And that actually that makes people happier as they get older, believe it or not. Which is kind of interesting that recognizing, oh gosh, life is short as we get older, makes us happier.

Lainie Rowell: I think that's a blessing for getting older. There are good things, right?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Yeah.

Lainie Rowell: I'd love to talk about workplace, always trying to cover the whole gamut, personal and professional, but I'd really love to talk about workplace and relationships. This is something that I find to be a little bit tricky, so I'd love your guidance on, and really thinking about navigating cultivating these friendships when there's things like evaluations and thinking about professional boundaries. In The Good Life, you tell the story of Ellen, I'm doing air quotes, which listeners can't hear, but talking about this specific story, which by the way, one of my favorite things about the book is the stories that you share.

Because that's how we remember things, right? The stories really resonate. And the story of Ellen, which I don't know how much you're okay with me giving away, but it's kind of this heartbreaking situation. And so would you be up for sharing it?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Yeah. Well, she she was very friendly with her work group and she became the supervisor of her friends. They were the employees and as she became the supervisor, she had to evaluate them. And that including, including giving some negative feedback. And then it really soured some of the relationships. And it was a real loss for her because they couldn't be social friends anymore in the same way.

And so it was an important story about the complications of friendships at work. Now that said, what we know is that it's really important to have friends at work, so the hope is you could be friends with someone who's a peer, or who you don't work with, but who's maybe in the same building, or in a different department but the idea is to have friends, but to also try to navigate the trickiness of different power relationships, right?

Where someone's your supervisor, or someone's your employee, and that, that makes work a little more complicated.

Lainie Rowell: I'd love your thoughts on something that I share with people, and this is something that I actually did learn in my psych program.

I was taught the praise to correction ratio. I was actually taught six to one, but we can go five to one or four to one. I think varying studies will give you somewhere within that range of the overwhelmingly acknowledging the good versus the constructive feedback. Is that maybe part of what could help these work relationships cause I know it's romantic relationships, family relationships, you know, we need to overwhelmingly acknowledge the good. To me, praise is a form of gratitude and that's a way to do it. So can that help?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Well, and, and partly we need to acknowledge the good because we are so focused on the negative, both as evaluators, but also then, you know, if I get 10 pieces of good feedback and one piece of negative feedback, I dwell on the negative.

We all do. That's what our minds do. So we really need to bring in the whole smorgasbord of feedback, including what's positive , because otherwise the person we're evaluating is just going to hear the negative. It's a way to try to counteract that negative bias that we've been talking about.

We just have to, we have to do it.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, and I think when it's specific and authentic, it actually helps people to, yes, they're going to focus on the negative, but maybe in a more constructive way. It's not just that this person's always picking on me for doing things wrong, they genuinely seem to notice the good, so this seems like this could be something I should really focus on.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Yes, and the other thing to think about when you're giving feedback is to give feedback, if you possibly can, in a way that you're offering something that someone could do about it. Like, what if I give you feedback saying, You're just not very interesting. What are you going to do with that? Right. You know, or if, if I say, you know, you're, you're just kind of lazy as a worker, what are you going to do with that?

But what if I could concretely say, it would be very helpful if you could get these tasks done in this amount of time, could we set a plan for that? In other words, if you're saying, I would like things to be different, give someone a path, a very concrete path for making it different rather than just leaving them with, well, how do I be less lazy?

Lainie Rowell: It's like saying you're too short. I don't know how to be more tall.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Exactly. Exactly.

Lainie Rowell: That's really not helpful. So on the positive side, the specific and authentic and on the feedback side, also specific, but actionable, right?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Actionable.

Lainie Rowell: I mean, we could make this entire discussion about all the things I love about the book and we'd go hours because it's really lovely. There's many wonderful things that you and Dr. Schultz do in the book, but you make it so accessible through the stories. And another one of the things that I loved is when you talked about curiosity and the role of enhancing relationships.

To me, this is very fascinating because I do think that whether it's the person we come home to every day, the person in the cubicle next to us, whoever it is, it's very easy to make assumptions. Or just, we've been together so long, there's nothing new to learn, and so, can you tell us a little bit more about that, curiosity and relationships?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Yeah, well, you know, if you think about it, we all want to feel seen for who we are, right? I mean, just that I notice you and I pay attention to who you are and how you're coming across. And the difficulty with long relationships is we start taking each other for granted. Oh, I know what you're going to say.

I know the next thing you're going to ask me. I know, you know, and we do this boy. I mean, you can sure do it with your spouse. I've had dinner with. my partner most nights for 37 years, that's a big deal. And it's hard not to take things for granted. Right. And with work colleagues as well.

Oh, I know what my boss is going to say. So curiosity makes people feel like you're really interested in today. Like, who am I today? Not how predictable I am, but what's here right now. And actually one of my meditation teachers taught me this. He gave me the assignment when I sat on the cushion.

So I've met thousands of times. And he said, one of the things to do to enliven your meditation is to ask yourself, as you meditate, what's here now that I've never noticed before? And you can do that with a relationship. So I can have dinner with my partner and as we're talking about the usual stuff, I can think to myself, well, what's here right now that I've never noticed before?

And it enlivens you, it enlivens your interaction with this other person. Even if you're just noticing that they have a new sweater or new earbuds or whatever, just, just noticing something.

Lainie Rowell: That's so lovely. It reminds me, so my husband and I have some catching up to do. We've got 14 years in the books and I remember when we met with our priest as we were getting married, he said, I want you to think about going to Niagara Falls for the first time, and how you're just filled with awe and wonder. And it's just so amazing. And now I want you to imagine that you live at Niagara Falls.

Getting married is like living in Niagara Falls. And I thought that was a really good analogy because you, when something is new, you do notice all the amazing things, but you get used to it. So I really love what's here now that I've never noticed before. I think that's a great strategy and it works in all relationships.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: It does. It does.

Lainie Rowell: I even think of my kids as they're like constantly changing. That's they're more noticeably changing than any others, but My daughter is now almost as tall as me. Amazing.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: I know, isn't that amazing? Right? Yeah.

Lainie Rowell: You're just so delightful. I don't want this conversation to end, but I really will honor your time. I promise.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Well, thank you. I'm enjoying the conversation.

Lainie Rowell: You're so kind. So, thinking about parents and educators and those who get to shape the lives of our littles and help them. And I'm thinking about the study, which is watching them from adolescence to adulthood and later in life. Just in general, what advice do you have for parents and educators who are really helping to shape these young lives?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: One big piece of advice, I think, is help kids tune in to what excites them, right? We spend so much time suppressing that awareness of what excites me. Like, oh, this excites me, and that thing, not so much. That kind of drains my energy. But a lot of times, because we have to do certain things, we have to learn our multiplication tables, right?

We have to learn to read, that we have to sit still in school, that there's a lot of time when we suppress all those signals about what I care about, what's enlivening, what's not so much. Help kids notice and help kids value that, right? We can do that as parents. We can do that as educators. And that doesn't mean they avoid the things that are important for them also to do, that they may not love, but it means that they learn that it's really okay to notice the difference between what excites them and what doesn't.

Because it's so useful to be able to find the things in life that are enlivening. It sets you up for well being, for thriving.

Lainie Rowell: Yes, absolutely. Is there anything that you just can't share enough? Like, you will put it on billboards, you will stand on tables, and you have to say it as many times as you need to because it's so important.

Or, is there something that you maybe haven't had a chance to share before that you would just love to get out there?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: I guess the thing I can't say enough, is that nobody's happy all the time. Because we get this message sometimes from the culture that if I just do all the right things, then I'll be happy all the time. And those people over there, like especially on social media, they're living their best lives. They have it all figured out.

They're happy all the time. No life is like that. And that's really important to name because otherwise we can feel like we're missing out, that other people do have life all figured out, and we don't. Life has ups and downs and joys and sorrows, and as Jon Kabat Zinn is fond of saying, "You can't stop the waves, but you can learn to surf."

You can't stop the waves of challenge and difficulty and even unhappiness, but you can learn to surf through those until you get back to the better times.

Lainie Rowell: I appreciate you making that connection to social media, and I'll go on record that I do think there are benefits of social media, but I do often think about the negative side of social media and the social comparison, but I don't know that I ever really thought about it in the way that you framed it of, makes us think we have to be happy all the time.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Right, right. Yeah, it's just to remember that when people show us their lives through photos and comments and stuff, that's not the whole story, right? We don't show each other everything and so actually another quote from one of my teachers which I love is, "we're always comparing our insides to other people's outsides."

And especially on social media. So just remember that that's not the whole story. And so don't do that comparing. Connect with people on social media. That's great. Just don't compare yourself on social media.

There's a psychologist named Jean Twenge, T W E N G E, and she studies this. And her research suggests that, that when we connect actively on social media, we get happier. And when we passively consume, when we doom scroll through other people's Instagram feeds, self esteem goes down, anxiety goes up, depression goes up.

So it's how we use social media.

Lainie Rowell: That connecting actively on social media is essential. And it reminds me of something in the book, making a connection to how actively connecting in the real world is also important. In the book, you mentioned the study about people getting on the train and people who sometimes work, people who sometimes connect with others, and then people who normally wouldn't connect with others, the researchers asked them to actually talk to people on the train.

They didn't want to. But in the end, they were happier, right?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Exactly. That's exactly right. That's exactly right. And it's a good example of how we don't always know what's going to make us happy. Like there's some resistance to connecting with other people. We also see it like if a friend says to you, Come on, let's, let's go to this party or let's go out to this restaurant.

We're gonna, let's meet some people. You might find yourself feeling like, Oh, let me just stay home. Let me just sit on the couch and watch Netflix. There's often this little resistance that happens. And so it's useful to notice, to remember, oh, when I overcame that resistance and I went out and met with these people, I actually felt great afterwards.

It was better than I thought it was going to be.

The research suggests that people are generally happier when they connect with others.

Lainie Rowell: Well, this has all been super helpful.

And I know that people are going to want to connect with you. I will put a link to The Good Life in the show notes for those who are listening, and I will make sure to link it in the article as well. And are there any other ways that people could connect with you and your work?

Dr. Robert Waldinger: So just my website, RobertWaldinger.com.

Lainie Rowell: Well, you have been so generous with your time, and I have all the happiness chemicals flowing after talking to you, and you made me feel noticed, you made me feel seen and heard this entire conversation, so you, you are a definite practitioner of the things that you share, so I appreciate that very much.

Dr. Robert Waldinger: Good, good. Well, this was a pleasure. I really enjoyed the conversation.

Thank you.

Lainie Rowell: Well, thank you again for being here and thank you all for listening.

Episode 88 - Finding Our Happy Hours: Time-Management Secrets

Shownotes:

Podcasting is one of the most rewarding ways I learn and I’m delighted that I get to share it with you. 

And now, I'm thrilled to bring you something new: I'm aligning podcast episodes with ⁠Thrive Global articles⁠!

That’s right, my friends, this means you can choose your adventure with each story - read the article, listen to the episode, or explore both.

This episode is about "Finding Our Happy Hours: Time-Management Secrets" and you can find the series on Thrive Global!

Bonus: If you are an educator, check out: 📝 ⁠Redefining Time: A Guide to Meaningful Moments⁠ co-written with Suzanne Dailey, McGraw Hill’s The Art of Teaching

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Episode 87 - Emotional Engagement and Resilience with Mandy Froehlich

Shownotes:

Join me in a captivating conversation with mental health advocate Mandy Froehlich. We delve into the realms of emotional engagement and resilience, uncovering insights that will challenge and inspire you. Mandy shares her unique perspective on navigating life's ups and downs, emphasizing the power of positive emotional engagement and practical resilience strategies. Tune in for an episode brimming with wisdom and transformative ideas, guaranteed to leave you with valuable takeaways for both personal and professional growth.

About Our Guest:

Mandy Froehlich is a distinguished mental health advocate, educator, and author. Her professional path started as an elementary teacher who loved technology. As her story goes, she became incredibly burnt out long ago when there were no pathways to healing. Nobody wanted to talk about sad teachers, or so she was told. Although edtech and mental health might seem like completely different topics (they're not), they were her life for many years. She was a technology integrator and then a Director of Innovation and Technology, but she was trying to heal from the stress and strain of the classroom many years after she left it. Her goal was to help other people and advocate for policy change. She strives to be the mental health advocate that she needed years ago.

Thrive Global Article:

⁠Emotional Engagement and Resilience: Mandy Froehlich's Guide to Thriving⁠

Connect with and learn from Mandy Froehlich:

Website – MandyFroehlich.com
X/Twitter – @FroehlichM

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: [00:00:00] Hello, my friends. We have an amazing guest. We have my friend Mandy Froehlich. Hi, Mandy.

Mandy Froehlich: Hey, how are you doing?

Lainie Rowell: I'm better now that I'm talking to you. And I'm going to do a quick little intro for those who may not already know of your amazingness. And so for those who are just now being introduced to Mandy Froehlich, she is a mental health advocate, author, educator, and consultant.

She is doing so many things to make this world a better place, and I am just thrilled to share this time with her.

Mandy Froehlich: Aw, thank you so much. I appreciate that. I try, like we all do, trying to do our little part help everybody else that, that's out there, you know?

Lainie Rowell: Of course, of course. Mandy, is there anything you want to add to that bio?

Mandy Froehlich: Oh my gosh, I don't think so. I mean, in the grand scheme of things, it covers pretty much everything.

I guess mom of college kids might be another one. Just trying to make it through that transition of all of the kids being out of the house. That's an entire job in itself.

Lainie Rowell: Well, I'm so happy to have you here in addition to just wanting to spend more time with you because you are someone I look to for what do we need to be thinking about and doing with regards to mental health. So first couple questions really focused on emotional engagement and mental health.

And so let's talk about emotional engagement first. And how do you see it fitting into our overall well being? And why do you think it's crucial for finding this fulfilling experience, both personally and professionally.

Mandy Froehlich: Well, emotional engagement is really it's a term from marketing technically, and it's popular in that space, and what it is, is it's when marketers try to get the consumer to react in an emotional way to something that is happening.

Something that's happening in like in a commercial or in an ad. It is a psychological term as well. But in marketing, it's really getting you to try to engage with the product because you feel this emotional attachment to the product and, and that product's going to fix things and it's going to make you better.

And it's going to make you a hero or whatever it is. And I always loved thinking of it that way because for me as we're kind of navigating through our lives personally and professionally, we really are looking for those things to emotionally engage us that are going to make us happier, make us feel more joy or for some of us, it's just make us feel something, right?

When we think about finding fulfillment and that emotional engagement in our personal and professional lives I think about, first of all, positive emotional engagement. I want to make sure that if we are engaged it is in a positive way because you can also have emotional engagement with a negative association, which would mean that you are engaged emotionally with something, but you're angry and you're fighting against it. So what we're really referring to is the positive engagement. We want to look for those things in our personal and professional lives because that's really what tethers us to who we are and what we're doing.

It's that emotional piece. There's lots of ways to find those positive emotional engagements. There's also lots of ways to find the negative ones, but there's a lot of ways to find the positive emotional engagements, like finding your purpose in your personal life, finding your purpose in your professional life.

When we talk about how crucial it is to find those things. It really is what tethers us to being who we are.

Lainie Rowell: I hear you talking about that positive emotional engagement, and yes, we definitely want to seek that out, though not everything is in our control, I think it's fair to say. And sometimes we're in really high stress environments, there's things that are going on, and we really need that resiliency, right?

So what are some of the practical tips that have worked for you and others to kind of help us build up that resilience in this tough time, those tough situations?

Mandy Froehlich: Yeah, sure. I think one of the important parts of building resilience is understanding that you need to build resilience outside of those stressful times so you have it ready for the times that you're in a high stress environment because it would be like deciding to run a marathon while the marathon's going on.

You can't do that. It doesn't work and so in building resilience, there's a lot of little things that you can do. So one of the books that I always recommend is Micro Resilience and it is by Bonnie St. John and Alan Haynes, and it gives a lot of research into what resilience actually is, and my favorite example is that they studied a bunch of people who were tennis players at Wimbledon.

And obviously they were all really great players, right? But consistently some people were better than other people and they wanted to know why, why were some people just always better, even when they had a group of top notch tennis players there.

So what they did is they studied the tennis players and how they played, and then they studied the moments in between the plays. And what they found was that the people who were at the top of their game, were the ones that reset in those moments. They had some little habit that they would maybe spin their racket or they would do something like that.

That they would reset. They had some sort of a strategy during that time to bring their energy or their anxiety back down. That was the only difference between the tennis players that were playing at a really high level and the tennis players that were not doing quite as well.

That's really what resilience is about is it's resetting in between those times where we have a lot of things going on and strategies there's so many strategies for resilience and micro resilience and part of the issue, I think that we're running into just as humans is that.

Resilience and mental health issues, they're all so personal. And so I can tell you everything that I do for resilience, and that may not work for anyone else. Because they have to be able to find their own thing.

But really little things for bringing yourself into focus, and a lot of them fall under self care, of course so that would be taking care of your mind, body, your soul making sure that you're feeding all of those things.

It can be anything from leaning into a spiritual practice it could be maybe practicing some mindfulness, which some people consider spiritual and some people don't. It could be leaning into a new hobby. Recently I started horseback riding again. That's not a new hobby.

That's a hobby from when I was a kid. It was something that really brought me joy and that as an adult I've leaned back into. So. There are a lot of different strategies for resilience. The trick is figuring out what it is that works for you.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, we're all so unique and dynamic. And so what works for me might not work for you and vice versa.

We have to test out these practices and one thing I want to go back to when you were talking about the tennis players and how they would reset in moments and it's kind of like spin the racket to reset, right? And it could be breath, it could be whatever is going to work for you.

But I wanted to ask you, is it fair to say that part of that resetting, and sorry for the pop culture reference, friends, but it reminded me of Ted Lasso, Be a Goldfish, right? Have a 10 second memory. Is that kind of part of what the resetting is? Is to kind of let go, because when you're in it, it feels like this is how it's going to be forever.

Mandy Froehlich: Yeah, I would say in the moment, yes, that's true. But I would add on that as long as you come back to it and deal with those emotions and feelings that happened during the course of that period.

And so one of the areas that I think in building resilience that is most often I don't know if shied away from is the right term, but would be that healing piece because it's kind of ugly, frankly, and it's messy and it's chaotic and it often doesn't feel good. You know, it's not that light coming from the heavens and all of a sudden you feel better. It's usually has something to do with crying and tissues and snot and all of those things. And that's what healing is. And so people shy away from it because it doesn't feel good.

But in order for us to build resilience, we have to be able to deal with the things that happened to us. Whether that was a buildup of stress, whether that was a disconnection in a relationship, whatever that means for that time. So I would say yes, like memory, like a goldfish. As long as when you get to the end of that, you're going back and dealing with what you need to deal with.

Lainie Rowell: Yes, because a tennis match is a very specific like you don't get to say, Hey, I'm going to need like 10 minutes to process through this. Can you all just talk amongst yourself? And then we'll get back to the match, right? That's not going to fly, right? So I think this is actually a really interesting nuance to resiliency that I maybe never thought that carefully about, which is, that we don't want to dismiss the feelings.

We do have to feel. We have to deal with them. It's sometimes not going to be in the moment that they come to us. And so we need to regulate and get out of that in the moment, but we have to still go back to it. And so that's helpful for me.

Mandy Froehlich: Yeah, exactly. And I also think too, that even if you get to the top of your resilience game and you know your strategies and you have healed the best that you think that you can possibly heal, that you've really focused on that, it's not that bad things don't happen or that bad things happen and you don't hurt, it's that every time that it happens, you're able to deal with those emotions and move through that hard space a little bit faster and a little bit easier, and so I think that's also another misconception is that.

You know people think that once they've healed and, and they've done all the hard things and that everything would be easy from now on, it's absolutely not true. It's just that the next time it comes about, you know what you're supposed to do and what you're supposed to feel.

So, I think that's also an important distinction.

Lainie Rowell: And I think sometimes we are told things that, are meant to be helpful, but are also a little misleading. So they'll say, okay, with grief, you got to give yourself a year after a year. Well, I mean, it's not necessarily true. First of all, we're not all the same.

But also, it's not that it goes away after a year. But it's resonating with me how you're saying the way that you're going to be able to move past it is different. It's not that I won't feel the thing. I can shift out of it faster.

Mandy Froehlich: Right. Right. And faster means something different for everyone too then, right? I mean, that's the difficulty in all of these things because it's. So personal, like what might take one person a year, might take another person two, might take another person six.

Well, then all of their fasters are different. And I agree there are so many little quotes or quips out there that I do think they're meant to be helpful. I think that they're supposed to be inspiring but I think at the end of the day, some of them actually just induce guilt.

And make you question why you're in the space that you're in and so you have to take everything that you read just with a grain of salt and only use it if it is actually helpful.

Lainie Rowell: That's great advice. So we've been talking about resiliency and healing and times are definitely challenging and there's stressors that are different for everyone. What are some of the ways that we can move towards, and I think this is one of the spaces that positive psychology has just really empowered us over the last few decades, is what can we do to flourish? What can we do to thrive? And part of that is going to be that harmony between work and life.

So that's easier said than done, obviously. And so I wonder in your experience, what are some of the things that maybe are stumbling blocks and what are some of the things people could do to get to that harmony?

Mandy Froehlich: I think that first thing I'd like to do is talk a little bit about the harmony and the balance, because we hear a lot about that, that balance between our regular personal life and then our work.

I want to be clear when I talk about balance, it's not 50 50. There are going to be times where you're working a lot one week and then times you have a little bit less time at work and you're with family or friends or doing whatever it is that you do in your personal life.

So balance is really about finding that good average of spending time in those two places. I just wanted to first say that about balance or harmony. And then, as far as getting tripped up or some things that we could do to help ourselves, I think number one is, Really get to know yourself well and in all aspects the things that you're good at, the things that you excel at if I said to any listener for the podcast, if I said to you what are the things that you are just fantastic at?

If you don't know that, you need to know. And sometimes the things that we're fantastic at are not always the things that we like, but a lot of the times, the things that we are fantastic at are some of our passion areas that we could lean into. And so that's really, really important.

It's also important to know why you do the things you do through the lens of being human and what that means for how you act. I'll give you a very personal example. One of the things that sort of runs in my family are these very obsessive tendencies and my mother was bipolar and we had all the bipolar stuff going on in my household as I was growing up and she turned to some very unhealthy coping mechanisms for that.

And so as I got older, I never did any of those coping mechanisms. I never drank. I just never did any of those things. But what I did do was start working really, really hard. And what I realized over the course of time was that my mother's drinking. was my workaholicism. And so it was a combination of me wanting to try to prove myself and ignore the rest of my life. The difference between the two is that me being a workaholic is socially acceptable, not only socially acceptable, but in our society, there's massive applause going on for all of the workaholics of the world constantly.

And so I was not only getting the positive reinforcement, I was also allowing myself to numb myself towards some things that were going on in my personal life that needed to be addressed. It took me a long time to come to that conclusion, and I only did it through the process of understanding myself and understanding my past, and how the things that happened in my past impact my now.

Those are some of the reasons why it's just so crucial to understand who you are and why you do the things you do. And that's not always bad, but it's also not always something where you have to be embarrassed of it or anything like that. Sometimes, you know, you do something in your life because...

You were taught in a certain way that was a really good thing and you continue to do that and that's amazing. But a lot of times when we're talking about healing and resilience and, and finding fulfillment and all of that stuff. It's about recognizing the pieces of you that need attention or need to be known in order to be able to move forward.

Lainie Rowell: That was really helpful to me. So I'll just say I relate to this because I feel like my coping mechanism during the pandemic was to become a workaholic. To me, it was a time where there was so much that I had no control over, and full disclosure, I do like me some control.

And this was a time where things that I would normally have at least some sense or possibly illusion of control. It was all gone. It was all just wiped away instantly. And I hear you about, well, there's some things that we do to cope that society says, Oh, that's bad. And then there's others that maybe society is somewhat neutral on.

And then there's others society actually applauds. And it could be that it does have. a positive impact on your life, but if it's that you're not coping with what you really need to be working on, then you're just kind of burying those feelings, burying what's really going on. Is that fair to say?

Mandy Froehlich: Yeah, absolutely fair to say.

And so when we talk about stumbling blocks, like that's definitely one. For example, I definitely have control issues as well, no doubt. And so when you find that sense of control somewhere you find, or if you feel maybe all of the human things. You're not important. You're not making a difference. You lean into those places that you feel like you are. And then all of a sudden you find yourself in a stumbling block where there's other things that are not going right anymore.

I think that's what happens with a lot of workaholics. There will always be things that happen in our life that cause a stumbling block. You could say that my home life when I was growing up caused that stumbling block, but part of resilience is being able to know yourself and navigate through those in order to be able to get to that place where you feel harmony.

And that's kind of how I advise people. I could continue with the micro resilience and all of those types of things, but when it really comes down to it, micro resilience and self care and all of that is so vitally important. But it's not going to completely get you to where you want to go until you start to fill some of those, like, holes that have been left in your soul from different things that happened over the course of a lifetime.

And I'll then allow that self care to kick in, that positive psychology, the gratitude, all of those things. And so that they really need to be practiced in tandem.

Lainie Rowell: I really appreciate that. And going back to your earlier analogy about, well, you're not gonna just jump into running the marathon.

You're not gonna learn to run the marathon while you're running the marathon. Did I get that close? I you said it. But the idea that you would show up on. the day of the marathon and be like Let's do this. I can, I can totally do this. To be clear, I am not a marathon runner, but I know marathon runners, and I know how rigorous that training schedule is, and how you have to fully prepare for it, and you don't just jump in.

And so, we need to be doing these practices. Obviously, I lean to gratitude, but also meditation and these other things that we can do so that when these challenging times hit us, we've got those skills and also just to have that balance, right? Because for those of us, and I think I speak for you, Mandy, but please correct me if I'm wrong, who find such fulfillment and joy and feel really purpose driven in our work, it's very easy to prioritize work over almost anything.

Mandy Froehlich: Absolutely. And then it's also easy to fall a little bit into the trap of where your purpose and your work collide if you start getting a little bit off track by certain things like money, so there's also that piece of it too, but yes it is really easy to lean back into that especially if you have found your purpose.

And that's why the harmony thing is so important as well. You need to find as much purpose in your personal life as you do in your professional life, really, to keep it balanced.

Lainie Rowell: So Mandy, tell us a little bit more about how we can build up that resilience.

Mandy Froehlich: Yeah, sure. So we just talked about harmony, for example, and balance and things.

And one of the pieces of self care that I think is really important is to make sure that we are also practicing self care in a balanced way, in a holistic way because a lot of people rely solely on physical self care. That's kind of their thing that they go running or they do yoga or something to that effect.

But really I practice four dimensions of self care. So there's physical, intellectual, emotional, and. spiritual. And spiritual does not necessarily mean religion, although it can. A lot of people get hung up on that. Like, I don't practice a religion, so I can't do spiritual. Spiritual is really just about finding the balance in your soul, finding your center.

So whatever makes that type of thing happen. For some people it's running animal rescues. Sometimes it's practicing mindfulness, things like that. But oftentimes under emotional self care I also include things like healing and seeing a counselor and stuff like that.

So even within the realm of self care, that piece of knowing and understanding ourselves and finding that harmony is still in that space. And of course, self care is backed up by a lot of positive psychology things and gratitude and all of the research behind that as well. So even those four quadrants they include both the healing piece and the making sure that we're taking care of ourselves in multiple ways.

Lainie Rowell: Absolutely. So, just to recap, Mandy, we've got the, when we want to balance our self care, we want to balance the intellectual, the emotional, the spiritual, and the physical, correct?

Mandy Froehlich: Yeah. And some people have listed up to 16 different types of self care. Like that just didn't feel manageable to me knowing that I needed to work in all of those areas that felt very overwhelming. There is a self care, that's a lot of people recognize, and that's social.

And that's because we are by nature, social creatures. We need to feel like we belong. It's how we build our identity and things. And so I can see that one, but for me social falls under emotional, just because it's the emotions from those connections that are the piece of the self care that matters.

It's not actually just being around people.

Lainie Rowell: Well, and I would add, I think that the social could potentially be a through line for all of them. Because when I think about the intellectual, that yes, there's times where I want to learn independently, but there's other times where I want to learn in a community.

And spirituality, when I think about gratitude, so much of that is to do with others and nurturing relationships. Not always, but sometimes. And so, I think for me, and even if you wanted to get to physical, well, a great commitment device is to have a workout buddy. So, I think that you don't necessarily need that to be a separate one that could actually be one that runs into whichever of those four that you think are best for you. And so that's going back to that theme we've talked about, you know, it's all personal. It's like I could say this, but that's not necessarily going to be a fit for someone else. And so it's all about finding your strengths, finding your purpose, and really figuring out what works for you.

Mandy Froehlich: Right. Absolutely.

Lainie Rowell: Mandy, this has been so much wisdom and I know people are going to want to connect with you. What is the best way for them to do that?

Mandy Froehlich: Sure, you can find me at, @FroehlichM on the Twitters, and at MandyFroehlich.Com on my website. On the internet.

Lainie Rowell: On the interweb, we've got that. Okay. Mandy, thank you so much for your time and your wisdom. And thank you all for listening.

Episode 86 - A Brain Health Revolution with Dr. Daniel Amen

Shownotes:

We Zoom in Dr. Daniel Amen for this thought-provoking episode. Dr. Amen takes us on a journey through his groundbreaking approach to mental health. Discover how his unique focus on brain health is challenging and transforming traditional psychiatry. From personal stories that sparked his passion to innovative techniques reshaping mental wellness, this episode is a must-listen for anyone curious about the powerful link between our brain's health and our overall well-being. Tune in for an episode that promises to change the way you think about mental health.

About Our Guest:

Dr. Daniel Amen’s mission is end mental illness by creating a revolution in brain health. He is dedicated to providing the education, products, and services to accomplish this goal. Dr. Amen is a physician, adult and child psychiatrist, and founder of Amen Clinics with 11 locations across the U.S. Amen Clinics has the world’s largest database of brain scans for psychiatry totaling more than 225,000 SPECT scans on patients from 155 countries. He is the founder of BrainMD, a fast growing, science-based nutraceutical company, and Amen University, which has trained thousands of medical and mental health professionals on the methods he has developed.

Dr. Amen is one of the most visible and influential experts on brain health and mental health with millions of followers on social media. In 2020 Dr. Amen launched his digital series Scan My Brain featuring high-profile actors, musical artists, athletes, entrepreneurs, and influencers that airs on YouTube and Instagram. Over 90 episodes have aired, turning it into viral social media content with collectively millions of views. He has also produced 17 national public television shows about the brain and his online videos on brain and mental health have been viewed over 300 million times. Dr. Amen is a 12-time New York Times bestselling author, including Change Your Brain, Change Your Life, The End of Mental Illness, Healing ADD, and many more. His highly anticipated new book is Change Your Brain Every Day: Simple Daily Practices to Strengthen Your Mind, Memory, Moods, Focus, Energy, Habits, and Relationships was released March 23rd, 2023.

Thrive Global Article:

A Brain Health Revolution: Dr. Daniel Amen's Mission to End Mental Illness

Connect with and learn from Dr. Amen:

Websites – DanielAmenMD.com & AmenClinics.com
Instagram – @doc_amen
TikTok – @docamen
X/Twitter – @DocAmen
LinkedIn – @DrDanielAmen
Facebook – @DrDanielAmen
YouTube – AmenClinics 

About Lainie:

Lainie Rowell is a bestselling author, award-winning educator, and TEDx speaker. She is dedicated to human flourishing, focusing on community building, social-emotional learning, and honoring what makes each of us unique and dynamic through learner-driven design. She earned her degree in psychology and went on to earn both a post-graduate credential and a master's degree in education. An international keynote speaker, Lainie has presented in 41 states as well as in dozens of countries across 4 continents. As a consultant, Lainie’s client list ranges from Fortune 100 companies like Apple and Google to school districts and independent schools. Learn more at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/lainierowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

Website - ⁠LainieRowell.com⁠

Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Instagram - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@LainieRowell⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Evolving with Gratitude, the book is available ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ And now, Bold Gratitude: The Journal Designed for You and by You is available too!

Both Evolving with Gratitude & Bold Gratitude have generous bulk pricing for purchasing 10+ copies delivered to the same location.🙌

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/ewgbulkdiscount⁠

📚➡️ ⁠bit.ly/bgbulkdiscount⁠

Just fill out the forms linked above and someone will get back to you ASAP! 

Transcript:

Lainie Rowell: [00:00:00] Hello friends. Welcome to the pod. In this episode, we're incredibly fortunate to have Dr. Daniel Amen joining us. Thanks to the gracious connection made by Dr. Christine Olmstead.

Dr. Amen is on a bold mission to eradicate mental illness through a revolution in brain health.

He's a physician, adult, and child psychiatrist, and Amen Clinics has the world's largest database of brain scans for psychiatry. Totally more than 225,000 SPECT scans on patients from 155 countries. Get ready for an eyeopening chat about brain health, innovation in psychiatry, and Dr. Amen's extraordinary impact on mental wellness. Let's dive in.

Thank you for being here, Dr. Amen. I really appreciate your time.

Dr. Daniel Amen: You're welcome.

Lainie Rowell: I did get the honor of seeing you speak a while back and I just love the way that you really cut to the importance of brain health in a way that I had never heard anyone explain before. So what do you want to tell us about brain health and psychiatry?

Dr. Daniel Amen: I'll give you a little background and why I'm horrified with what's going on in society, and then perhaps a new direction. So, I'm one of seven children, and growing up I was irrelevant. Which is funny, you know, I'm a middle child, and my dad called me a maverick, and to him that was a very bad thing, But that becomes very important later in my life.

1972, I turn 18, the government still has a draft. And I become an infantry medic where my love of medicine was born, but about a year into it, I realized I didn't really like being shot at. It wasn't my thing. Some people like it. It was irritating. And so I got myself retrained as an x ray technician and developed a passion for medical imaging.

And our professors used to say, how do you know unless you look and that becomes one of the major themes of my life. And then in 1979, I'm a second year medical student, and someone I love tries to kill herself, and I'm horrified, and I take her to the chief of the Department of Psychiatry at Oral Roberts University, where I was going to medical school, and his name was Stan Wallace, And I came to realize if Dr. Wallace helped her, it wouldn't just help her, that ultimately it would help me as someone who loved her. It would help her children, would help her grandchildren, as they would be shaped by someone who is happier and more stable. And I fell in love with psychiatry, which is now 44 years ago, and I've loved it every day since.

It was the perfect fit for me. But I fell in love with the only medical specialty that never looks at the organ it treats. Think about that. If you have chest pain, cardiologist is going to look at your heart. If you have back pain, the orthopedic doctor is going to look at your spine. If you have belly pain, they're going to look at it in so many different ways.

But if you try to kill yourself or you try to kill someone else, or you're wracked with an anxiety or an addiction that won't stop. No one is going to look at the organ that creates behavior. And in 1979, I knew that was wrong and I knew it would change. I just had no idea I'd be part of the process. And in 1991, I went to a lecture on brain SPECT imaging.

So now I've been a psychiatrist for almost a decade. And I, I just know something's wrong, making diagnoses based on symptom clusters with no biological data, and then trying to drug people's brains into submission. And it's just not me. And I'm like, we should look. And in 1991, I went to a lecture on brain SPECT imaging.

SPECT stands for Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography. It's a nuclear medicine study that looks at blood flow and activity. It looks at how your brain works. And no lie, it changed everything about my whole life. When I started looking at the brain, I realized your brain's an organ just like your heart is an organ, and you have to take care of it if you want a better mind, if you want happiness, if you want peace, if you want passion, purpose, and connection.

And it completely upended my training and I'm like, Oh no, I have to be a brain health doctor, not a psychiatrist. And, you know, in 1979, when I told my dad I wanted to be a psychiatrist, he asked me why I didn't want to be a real doctor. Why I wanted to be a nut doctor and hang out with nuts all day long.

So, it's very clear I have daddy issues and love my dad, who I lost three years ago who is my best friend in the last five years of his life, but he reflected society's view of psychiatrists, that it's not really science. And the truth is, it's not really science because they never look at the organ they treat.

And so, everything in my life changed. If you dated my daughter for more than four months, I'm scanning your brain. When I got divorced in 2000 and I told myself, If I ever got married again, the first naked part of her I wanted to see was her brain. And the way out of this mess, and, you know, I call it a shitshow last year there were 337 million prescriptions for antidepressants, with nobody looking at any of their brains.

27%, this is a horrifying statistic, 27 percent of all doctor visits, someone's being prescribed a benzodiazepine. Not just psychiatric visits. OB GYN, internal medicine, family practice, it's insanity is what's happening. We are trying to drug America into happiness and it's not working. We are the unhappiest we've been since the Great Depression.

And the way out is not through Johnson Johnson or Pfizer or Eli Lilly. The way out is through brain health. And I wrote a book, I've written a bunch, but one of my favorite books is called The End of Mental Illness, and in it, I talk about, we need to change the paradigm, away from diagnosing people with mental illnesses, nobody wants that

and move it toward brain health. And so based on what is now almost a quarter of a million SPECTs scans I've done over the last 32 years, most psychiatric problems are not mental health issues. They're brain health issues. Get your brain healthy and your mind will follow. So, if you follow my thinking, what's happening in psychiatry is just dumb.

Make diagnoses based on symptom clusters with no biological data and then try to drug the brain into submission. If I'm right, and I am I'm certain of it. If I get your brain healthy, which means you have to eat right, and you need to exercise, and you probably, 72 percent of Americans need to lose some weight and make sleep a priority, and turn off the news, and stop scrolling and probably some nutrients, like omega 3 fatty acids, vitamin D, B vitamins, and so on.

Completely changes the paradigm away from what isn't working. The outcomes in psychiatry are no better than they were in 1954, the year I was born to brain health and our outcomes, I have 11 clinics around the country, our outcomes are better than anyone who publishes their outcomes.

Lainie Rowell: I want to touch on, I heard you say the generational ripple effects.

Right? It's that we need to get our brain healthy, not only for us, but for all of those around us. And that also, when you're talking about these ways that we can get our brain healthy, that's also where I'm hearing the generational connection, because that's how we're teaching our children to take care of themselves.

Is that fair to say?

Dr. Daniel Amen: Every day, you are modeling health. Or you're modeling illness with your behavior. And, you know, by what you feed your family, by what you order when you're out at a restaurant, by how you think, by the amount of love, or lack thereof, for your brain. And every day, , your habits are turning on or off health promoting genes in your body that impact you, but also generations of you.

So, when a little girl is born, she's born with all of the eggs in her ovaries she will ever have. And her habits throughout her life turn on or off certain genes that make illness more or less likely in her, but also in her babies and grandbabies. So, it's just not about us. It's about generations of us, and in the United States, you know, as opposed to Japan Asian cultures are about we, and American culture is about me, and there's something inherently flawed with when it's about me, and not generations of me, we're just more likely to be sick.

And, you know, if you just think of COVID, which I have all sorts of opinions about the United States has 4 percent of the world's population and 16 percent of the world's COVID deaths. And I think it's sort of that. Me First Mindset.

Lainie Rowell: I want to go into the taking care of it a little bit more because, to me, you reminding us that your brain is an organ, like the heart, and we know that we can heal the heart by having better lifestyle choices, and we can also heal the brain by having better lifestyle choices. In fact, this has happened to you, personally. You have done this yourself. You scanned your brain at a younger age and then after the lifestyle change? Is that correct?

Dr. Daniel Amen: It is. I think all of it is about how can I have a better brain? And then how can I teach you to have a better brain? And oh, by the way, if I teach you to have a better brain, we both have better brains. You are now part of my support group.

Lainie Rowell: Could you give us some very specific daily practices that the readers slash listeners could incorporate into their life? I know we're talking about things like exercise. It all relates to mental health, but what are some specific practices that you really encourage people to implement in their daily lives?

Dr. Daniel Amen: Start every day with today is going to be a great day. You know, most Americans have undisciplined minds where they turn on their phone, they start to scroll, they watch negative news, they just allow negative inputs into their mind and they don't know how to direct their mind. So I start every day with today is going to be a great day.

I start my huddles in the morning with my team and I'm always walking or on a stationary bike. Exercise absolutely essential because boost blood flow to the brain. Whenever I go to eat something, I ask myself, is this good for my brain or bad for it? And I only eat foods I love that love me back.

It's like, you're in a relationship with food and too many people are in abusive relationships with food. Meditate. I love diaphragmatic breathing. I have a very specific pattern I like. Four seconds in, hold it for a second or two. Eight seconds out. Hold it out for a second or two. It's a 15 second breath.

If you do that, increases heart rate variability and calms your whole nervous system down. And it's super simple. But my favorite of all my daily habits is when I go to bed. I say a prayer, and then I go on a treasure hunt. I start at the beginning of the day, looking for what went well, or what made me happy.

And it's my favorite part of the day because so many cool things happen and many people when they go to bed the negative stuff attacks them and, and, you know, negative stuff will attack me, but I like imagine a big broom and sweep it away because it's like, that's not the time. The time, you know, I'll deal with that tomorrow.

And during the day I'm much better at, you know, doing karate with my thoughts than right before bed. And so what went well? is, you know, such a great technique.

Lainie Rowell: And I find that when I do that, and calling it Practicing Gratitude, going on the treasure hunt for the goodness, I find when I do that, I know that sleep is considered a reset, but I find that when I do that before bed, it carries over to the next day, and how I wake up.

The mood. The emotions that I'm feeling the next day are carrying over from that night before, just as if the night before I'm stressing and worrying about it, I tend to wake up stressed and worried.

Dr. Daniel Amen: Yeah, it impacts your dreams, and how you're processing information, so, it's just learning to discipline our minds, our brains, and direct them to what's right rather than what's wrong, and then whenever I feel sad, or mad, or nervous, or out of control, and it's not very often, But I write down what I'm thinking.

And then I just have a process I teach my patients to kill the ants, the automatic negative thoughts that steal their happiness. And I just go, is that really true? And it's so helpful to not believe every stupid thing I think. And I have this rule of 12. Which is I came up with this when I took my wife to Paris for her birthday four or five years ago. And I said, you know, 12 things are going to go wrong. I just honor the principle that shit happens. And let's work really hard and not be upset until the 13th thing. And four things went wrong and nobody was upset the whole trip and we sort of felt like we had a bonus of eight.

And I think learning how to roll with life. Not roll over it, but roll with it, and one of my favorite quotes from my friend Byron Caden is, "Argue with reality, welcome to hell." And so, if I'm upset because the plane, my flight got cancelled, I'm like, well the flight got cancelled, you know, probably because the engine wasn't right, and thank God you're not going to die.

If I roll with it, well then I'm not stressed.

Lainie Rowell: Yeah, I think there's this intentional, you could say disciplined, approach where, you know, some anxiety, I've heard you say this before, some anxiety is healthy, right? Like, You don't get to just live so carefree that you don't care about how much you exercise, or the things that you might be putting into your body that are unhealthy.

Some anxiety keeps us from making some bad choices, right? But that negativity bias, where we do overwhelmingly notice the things that are bad, it really does have to be kept in check. And I really appreciate you saying don't spend too much time scrolling, be careful about how much you're intaking the news.

There are people who consume so much news. I honestly don't even know how they function because that is is so much negativity and it's not to ignore it, as you said, but we do have to be focused on, okay, how much am I taking in? and also having the discussion about, well, what is reality?

That's what I hear you saying, is that we have to be so intentional with what we put into ourselves, including the news and the social media. That's part of our brain health.

Dr. Daniel Amen: Absolutely. And I always think of my patients in four big circles. What's their biology? That's why I look at their brain, but I also look at the health of their body.

What's their psychology? How they think, their development. What's the social circle? How are we getting along? And what's the spiritual circle? Why do you care? What is your deepest sense of meaning and purpose? And understanding illness, it occurs in all four of those circles, right, so it's not just your brain, and getting well, being optimal, is all four of those circles, and I, I think it's just the most balanced, rational way to practice medicine, but also to live your life, to be purposeful and focused on what you want.

I have an exercise I do with my patients called the One Page Miracle. On one piece of paper, write down what you want. Relationships, work, money, physical, emotional, spiritual health. What do you want? And post it. And then you ask yourself, is my behavior getting me what I want, rather than you shouldn't have sugar, or drinking is not good for you, or marijuana is not innocuous Go, what do you want?

And if you want energy and memory and passion and connection, well those things damage your brain, so you don't really want them. But when you go, Oh, you shouldn't have this or shouldn't have that well, then people want them. And so you have to preface it with love your brain. And what do you really want?

And, you know, I know what I want. I want energy, and memory, and clarity, and connection, and passion.

Lainie Rowell: I feel like I have a sensitivity to sugar. I can tell a difference if I consume something that has an amount of sugar that's gonna spike my blood sugar level. I can tell.

It's, it's so clear to me. There's a difference and it's a, it's a bad feeling. It's just something I really, I don't want to be there. I don't want to be there. So that's me having to remember if I do this, I will end up there and that's not what I want, right? And so it's really helpful.

Dr. Daniel Amen: And I was at in an area where there's a little cafe, and I was with my two nieces who were raised in a horrible environment.

I ended up adopting them. , And I, I just pointed out to them the donut case. I said, look at these. There were donuts and cupcakes and cakes. And I said, all of these things, are basically made with sugar, flour, butter, and all of them. They just, like, change the texture a little bit. I said, all of them are going to kill you early, and they make you feel better for about 20 minutes, and then you feel worse.

And yet, people don't see that as weapons of mass destruction. They're like, Oh, I want them. And little kids beg for that. And I'm just like, you know, when you see the world through my eyes, you just, see that you're in a war for the health of your brain and your body.

Lainie Rowell: I know you have a lot of success stories in your practice and in your work, could you share a specific success story or an example of someone really improving their mental and emotional well being, their overall well being, implementing.

the things that you recommend.

Dr. Daniel Amen: I have so many stories.

You know, one of my favorite stories is Jared, who was diagnosed with ADHD when he was three. Hyperactive, restless, impulsive. couldn't concentrate, no friends. The doctor put him on a stimulant, made him worse, put him on another stimulant, made him worse, put him on another stimulant, made him worse.

I'm like, okay, who's got the learning problem? I was going to put him on an antipsychotic medicine to calm him down. And his mother brought him to the clinic. And, no question, he did have ADHD, just not the kind that responds to stimulants. He had a pattern we call the Ring of Fire, and on a group of supplements, parent training, he just did dramatically better.

And for 10 years, straight A's in school, and I was at a benefit with him and he told me he wanted to be a firefighter, his dad was a firefighter, and I said, how come? He said, on someone's worst day, I want to make it better. And I love that, because he was clearly headed for a bad life. And now he's in service, with a good brain, and a good mind, and a great relationship, and a job he loves.

I love that story.

Lainie Rowell: So I want to give you an opportunity any last words of wisdom.

Dr. Daniel Amen: Well, the big lesson is you're not stuck with the brain you have. You can make it better. And I did the big NFL study when the NFL was lying. It had a problem with traumatic brain injury and, I've always loved football until I started looking at the brain and then I realized football doesn't love your brain. And Anthony Davis, the Hall of Fame running back from USC came to see me and his brain was terrible. But five months later, it was better. And he's like, Doc, we have to tell people about this.

And so, I gave a lecture to the Los Angeles chapter of the NFL Players Association, and it was clear to me that some of the players had dementia, they had a lot of family problems, and I'm like, somebody should do a study, and if you grew up Roman Catholic like I did, As soon as you go, somebody should, you then point the finger back at yourself.

And I go, I should do that. And so I partnered with the NFL Players Association. We did the first and largest study on active and retired NFL players. High levels of damage. Stop lying about it. Football's a brain damaging sport, but on a rehabilitation program, 80 percent of our players got better. That's stunning news.

You're not stuck, even if you've been bad to your brain, we can make it better, and I can prove it. But it starts by looking, right? If you don't look, you don't know. And people go, oh, I don't want to know. And I'm like, well, if you knew a train was going to hit you, wouldn't you at least want to try to get out of the way?

Of course you want to know. And the scans are only good news because you have what you have. If I can show it to you and make it better, well, how cool is that? And that's, you know, my mindset is not to tell you you're messed up. It's like, you're awesome. How can I help you have maybe 10 percent more access to your own good brain so you can be more awesome?

Lainie Rowell: There's so much hope in the work that you're doing. I appreciate it and I know that our listeners and our readers do too. So, I want to be able to get people connected to you if they're not already connected to you. What is the best way for people to keep up with your work?

You've got tons of books, you're on the socials. What is your favorite way for people to connect with you?

Dr. Daniel Amen: I have a new book out called Change Your Brain Every Day. It's one of my favorite books too. It's 366 short essays on the most important things I've ever said. So it's sort of like a daily devotional to the brain.

They can learn about the clinics I have a lot around the country at AmenClinics.Com. Amen like the last word in a prayer. Clinics. com or follow me on Instagram or TikTok @DocAmen.

Lainie Rowell: Okay, and I do and I will. And thank you for everything you've shared here today and for all the amazing work that you put out there.

We truly appreciate you. And thank you all for listening.