Have you ever felt a deep lack of confidence that seeps into your relationships, your work, and even how you see yourself? Maybe you find yourself constantly seeking validation from others, afraid to fully trust your own inner wisdom. Or perhaps you bounce between heights of self-assurance and depths of doubt, never feeling truly grounded. So easily knocked off your seat and into the spin of uncertainty.
If so, youβre not alone. Weβre living through a unique moment in time where many are questioning their core identity, their purpose, and grappling with pervasive groundlessness in nearly every domain of life. The shaky foundations we once relied on seem to be crumbling all around us. In work, love, family, community β weβre being called to find a deeper wellspring of confidence from within.
My guest today, Ethan Nichtern, has spent years exploring the ancient wisdom that can help us cultivate unshakable confidence amidst lifeβs uncertainties. Ethan is a renowned Buddhist teacher who leads meditation classes and hosts The Road Home Podcast. In his book Confidence: Holding Your Seat through Lifeβs Eight Worldly Winds, he weaves a powerful tapestry of insights to guide us home to our innate sense of self-trust.
In this conversation, Ethan unwraps the βeight worldly windsβ β the contrasting experiences we hope for and fear in life, from pleasure and pain to fame and insignificance. He shares how by firmly taking our seat amidst these opposing forces, we can develop profound self-trust. Youβll discover practical strategies to harness the power of self-compassion, lineage, awareness, and what Ethan calls βwind horseβ to ride confidently through every situation.
You can find Ethan at: Website | Instagram | Episode Transcript
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Episode Transcript:
Ethan Nichtern: [00:00:00] The way I think of confidence is just like an actual willingness to be in the forces of life and trust. Not necessarily that Iβm going to get what I want because we also fail quite a lot. I think trust is interesting. Itβs just sort of a feeling of, this is going to be okay, I can work with this. Itβs that quality of like, here I am. This may be hard, but Iβm grounded. And maybe that means grounded in groundlessness, but at the end of the day, I have to trust myself.
Jonathan Fields: [00:00:32] So have you ever felt a deep lack of confidence that just seeps into your relationships, your work, and even how you see yourself? Maybe you find yourself constantly seeking validation from others, or afraid to fully trust your own inner wisdom. Or perhaps you bounce between heights of self-assurance and depths of self-doubt, never really feeling truly grounded, so easily knocked off your seat and into the spin of uncertainty. Well, if so, youβre not alone. Weβre are living through a unique moment in time where many are just questioning their core identity, their purpose and grappling with pervasive groundlessness in nearly every domain of life. The shaky foundations that we once relied on really, they seem to be crumbling all around us in work and love and family community. Weβre being called to find a deeper wellspring of confidence from within. Well, my guest today, Ethan Nichtern, has spent years exploring the ancient wisdom that can help us cultivate unshakable confidence amidst lifeβs uncertainties. Ethan is a renowned Buddhist teacher who leads meditation classes and hosts the Road Home Podcast. In his book, Confidence Holding Your Seat Through Lifeβs eight Worldly Winds, he weaves a powerful tapestry of insights to really guide us home in our innate sense of self-trust. In our conversation, Ethan unwraps these things he calls the eight worldly winds. We dive into what those actually are the contrasting experiences that we hope for and also fear in life, from pleasure and pain to fame and insignificance. And he shares how by taking really firmly our seat amidst these opposing forces, we can develop just profound self-trust. Youβll discover practical strategies to harness the power of self-compassion and lineage and awareness, and what Ethan calls windhorse to ride confidently through pretty much every situation. So excited to share this conversation with you! Iβm Jonathan Fields and this is Good Life Project.
Jonathan Fields: [00:02:37] Weβre having this conversation at a sort of an interesting moment in time where a lot of people are sort of like questioning who they are and their sense of confidence in themselves, in the world around them, in their relationships, in a connection to something maybe more expansive and bigger than them and and really trying to grapple with a sense of just pervasive groundlessness in nearly every domain of life. And, you know, itβs interesting because this is a space where you have not just lived, but youβve been teaching in for a long time. Iβm wondering just broadly, what are you seeing as youβre having conversations with people, with students out there in the world these days?
Ethan Nichtern: [00:03:14] Yeah. The reason I wanted to write about confidence was because, you know, Iβve been teaching Buddhism and meditation and Buddhist psychology for a long time, and I think the mindfulness movement really caught on in the last decade or so. And I think when you look at peopleβs initial interest in something like mindfulness, it usually is something like stress reduction or working with a difficult emotion or just working with, you know, what we might call monkey mind, you know, just really a difficult relationship with oneβs own thoughts and emotions. But what I noticed, and this really mirrors my own path is whenever I got one level below the surface with somebody about what they were interested in studying, or where the teachings or practices were coming alive for them, or where they were, where they were stuck. It had something to do with trusting ourselves to show up in some way to some aspect of life. You know, it could be related to just trusting yourself, to being able to make it through a meditation session, which is not actually that easy. Kudos to everybody who does make it through a whole, you know, 5 or 10 or 20 minute meditation session. It could be trusting yourself to have a difficult conversation with your boss where you, you know, ask for a raise or advocate for yourself.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:04:38] It could be trusting yourself in a difficult, very vulnerable conversation with your intimate partner, or trusting yourself to, like, show up politically right now in a compassionate way. Thatβs saying, hey, we need to really figure out human society together, and I want to actually be part of that. And itβs difficult. You know, itβs really hard to be part of it. So I also realized that the teachings I inherited, in a sense, you could say that Buddhist thought is not so much about confidence, at least not on the very surface level. But when you really get into it, it is about developing sort of a sense of trusting our own mind, trusting ourself. And I wanted to harvest both some of the ancient themes and some of the modern themes, because I think the union of ancient and modern is always where I find kind of the greatest wisdom and application. I do agree weβre in a time of immense groundlessness, and people are definitely struggling with actually kind of showing up and wanting to show up. I mean, weβre all doing it anyway, you know, maybe weβre hiding out for a minute watching our favorite streaming show or reading our fantasy novels, but in general, we are all really saying, like, how can I use my spiritual tools to actually show up to trust myself? And you know, I also think what was important for me about this in this moment as a man, too, I think we do live in this era of a lot of false confidence, you know, a lot of kind of alpha male confidence.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:06:10] Iβve been reminded that actually the term con man is short for confidence man. So, you know, thatβs really been on my mind and alive too, because there is also this question of like in any of those situations, sort of like how do I take my seat in my life, as we say, in meditation and then really claim claim my spot? Itβs an interesting thing you said about Jonathan, about Groundlessness, because thatβs one half of it. But I think about the example of going back to ancient master, the historical Buddha. When he achieved awakening, he touched the ground. He was like, Iβm completely grounded in being a human in my body at this moment and I can show up. Thatβs always interesting, is dealing with trusting ourselves and working with groundlessness and uncertainty at the same time is, you know, I think thatβs usually where we harvest the greatest wisdom, too. And itβs itβs definitely that time on planet Earth, I think.
Jonathan Fields: [00:07:09] Yeah, itβs sort of like living in that gap. And how do we navigate it? How do we dance with it? And I love, as you mentioned, so much of the way that you brought yourself to sort of, you know, to the wisdom world has been as a bridge builder, you know, between sort of ancient wisdom and modern life, you know, even down to, you know, one of your books, The Dharma of the Princess Bride, like one of the most adored movies thatβs been out there, one of my favorite movies. And then you sort of like, deconstruct it in Buddhist thought. And letβs talk about this in the context of of life. And what can we learn from it? Um, when you talk about confidence also now trusting yourself is a phrase that you kept repeating. Yeah. When you use the word confidence, what are you actually talking about?
Ethan Nichtern: [00:07:49] Yeah. Itβs a term that I think we kind of know intuitively. You know, like when somebody when we think somebody has confidence, thereβs a sense of strong presence, thereβs a sense of bravery. But if you look it up in the dictionary, which I did, the most common definition of confidence does include the word trust and firm trust sometimes like like somebody said, the Latin root has to do with faith, right? Which is sometimes a more spiritually or religiously loaded word than trust. But they basically mean the same thing, like thereβs some belief in oneβs own ability. And the way I framed it in the book is it has to do with our ability specifically to work with hope and fear striking us like we want some things in life. And, you know, I think a lot of times when people study meditation, they think weβre supposed to stop wanting, you know, which I would say, good luck with that.
Jonathan Fields: [00:08:48] Yeah. I have not come close to anywhere remotely close to. Yeah. Itβs like.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:08:52] And I really want to write a book for people who want actually some kind of, you know, maybe itβs, uh, you want your screenplay to get finished and adopted and picked up by somebody. You want love. Itβs very human. Right? And then youβre afraid of certain things. Weβre afraid of failure. Weβre afraid of death. Weβre afraid of being criticized. You know? Weβre afraid of pain. Itβs very human. And so when early Buddhism talked about these experiences of hope and fear, just like kind of, you know, winds striking us. And so the way I think of confidence is just like an actual willingness to be in the forces of life and trust, not necessarily that Iβm going to get what I want, because I do think a confident person, in the true sense of the word, we do accomplish our purpose is a little bit more frequently, but we also fail quite a lot, and you can get as enlightened as you want in business or art or politics or romance or relationship, but youβre still going to have death. Right? And like if we want to say some spiritual master like Buddha was greatly spiritually accomplished. He got what he wanted. In the end, he was so confident, but he also died. So confidence canβt be about like just winning the game of life, because nobody really wins the game of life from the standpoint of like surviving it, you know? Yeah. Um, and so working with how do we trust ourselves to show up and pursue things in the face of all that is, I think, really, really what I was looking at. And, you know, I think trust is interesting. Itβs just sort of a feeling of this is going to be okay, I can work with this. Itβs hard to define in words. Itβs that quality of like, here I am. You know, this may be hard, but Iβm grounded. And maybe that means grounded in groundlessness, which is an interesting idea.
Jonathan Fields: [00:10:54] It is, you know, and I feel like so many people have this experience where theyβll actually trust other people before theyβll trust themselves.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:11:01] Yeah.
Jonathan Fields: [00:11:02] And I wonder if part of that. Iβm so curious what your take is on this. I often wonder whether part of that. And like, Iβm raising my hand here also, right, is that if we trust other people or if we go seek, well, like, let me talk to this wise person or let me go get this. We trust the data. We trust the people, we trust this. And then we make a decision based on all of that external input. And then we can say when we make the decision, we say, well, Iβm confident based on x, Y and z external things, and I can point to those as the basis for this decision. Then if the decision doesnβt work out, then we can point to something outside of ourselves and say, well, you know, like I relied on on these people, these indicators and clearly like they were off. So itβs not a personal hit because it wasnβt my own self-trust that betrayed me. Whereas if I just say, let me go inside and say, mm, let me really feel into this, like, let me use my intuition. Let me use whatever intelligence or rationality I can make a decision. And then that decision doesnβt work out. Itβs a much bigger hit for most people. So I often wonder whether we sort of we outsource confidence because thereβs something inside of us that subconsciously says that if we actually try and stand in a place and rely on our own self-trust and then make a call and it turns out wrong and the stakes are high, that is going to hurt way more.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:12:17] Yeah, itβs a beautiful discussion. You know, I also think thereβs so much wisdom in Western psychology. So if you start with, why do we trust other people? Itβs itβs because we enter the world helpless, you know. And so from that standpoint, from a psychodynamic standpoint, we we start trusting our parents or our parental figures. My daughter is getting more and more self-sufficient. Sheβs she actually turns seven years old tomorrow. But when I pick her up, she needs to know Iβm going to carry her. Right? You and I donβt get anybody to give us shoulder rides anymore, I donβt think. Right. We have to carry ourselves all the time on our own two feet. So there is something about, like. And I think a lot of things we study, I think itβs really important, you know, to have teachers or mentors or experts that weβre looking to. Right. And itβs an interesting moment wherein I talk about this later in the book when I talk about lineage, that I do think thereβs kind of been a growing distrust for experts in some ways, too, because you can feel like exactly everything you said, like, okay, itβs on them. Like they will carry me if they get it wrong. Itβs not my fault. But you can also feel like, oh, they donβt. The experts donβt know what theyβre talking about, right? Which is very similar to rebelling against your parents. And I think thatβs actually pretty a pretty necessary phase in our psychological and spiritual development to be like, no, Iβm going to figure this out, you know? And so I think thereβs some balance of the two, right? Because we are interconnected with each other. So we do have to realize, you know, actually, Iβm not figuring anything out.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:13:57] Like even everything Iβm saying comes from other people. Iβm just kind of synthesizing it and putting it into my own expression. And at the same time, your grown adult life and you say whatever, whatever. My parents and teachers and elders and family, whatever they taught me right now, itβs just me here, you know, like nobody else can help me figure out what Iβm going to say or how Iβm going to show up to, like, this interview. Itβs like, okay, I have to like, internalize whatever those parental voices are, whatever those mentors are and say, I got this. You know, just like my daughter, you know, most of the time is walking herself. Self. Yeah, it is interesting though, how much we do, as you say, kind of outsource our own power even as grownups, you know. And I think then there is some sense of actually realizing, oh, okay, I outsource my own power because I did need help learning how to do things, and I might still need learning help, but at the end of the day, I have to trust myself. And I think thatβs especially important when weβre looking at receiving feedback from others, which is a whole chapter in the book. Working with how we receive praise, how we receive criticism on whatever project we might be working on. People are going to give me all sorts of ideas about how Iβm doing and what I should do next, but I actually have to take those ideas and then synthesize them with what in Buddhism is sometimes called the principle or internal witness, which is my own sense of knowing. And I have to trust that at the end of the day, right.
Jonathan Fields: [00:15:34] Now, that makes a lot of sense. And the other thing that, you know, as youβre describing it. You know, thatβs coming to my mind is that when we outsource self-trust or confidence, we kind of lose that magical feeling of when something actually does work out the way we hoped it worked out. Then if it was something that where we really grappled with it and we reasoned it out and we felt into it, whatever you want to say is your process, and then we make a decision. Itβs like, yeah, this actually turned out the way that it did. And I worked hard. And like, we have a level of ownership over that. Yeah, that really just feels amazing. But if we outsource the decision making, if we outsource it, you know, if we if we say, well, that was because I trusted the input of others. And thatβs sort of like what led to it. We feel less of a sense of ownership. Yeah. And we lose like this magical moment of us standing in a place of agency, you know that I think so many of us feel that we donβt get enough of these days.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:16:27] Yeah, itβs interesting because I think thereβs been a lot of talk in recent years. Really good talk and really necessary talk about accountability, right? Accountability for oneβs actions. Accountability for how we show up. But accountability has sort of like a negative twist to it, right? It doesnβt need to. But the way we often say that is like, if you mess up, take responsibility. Yeah. The other side of accountability is actually empowerment. Like, you know, itβs not I think the other thing that I think Buddhism names is that thereβs a problem with the worldview of individualism. Right? Thereβs a problem with the idea that I did everything. For example, going back to the parents example, my parents are the ones who introduced me to quite a lot of the practices that I do. I mean, they didnβt force any of them on me, and I had other teachers, but I would not be a Buddhist probably without my parents. Right? So I canβt really take responsibility alone. Say I did all this. Itβs like, oh yeah, no, I had privilege. I had a good environment. It was interdependent. But then at the same time, thereβs like and and by the way, I worked really hard, right. And I showed up and I could do it again. Right? I can take responsibility. I love that sort of two sides of the coin of agency and accountability. The other way to think about agency, to use a more slightly loaded word is power. Like claiming our own power. You know, like I can do something. I might not be able to do everything, but I can influence situations, you know, by showing up.
Jonathan Fields: [00:18:06] That makes a lot of sense. You know, itβs interesting. Um, I feel like so much of when you tee an idea up, itβs often, well, letβs actually look at the different aspects of this, you know. And so you introduced accountability and agency. But you mentioned this notion of worldly winds earlier and talked about these two. Hope and fear. I want to dive in because in the book you actually introduced the idea of eight worldly winds. So take me to what weβre actually talking about when weβre talking about worldly winds. And then maybe weβll walk through them a little bit so we can get a better feel for them.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:18:38] Yeah. So the eight worldly winds that is talking about ancient versus modern, this is ancient wisdom, right? And itβs still applicable. It comes from the historical Buddha 2600 years ago. He talked about these eight experiences that if youβre a human in the world, you will face and theyβre either called like my teacher and friend Sharon Salzberg sometimes refers to them as the vicissitudes, which feels like a very s.a.t word. So theyβre sometimes called the worldly phenomenon. But I really like this metaphor of wind, which is the way I think Pema Chodron and others refer to them as winds, because thereβs a sense of like a force striking you. And the analogy that I use early on in the book, which thereβs always kind of a I donβt know if youβre like this when youβre expressing yourself or writing, thereβs always kind of a visual analogy that comes to me at a certain point is like, oh yeah, that. So if you go buy a car wash or a mechanic or like a car dealership, thereβs those, those noodle looking, really tall inflatable guys, sometimes theyβre artificially blown by an air blower, but when the wind hits them, they wave. They look like theyβre smiling, theyβre laughing, theyβre dancing. And then if the wind stops blowing or blows the other way, they droop over, like, looking, like, completely depressed and and crestfallen.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:20:01] So I was playing with that analogy of how these different experiences of life hit us. So the eight is really four pairs, right? And and four pairs on each side of the pair. Thereβs the experience that we hope for or that when it happens, when it hits us, it inflates us, it inflates us, it makes us temporarily feel great about our confidence. And on the other side is the the wind that deflates us, that knocks us over, that, you know, signals our defeat or our demise. So they go from sort of the most visceral to our embodied nervous system, which is we hope for pleasure, we fear pain, and then they get into our sort of our relational sense of self. We hope for praise. We fear criticism and blame if weβre trying to do bigger work in the world, you know, have a podcast or weβre trying to influence a group of people in some way. We hope for recognition and renown and fame. We fear insignificance, having no influence. Itβs interesting in that pair fame and insignificance. Another classic translation says that the feared outcome is infamy, which I think we still fear.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:21:18] But I also think we live in this interesting era where if youβre infamous among a group of people, you can kind of turn that into a new kind of fame. The example I use for that is the rapper Eminem. Nobody ever talked about how controversial Eminem was more than Eminem, you know? So heβs sort of, you know, turning his infamy into fame. So I think what we really fear in that couplet is we just have no impact. Nobody knows our work. Nobody knows what weβre trying to do. Nobody remembers us, nobody writes us a holiday card, etc. and then the most generalized one, which has to do with our spiritual quest, it has to do with every aspect of life. Any project we could conceive is we hope for success and we fear failure or loss. So those are the eight worldly wins. But itβs really working with this dance when we show up, when we try to, you could say, take our seats in the world, in our life, just the same way we might take our seat in meditation. We really hope to be inflated with the positive winds and we really fear being knocked over with the negative winds.
Jonathan Fields: [00:22:31] That makes so much sense. And weβll be right back after a word from our sponsors. I want to walk through this in a little bit more detail. Starting out with pleasure and pain. You use this phrase licking honey from a razor blade, which is pretty visceral.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:22:46] Yeah, that comes from an eighth century very famous Indian Buddhist teacher whoβs very well known, uh, named Shantideva, who wrote this text that especially popular in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition called The Way of the Bodhisattva, the way of the being whoβs trying to awaken compassion. Right. And he said that pursuit of pleasure can be like licking honey from a razor blade. Right? What he was talking about was fixation on pleasure. When we know itβs impermanent, right? When we know we canβt make any pleasure last forever. And so the razor blade is kind of the truth of impermanence, the truth of death. I love that phrase because when I read it, I was like, you know, Iβm from the 90s. So it did sound like it could be, you know, the 90s, when I feel like all the music was about very personal existential dilemmas, like Alanis Morissette. So I feel like that could be like a Nirvana lyric, you know? I just imagine them on MTV unplugged licking honey from a razor blade. So the idea is that pleasure feels good, pain feels bad. But thereβs this false promise that if we have a pleasing sensation in our body and our sense realm, we can make it last. And if we do the right things, we might avoid pain, you know? And I think in that arena, Iβm always a casual fan and invested student of the conversation between Buddhist thought and neuroscience is really interesting to me and sort of what theyβve discovered.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:24:25] I talk about one experiment, what theyβve discovered about how advanced mindfulness practice changes our relationship to pain, I think is, is super interesting. You know, the long and the short of it is we donβt brace against pain as much when itβs not happening. But for very advanced meditators, what they found is during a painful physical experience, the pain receptors light up more than people whoβve never practiced mindfulness. You actually feel the pain more completely if youβre being mindful. They didnβt do a pleasure experiment, which I also think they would find during the experience of a chocolate chip cookie. Right. You would actually taste it would be even more ecstatic for the mindful person than the non mindful person. You would taste it that much more. And itβs like when we actually are holding our seat, we actually are feeling our experience more right, but itβs less of a problem. I think thatβs the thing about pleasure and pain. I talk about this. Thereβs thereβs a mirage in pleasure. Thereβs this idea in hope or pleasure that this is going to save me.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:25:42] Right? Like when you really want a chocolate chip cookie, thereβs some feeling of like, this cookie is my spiritual salvation, you know? And youβre never thinking about just tomorrow when youβre going to be craving the cookie again. Right. And I talk about the experience of being on a meditation retreat and having a really difficult itch on my nose from a fly buzzing or something like that, and just deciding that I was not going to scratch the itch, which is a very holding your seat kind of a thing to do. And I remember as a grown up person actually thinking the thought, if I donβt scratch my nose, Iβm going to die, which is not true. Itβs an irrational thought, but there is in pain or unpleasant circumstance. Itβs not that weβre misunderstanding, that weβre in pain because we very much are. And if weβre in chronic pain, if thereβs something we can do to reduce the pain, please always do the compassionate thing. But we think that this unpleasant experience is going to be the end of us, when really what happened with the itch is few minutes later, it was just completely gone. You know, just evaporated.
Jonathan Fields: [00:26:52] Itβs a really interesting distinction that you make also in that like if we take our seat and especially if itβs informed by a practice like mindfulness where like weβre sort of like we have an enhanced level of awareness where weβre going to notice, and weβre also probably going to experience sensory input more, more deeply, more intensely. Itβs going to be there on both sides of the spectrum, right? But the other part of it, which you shared, you know, and people would be like, oh, sweet, more pleasure. Like, yay! But also like more pain, but at the same time, as you described, you experience that stimulus. But part of the experience of it isnβt just the neurons that are firing at the end at the point of stimulation, itβs what your brain does with it, you know? And that very same practice says, yes, Iβm going to actually like notice all those firings. Yet the signals that Iβm getting from it, Iβm going to have like more of a say in how that lands in my mind, which is the other part of the experience. You know, I think oftentimes practices like mindfulness, like their experience says, oh, the benefit is, you know, you just, you know, youβre the screen on the screen door on the summer porch and everything like it touches you, but then it just blows through you. And itβs all about like the ability to just kind of be chill and in the center and let it go. But itβs not about itβs not often said like actually, it may also give you access to really heightened sensory experience. Yeah. Yeah. But youβre going to youβre going to handle it differently. Yeah. And thatβs a huge like thatβs the big qualifier there.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:28:19] Yeah, yeah. You know, thatβs based on the way you framed it Jonathan. What I would say is being in the center, you know, which Iβm calling holding your seat is not so chill. Yeah. Because thereβs always a lot going on. Right. Thatβs actually what presence is. Itβs itβs not the absence of activity. Itβs actually youβre sitting in the center of this almost maelstrom, external and internal. You know, you have everything thatβs happening in the outside world. You have your sense perceptions, you have your thoughts, you have your emotions. And even in moments of boredom, actually, even, you know, when youβre sitting some days when I have a break, especially in the summertime, I live here in in Brooklyn, I have a stoop, you know, which is the thing Iβve always wanted. Thatβs living the dream for me is just having a stoop.
Jonathan Fields: [00:29:10] Itβs a beautiful thing.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:29:13] And you just go and itβs a quiet street, you know, especially when I sometimes can take a break in the afternoon. But even if you say, oh, for Brooklyn, for New York, this is a very quiet moment. This is a very quiet street. Thereβs still so much going on. And even when I go to the country, which I do quite frequently, you say, oh, itβs so chill here. But then you open up and you go, oh, like there is a symphony of birds and chipmunks, and theyβre all talking to each other like thereβs so much happening when we pay attention and itβs never that chill. And I think when we go into the deeper, I think pleasure and pain is a really good foundational level. And thatβs why mindfulness starts with the body and mindfulness starts with pleasure and pain, because the things we discover about our reaction to pleasure and pain, I think, are very applicable to when life gets real or when life gets more relational, you know. Pleasure and pain have so much to do with how we handle praise and criticism.
Jonathan Fields: [00:30:21] Yeah. Which is the second pairing that you talk about, you know, praise and blame. And I think so many people feel like theyβre living in a world where thereβs a lot of opportunity for criticism. Yeah, itβs kind of coming at them from all angles here. And for a lot of people, I think it kind of shuts them down and makes them say, whatβs the middle path here where, you know, like I keep my head down enough so that I donβt take any, any heat or any fire. Iβm doing enough where Iβm kind of getting by, and I feel like Iβm a constructive human being. And theyβre trying to thread this needle, which is really unthreatening. And even if they feel like they end up doing that for a window of time, then if you ask them, how are you doing? And theyβre honest with you, oftentimes the answer is not good.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:31:02] Right, right, right. I think a lot of times thatβs thatβs sort of the sad thing is a lot of times people donβt really try to accomplish a lot in life because theyβre afraid of how others will respond. And weβre afraid of criticism, so we donβt put ourselves out there. And thereβs reasons not to. I mean, friends of mine asked me like, how do you handle social media? Like, thatβs just it just sounds like people are coming for each other all the time on social media. And I think our technology is really interesting because because praise and criticism in the classic Buddhist teachings would fall in the category of speaking and listening, right, right speech. How we express ourselves, how we listen to others, kind of some basic guardrails for how thatβs done with skill and with kindness. And again, thereβs a lot of modern nonviolent communication Iβm thinking of, you know, a lot of modern insight into how one works with that, but thatβs really about like verbal communication and two people talking to each other. And now we have this devices where youβre just able to give and get feedback practically any time to practically or from practically anyone you want you know.
Jonathan Fields: [00:32:21] Or donβt.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:32:22] Want or donβt want or.
Jonathan Fields: [00:32:23] Donβt know and never will know. And thatβs like a part of it.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:32:26] Yeah, yeah. So itβs interesting because like, you know, praise and criticism are hard enough practices to work with our sense of self-trust. If we know, like ten people just getting like a family together at Thanksgiving to say, like, okay, hey, weβre going to practice mindful speech. Letβs each say what we appreciate about each other. And then if thereβs something maybe that somebodyβs doing thatβs bothering you, we could express that after weβve, you know, validated a little bit, that would be near impossible for a lot of families, although a valiant effort. And some families, I think it happens. Well, and thatβs quite a joy when you actually see that. But now youβre like, oh, okay. So youβre struggling with communication in like five relationships. Try 5000 strangers at once. You know, itβs not itβs not a fair arena in some ways. But the first insight that really works for me is, again, to go back to pleasure and pain. The more present you are, the more this is going to be true, that actually praise is going to feel good. And actually, a lot of times we donβt let ourselves feel that if somebody compliments you and says, oh, thank you so much for cooking me dinner, you go, oh no, no, no, it was nothing, right? Rather than just actually receiving the pleasure of like, oh wow, I did a good thing. And somebodyβs expressing appreciation. Yeah.
Jonathan Fields: [00:33:49] People are so often so bad at actually receiving words of praise.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:33:53] Exactly. Because itβs like too much kindness or something. It makes us vulnerable and it puts us on the spot. Itβs a wind. It hits us, you know, somethingβs actually happening in our system. And then also our our defensiveness in the name of criticism. I once heard. Your friend, our mutual friend Susan Piver, share great wisdom that I put in the book. What she was saying was, there was one friend who would just point out potential problems or potential things that could turn into obstacles. And she said, when I was early on in the creative process, I really needed like that creative energy to be flowing. So I would ask for this personβs feedback. But much later on in the process, when it had already gained all the momentum that it needed. So I think this is one thing is like if weβre trying to put ourselves out there knowing who weβre asking, and I think itβs important to have people in our corner who are inherently supportive. I think thatβs really important for teachers, you know, or mentors or coaches, people who work with other people, because we are so biased to pay attention to negative information. Thatβs just part of our evolution as well, to really be able to when weβre sharing feedback with others to start from appreciation, and then to maybe know that itβs going to hurt.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:35:14] If you get criticized, it might be really important to be criticized to receive feedback. It is really important to receive constructive criticism if we want to show up to anything weβre trying to do, but knowing that that is the same experience as pain, I think is really important. Thatβs really been transformative for me. I talk about preparing for the ouch when youβre receiving feedback like, donβt post a thing on social media without being like, oh, somebodyβs going to disagree with this. They might not know who I am, they might not be well trained in the tools of right speech or nonviolent communication. And it might hurt to be disagreed with, you know, just the same way an itch is unpleasant, the same way if somebody poked you with a needle, it would hurt. Like, thatβs just part of how I receive information. So I think thatβs really important is when people say, oh, I know how to get to the place where criticism doesnβt hurt. Iβm like, I donβt I donβt think thatβs what mindfulness is. You know, itβs actually familiarity with the process and familiarity with like, yeah, it hurts. But thereβs also good information here.
Jonathan Fields: [00:36:26] Sometimes itβs being able to parse that. You know, I remember a couple of years back Adam Grant was sharing that when heβs working on a book, you know, heβll work on the manuscript and itβll get to a certain point. And then he has a small group of people who he gets together, often his grad students or postdocs where and he calls them his challengers, and heβll basically share a piece of the manuscript or the entire thing and say, like, have at it. Literally just.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:36:50] Like, oh my gosh.
Jonathan Fields: [00:36:50] Tell me everything that you can figure out. Like, where did I mess up? Whatβs wrong? Whatβs the counterargument here? He wants to know it all, but he does it in a way thatβs really interesting, which is really syncs up with what youβre talking about here, which is that he doesnβt actually post that online to your millions of followers and say have at it. You know, he has a very small number of people, maybe half a dozen people or something like this, who he trusts, who he knows are really smart, who know his work, who are really well versed in in his lineage and his science. And then he says, okay, like, you know, like the agreement here is that youβre not having at it because youβre trying to take me out or take me down. Weβre doing this together because weβre trying to refine the ideas so that they are as accurate and as useful and as valid as possible. So when mass numbers of people interact with it, I can feel better that weβve done our work. And maybe sure, like maybe that helps me feel like itβs more defensible to. And maybe we get less people disagreeing.
Jonathan Fields: [00:37:45] But of course, like youβre always going to have people that disagree when something goes to scale. But itβs an interesting example, I think, of what youβre describing there, and it ties in also with this sort of like this third couplet that you referenced earlier, which is the notion of influence and significance or what you describe. Thereβs a really interesting sort of like potential interpretation of infamy there, you know, because we all do want to see, feel like weβre doing something that makes a difference. You know, like that we have some influence that we have some level of say in our lives and maybe in other lives. And if we if it ties in with what you were just sharing, also, because if we canβt weather the winds of criticism, itβs going to be really hard to be able to take a seat behind an idea or an identity that allows us to feel a sense of mattering and significance. And then thereβs that other fear of saying, like, what if I donβt matter? Which can be devastating, but maybe itβs also really freeing at the same time.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:38:42] Yeah, yeah, yeah. I talk about, again, having a seven year old, I harvest a lot of wisdom from Pixar movies. I donβt work for them, but but just, you know, had my mind slightly blown or just had a lot of appreciation for seeing the second inside Out movie. But in the with I was really picking up on a theme from the Disney movie Coco, where it has to do with the Mexican holiday Dia de Los Muertos and the land of the dead. The way this is set up, as happens on Dia de Los Muertos, you put on your altar ofrendas or offering to your dead ancestors as a way to remember them. And the way the movie sets this up is as long as somebody keeps remembering you on their altar, your spirit lives on in the land of the dead. But when you really die in this framework, is when nobody remembers you well enough to make an offering on your altar. And so I call that the second death. Right. And thatβs sort of it could come before or after our physical death, but itβs when nobody remembers us. I think itβs really important, especially for those of us who are trying to do work that has impact. You know, Iβm thinking of the song Fame. I want to live forever, right? Nobody does that. And I think what we try to do is say, but could I do something that has impact forever? And the answer is no, you actually canβt. It might have impact for a long time, you know, like great people of the ancient world. But probably people are going to misremember you. I mean, thereβs so much conflict over who the Buddha actually was. I make the joke that most of the time, Jesus is just a totally different ethnicity than he actually was in his life, so heβs not being remembered very accurately in a lot of ways, and nobodyβs going to remember us.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:40:36] And so what does it mean to have impact? Acknowledging that in a cosmic sense, there is a sense of letting go of our identity, because a lot of times we do approach, you know, what we could call these days, having a platform as like, yeah, but I really want people to know me and my work. In a sense, thatβs the more outward or more social facing level of seeking praise is there has a lot of wisdom, right? If you feel like, oh, I can offer something, I want to be a benefit, I want to help, and I want to live a good life as well. The idea of offering that broadly is very important. It doesnβt have to be super broad, but beyond just one on one interactions, right? We all want that. We all want to have some level of impact. I think for some people, this coupling of wins of fame and insignificance feels or influence, as I called it, feels a little less relevant. But I think in some ways, whenever youβre trying to show up in the world, you want to have impact. You want to be recognized by your family. At least you want to be recognized by your friends. Nobody goes to a school reunion being like, oh, what have you been working on for the last 20 years? Nothing. Iβm pretty invisible. Nobody wants to feel that way, I joke about coming back from a meditation retreat with all these insights and hoping everybody really missed you. And instead people are like, oh wait, you were gone for a week, you know? Right.
Jonathan Fields: [00:42:09] But on the other hand, itβs like on the one hand, yes to all of that. And on the other hand, there is a certain spaciousness to not being missed. Thereβs a certain freedom to that as well. Itβs terrifying and at the same time freeing. Literally, I was just talking to, as you mentioned, our dear mutual friend Susan Pifer yesterday and some version of the phrase, I want my work to be seen, not me, came out of my mouth. Yeah. And Iβve been kind of sitting with that and also in part asking myself, is that true? Because Iβm not 100% sure it is. Iβm an introvert. Iβm a sensitive person, so I love being at home by myself. I love solitude, and I love creating things. You know? I love the fact that I could create something and that that thing would go out into the world, and that would be the thing of influence or significance or impact that would matter. And Iβve always felt like I donβt necessarily need to be the one associated with it. I just want to know itβs out there. Iβm questioning that more and kind of saying, like, is that really true? Or is it just that I value my solitude so much that Iβm afraid that if I was a part of the thing that was appreciated, or was out there in the world, that I would lose this other thing that I hold dear. And itβs an interesting thing that Iβve just been sitting with.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:43:22] Yeah, I talk about that in confidence, too, sort of my personal path. And for me, the interesting crux of this was since I was in sixth grade, I wanted to be a writer. Part of that was I just loved words and, you know, that mode of expression. And I resonated with it. I always have, but the other part was I was like, oh, famous writers are really cool because youβre still completely anonymous. Everybody could have read your work if youβre a best selling writer, but nobody really knows what you look like unless they really know who you are. And I was like, anonymous fame. That sounds like perfect to me, you know? And then I ended up becoming a teacher who also writes. And thereβs again, thereβs this sense of like, okay, but now my identity is like, oh, heβs the wisdom holder. And there is that complexity of like, you know, Iβm sure when somebody comes up to you, Jonathan, and says, oh, I really appreciate your work. Itβs had a really positive impact, right? Thereβs this complexity of ego and egolessness where thereβs sort of like, oh, Iβm so happy the work has been helpful. And then thereβs a part of you thatβs like, yeah, I did that. We flicker in and out of that, and I think itβs very natural to flicker in and out of that, but then we can get fixated on like, I need my name on the building, you know, whoβs getting top billing, you know? Et cetera. It was interesting. I had I went on the, the book tour thatβs been going on for confidence, spoke when I was in Portland, Oregon, at Powellβs, which is, from a writerβs standpoint, one of my.
Jonathan Fields: [00:45:00] Favorite bookstores in the world. Yeah. Itβs amazing.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:45:02] Yeah, itβs maybe from a writerβs from a, like, bookstore indie bookstore aficionado standpoint, maybe the most famous bookstore in the world. I mean, we can argue we can argue about that, but itβs one of the only places where when you have an event, they put your name on a marquee on the marquee, right? Yeah. Which, yeah, for a writer, itβs like, Iβm not a Iβm not a stand up comedian. Like. And then youβre like, whoa, my name is on the marquee. And of course, Iβm a Buddhist teacher. But you snap a picture of that, you know? All right, I did that. And at the same time itβs like. And then theyβre going to take that down and thereβs going to be a new set of people trying to have influence and impact. And so I think if we can inhabit that dance of saying, I really want to be a benefit, and thereβs a part of me that like actually seeks the recognition of that, but Iβm going to be wary when that becomes a fixation. Right. Just the same way, I would be wary if pleasure was a fixation or people. Pleasing or praise was a fixation. If I start to notice that needing recognition is a fixation, Iβm going to work with that, and Iβm going to try to embrace the other side of the coin, which is the experience of aloneness. Right? Because at the end of the day, weβre always alone with ourselves. Thatβs the basic premise of mindfulness is itβs you, your body, your heart, your mind thatβs your actual co-pilot through all of this life. And if we canβt actually inhabit our aloneness, I think when we try to have impact with others, it is going to have an addictive quality to it.
Jonathan Fields: [00:46:36] And weβll be right back after a word from our sponsors. This final pairing in the worldly winds, this notion of success and failure that you referenced earlier because, you know, letβs say we do go out there, our work does go out there and make a difference in some way, shape or form. We have this and you write about this. You know so much of the way that we measure whether weβve succeeded or failed at what weβre trying to do is not in terms of tuning in and just sort of like listening to ourselves, but it is looking around us and saying, where am I relative to like this person, that person, that person and the other person? And like, that is our measure of success. And itβs just a losing game. I mean, especially, you know, like Iβm in Boulder, Colorado, but I spent 30 years in New York City. Two, Youβre in Brooklyn. There is no way to live in a New York area. And then ever feel like for the history of your life that you canβt find a thousand other people who, by whatever measure youβre judging externally, are like eons ahead of you? Itβs itβs a disastrous way to live and to sort of like, measure success. And yet we do it so often.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:47:43] Itβs interesting. I really like to watch basketball. So I hope the Knicks are the best. So I think sports is a good arena where you try to figure out like, whoβs better than the other on this given day or this given tournament or this given season. And I think itβs nice that we have certain areas of life where that that holds. But thereβs a lot of uses of in Buddhist terms is called comparative mind. My level of okayness is judged relative to the perception of other peopleβs success or happiness. Right? So itβs interesting like sometimes, you know, Iβve never written a best seller, for example, but I do get to keep writing people enough. Itβs fine for me. But, you know, somebody tells you in the process of writing a new book, I think you have a best seller in you and youβre like, okay, thatβs wonderful, because thatβs praise, right? But when you really parse, like, what does best selling mean? Is it do you mean you want all the other people who are writing books to not sell? Well, it means better than it doesnβt mean great job. Lots of people connected with your work. It means you did better than the other people you know. One of the things I noticed people say in New York a lot, oh, I have the best doctor. I have the best dentist. And itβs like, okay, what about I have a good doctor, I have a great dentist or something like that. Like best literally means what do you mean by that? Like, everybody else has a shitty doctor, like, wouldnβt you want other people to have good doctors too? And then we transpose that onto our children.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:49:17] Iβm very aware of this as a as a parent and father. Like, and itβs itβs weird being a, like a kid in a kind of progressive liberal space because the messages are weird right now. Itβs everybodyβs included. We value everyone. And which is a completely egalitarian message, which I love to death and resonate with. Everyoneβs included. But oh, by the way, only about 5% of you are going to get into the college you really want to go to and feel important there. And itβs like, well, those are weird, conflicting messages. And how do we start to actually hone? Iβm succeeding or failing based on kind of my own metric of happiness and success. Because, as you said, comparative mind is itβs literally endless, like you not just in New York, in, you know, samsara in all the realms. Once you start saying that person has something and I do not have it, and until I have what they have, I am not okay. Itβs a recipe for unhappiness, dissatisfaction. And itβs also probably a recipe for putting on blinders and getting very obsessive and not really thinking of ones showing up or ones work in a way thatβs helpful to others. Itβs much better as a writer to think I would like my work to be of benefit, you know, and I would like enough people to read it so that it is of benefit and keeps me doing it, you know. And if it sells better than everyone elseβs, then honestly, Iβm going to recommend people read other peopleβs writing.
Jonathan Fields: [00:50:52] Itβs such an interesting frame too. I remember a number of years back reading some research on envy, and the researchers teased out this interesting distinction. They said basically, we identified two different types of envy. Benign envy and malicious envy. And they said that both envy. You look at somebody else and youβre like, ooh, I wish I had what they have, or I wish I could do what they could do. But one of them is accompanied by a sort of schadenfreude, like, like, how can we take them? Like, I hope they fail. The other one is like, what an inspiration. Like, maybe if I really work really hard, if I sort of, like, really pour myself into this thing, Iβm inspired by this. Like, they show whatβs possible to me. Theyβre just going to make me work that much harder and devote myself harder and and give that bigger because I see whatβs possible. And it was eye opening for me because I think it helped me more intentionally flip that switch on a regular basis. So now as a writer, and I think there was a time where I pick up a book and I was like, oh, this is just like stunning, you know, like, this is terrible. Um, and now Iβll read a sentence from a writer who I really admire and Iβm like, maybe in ten years Iβll be able to write a sentence like that, and Iβm totally down for that journey. Like, how cool would it be? And I think thereβs a certain amount of we can flip that switch. Like, I think thereβs a way to actually have comparative mind, but in that benign, inspirational way that draws us towards and celebrates something and is inspired by it, rather than, I have to figure out a way to best that or take them down. Iβm curious what your take is on that.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:52:22] Yeah, I wasnβt aware of the distinction between malicious and benign envy, but it totally syncs up with my thoughts on envy. And I think the most important part for me of of Buddhist wisdom is the idea that within every emotion, Motion, especially strong emotions that we experience and especially within emotions that are difficult to admit. Weβre experiencing things like anger or envy, you know? And thatβs one of the reasons I wanted to talk about it in the chapter in success and failure is like, oh, Buddhists donβt experience envy. And itβs like, so I just went ahead and told the story of like the day I succeeded the most Iβll ever succeed as a writer and still felt, you know, envy of another writer on that day, you know, so Buddhist teachers do experience envy because weβre human. And if a if a person ever says they donβt experience human emotion, Iβm not sure why that would be a good teacher for other humans. You know, benign envy really speaks to the wisdom of envy, which is if we can see how somebody elseβs is path is succeeding, we could maybe say, okay, what is it in here that I long for? And sometimes itβs easier to see it when somebody has a mode of success, thatβs not your wheelhouse, right?
Jonathan Fields: [00:53:43] Thereβs no sense of competition. You know, like, or winner take all type of thing going on there.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:53:48] Yeah. I went to see when I was in Chicago, like show at the Museum of Contemporary Art by a painter whoβs a Brooklyn painter, Nicole Eisenman, who I think is just amazing. And because Iβm a huge fan of painting, but I just it was never the thing I was trying to do. So you can move through this show and just be like, wow. And thereβs not even a like, I wish I could do that. Itβs just like, oh, this is so amazing that a person could do that. You know, itβs like watching somebody like LeBron James play, play basketball or something like that. Youβre just like, Iβm just going to watch the art and enjoy it. But sometimes somebody does have something you want and you could say, okay, what is it that I actually long to do on my own path? And maybe I could just take that information that, you know, benign or that actually wisdom envy, we could almost call it and say, okay, how do I actually let this lead me towards my longing a little bit? You know, one other unrelated to what youβre saying, point I want to make about success and failure, because I really do think our relationship to pleasure and pain is so important to understand the other of the eight worldly winds. So one of the thinkers that I read in writing the chapter on pleasure and pain was Doctor Anna Lemke, who wrote a book called Dopamine Nation, and sheβs an addiction expert, and she talks. Thereβs some good podcasts with her. Iβm not sure if youβre familiar with her work, but she talks about how pleasure and pain are co-located in the brain, and she talks about sort of like a seesaw, right? That that wants to stay in balance.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:55:29] And if you try to do too much, say, on your smartphone or too much sugar or too much whatever the addictive tendency that you have is to try to push the dopamine side of the seesaw so that itβs going down. It balances out on the other side. You get less, less pleasure with each hit, and she calls them the gremlins load up on the other side. But I love that idea of pleasure and pain, wanting to stay in some sort of balance for a healthy brain and a healthy nervous system. Meaning we want to have some relationship to both of them. Some appreciation to both of them. I think the exact same thing is true for success and failure, and I think this is really important. Like when I am talking to students or people on the path about confidence and they say, I really want to succeed at X, you know, youβd be a jerk if you said, well, I hope you fail because thatβll teach you a spiritual lesson. Like thatβs never the thing to say. Itβs like, I do hope, but itβs not always going to happen. And what I really hope for is that when you experience either success or failure, you learn something. You learn something about what it means to be human. And I do think that leads to more success, maybe in general, but I think more importantly, it leads to an actual insight into being human, which is really what weβre looking for 100%.
Jonathan Fields: [00:56:54] It just helps us live a little bit with a little bit more ease. You know, the words come to mind where sheβs sort of like, you look at each of those situations and youβre like, this too shall pass. Yeah, sure. Like the highest high. Awesome. And itβs going to go away. And the lowest low. Oh, and itβs going to go away. You know, um, letβs certainly say yes to all of them. Accept that as reality and then know also that theyβre impermanent. You know, it kind of wraps us around to what you describe as the four powers of confidence. And I want to move through these a little bit more quickly. You know, so you list out compassion, lineage, awareness, windhorse as, as almost like this is your toolbox. This is what you get to access when you sit in the seat, when you actually know when you have this confidence with you. You brought up lineage earlier in our conversation. Compassion is something where I feel like thereβs been a lot of conversation around it, and I think weβre all getting more attuned to the fact that this is really important for us for a lot of different reasons. Awareness is one of those. Those four as well. This notion of being able to observe and take in whatβs going on around you, not necessarily with a sense of judging it, but just like knowing like this is actually this is my reality. This is my subjective reality, but this is what Iβm experiencing. Lineage and Windhorse I think are really interesting. Iβd love to go into each one of those just a little bit more, because I think those are the two where people are going to be like, I donβt really get what this is about, so talk to me about these a bit more.
Ethan Nichtern: [00:58:23] Well, Lindsey,, obviously, you know, a lot of this is coming from things inherited from Buddhist teachings and trainings and the notion of lineage related to confidence. It has to do with that, that sort of interwoven nature between taking your own seat and saying, I can do this and kind of owning your own agency and power on the one hand, but also realizing youβre not the first human in history to experience hope and fear. Youβre not the first human to try to do something. In my case, Iβm not the inventor of any of these teachings. Youβre standing on the shoulders of mentors, teachers, family, ancestors, and I think a lot of times we have a very especially in modern life, you know, a very tenuous nature relationship with our past. You know, if you go through kind of, again, that psychodynamic sort of, you know, intergenerational trauma approach, youβre like, well, this person in my family was a screw up, and that person was a screw up, and that person before them was a screw up. And I think studying Tibetan Buddhism, itβs so crucial to acknowledge being part of a lineage. Right. And not necessarily being the same as the other members of the lineage. But thereβs an idea of actually being part of something larger than oneself. And, you know, thereβs a certain aspect of that thatβs humbling, right? To say, I didnβt invent all this, but thereβs also an aspect thatβs empowering, which is to say you can actually call on the support and the wisdom from your ancestors, right? From not just to look at one family line as a series of screw ups, but to say like, oh, let me study like who my parents were, who my grandparents were, who my great grandparents were, and maybe even imagine them coming with me.
Ethan Nichtern: [01:00:25] Visualize them coming with me when Iβm doing a hard thing and asking for their blessings. And in the Buddhist tradition, the idea of actually imagining the great beings of the past in our spiritual heritage, in whatever work weβre doing in the world, hopefully we have lineage figures that we really look to as like, you know, if I had a shrine or an altar, I would put these these people up on it and you can actually harvest that and say, okay, like when I am going to do something hard, Iβm actually going to visualize and imagine. And thereβs meditations, especially in Tantric Buddhism, where you really work with this in depth. Imagine them kind of coming forth and blessing me and holding me, you know, in the conclusion chapter, I talk about the one hard thing that I did during writing the book, which again, you know, itβs interesting when we talk about the things we donβt have confidence in, all of us have things that if other people looked at them, weβd be like, oh my God, thatβs amazing. I canβt believe you do that. And youβre like, well, itβs pretty, you know, itβs just a thing I do. And then thereβs other things that people would be like, yeah, thatβs no big deal. And youβd be like, yeah, that was one of the hardest things I ever did in my life, you know? So for whatever reason, which makes sense because I grew up in New York City, I didnβt get my driverβs license until later in life.
Ethan Nichtern: [01:01:48] And, you know, part of it was I just didnβt have enough support when I took the test as a teenager. And then I kind of like, you know, freaked out and blocked it out. And I was like, If Iβm going to write a book about confidence, Iβm going to have to do a hard thing during this, getting friends to help me borrow their cars, practice driving, taking the road test in New York City where actually supposedly people, the average person takes it more than three times before they pass, you know? And you know, I did all that a year and a half ago. But one of the things I imagined was my grandmother, who is in the dedication of the book not wasnβt a Buddhist, but was a very powerful woman and very bold and very confident. But another thing about my Grandma Claire is she got her driverβs license later in life. So to actually imagine Grandma Claire and, you know, use tools like love and kindness, meditation like the Windhorse practice. And to actually imagine her like being there as a lineage figure in support really helped do it, you know? And I was also willing to fail. If I failed the test, Iβd say Iβd take it again. And, you know, a year and a half ago, I, I took the test. And, you know, Iβd been driving a lot ever since. And I can definitely say on the roads of America, I am I am not the worst driver on the road.
Jonathan Fields: [01:03:11] It is. Itβs itβs funny. Itβs such a New York City thing.
Ethan Nichtern: [01:03:14] It is a New York City.
Jonathan Fields: [01:03:15] Raising a kid in New York also. Itβs just like thereβs no reason. So. Right. Letβs circle back to that final thing, Windhorse, which you just referenced also which like my understanding is itβs itβs been explained to me as sort of like life force. Yeah. You know, maybe, you know, people might use the word prana or whatever your word for it is. Yeah. Is that sort of like, similar to what weβre talking about here?
Ethan Nichtern: [01:03:37] Yeah, yeah. So again, going on the theme of wind. So coming from a combination of Tibetan or Tantric Buddhism along with Tibetan indigenous wisdom that was sort of housed in, in the Shambhala tradition of, of Tibetan Buddhism. Thereβs this theme and itβs a set of meditation practices and usually a set of meditation practices that is done relatively quickly. So thereβs short meditation practices, like they can take 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 minutes, and you can do them before showing up to do a hard thing. But the idea is wind has multiple meanings in classic Buddhism here, itβs exactly as you said. Itβs kind of like prana or sort of like life force. But itβs not just your life force. It also is kind of the the force of the moment, which often takes an emotional like if youβre about to have a difficult conversation with a friend, letβs say the wind of the moment might be whatever the emotion is, it might be sadness, it might be resentment or anger. And you sort of acknowledge in winters the wind of the moment. You donβt try to fight it. But then the notion of horse is kind of harnessing and riding the energy of the moment, taking your seat and expanding outward with confidence and then going into whatever the situation is. So itβs very much about seeing that the life force or the prana of the moment, the wind, is actually in the human difficulty of the moment. So itβs actually the energy that says, oh, I donβt want to do this, or this is going to be really hard. Or what if democracy collapses and whatever it is, right? That you go, oh, okay, thatβs it. That fear or that hope or that emotion is the moment Iβm going. To be present with that, Iβm going to ground with that, acknowledge that, and then open my heart to. And through that and then do what needs to be done, you know. So itβs a kind of a preparatory. Meditation usually for showing up in difficult moments.
Jonathan Fields: [01:05:48] Yeah. No, that makes a lot of sense. So. The book is filled with such a like a deeper conversation about all four of these powers as. Well, and also strategies, practices to say, how do I actually do this? How do I harness it. So I definitely encourage folks to dive in. It feels like a good place for us to come full circle as well. So in this container of Good Life Project., if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
Ethan Nichtern: [01:06:10] Hmm. Yeah. To live a good life, I would say try to come back to the present moment as much as you can and acknowledge that youβre human. I think thatβs the most important thing for me. And thereβs no way to get around that. And thereβs no need to get around being human. Itβs actually a really good working basis for a good life.
Speaker3: [01:06:33] Mm. Thank you.
[01:06:36] Hey, before you leave, if you loved this episode, safe bet, youβll also love the conversation we had with Henry Shukman about the way to original Love. You can find a link to that episode in the show notes. This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers Lindsey Fox and me, Jonathan Fields. Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez. Kristoffer Carter crafted our theme music and special thanks to Shelley Adelle for her research on this episode. And of course, if you havenβt already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project. in your favorite listening app. And if you found this conversation interesting or inspiring or valuable, and chances are you did. Since youβre still listening here, would you do me a personal favor? A seven-second favor and share it. Maybe on social or by text or by email. Even just with one person. Just copy the link from the app youβre using and tell those you know, those you love, those you want to help navigate this thing called life a little better so we can all do it better together with more ease and more joy. Tell them to listen, then even invite them to talk about what youβve both discovered. Because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action, thatβs how we all come alive together. Until next time, Iβm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.