E246: 7 Life-changing Lessons From The Longest Ever Study On Health & Happiness! Dr. Robert Waldinger
I saw a video that you made.
It punched me in the face.
The reason why my TED talk went viral was because...
Dr. Robert Wahlinger.
Well, Harvard psychiatrist and director of...
The longest study ever done on what makes humans
look happy or unhappy lives.
This TED talk is one of the most beautiful,
all-high for 85 years.
We've tracked the lives of 724 families
through their entire adult lives,
looking at mental health, physical health,
to see what really keeps people happy and healthy.
Some of the participants donated their brains.
They have, you know, so much about them in life,
and now we get to examine their brains.
The most surprising finding in the study was that
it's our relationships that keep us healthier and happier.
There is research that shows that actually people who are married,
men live 12 years longer and women live 7 years longer.
That said, it's not the marriage license.
It's about...
Starting in the 1950s, we stopped investing in other people.
Being lonely is as dangerous to your health
as smoking half a pack of cigarettes a day.
Isolation can break down your coronary arteries, your joints,
the brain declines sooner.
My mission now is going to be to bring this science
that we've worked so hard to develop
and bring it to people in ways that they can use.
Looking at that research, what are the factors
that made those relationships most successful?
Well, most surprising finding in the study
was that...
Robert.
Who are you?
And what is the mission that you're on?
I am a psychiatrist.
I'm a married father of two grown sons.
I'm a Zen priest and I'm a researcher.
And the mission that I'm on
is to relieve the suffering that's optional in the world.
That's the vow I took as a Zen priest.
What is the optional suffering you're referring to?
Well, there's some suffering that's not optional, right?
There's pain.
There's so many things that we can't control
that hurt that we suffer from.
But then there's optional suffering.
There are all the stories we tell ourselves
about things that turn out not to be true,
things that I worry about that turn out to amount to nothing.
Mark Twain had a wonderful quote that I love.
He said,
Some of the worst things in my life never happened.
And that's the optional suffering that we're talking about.
The all the ways that we imagine things that make us suffer a great deal.
So let's go down those two paths.
Psychiatrist and Zen priest.
What does it mean to be a psychiatrist?
What does that mean practically in terms of your work?
It means working with people who are struggling with mental illnesses,
with conditions for which we have help.
And some of the help is medication.
Some of the help is talk therapy.
I became fascinated by how the mind works.
That was what was most exciting for me when I was a medical student.
And I realized that it was going to keep me interested most of my career.
And it has because everybody's so different.
I mean, I realized that if you treat one case of high blood pressure,
you sort of know what the next one's going to look like.
But when you talk to a new person, it's never the same as the person you talked to last week.
So being a psychiatrist for me is getting to take deep dives into people's life experience.
There's a there's a through line here to the third pillar of what I find so absolutely fascinating
about you. And it's also the thing that introduced me to you many years ago.
I was a young man who was incredibly, I would say, I would say addicted to some degree to work.
I was pursuing money at all costs.
I was that sort of typical millennial.
I think you've referenced in the book that had his priorities and all the wrong orders,
particularly at that point, I'd sacrifice so many things.
The stuff that you write about that makes life so meaningful presents,
my happiness was off somewhere in the future behind some future imaginary goal.
And I was sat in a room in Manchester. I think I was in the region of,
I'm going to say somewhere between 18 and 20 years old.
And then I saw a video that you had made a TED talk you had done.
It's one of the most watched TED talks of all time.
And it was about it was the longest study on happiness ever done.
It was the Harvard study of adult development, I think it's called.
And it it punched me in the face.
And it punched me in the face because I've never forgotten it.
And I've talked about it frequently, every quarter or every couple of months since then.
But it punched me in the face because it made me confront something that I think
I knew at some deeper level, I was maybe getting wrong.
And that was the nature of what really makes us happy as humans.
Can you tell me about the Harvard study of adult development,
what the aim of it was and how you in particular got involved with it?
Sure. The study is the longest study of human life that's ever been done,
as far as we know, of the same people going through their entire adult lives.
That's what's so rare about it.
Most research is snapshots in the moment or over two weeks or a month.
So this is over 85 years, 724 families.
It was started in 1938. It started as two studies that actually didn't know about each other.
One was a study of Harvard college students, 19 year olds, young men who were thought by the deans
to be fine upstanding specimens. And this was going to be a study of normal development from
adolescents into young adulthood. I mean, now we smile because, you know, if you want to study
normal development, you study all white males from Harvard, you don't do that.
It's so politically incorrect. But at that time, that's what they were doing.
And the other study was started at Harvard Law School by a law professor and his wife,
a social worker, who were interested in juvenile delinquency.
And they were particularly interested in how some children from really troubled backgrounds
managed to stay out of trouble and stay on good developmental paths.
Like how could that be? What were the conditions that allowed these young people to thrive?
So they chose boys from the city of Boston in 1938, whose families were known to, on average,
five social service agencies for domestic violence, parental mental illness, physical illness.
And they studied all those boys again, looking at what makes people thrive.
And so both of these studies were studies of good normal development instead of studies of what
goes wrong. Most of what we study is what goes wrong so that we can help people.
So these were radical in that sense. And then nobody expected the studies to last more than
five or the most 10 years. And the founders of the study would never have dreamed that
you and I would be talking about this study today and the fact that we're still collecting data,
even as we speak, from the children of all of these original 724 families.
Wow.
You're still collecting data from the children of the participants.
Yes.
And are the founders of the studies still alive?
Oh no, they're long gone. I'm the fourth director.
And the third director was my teacher when I was a medical student. He lectured to my class about
this study of men who were then in their 50s. And I thought, this is amazing. And then about 15
years later, he took me out to lunch one day and said, how would you like to inherit this study?
And I was flabbergasted, but very excited to be able to do it.
What was the study aiming to answer?
It was looking at the big domains of life. It was looking at mental health, physical health,
work life, and relationships. And what the study has done is looked at all of those
just same domains over and over again, year after year for 85 years. What's exciting for me about
it is that we've changed our methods. So initially, there were interviews and medical exams and
people went to their homes and talked to their parents. Well, now we draw blood for DNA. I mean,
DNA wasn't even imagined in 1938. We put people into MRI scanners and watch their brains light up
when we show them different kinds of images. And that would have been science fiction to scientists
in 1938. So what I love is we're studying the same subjects, but we're studying them using
very different methods over time.
I read that some of the participants of the study that have passed away have donated their brains.
They have. We have about 30 brains sitting on shelves in a laboratory at Massachusetts General
Hospital in Boston. And what's rare about them? Most brains are collected because
there was a big problem in life, for example, dementia or brain tumor or something. These are
normal brains. And so what's rare is that these are brains about which we know what their life was
like when they were 20 years old, when they were 30 years old. We know so much about them in life.
And now we get to examine their brains.
So this study, you became the director of it. Let's start top level then. How did this study sets out
to answer some of the big questions in life? The most important things about what makes us happy,
what keeps us healthy, socially healthy, physically healthy. You've got the longest study of humans
that anyone thinks has ever been done. You've been studying them for decades upon decades.
Looking at that research and being a first party to all of that, that information, how has it changed
you? It's very much made me take care of my own relationships. So because the biggest
most surprising finding in the study was that it's our relationships that keep us healthier and happier.
You know, I'm a Harvard professor. I could work nonstop until I drop dead. I mean, that's just the way
academia works. And what I realized was particularly once my kids weren't there,
pulling me away to go take them somewhere or do something with them, that I could just work
all the time. And so what I've started doing is to be much more intentional about calling my
friends about saying, let's go for a walk. Let's go out to dinner. Let's make sure we get together.
I never would have done that before, particularly as a man. I think women are much better. My wife
is much better at calling friends on the phone at making sure they get together. I had to teach
myself to do that. I had to make myself do it. I had to take my own medicine, if you will,
based on what I was studying in my work life.
What do we get wrong about the subject matter of happiness? Like if you were to ask those
participants what they thought would cause happiness in their lives, or you were to ask,
I don't know, a millennial, what are the answers that we say and how wrong are we? And are we good
at knowing? Someone asked me this yesterday at an event. They put their hand up and they said,
we're talking about remote working and this whole change disruption that's happened in the
workplace. And they put the hand up. I think they're a CEO and they said, do my employees actually
know what they want? And it was a really curious question. I ended up answering, and this is maybe
a little bit controversial, but I ended up answering that. Most of us don't know what we want in most
facets of our life. Yes, and we're bad at knowing what's going to make us happy. I'll give you an
example. It's in the book. There was a study in the city of Chicago where they were studying
commuters, people who were about to get on the train and take the train to work like they did every day.
And so they took a random sample of people in one group and they were assigned to do what they
always do on the train. It could have been listening to music or reading the news on their phone,
whatever they did. The other group randomly was assigned to talk to a stranger on the train,
which none of them had ever done. And they asked them beforehand, how much do you think you're
going to like this assignment we've just given you? And the people who were assigned to talk to
strangers said, I'm not going to enjoy this. Afterwards, after they completed their assignments,
the people who had talked to strangers were much happier than the people who had done their usual
staying on their phones or reading the newspaper. So it's an example of how we're not so good at
knowing what's going to make us happy. And particularly when it comes to connecting with each other,
that there's something about these kind of small conversations that we can have with strangers or
even with someone we barely know that turn out to be very energizing more of the time than not.
But we're always afraid. We're afraid someone's going to think we're strange if we strike up a
conversation or we're going to get stuck talking to someone who we don't like.
But what we find is that the culture gives us these messages about what will make us happy that
turn out not to be the truth. A lot of the messages are about consumerism. We're told,
if you buy this car, you're going to be happy. If you serve this brand of pasta, you're going to
have blissful family dinners. And even though we sort of know that this isn't the truth,
the advertisements really do inculcate this sense that if we consume the right things that will
be happy. And what we know from our research and many other studies is that's just not so.
And that these connections with each other actually do make us happy. I mean, for example,
you and I are talking now and your questions and your interest in my work is actually energizing
for me. It's actually making me happier than when I walked in the door today. Why?
I think there's something about wanting to be seen. Like you're actually saying, I want to know
you. I want to know what's going on with you. And that there's something about that that makes
us feel like we belong, that makes us feel like we're connected. And so what we notice and what we
talk about in the book is this idea that when we actually are curious about another person,
it's giving them a gift. It's giving them a way to be seen, a way to tell about themselves,
that we all really yearn for at some level or almost all of us do. And so it's something we can
give to each other every day. When you compare and contrast the two lists list A, which says what we
think we want and B, what your study on happiness is shown that actually leads to happiness. However,
we define it. What are the things just in order that we're most wrong about?
Probably the three big ones were most wrong about fame, and wealth, and badges of achievement.
If I win this prize, if I get to be CEO, that kind of thing. And because the culture tells us all
day long that these will make us happy, and because they're measurable, I think one of the things,
if you think about fame, I mean, it's likes. It's how many downloads of a podcast, it's how many
people read a book, right? And it's measurable, it's quantifiable. Wealth, of course, is quantifiable.
And achievement. But what we know is that those things don't do it. Now, meaningful work can make
us happy, can be fulfilling. That's different from getting the prize, getting the badge.
By contrast, you can't measure relationships. They're kind of messy and complicated, and
they're often full of ups and downs and conflicts. And so you can't quantify it, you can't hold on
to it, it's always changing. And so by contrast, these relationships that actually turn out to make
us happy are not, you can't get your hands around them as easily as you can get your hands around
these things you can kind of grab for these shiny brass objects you can go for.
So why do we, you know, outside of the media influence, why do we have a sort of proclivity to
strive for things like fame? Is there like an evolutionary basis for wanting to be famous or
rich or high status, I guess? Can I get into Zen a little bit? Of course you can, please.
Okay. There's a writer named David Loy, L.O.Y, who writes about this, and I think he's really onto
something that in Zen philosophy that if you really look for the self, if you sit down on a meditation
cushion and you look and I look for Bob, like who's Bob, I can't find him. I can't find a me
anywhere. I can find a swirl of thoughts and ever-changing sensations coming from my body,
and but I can't really find a fixed thing that I call Bob. And that what David Loy argues is that
all of us at some level know this, that there isn't really a fixed self that's going to go on
through time and that's going to last after I die. And that it's at some level scary to know that,
right? And what David Loy argues is that many of us are grabbing for things like wealth and fame
and dominating the earth and dominating each other in this kind of wish to make ourselves feel more
real, more permanent, more fixed, like we really exist. And I think he's right. I think at something,
think about all the ways, you know, I think about all the ways I've been preoccupied with,
you know, am I going to be remembered when I'm gone? Well, I'm probably not, you know, 50 years
from now, nobody's going to really remember who I was. And if I really let that sink into my bones,
that's scary. And so I'd rather write a book with my name on it. I'd rather, you know,
endow a building that'll keep my name on it for a while until the building falls down. Do something
that makes me last longer, that makes the Bob self feel more real. So that's the deep zen dive
that I didn't mean to take you on. But but that's, I think for me, the most helpful explanation at
why we all myself included get preoccupied, why these by these badges of achievement, if you will.
With that comes a ton of suffering, right? Yeah,
designed to be permanent, yeah, and significant. And to compare ourselves because with that comes
comparison. And we know that when we compare ourselves to others more frequently during the
day, we are less happy. Even if it's a positive comparison, I am doing it downward comparison.
Even if it's even if it's a positive comparison, because there's always the threat of falling short.
You're deciding to play a game, which is, yeah, it's like a psychological decision to play a game,
which sometimes you'll win, but sometimes you'll you'll lose exactly. So it's better not to play
the game of comparison altogether. Well, what I find is when I put the comparisons aside,
which I can sometimes, I'm so much more at peace. You know, when someone says to me, do you know
that so and so got this many views or so and so, you know, had this many likes on social media,
I can feel a little part of myself get anxious or close off or start making that comparison that
almost physically hurts a little bit. And when I let that go, if I can just sit and look at a tree
for five minutes, I get a sense of equanimity that I can't get when I'm doing these small comparisons.
The brain engages in these comparisons quite naturally, you know, it's trying to make
snap decisions so it doesn't have to expend too much energy about the value of things and what
things mean. So it kind of compares one thing to another. I've read about the studies in restaurants
where they add an expensive steak to the menu and now because there's a really expensive one,
people will assume that the low price steak is not good and they'll avoid that one, they'll go for
the middle one. Yeah, their decision change is based on the the frame in which they see
the options or the choice. And it's the same with humans. We're trying to figure out the value
of ourselves by snap comparisons. When you hear about these things that the brain is doing,
these comparisons, you go, why does the brain hate me?
Exactly. The other thing is when I look at the animal world, I think, you know, think about all
the ways that we get preoccupied with, do I look right or am I dressed right or have I achieved
enough, right? And then I look at birds and I think I bet they're not showing up worrying about
those things. And what a relief, what a wonderful thing not to be worried about those things.
And I do find that this practice of mine can get me there some of the time, not all the time,
but some of the time. I used to, you know, I used to wonder on that point of like, why does the
brain hate me? I know the brain doesn't hate you. Like, I used to wonder with weight loss, for example,
until I sat here with dietary experts, why, when I have some sugar, I then get sugar cravings. Yeah.
And they explained to me that your brain is actually on your side, it's trying to help you to
survive. Once upon a time, when we didn't have fridges and supermarkets and Uber Eats and whatever else,
coming across some sugar was would advance your chances of survival that would give you energy,
et cetera. And even with the comparison, it's a tool that helps me make quick decisions. My brain
doesn't hate hate me, but the world we live in was not designed for my brain. I wasn't supposed
to be able to look at a billion people on a glass screen. And so the suffering is really a by
product of a changing world, not a brain that hates you. And I see that throughout your work is,
the world has changed to make us unhappy in several ways.
Yes.
What do we do about that? We can't leave the world.
No, we can't leave the world. And the world is always going to keep changing. And so for example,
if we sometimes we can, we can demonize screens and we can demonize the digital revolution,
that's not going away. And so really it's about being as adaptable as we can. But I think for me,
the question is, how can we be as intentional as possible? That our brains evolved, as you're
saying, they don't hate us, but they evolved in certain ways. And so they need correctives.
Similarly, the digital world has evolved in certain ways. And so the digital software
is designed, digital media is designed to grab our attention and hold it.
So it's really that brain.
To exploit that brain.
So then how can we be intentional enough to turn away from that software when we need to,
right, when we need to turn toward each other? When we need to have real time
contact with each other that's so nourishing emotionally and psychologically,
how can we keep from going down the rabbit hole that social media has evolved to keep us hooked
on, not because social media is evil, just because that's how they've developed in order for people
to make a living.
It is quite exhausting, I think sometimes I think because you're right, industry and business,
and even the high street, if you walk down the high street, you know, outside, everything is
designed to exploit the brain. You like the shops are selling sugar and carbs and
or you can go to the gambling shop and that will exploit your brain.
You know, it's dopamine response to flashing lights and pulling that lever on there.
It's difficult.
It is difficult. And that's where suffering comes in. You know, one of the things I see as a
psychiatrist, but we all see this, is that people often want to change their state.
They just want to change how they feel. There's this great cartoon I like, there's this
meditator sitting on a cushion and there's a thought bubble over his head. And what he's thinking
is, I really do want to be in the moment, just not this moment. And if you think about all the
ways in which we want to change our state by gambling, the excitement of gambling or the sugar
high we get when I get some delicious ice cream, or, you know, that it's a way of changing that
kind of sense of malleys that comes over us moment to moment. And I think one of the things we can do
instead is simply be present for that malleys and then watch it pass, which it does eventually, right?
So basically, by and large, we're trying to get rid of some of the less pleasant experiences of our
momentary life, but they'll pass all by themselves if you just pay attention.
Does that require this thing called discipline? Yeah, it does. If we come to watching and not
grabbing on for the next thing to make my feeling go away. I was reading through the chapter in
your book about time and attention and death. Cheery, right? Yeah, but it's one of the subject
matters that I'm really compelled by and I've actually been writing a lot in my upcoming
book about the topic of death. And the order in which I wrote was I started by talking about time
and death because I think they're sort of intrinsically linked to understand the importance of time.
You need to understand that you are going to die, which I don't think many humans really understand.
And then I was going to deliver some time management techniques in my book because I thought, right,
I've set up the conversation that time is important. So now give the reader some time management
techniques. I researched all the time management techniques. I looked at the ones that I use
and I realized there was thousands of them. Now there's thousands of them for the same reasons
that there are thousands of fad diets because none of them work. Yeah. Unless you have this
thing called discipline. Yeah. And this is what, you know, as a Zen priest, you know, it's all well
and good knowing the techniques about meditation. But if you can't have the restraint to not get on
Uber Eats at one aim in the morning and order that KitKat, right? Because you don't have the
discipline. It doesn't matter. I can know it, but doing it is another thing. My question is about
discipline. How does one, even if you're looking at your own life, where does one find that discipline?
You know, often it's, it's not the Nancy Reagan strategy of just saying no, right? You know,
if you think about that, that discipline can't just involve saying no. It has to involve having
something to turn toward. And I think that's where we may be able to help each other find things.
So, you know, if you, if you don't want to order the KitKat on Uber Eats, right? What could you do
instead that that might help, that might feel okay? And I think it's that, you know, if we think
about alcoholics anonymous, the one of the reasons why it works is it doesn't just say don't drink.
It gives you a whole social network of people to support you. And it gives you activities to do.
And people to be with every hour of the day, right? And so what it does is it gives you something to
put in place of that drink that you want to reach for. And even so, it's really hard. And so I think
what, what we need to say is let's put in place some things to help us manage so that we don't
reach for the candy when we're trying to lose weight, right? But when our body is just saying,
oh, I got to have it. And one of those things which you read about and you've seen in the study is,
as you said earlier, is connections and relationships. How important can you quantify to me the importance
of having a romantic partner in your life as it relates to health outcomes?
Well, unfortunately, I can. And because I just want to say that you do not need a romantic partner to
get these benefits because some people have said to me, well, if I don't have a romantic partner,
should I just walk in front of the bus now and enter all right? No, no, it's fine not to have a
romantic partner. But there is research that shows that actually people who are married,
men live 12 years longer on average if they're married and women live seven years longer on
average if they're married. This is some studies in the United States. That said, it's not the
marriage license. It's about an intimate connection. And you can have an intimate connection with
somebody who's not a romantic partner, could be a good friend, could be a sibling, could be
an adult child, so many things, you know, so many ways to have this. What we think is that
everybody needs at least one person to whom they feel securely attached. Our original
participants in our research, at one point, we asked them, who could you call in the middle of
the night if you were sick or scared, list everybody? And most people could list several people that
they could call, but some people couldn't list anyone. And some of those people who couldn't list
anyone had romantic partners. Yeah. So you can be lonely in a romantic partnership, right? You can
be isolated in an intimate relationship. So all that is to say that it is really the quality of a
secure connection that we're talking about that we think everybody needs at least one of in the world
to get these kinds of benefits. What is the physiological or spiritual or
Zen reason why having a intimate relationship with at least one individual is causing us to live longer?
Yeah. So there are a lot of theories about this, but the best theory for which there's some good data
has to do with stress. The idea that good relationships actually help us manage stress and help us
manage negative emotion. So, you know, stress happens all day long, right? And if I leave here
in something upsetting happens, my body will literally change. My blood pressure will go up,
my heart rate will increase. I might start to sweat, right? That's normal. The body goes into
something called fight or flight mode. We're supposed to be able to do that because we want to
prepare to meet a challenge, you know, evolutionarily. It's a good thing. But then when the stressor is
removed, the body's meant to return to equilibrium. You know, so if I have something upsetting happen
and I go home and complain to my wife, I can literally feel my body calm down. You know, if you
have a friend you can call and you can talk about what was upsetting, you can literally feel that
return to equilibrium. What we know happens is that people who are lonely, people who are socially
isolated don't have that. And what we have been able to demonstrate is that they stay
in a kind of fight or flight mode. So, higher levels of stress hormones circulating like cortisol,
higher levels of inflammation. And that's how we think. We're pretty sure that isolation,
loneliness or toxic relationships through stress can break down your coronary arteries, can break
down your joints, can make it more likely that you'll get type 2 diabetes. So, that's how the same
mechanism can affect lots of different body systems. And stress is really intrinsically linked to
poor nutrition, right? So, if I'm stressed, I'm more likely to reach for the KitKat. Exactly.
You're more likely to go to the casino or to place that bet or buy that.
Short-term decisions and not delay gratification.
Exactly.
Maybe explains why men live less long as well because they are less likely to
open up according to the data and be vulnerable and therefore their stress is not
reduced by the insulating effect of having supportive relationships.
That's right. They are less likely to open up. In fact, when they've done studies of how couples
argue with each other, they videotape them. What they see is that men are more likely to withdraw
during an argument and women are more likely to pursue to say, look, I want to talk about this.
And the man is likely to kind of clam up and literally sink back in his chair.
And so... I feel attacked. Exactly. Exactly. I'm withdrawing.
Yeah. Yeah. And so it literally involves a process of learning sometimes for many men to
learn to say it's okay. And one of the things we know is that men often have an
aversive physiologic reaction during arguments that make them want to withdraw.
So that the same kind of fight or flight mode for men make them want to hang back.
And for women, they make them want to engage. And that's a little bit trickier.
The science is a little trickier in that regard, but there's some idea that that's
part of what goes on for us gender-wise. I understand how men might end up in that
situation from maybe watching movies or, I don't know, stereotypes that are portrayed in media
of what a man is, right? But are we also inheriting that from our parents?
Oh, yes. Absolutely. We get socialized all the time. In fact, there's some research
on adolescent boys. And the research suggests that younger boys have close friends and they
emotionally confide in each other. And then as those teenage boys get older, they stop doing that.
And there's some idea that it's not considered manly to do that. So the boys stop doing it.
The girls continue to do it because they've been socialized that it's okay,
that it's feminine. It's perfectly reasonable for a girl and a woman to confide in other people,
whereas men and men don't do that. And that's one of the stereotypes in the ways that we're raised
that hopefully is subsiding, that there are more ways to feel like a real boy, a real man,
that include emotional engagement with other people.
What is the cost then on the other side of the coin? What is the cost of being lonely? I was
reading some studies, I think maybe similar to the ones you described about the gradual decay of
connection that's going on in the world. So we're getting lonelier and lonelier as a species.
Have you seen that in your studies over the years? You've seen, as you ask these participants,
how many people they've got to turn to in that moment of crisis? Are you seeing a decay in the
amount of people they think they can call it to him in the morning? We haven't seen that decay,
but there are many other studies that have. And in fact, there's a sociologist named Robert Putnam
at Harvard, actually, who wrote a book in the 80s called Bowling Alone in which he studied
what he called our investment in social capital. Like how much do we join clubs? Go to churches
and mosques and synagogues. How much do we invite people over to our homes? And what he found was
that starting in the 1950s, all of those indices dropped off. We stopped investing in other people.
And it seemed to coincide in the US with the introduction of television into the American home.
And then he went back in the early 2000s and did the same survey again. All of those parameters
had dropped off further. So what he's shown is that we're becoming much more isolated, certainly
in the United States, but also in the UK and in the developed world particularly. And it seems to
have a lot to do with social mobility. It seems to have a lot to do with digital media and forms
of entertainment, many different causes. But the net effect is that we are becoming more isolated.
And to your question, there's an investigator, Julianne Holt-Lunstad, who studies loneliness.
And what she has estimated is that being lonely is as dangerous to your health as smoking half a
pack of cigarettes a day or a being obese. And so what we know is that there are these very real
concrete effects of social isolation and loneliness that damage us as we go through adult life.
I've read that there was a, I read a new book that there was a link without Simon's as well.
Yes, there is that the brain declines sooner. And the onset of Alzheimer's is earlier in people who
are lonely. Your twice is more likely to develop. I believe that that was in the
Marmalade Trust study. So your twice is likely to develop Alzheimer's if you're lonely.
It could be. And we think that has to do with stimulation of brain pathways. So the thing that
that makes relationships a little scary and risky because people are unpredictable
is also the thing that stimulates our brains. So when I came in here, you and I had never met.
So I was going to talk to you. I didn't know what you'd be like, right? I didn't know what
the questions would be like. But that's good for my brain because you've got my brain running on a
lot of different circuits. And that's stimulating my brain circuits. That's a good thing. You, I think,
are preventing me from becoming demented earlier. So thank you very much.
You're welcome. Yeah. Are we good at understanding? You know,
I think I think back to that kid me sat in that room in Manchester just absolutely focused on
building a business and becoming a CEO and all of those things, the monetary upside. I was
particularly bad at if you'd asked me what the value of a relationship was, I would have
I would have said I probably would have just pointed to the costs. I would have said it's going to
go out of time and arguments. Yeah. In the research that you've done, are people good at
understanding the value of a relationship? No, they're not. They're not. Partly because
relationships are the background. I mean, if you think about it, we've never known the world
without relationships. Most of us, most of us do not live in solitude. And so we've always been
people around, which means we tend to take relationships for granted. And it's only when you pull back
and you look at, you know, thousands of lives that we saw these powerful effects, the differences
between people who had good relationships and people who didn't. Most of us are, you know,
it's like that old joke about the two fish swimming along and the older fish swims by and says,
hey, boys, how's the water? And one fish turns to the other and says, what's water? And you know,
we're in this swirl of relationships all the time that we take for granted. And so it's particularly
difficult for us to understand that this is something that we need to pay attention to nurture,
cultivate throughout life. What if I'm in a toxic relationship? What if my partner is an
asshole? Is it do I stay because of these physiological benefits, insulation from stress,
whatever it might be? Or do I dump them and go out alone in life?
Well, as with so many things, one size does not fit all. There's a huge amount of discernment
involved. So if you think about it, one question for a toxic relationship is how much is at stake?
How much do I have invested? So let's say you're married and you have children together,
then the idea is to work really hard to see, is there a way to salvage this relationship
if only for the children, but also because the partnership could have benefits.
And so what we would say is if there's a lot invested, then we work harder to see.
Is there any way we can find ways to work out our differences? Sometimes there isn't,
and those relationships need to be ended. But I want to point out that most relationships of
any consequence have conflict. And so the real issue is not are there conflicts? The real issue is
can we work out conflicts regularly in ways that make us both feel okay about ourselves and about
each other? If we can't do that, then those relationships often need to be stepped away from.
When you look at all of the relationships that are beneficial and are successful as a relationship,
what are the factors that made those relationships most successful if they're only?
One of the things people talk about a lot is being able to be themselves, to be authentic,
meaning not to have to hide important aspects of who I am in a relationship. And it's not that
we're bearing our souls all the time, but do I have to pretend that I'm someone I'm not? That's
exhausting and depleting. And so the idea is to be able to be yourself in a relationship of any
consequence. I think the other thing we find in good relationships is that people allow each other
to change over time. I mean, we're all constantly changing. We're all moving targets. And so
if we can allow each other to change and maybe even celebrate that change, the relationship is
stable and is likely to last. I mean, I think about my wife and I are about to celebrate our 37th
anniversary. We are so different than we were 37 years ago. I mean, I'd never heard of Zen
37 years ago. And now it's a big part of my life. My wife had to figure out, what do I do with this
guy now who practices Zen? My wife has developed in ways I never expected. What we've had to do
is learn about each other as we change and accept those changes and hopefully support each other
in changing, which I think mostly my wife and I have been able to do. But it's part of its luck.
I mean, it's not like we're such wonderful people. We've just been lucky to be able to support
each other in those changes. But part of it is intentional. And so I think that the best relationships
involved being able to support each other in exploring new things, taking risks.
One of the things that inhibits all of that is we have these expectations on our partner.
We have an expectation of the role they'll play, of who they'll be, etc.
How does that impact our chances of being successful in relationships?
Yes. I mean, I don't know if you remember this old Billy Joel song,
I love you just the way you are and which the lyrics are saying, don't ever change.
Don't ever, I just want you to be exactly the way you are right now. And that's completely unrealistic.
And so we do. We have these expectations of who our partner is going to be. Parents have this
of children. I mean, sometimes I'll catch myself telling one of my sons who's in his 30s,
are you sure you don't want to wear a warmer coat when you're going outside? And he looks at me
as his dad. He lives on his own. He's lived on his own for years. It's like, come on.
But I have to get out of this mode of being his parent in this helicoptering way, right?
So we're always having to readjust our expectations of each other in order to make relationships work.
If I was your one of your kids and I said, Dad, give me one piece of a relationship advice for how
you and Mum have managed to stay together for those 37 odd years. But just, I just want one piece of advice, Dad.
Catch each other being good. Instead of catching each other at doing the things that annoy
you, right? I'm really good at noticing when my wife does things that annoy me.
And I'm not good at remembering, oh my gosh, you know, she just made this great meal. She just made
sure that I was on time to this meeting. She just reminded me to take my medication. You know,
it's like all these things that, oh my God, if she weren't here, I would be a mess, right?
And so what I would say is it's really practicing gratitude. Gratitude practice is really just flipping
our negatively biased minds on their heads and essentially finding what's good, what's going right
with the partnership. And when we do that, there's usually so much to find that's not wrong.
That's right about the relationship. And if you do that, you find that I find that I'm happier in
the relationship, even though there are plenty of times when it's boring, it's predictable, it's
annoying, as any long relationship is, there's so much to be grateful for.
The other thing you talk about a lot in this book is about the use of our time and how we spend
our time chapter five. Kind of goes back to what we're talking about a second to go about time
management and discipline and all these things. One of the alarming things I got from chapter five
was just how much time we waste unknowingly. And I think maybe this is something that's quite
pertinent to your Zen practice. But I think you said that we spend half of our time in waking
moments thinking about something other than the thing we're currently doing. Yes. Yes.
And that people that do that are more unhappy. So people that spend more time ruminating about
or with a wondering mind, as you called it, are the most unhappy.
Yes. There's actually good research on this from a different research group where they would
actually ping people throughout the day at random times and say, are you thinking about
what's right in front of you now? Are you thinking about what's current? And that's where they get
this data that says most people will respond. No, I was thinking about something else, the future,
the past, whatever. And then they would also ask at the same time, how's your mood right now?
How happy are you? And they found that the people who spent more time thinking about
what's right in front of them were far and away happier. So a wandering mind is a less happy mind.
In that chapter, you talk about multitasking as well. We all think, I mean, I'm, you know,
this is one of the problems I had when I was writing my bookers. I like to play music
with that has lyrics in it. So it'll be, I don't know, like R&B music or something.
And I want to write at the same time. And I eventually come to learn that my brain is incapable of
doing two things. So it's not actually listening to the music. It can't listen to the music and
write at the same time. In chapter five, you talk about this research that shows our brain is not
capable of doing one more than one thing at a time. That's right. You're really switching back and
forth really quickly. And it's super inefficient. It's incredible. It's an incredible waste of energy
because your brain takes a moment to get back into gear in the thing you've switched back to.
And then it's, and then it's switching off again to something else. And so what we, this idea of
multitasking, oh, I can do so many things at once. Is a fool's errand, basically.
Flow state. Kind of linked to that. Yeah.
Is it a thing? It is a thing. Is it a good thing? Yeah. It is a good thing.
Prose it. Well, I don't know if I can prove it, but well, actually, there's been some good work by
Chixet Me High. He's a, that's his name. And I can't spell it. It's this long name. He's since
passed away, but a very brilliant psychologist who did research on flow states. You know, so
I'm a meditator and many people say to me when they find that out, say, oh, I should meditate.
And I often say, no, you shouldn't. You should see if meditation feels good to you. And if it does
do it, if it doesn't feel good, find another state, a flow state, if you will, find another past time
that for you makes the time just fly by. So my wife is not a meditator. She has no interest in it,
but she loves music. And she's an avid pianist. She can sit for an hour and just be transported
playing the piano. That's her flow state. For some people, it's skiing down a ski slope. For
some people, it's working in a garden. For some people, it's being on a soccer pitch. It's, you know,
so what I, my hope for people is that they find a flow state or maybe more than one and that they
allow themselves those experiences of flow from time to time where they're just in so in the activity
that time passes by effortlessly without noticing. That's so nice to hear and refreshing for people
who have struggled with meditation, which I imagine is most people. Lots of people. And, you know,
even on this podcast, when I have guests only often talk about the positive upside of doing
meditative practice, there must be so many people that listening go, I've tried it, I can't, I can't,
it doesn't work for me. But to know that, like your hobby, that thing that just, as you said,
that makes the time fly by is an equally effective potentially form of meditation.
Exactly. Making music or painting or whatever it might be, running.
It really nourishing. I mean, it gives us energy. It gives us a sense of peace and
equanimity to be in that kind of state. Quick one. As you guys know, we're lucky enough to have
BlueJeans by Verizon as a sponsor of this podcast. And for anyone that doesn't know, BlueJeans is
an online video conferencing tool that allows you to have slick, fast, high quality online
meetings without all the glitches you might normally find with online meeting tools. And they have a
new feature called BlueJeans Basic. BlueJeans Basic is essentially a free version of their top
quality video conferencing tool. That means you get an immersive video experience that is super
high quality, super easy, and super basically zero fast. Apart from all the incredible features,
like zero time limits on meeting calls, it also comes with high fidelity audio and video,
including Dolby Voice, which is incredibly useful. They also have enterprise grade security,
so you can collaborate with confidence. It's so smooth that it's quite literally changing the
game for myself and my team without compromising on quality. To find out more, all you have to do
is search BlueJeans.com and let me know how you get on. Over the last couple of how long, maybe
four months I've been changing my diet, shall I say. Many of you have really been paying attention
to this podcast. We'll know why. I've sat here with some incredible health experts. And one of the
things that's really come through for me, which has caused a big change in my life, is the need
for us to have these super foods, these green foods, these vegetables, and then a company I
love so much and a company I'm an investor in and a company that spawns this podcast and I'm on the
board of recently announced a new product, which absolutely spoke to exactly where I was in my life
and that is HUEL and they announced Daily Greens. Daily Greens is a product that contains 91 super foods,
nutrients, and plant-based ingredients, which helps me meet that dietary requirement
with the convenience that HUEL always offers. Unfortunately, it's only currently available in the US,
but I hope I pray that it'll be with you guys in the UK too. So if you're in the US, check it out,
it's an incredible product. I've been having it here in LA for the last couple of weeks
and it's a game changer. On the subject of work, what did you notice in the study about the type
of work that leads to the most happiness? I've really tried to distill, I think, over the last
couple of years, what are the fundamentals of what we need in work to be happy? And obviously,
because of this real tectonic shift in how we work and digital screens and remote working,
things are changing. I sometimes wonder if we're kind of sleepwalking into a world of work that
we haven't properly considered, just because we can do something doesn't mean necessarily we should.
Yes, again, that path of least resistance. So we do know some things about this from
some good research coming out of business schools. They do a lot of this kind of research on the
conditions of work, but also the Gallup organization. They did a survey of 15 million workers,
all over the world, all ages, all cultures, all ranks in a workplace.
And their main question was, do you have a best friend at work? Only 30% of those 15 million
workers said, yes, I have a best friend. What that meant was, I have someone who I talked to
about my life, about my personal life. It might be my child is struggling with math or it could
be anything, but just to talk about what's going on in your life. Those 30%, then they did all kinds
of assessments of those people and talked to their bosses. They were better workers. They earned
more money. They were better with customers. They were less likely to leave their jobs for a better
offer, because they had people they wanted to show up for every day. And so what many
leaders in the workplace think of as a distraction socializing at work,
turns out to be a hugely powerful factor for increasing productivity and increasing
wellness and happiness at work. Those 70% of people who said, no, I don't have a friend at work,
11 out of 12 of those people said, I'm pretty much disengaged from my job.
11 out of 12. Nearly all of them. Whereas the 30% were much more engaged in their jobs. So
if you have friends, you're also more engaged in your work. There's something about those connections
that is energizing and liveening, and it spills over into the work itself.
It's so interesting. I sat with our Head of Culture app, my marketing company FlightStory,
and we were talking about the KPIs that a Head of Culture and People should be
tracking in the modern era. And one of the KPIs, which I had in my last company and we've
introduced into FlightStory, is the amount of communities that exist outside of the office.
So how many football teams? Do we have a woman's football team? Do we have a reading club?
Do we have an are they active communities? Because it's really clear to me that in terms of retention,
satisfaction, engagement in the work, if people are bound by this community in various different
ways, everything is going to be better. And people don't necessarily think about that in the modern
world of work that you should be as an employer doing everything you can to create a, I don't know,
FlightStory football club or a Dyer ever CEO, reading club or running club. It will have huge
positive impact for, of course, health and all of those things, physical health and all those
things, but psychological health and social fitness as you call it in the book will go up.
As employees, we don't think that's our business. Right. Right. We don't think it's our business
and it turns out to be so much our business. The other thing is we, most of us spend more waking
hours at work than we spend doing anything else in our lives for most of our adult life. I mean,
so if you're not going to get the benefits of good connections with other people at work,
you are missing a huge part of your life experience.
But it didn't used to need to be our business so much either. If you know what I mean, like,
we used to have other things within society, like even pubs have started shutting down because the
economics don't work out and churches and these sort of social institutions outside of the office.
And then you look at what's going on with this kind of remote working situation post pandemic
where the the in social institution of the office or working around people is also in decline.
What's your view then on remote working and what would your message be to a CEO or leader or employer
that has this maybe potential social pressure coming from wherever to say everyone should be
able to work from home at all times. That's a really good thing versus the research you've done.
That shows the importance of in real life human connection. Yeah. Yeah.
Well, we don't know enough yet about the difference between remote work and in-person work. We don't
know, for example, what gets filtered out on Zoom? You know, what aspects of emotional communication
get filtered out? We don't know. And so we're going to learn more in the next few years because
people are studying this. But then the question is what do we do and what do we know? I think we
well, what we know right and what do we know? Well, we know that some things are filtered out.
And if you think about it, when when you were locked down and you were just on screens with people
and then you saw people again in person, you I felt this upsurge of like, whoa, this is so great.
It's so good to see you in real life. Right. And so we know that there's some there's some
truncation of the interpersonal experience. We just don't know all the elements of it.
By contrast, so I'm a psychiatrist and I do psychotherapy. That's my specialty. So every day
I see people in talk therapy. If you had told me I could do talk therapy remotely that was meaningful.
I would have said you were crazy. Well, turns out you can and most of my colleagues are doing it.
So there are aspects of remote work of remote connection that are much better than we thought.
We're having to learn about this. But to your question of well, what advice would I give to
CEOs? First, I would say that the culture of fostering social connection needs to start with
the CEO. It needs to start with leadership. It can't just be something you delegate to your human
resources department. But then I would say also be intentional, structure it and that can be
structured even on zoom. So the surgeon general in the United States, that's the kind of head
doctor. He's like the the figure head of medicine of public health. Vivek Murthy is his name.
His platform has been emotional well-being and decreasing loneliness, particularly in the
workplace. So what Vivek does is he has a staff meeting every week where the first five or 10
minutes are devoted to one staff member talking about something in their personal life that they'd
like everybody else on the staff to know. And people love this meeting. It's their favorite
and it's their favorite part of the meeting. Because they get to know about each other.
I didn't realize you were interfencing or you were into magic tricks or whatever it was. People
just talk about their lives. And so I think what we can do even with remote work is structure
ways of knowing each other better. The ways that we used to be able to take for granted.
Like you come to a meeting in an office and you spend a moment or two chatting with the person you
happen to sit next to and you might find out something about their life. How do you do that
remotely? How do you do that on zoom? And that's what I think we have to figure out in some way.
If we're going to have any hope of having meaningful connections in the workplace.
One of the things that has been really, really positive about the shift we've seen in the world
of work over the last two years is it feels like people have more control and autonomy.
And controlling autonomy is quite clearly a predictor of happiness, right? Yes, huge predictor.
In fact, in the UK, they did the first study of this. Michael Marmot, who did this amazing study,
the White Hole Studies, where he found that the people who had more control and more autonomy
stayed healthier. They were under less stress and they stayed healthier. That always really
really stood out to me that there's physiological health implications, less likely to get things
like heart disease. If you feel like you have a greater control over your life and work,
people that are working in jobs that when they don't feel like they have autonomy,
have physiological consequences, they're more likely to get disease. It feels very, very stark.
Well, and it goes back, I think, to the stress hypothesis that there's something about having
no autonomy being confined and constantly frustrated that keeps, I suspect, keeps the body revved up
in a kind of chronic stress mode that then breaks it down. In your work as a psychiatrist,
what is the like reoccurring thing that us as humans just seem to struggle with on an ongoing
basis? You talked about at the start, it was things to do with permanence or identity,
whatever else. Are there other things? I remember sitting here with Risapia,
and she talked to me about how we fundamentally live with the patients she sees,
suffer with a feeling like they're not enough. That seems to be a consistent theme for her.
What are the consistent themes in your practice as a psychiatrist?
Well, I would say that sense of not being enough is a very important, very common one.
It speaks to a sort of larger problem of self-criticism that many of us are quite
critical of ourselves for just any number of things. All of us have a different set of things
we're critical about, but a lot of what I work with with people is first showing them the self-criticism,
because often it's like the air they breathe. So I come into a practice,
and what is a typical symptom of someone that might come and see you? And why would they have
come to see you? They might come with depression, they might come with anxiety, they might come with
a sense that life is meaningless and they're not getting any joy in life. They might have come
because a spouse has died or a child has died and they're not able to cope. They are just finding life
life doesn't seem worth living anymore. And what's your process from there? What's
they say there, symptom? I'm depressed, let's say. We talk. So I am a psychiatrist, but I tend not
to reach for my prescription pad right away. I do use medication when we need it, but first we talk.
And often if I can help somebody just to tell me what's wrong, a lot of the symptoms will ease.
And yeah, I mean, you can, if somebody is, if it's life and death, I will often use medication
right away to make sure somebody stays safe. But many times people will come and after two or
three meetings, they will feel less depressed because they've been able to unburden themselves
and to talk about something they feel is so horrible or so shameful. And I can help them
understand it and often normalize it. A lot of what I do and a lot of what my research does
is normalize things and say, yeah, this is part of being human. And for many people, you know, a lot
of times, one of my teachers used a phrase that I find so helpful. He said, we're always
comparing our insides to other people's outsides. You know, I'm always comparing the me that some
mornings wakes up feeling kind of lost. And you know, like, I don't know what I'm doing with my life
or down with the curated lives that we see on social media or the game faces that we put on for
each other. I mean, you know, we're you and I are trying to look okay for each other. You know,
we're not telling each other about our miseries right now because we have a job to do. We're doing
this interview. And that's fine. That's good. We need to do that. But it can leave each of us with
the impression that other people are always fine. They've got it figured out and I don't.
So a lot of my work as a psychiatrist is to help people see, oh, you know, no, this is actually part
of being human that, you know, yes, when you lose a loved one, this is a trauma. And that, yes,
many people feel like they don't want to get out of bed in the morning. Many people feel like they
can't go to work. And let's talk about that. Let's talk about your loved one. Let's talk about
what the loss is like. And when you really take people through that and take through people through
what's hurting so much, a lot of times the pain will ease tremendously. Sometimes we use
medication to help and that's good. But many times it's not needed.
What are the factors of somebody that can be helped from all you've seen in your work? What
are the things you go? Well, if they exhibit this, this, and this, then I think we can work with them.
And I'm saying this, it's worth saying because I want to build the bridge. We all have people in
our lives that we want to help. You're right. Someone that's struggling with something. I'm not
saying it's our job to help them or to be a fixer assignment. So that taught me not to be.
But I do find it useful to know that's kind of the question I'm trying to answer here is like,
that person we all have in our lives, maybe they're struggling with something, maybe it's a recurring
issue. Which ones of those can be helped? What are the cool factors?
The ones who can be helped are the ones who are willing to look inward. So some people
will never go for help. They'll never want to be curious about themselves, often because it's
scary at the deepest level who are saying, this is my story and I'm sticking to it. This is my
worldview. And I am not going to inquire about my own role in my difficulties. The people who can
be helped are the people who sooner or later get to a point where they say, okay, maybe I'm making
some contribution to my troubles. And if so, what is that? Responsibility.
With some responsibility. Some responsibility. For some people, it's humiliating. It's impossible
to even imagine that I am the architect of some of my own misery. Actually, many times,
a couple will come for couples therapy. And if one person says, the only thing you have to do
is fix the other person. You know that it's not going to work because any couple has learned a set
of dance steps they've developed. And what you have to help the couple to do is look at their
dance steps and then modify them. And it's always two ways. It's always both people contributing
to difficulties in the couple, just as both people contribute to what goes right.
It's the person who says, no way am I any part of the problem here. That's the person who can't
really be helped by these means. It's the reason why sometimes we don't want to take responsibility
because confronting what the inward perspective might show us, as you said, is really uncomfortable
for a self-esteem, which is already on the floor. Yes. Yes. That's it. I mean,
So I'm playing defense. I don't know. I'm playing defense. And the defense has to be so complete.
So think about the people who are so self-aggrandizing and have to tell you with every sentence how
wonderful they are, who can never apologize, who can never admit doing anything wrong. Those are
often the people who feel the most vulnerable and who put up this rigid defense because to
entertain that they're fallible, that they can make a mistake, that they can do something wrong,
threatens a total collapse of the self. And so those many times are the people who just can't
can't at all entertain that question of what could I be doing that I might be able to change to make
things better. Do you have a framework for how I've heard you talk about how precious time is in
your book and about attention? Do you have some kind of framework that you use to decide how to
invest your time? Like why did you come here today versus being somewhere else? You live in
Boston, right? Yes. So you've flown over to the UK, to Europe, you've been doing some appointments
in Europe. How are you deciding to deploy your time? Is there a framework?
There's definitely a framework. For me, it goes back to that vow of service. So this study,
I've been going for 85 years, we've published hundreds of scientific papers. But we published
the Menacademic journals, very technical, no one reads those journals, literally almost no one.
And so what we found was that people were hungry for this kind of information. I mean,
the reason why my TED talk went viral was because I was speaking about things that we know from
science that we haven't told anybody in the wider world. So my mission, I said, look,
I don't have that many years left in my career. My mission now is going to be to bring this science
that we've worked so hard to develop and bring it to people in ways that they can use to bring it
in understandable form rather than highly technical geeky form, which is what most of my scientific
papers are. Why? Why don't do something else? Because relieving suffering is one of the most
meaningful things I can do with my life. And given that I'm not going to be remembered 50 years from
now, easing some suffering right now is the best thing I can think of to do.
What's it doing for you? It makes me feel like my life has some purpose.
That and being with my family, my wife and my kids and my friends,
because the question that Zen keeps asking and making me ask is, well, what's being human about?
I mean, it's so unlikely to be born, first of all, right? And then to live a life. And so what,
why am I doing this? And so that's the answer I have given myself. It's not, by any means,
the right answer. God knows it's not the only answer. It's just my answer. And it's my answer for now.
Is life, is there a point to life in your view?
The point is what we make of it. There is, you know, this is the evolving of the universe.
The universe is constantly changing. It's morphing and changing. Our species is going to morph and
change, probably be extinct, right? Every species eventually becomes extinct.
So do we matter then if we're going to be extinct?
I don't know. We matter for the moment and we matter to each other. I mean, that's another reason
why I've spent so much of my adult life prioritizing relationships and studying
relationships. Because I think what, what can we do? Well, we can matter to each other.
What have you gotten wrong? And what are you?
I've gotten so much wrong. Where do I start? But okay, I'll start.
Top of the list, top of the list is I've worried too much about what other people thought.
So one of the things I've done is I, for example, I was in a job that was very prestigious. When I
was young, I was director of a training program at a prestigious program for psychiatrist.
I hated it. I realized I, and I was on a track to, to be the chair of a psychiatry department at a
fancy academic institution. And I realized I just hated the work. I just hated being an administrator.
To me, it was like washing dishes. The same problems came up over and over again. And I would
sit in these meetings with people who were obviously very engaged. I'm glad they were engaged,
but I just didn't care about it. And I finally had to say to myself first, and then to everybody
else, I don't want to do this. This is not my path. And it took me longer than I wish it had,
but I'm glad I did it. I had to learn that lesson in order to, you know, that was one of those
badges of achievement, right? And so I've, so for me, what I've gotten wrong is, is thinking that
the badges of achievement were going to be satisfying and realizing that they're not. I mean, for me,
a conversation like this is actually satisfying. I'd rather do this. And I don't even care how many
people listen to your podcast, although I'm, I'm sure it's a lot of people. I understand it is,
right? But, but I don't care. What I really care about is having this conversation with you,
that that feels like a really good use of my time.
I, if I make you, if I made you prime minister or president of the world,
no, please, no, no, we need you. Okay. Robert.
And I told you to redesign society in a way that would lead us all to having greater
levels of fulfillment and happiness. What are some of the first things you would do in terms of the
design of the way society operates at the moment? What would you ban? What would you introduce and
enforce? What I would introduce is massive support for children and the people who take care of
children, because it's the best long-term investment that actually they've done some studies of this.
There's a James Heckman is a an economist at the University of Chicago who,
who published a paper in Science where he analyzed hundreds of studies of what, when we invest in,
in an age group, where do we get the biggest bang for the buck, right? If we invest in zero to four
years old or five to eight or all the way up, what, what happens when people get into adulthood?
Who's the most self-sufficient? You know, who's the healthiest? And what he found was that for every
dollar we invest in age zero to four, that we get a huge payoff compared to every other age group.
That doesn't mean we shouldn't support people in other age groups, but it means if we could
invest in children, in young children, and child care, so much, so much less poverty, substance abuse,
misery, down 20 years, 30 years down the line. It's a long-term investment.
And what about on an individual level? So if you were to give me advice then on an individual
level, and maybe we'll put this in a frame of one of your children turning to you and saying,
again, dad, I'm off to live my life. What is the way you would recommend I design my life
at a very fundamental level for it to be a fulfilling life? What do I need to know, Robert, dad?
Invest in people. Really invest in all kinds of relationships, including casual,
peripheral ones. Which is what you've had to do following your involvement in the study,
right? That intentionality of pouring into relationships, even though it doesn't feel natural.
Because so many benefits come back. They see us through hard times. What they find, for example,
is that your most peripheral relationships are the people who are most likely to find you
your next job, not your closest friends, right? So even these peripheral relationships are of
great value to us. And that happens to be because they're not in your social network. They know
many people who you've never heard of and can connect you with people you would have no other
connection with. I'm definitely one of those people that has a bias towards being on my own,
being isolated, just working on my own. And I'm not good at watering my peripheral relationships.
I'm like, five out of five nurturing my close relationships. But outside of that, it's like,
it's like a concrete wall. I think a lot of people are like that. I think a lot of people
really struggle. I don't know, like struggle with, especially again, we talked earlier on about
men struggling with social interaction because of their inability to be vulnerable and open.
Does it really matter? Does it really matter for me that I'm 30 years old now? Do I start hitting
people up that I've not spoken to in a couple of years and start asking them to go for coffee?
It doesn't matter if you don't feel a lack. How do I know if I feel a lack?
You just check in with yourself. I mean, seriously, the reason I say that, it gets to this kind of
introverts versus extroverts spectrum that some people have said, well, if you're shy,
does that mean you're screwed? That you're not supposed to be shy? And no, it doesn't. What it
means is that all of us are on some kind of spectrum, temperamentally, from shyness to
extroversion, and that some people don't need many people in their life at all. And in fact,
having a lot of people around is stressful. Other people get their energy from lots of people,
and they want more people in their life. So there is a way that you really can check in and say,
what do I need more of? What do I have enough of? Maybe what do I need less of right now?
And people that are neurodivergent have sometimes different social needs to those that are sort
of neurotypical, I think the phrases, which goes to show that there's not a one-size-fits-all
approach to. I say this in part because I hit my friends up the other week. And I said,
after reading your work and reflecting over the years on the importance of social connections,
I was like, why don't I try and get all of my friends to live in the same place? You know?
Worth a try. Some of them live like of my five, six best friends, one of them lives in Dubai,
one of them traveling around the world with this baby from Tulum to wherever,
a couple of them live up north in the UK. If connection and social connections and social
ties are the most insulating for my health, if they are the number one cause of happiness,
why don't we make an effort to try and organize our lives as communities? I hit them all up. I said,
hey guys, let's all move to London. Fuck off Steve. And I'm joking. It was like, you know,
life happens. They get all of my work over here.
Well, that's what, you know, we're seeing this that actually these social fabrics are breaking
down in more traditional societies where people did stay in the place they were born. So India,
people are really worried about this in India now, certainly in China, where people are leaving
their villages. So in a typical family, there would be the grandparents, maybe even great grandparents
and the parents and the children, right? And the grandparents job was to take care of the grandkids
while the parents went off and worked. Now what's happening is that people are leaving their
villages to seek economic opportunity elsewhere, like in Dubai or in the big cities in China.
And everybody's losing their social fabric and their social role. And so I think there's a great
deal of worry about this. You're noticing this and you're saying, wait, I want to knit this fabric
back together. I want my friends to come together and let's all hang out together and support each
other. My wife and I are saying, you know, we should like, like develop this old people's home as we
get older and we should get all of our friends who are getting old to get together and live
together. But it never kind of works out that way because everybody's kids are moving to a
different place. And, you know, and so it's this question of how do we, how do we manage these
social fabrics that are fragile that once they're torn, it's really hard to put them back together,
but they provide so much benefit. Are you hopeful? You're not, are you?
Your reaction then told me you weren't hopeful. You're right. I wasn't in that moment. You aren't.
I could say it just the... I wanted to tell you I was hopeful. I could see exactly that.
But I'm not about the social fabric stuff. I'm not hopeful either. I mean, there is evidence that
sometimes we need to feel the pain before we change. But I think there are so much influence
that is driving us towards prioritizing other things and not the social fabric stuff that we've
talked about. That will probably went out over the long term. I think so. I think so. And the problem
is, you know, we evolved, we think, to be social animals, that it was safer to be in groups. And
that's why, you know, we passed on our genes more often if we hung together in groups. And so
the problem is that the way we evolved, it's a stressor to be alone. It's a stressor to be more
isolated, but life is taking us in these directions of greater isolation. So I'm not hopeful.
And you called me out on it. You could see it flicker across my face and then I think I was trying to hide it.
Okay, I'm going to ask you the question, Nudari. This is the question left by our last guest for
you. But then I am going to ask for a call of optimism. Okay. So the question left for you is,
if you could go back to one era in civilization, what era would you pick? Why? And what
would your job be?
Interesting.
I would go back to ninth century China and I would be a Zen monk.
Why? Because it was the way to know about life in a radically different way than
society was going at the time. And I would just like to know, just because I've studied
coons and I've studied ancient Zen literature. And I'd just like to know what it really would feel
like to be one of those monks in one of those monasteries with a teacher. And I can envision
it in my mind, but I'd really love to experience it. So if I could time travel, that's where I'd go.
If you could only say one last thing to everybody that was listening, if this was maybe your last day
on the earth and you know, you've got this mission that you've been on for the last couple of decades
to serve others and to help them with their suffering, if you only had 60 seconds to leave
a message with them based on your workers as a priest and a psychiatrist and the studies that
you've done, what would that message be?
It would be make your default setting kindness. Just go back to that whenever you have a choice,
whenever you're at a point where you're trying to decide how to take the next step, make that
your choice. Why?
It's what Tiknad Han the Zen teacher used to call nourishing healthy seeds. But if you nourish
those seeds, that's what grows. If you nourish other seeds, like the seeds of power or dominance
or anger, that's what'll grow.
Robert, thank you. Thank you for giving me your time today. Thank you for doing this interview.
I know you've done many of them, but this one was a step.
This was really a wonderful conversation.
Thank. And I do know, I really mean what I said, where you talked about seeds there.
Your TED talk planted a seed in my mind that just grew slowly over time.
And I was never able to shake it. And it's funny because I was a young man who would
I think that was probably the thing that had the biggest impact on me reassessing my priorities in
life, because you provided irrefutable evidence from a huge group of people with the study that
you're the director of over a long period of time that as I said at the start of this conversation,
just like stared in the face of the way I was living my life.
And because of that, because that seed was planted in my mind, I gradually, nothing happens overnight.
Once I think through confirmation bias, once the seed's been planted, you then find things
as you go on that confirm that seed and kind of water it and mean that it flourishes into being
a tree or a plant or a flower. And that's what happened. I realized that relationships and
connections and investing there, having a partner would be profoundly valuable and
beneficial to my life and my work. And most importantly, of all my North Star, which is happiness.
And that just nudged my life in a slightly different direction. But then think about it,
Robert, I then have this podcast. I then write quotes. I then speak to people on the internet
and social media and on the telly. And that slight nudging in that new direction has made me
nudge other people in that direction. And that started with that video for me. So thank you,
because I'm sure the dominoes falling has caused other people to be nudged slightly
in that direction as well. And that starts with you. So thank you so much.
Well, what you've just told me is a real gift, because that's what I would hope. That's, you know,
when we talked about what my mission is right now, it's hoping that this kind of information
and these ideas move people to shape their lives differently. And so it means a lot.
Thank you so much. Thank you.
So, thank you.
Bye.
Bye.