50. Equanimity: Seeing our Storylines and Changing Course (part 3)
Welcome to the JoyLab podcast, where we help you uncover and foster your most joyful self.
Your hosts, Dr. Henry Emmons and Dr. Imi Prasek, bring you the ideal mix of soulful and scientifically
sound tools to spark your joy, even when it feels dark.
When you're ready to experiment with more joy, combine this podcast with the full JoyLab
program over at joylab.coach.
Hello, I'm Henry Emmons and welcome to JoyLab.
And I'm Amy Prasek, here at JoyLab we infuse science with soul to help you uncover joy.
We do that by building up the elements of joy.
Those are the positive emotions and inner states that become the building blocks for
a joyful life.
The element for this episode is, again, equanimity.
So we dug into this element in the last two episodes, 48, number 48.
I'm building up your baseline and then 49 on how to use equanimity at the beginning of
a storm when you feel those physical sensations rise up and those thoughts pop in.
We're leaning on these phases laid out by Ponna Chodron on how we can, as she notes,
remain still like a log through a stressful situation.
In this episode, we're still on the high seas and now we're going to meet that common
hurricane called Why Me, also known as getting caught up in her storyline.
I'll just quote therapist Lori Gottlieb to get us started with this.
It's from her TED Talk that was super popular a few years back.
She said, if there's anything I've learned as a therapist, it's that we are all unreliable
narrators of our own lives.
So in her talk, she notes that we often have this assumption that our circumstances are
what craft the stories we tell ourselves.
But what is often more true is that the way we narrate our daily lives is what actually
writes and cements our stories.
I think in her talk and what we're saying here is that these stories are powerful and
we'll talk about how they can sort of spiral us down in the beginning of this episode,
but there's power for transformation for changing our narration and our stories.
We do this in the Joy that Program a lot and right here as well in the podcast, particularly
as we're working on these phases of a storm and the strategies with equanimity that we're
getting into.
They help us change the narration we have in our lives in a more clear and compassionate
way, sort of loosen the grip of our current stories and to start to write some new ones
that are more true and that service better.
So let's start in this phase of our stories arising amidst a storm.
Henry, can you say more about how these arise even though they really help us?
Why do these stories pop up?
Well, I really like that quote that you shared that we are unreliable narrators of our own
lives.
Right.
And it's not just you or me that are unreliable.
It's universal.
It's all of us.
So we might vary on whether we think too little of ourselves or too much, but we all get it
wrong, she's saying.
So in our last episode, we started talking about the anatomy of an emotional storm.
In real time, I know it feels like it happens all at once, but we're trying to parse it out
into stages so that we maybe can find some more areas for leverage, ways to minimize
the damage a bit.
So at the very beginning, there is a surge of emotion, a bad feeling that's basically
telling us that something is off inside.
If we can notice that and we can observe it with our wise mind, we might be able to stop
it right there.
We'll still feel a little upset, but the whole thing will just blow over.
If we can't do that, then those old, intrusive thoughts pop up automatically.
The ones we've been practicing for years.
If we can still see them for what they are, just thoughts that have no more meaning than
we give them, then they don't really have much power over us.
And they'll just drift away eventually with the wind.
However, if we let them run rampant, they are going to escalate things quickly.
So those first two stages are mild compared to what happens next, because what really
energizes the storm is the entry of our own story.
In a general sense, the problem is that we begin to make it personal.
We make it about me.
After all, it's me who feels threatened or hurt.
And of course, it's not the first time.
So this little voice enters and says, something like, this always happens to me.
And this will keep happening to me because there is something fundamentally wrong with
me or some variation of that.
So these are just all stories that we've been rehearsing for years.
And it seems like every time something like this new storm happens, we just add more layers
to the story.
It ramps up the energy behind the bad mood, and it becomes really hard at this point to
stay grounded and stay mindful because these forces become so, so strong.
Noticing that it's hard to be mindful at this point is really helpful.
It's a consequence of how much energy, time, and focus these stories pull from us.
We just don't have the bandwidth left to do much of anything else.
And we've talked about this in the past, this narrowing of the visual field amidst depression
and negative thinking and how it sort of shrinks our mental field.
We can't see as much literally.
And we can't think as broadly to help us climb out of these stories.
Our stories really pull us down and blindfold us and keep us locked into a type of self-centeredness.
That's hard to point out sometimes.
I had a hard realization with that.
I'm not self-centered, but I think it's common to sort of conflate self-centeredness with
greed or overconfidence.
But what's happening here when we get stuck in our stories is that self-centeredness is
at play, but it's this negative preoccupation with all these aspects of ourselves.
It's a self-centeredness anchored in unworthiness, in self-hatred insecurities, feeling like
the world is always out to get us or to quote Jim Carrey from Bruce Almighty.
God is a mean kid sitting on an anthill with a magnifying glass.
And I'm the aunt.
He could fix my life in five minutes if he wanted to, but he'd rather burn off my feelers
and watch me squirm.
Ouch.
Right?
I feel like that sometimes, don't we?
Personal.
The fallacies we dug into in episode 38, the fallacies of fairness and change.
Very helpful to go back to right here.
And the elements we work on in JoyLab, particularly the experiments we do in the program for our
elements of compassion, sympathetic joy, and equanimity can be big movers, I think, to
get us out of the self-centeredness.
But what we're doing right here, working through these phases of a storm, tuning into
the body, grounding, changing the narration, shifting our story.
They move us from what I've heard Pema children describe as self-degradation, self-centeredness,
and into self-cherishing.
I love that.
And self-cherishing is a life raft in a storm.
Yeah.
Wow.
I really like that too.
A life raft in a storm.
Yeah, and your Bruce Almighty quote is a perfect example of how we make it personal.
A mean kid with a magnifying glass.
Wow.
That's personal.
Yeah.
So, you know, at this point, we can just acknowledge that the storm is here and try to bring our
wise mind online to help us get through it more or less intact.
Yeah.
It's not business.
It feels personal in this phase as you noted, Henry, it's personal.
The realization is really powerful.
It's like you can see the pen in your hand, like you catch yourself, red-handed writing
the story.
I think that puts some space between us and our story.
A realization that this story is not the way it is necessarily.
It's the way I'm writing it.
And that realization can be really empowering, realizing that we've got some say in this
story, all the strategies we work on here at the podcast and the program, we train for
this.
So maybe next time when a storm hits, we just don't write as much because we have some space
from it now.
And maybe after a few more storms, we don't even pick up the pen.
Story doesn't come up.
And maybe after a few more storms, we write a totally different story.
Yeah.
You know, I think if something is wrong, if we feel bad in any way at all, the mind
just starts looking for reasons.
Why is this happening?
It fills in the details.
It's kind of the job, the mind's job, really.
And that's why it's so important that we take some ownership of this whole process with
our conscious wise mind.
Because if we don't, that unconscious, fearful, small self is going to do it, and it's going
to write a very different story.
So I don't think it's possible to rewrite our stories while we're in the midst of the storm.
I sure can't.
You know, we need time for that.
And maybe we need some guidance or help to do that.
I think that's a really good way to look at psychotherapy.
And I think it's a really good way to look at our JoyLab program where we're basically
working on writing a different story and weaving the 12 elements of joy into it.
Because no matter what, we're going to tell stories.
It is what we do to make sense of our lives.
So we might as well try to get better at it.
Yeah.
We are all authors.
At the same time, I love this idea that we don't have to write about all the things.
We don't need to craft a story, even a positive one for every scenario or have an opinion
on all the things.
Our brain will do what it does, but we don't need to latch on.
We can maybe just let it go.
I think that's a relief.
And so let's end here with a bit of wisdom, a little bit of inspiration on this and what
we've explored today.
It's from Marcus Aurelius' notes to myself, which was later titled Meditations.
He wrote, you always own the option of having no opinion.
There is never any need to get worked up or to trouble your soul about things you can't
control.
These things are not asking to be judged by you.
Leave them alone.
Thank you for listening to the JoyLab podcast.
If you enjoyed today's show, visit joylab.coach to learn more about the full JoyLab program.
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Thank you.
Bye.