The Mel Robbins PodcastWhat Makes a Good Life? Lessons From the Longest Study on Happiness
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
150 min read · 30,281 words- 0:00 – 7:26
Intro
- MRMel Robbins
I don't even know if I can get through the opening of this. I literally am so excited for today, because (exhales) (sniffs) (instrumental music plays) over and over and over again, living a good life is about the things that are right in front of you that you're not seeing.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. What's the strongest predictor of who's gonna be healthy and happy at age 80 when we look at age 50? And when we looked, it wasn't their cholesterol levels. It was how happy they were in their relationships. As we get older, the reality that life is short, that it's limited, rather than making us depressed, it actually makes us happier, because what we do is we start savoring life.
- MRMel Robbins
Mm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
We start paying attention to what's really important.
- MRMel Robbins
Hey, it's Mel, and I got a question for you. What does it mean to live a good life? You know, you and I can get so caught up in the stupid things that you forget one of the biggest and most important aspects of your life, that at some point it's gonna be over. Will you have lived a good life? You and I are so busy trying to get to the next thing, to make a certain amount of money, drive a certain kind of car, get a certain number of followers, look a certain way, have certain things, but is that really what creates a good life? When you lay on your death bed and you look back on your life, did you live a good life? Well, today, you and I are not only gonna consider that question, you're also gonna learn the secrets to living a good life from an 86-year-long study at Harvard. It is the longest study that has ever been done on happiness, relationships, and the human experience. Wherever it is that you're listening from, no matter how young or old you are, or how much money you have in the bank, what you will learn today will inspire you to live a good life. You guys are always asking me what is my favorite recipe to cook. Let me show you. My favorite thing to cook up, really cool thing for you. I have a brand new training for you. It's called Make It Happen, two-part video training, free workbook. Why? Because I love you. I love cooking up ways to inspire and empower you, and this year's training is all about execution. It covers science, neuroscience, principles in physics, all designed to help you not only make a plan, but execute. Because let's face it, you can cook up ideas in your head, but unless you actually take action, nothing is going to happen. So let me help you. Last year, half a million people took my free training. This year it's gonna be close to a million. Do not miss out on the opportunity to create the life that you love and cook up something really awesome. Let me help you make it happen. Just go to melrobbins.com/makeithappen and you are in. (instrumental music plays) Hey, it's Mel, and I am so glad you tuned in today. (exhales) Holy cow. I, I already feel myself getting emotional. (exhales) I don't know why I am so moved by what we're about to talk about, 'cause we haven't even had the conversation yet. Um, we're answering the question, what makes a good life? Woo. I need to take a deep breath, because the tears are already rolling down my face, and I'm so moved because I know that this is the most important conversation that you could have. And I want you to really slow down and pay attention to what you're about to hear, because this really matters. Everything that you are going to learn today is based on the single longest study ever done on happiness. The study began at Harvard in 1938. The study is on its 86th year. This is not some study where they have people fill out forms and then they never see 'em again. They literally tracked people's lives until the end of their life. It's called the Harvard Study of Adult Development, and the director of that study is here to share all of the research, and more importantly, what you need to prioritize starting today in order to live a good life. There is nothing more important than this conversation, because one of these days, you're gonna find yourself at the end of your life, and you're gonna look back and ask yourself, "Did I live a good life?" And it is my hope that your answer is yes, that you're proud of yourself, that you're surrounded by people that you love, that you used the time that you had to really enjoy your life. It is an absolute honor to introduce you to Dr. Robert Waldinger. He's the director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development. He's also a psychiatrist, a professor at Harvard Medical School, and a Zen priest. He's the author of the amazing book and the international bestseller, The Good Life, and he is here to share all of the research, the secrets, and some very surprising takeaways. And I am certain that by the time you're done listening, your life will not be the same. I hope you share this profound conversation with everyone you know and love, because we all deserve to live a good life. So please help me welcome Dr. Robert Waldinger to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
I'm so glad to be here.
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs) Have you ever had anybody else cry (laughs) during the opening?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Not during the opening, no.... for me, it means so much because you g- you get what we're doing, and you get why it's- why it matters. Like, you know, that you really get it. And it's like, "Wow, what could be better for somebody who just wrote a book, really, if you think about it?" So thank you.
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Thank you for getting choked up.
- MRMel Robbins
You're welcome. You're- I mean, I mean, I didn't do it. Like, I literally-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
I know.
- MRMel Robbins
... am just so moved by what you're doing.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And I really mean it.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Thank you.
- MRMel Robbins
(sighs) Um, I guess I spent so much of my life causing myself a lot of unnecessary heartache.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And it's because I didn't know any better.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And you're not alone. I mean, so many of us, myself included, caused so much heartache just by what we imagined was true that wasn't really true about life.
- MRMel Robbins
True, and also chasing the wrong things. And I just know that this really matters. And so, let's talk about, first, this study, so that the person listening has context for why this study is so important, how it is different, and the impact that it can make on their life. So, can you just tell us about the study?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Sure. First of all, nobody would ever have dreamed when the study began that we would still be going today. It started in 1938,
- 7:26 – 12:03
What IS the Harvard Study of Adult Development?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
and it started with two groups of young men first, um, Harvard College undergraduates, so a very privileged group, and boys from Boston's poorest and most disadvantaged families, a very underprivileged group. And then eventually, we expanded to spouses. We expanded to children. But i- initially, it was a study of thriving. Uh, the question was, what helps people make that transition from adolescence into young adulthood on good developmental paths?
- MRMel Robbins
Mm-hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And of course, you know, with Harvard undergraduates, we think, "Well, they've got their lives all set up. They're- they're privileged." But with the inner city boys, and they were on average about 12 when they entered the study, the question was, how do some children from really disadvantaged homes manage to stay on good developmental paths and grow up into healthy, happy adults? So both- both groups were studied with the question of, what helps us thrive?
- MRMel Robbins
And how did the study work? So, you started in 1938. You've got a group of two very different people, right? Or that's the assumption-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... because they come from very different backgrounds. And how did the study actually work?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well, the Harvard group consisted of 268 young men, and the inner city group, 456. We started with, uh, medical exams, psychological interviews. We went to their homes and talked to their parents and sometimes their grandparents, and the workers made notes about, like, disciplinary style in the home and even what was being served for dinner in 1938. And then they were followed all the way through adolescence into adulthood. Some famous people, John F. Kennedy was part of the Harvard group, Ben Bradlee, who was the longtime editor of The Washington Post. The Boston Strangler was part of the inner city group. But most people were not famous. They weren't infamous. They were just living their lives.
- MRMel Robbins
And then how did you follow them? Because it didn't end with just this sort of one series of interviews.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
No, and most studies do end that way. Or most studies that try to follow people over time stop before 10 years are up because too many people drop out.
- MRMel Robbins
Mm-hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
So this study followed people year after year with questionnaires, "How's your life going?" Interviews every 10 years, where we went to their homes and sat down with them and talked about their lives. Medical exams, um, getting their medical records from their doctors. And then, and this is the coolest thing, eventually, we brought in new techniques. So we studied the same big things, like, you know, physical health, mental health, work/life, relationships. But we started bringing in new techniques as science developed them. So now, we draw blood for DNA and messenger RNA. Those things weren't even imagined in 1938. We put people into the MRI scanner and look at their brains and how they light up when we show them different images. Again, people would have thought this was, like, something from outer space-
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... if we had told you in 1938, "We could put you in a scanner and look inside at your brain." So, it's a really exciting way to see how we can bring in the new tools of science to look at the same questions about well-being.
- MRMel Robbins
What is the biggest takeaway from this 86-year-long study?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
The biggest takeaway is that the people who live the longest, stay the healthiest, and are the happiest are the people who have more relationships with other people and warmer relationships with other people. That the people who literally saw more people in- in a given week, um, the people who felt happier with their relationships actually lived years longer, and they stayed healthier. They didn't develop the diseases of aging as soon, if they developed them at all, compared to people who were more isolated, who didn't care about relationships.
- MRMel Robbins
What was the most surprising?
- 12:03 – 14:38
The biggest and surprising takeaway from this study.
- MRMel Robbins
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
The surprise was not that relationships keep us happier, 'cause sure, if we have warmer relationships, we're going to be happier. The surprise...... was that they keep us physically healthier. So, how could relationships get into the body and shape our physiology so that good relationships make it less likely that we'll get coronary artery disease, they make it less likely that we'll get type 2 diabetes? How is that even possible? So, in the last 10 years, that's what we've been studying in our laboratory.
- MRMel Robbins
How is it possible?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well-
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... it turns out... So the best hypothesis we have, with good data, is that it has to do with stress, that relationships are stress regulators. So if you think about it, we're stressed at different times all day long, right? Like, I might leave here and an hour from now, something really stressful might happen and I, I can literally feel my body rev up, my heart rate revs up, my breathing gets faster, all that, right?
- MRMel Robbins
Yep.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
The fight or flight response. What we know is that if I can go home and talk to somebody, if I can call somebody on the phone or talk to someone at home, I can literally feel my body calm down, and that's what the body's meant to do. So, it's good that the body gets all revved up in response to stressors, to meet a stressor, but then it's meant to calm down. And what we think happens when we don't have good relationships is that we stay in a kind of low-level fight or flight mode where we have higher levels of circulating stress hormones, higher levels of white blood cells ready to fight off danger, and that those things gradually break down multiple systems in the body over time.
- MRMel Robbins
One of the things that I thought was really interesting was that in the study, that you could determine and predict who was gonna be healthy at the age of 80 based on certain things you could see in the present. Can you tell us about that?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. So, we had studied everybody out to age 80.
- MRMel Robbins
Yeah.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And we thought, "Okay, we have all this information about them year after year after year. Let's look back at them in middle age." So we picked 50.
- MRMel Robbins
Okay.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
"Let's look back at everything we know about them and say, 'What are the strongest predictors? Since we know what they look like at age
- 14:38 – 17:07
What was the strongest predictor of health at age 80?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
80, what's the strongest predictor of who's gonna be healthy and happy at age 80 when we look at age 50?" And when we looked, it wasn't their cholesterol levels. It was how happy they were in their relationships. Initially, we didn't believe it. We reanalyzed the data 'cause we said, "This can't be true." And then other studies of different groups of people began to find the same thing. And that's how you know you have a scientific truth. Not when one study, even our study, shows something. It's when many studies point to the same thing.
- MRMel Robbins
So, Dr. Waldinger, can you talk directly to the person listening? Because there are so many people that write in and listen to the show around the world who either feel super lonely or they are not happy-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... in their relationships. What is your message to that person about what's possible for them?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. Well, you know, if, if you think about it, there are many reasons why you might not be happy in your relationships, and there are many reasons why you might be lonely. So, let's start with your current relationships. What are the reasons for not being happy? So, at the worst end, there are really toxic relationships, there are abusive relationships, relationships where we might feel f- afraid of a partner. Those are relationships where, when we can, we need to step away, if there's violence, if there's terrible emotional or physical or sexual abuse. Okay, that's at the extreme end. But most of our relationships aren't troubled in that way. Most relationships have difficulties. You know, I've been married for 38 years. Do I ever have disagreements with my wife? Of course. I mean, any relationship with friends or family that's of any importance is going to have disagreements. So then, the question is, are those relationships worth the work of working out difficulties? And in many cases, they are worth the work. So then, the question is, can you work it out? Can you, in fact, first of all, accept other people for the things you don't like as well as the things you like, uh, just as we
- 17:07 – 20:36
Causes of loneliness and how to feel connected again.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
hope they'll accept us for the ways that I'm annoying and don't even realize it maybe? But then, can you also work out differences? Can you talk about what you care about, what's difficult for you in the relationship, and see if you and the other person can come to a better understanding? Many times, that's possible.
- MRMel Robbins
Tell us about what you learned based on this study and the experience of being lonely.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
You know, one of the things we've learned when we study loneliness is that the causes of why we're lonely are many. And so, again, the first step is to think about, "Why do I feel lonely?" So remember, loneliness is that experience of feeling less connected to other people than I want to be. So, I could be lonely in my marriage. I could be lonely in a crowd. It, it doesn't necessarily mean being alone on a mountaintop. The oth-
- MRMel Robbins
Can, can I just stop you right there?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
Because I think I just got something. I, just probably five years ago, was struggling profoundly with loneliness.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm-hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
I was extraordinarily busy.But I felt very disconnected from my husband, Chris. I felt like I never saw my friends. I didn't feel connected to the community that I lived in.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And even though I was surrounded by people all the time, on- on planes, at work, even standing in the kitchen with my husband, Chris, I felt this deep sense of disconnection. But I read it as something is wrong with me, as... just this sort of indictment that I've done something. And the way that you just said it, I had this little epiphany where I was like, "Oh, wait a minute. What if, when you feel lonely, it's just like a signal, sort of like hunger or thirst, that there's something that you want?" There's nothing wrong with you, other than the fact that you need human connection. You need this- this feeling of belonging in your relationships. So, I just wanted to make sure that as you're listening, that I highlighted that. And so one takeaway already is: In those moments where you find yourself lonely, catch yourself on that default of making yourself wrong and go, "Oh, wait a minute. I remember from this interview that I heard, that this is actually a signal that there's something to do."
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Exactly. That is perfect. You know, and- and that moment of making yourself wrong or making the world wrong, that if we can get out of the mode of blaming anybody, but just say, "Oh, this means I want connection," it can be so helpful. And actually, when couples come into therapy and they're angry at each other, often what you get to help them see is that underneath what they're yearning for is, "I wanna be closer to you." And that once they get that, oh my gosh, everything changes. So, once we stop blaming ourselves or anybody else, we just say, "Oh, I'd like more connection. What's making that difficult right now?" And then we start looking at the- the things that we might be able to do to make more connection.
- MRMel Robbins
So, if you were to take that and turn it into something that somebody can do. So, if you're listening and you
- 20:36 – 24:27
The #1 strategy for couples who don’t feel connected.
- MRMel Robbins
do feel lonely, or you're listening and you're like, "Oh, I relate to what Mel just said," like feeling very disconnected from your partner, is a simple step to simply go up and say, "I've been feeling very lonely and I miss feeling connected to you"?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. Although, that could feel like blame to a partner. But many partners will be okay with hearing that. Some partners may just need to hear, "I'd love to spend a little more time. Could we go for a walk after dinner tonight?" Making a positive suggestion might be a place to start.
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs) I feel like I just got really good advice. 'Cause I tend to go to Chris and just vomit the problem.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
Chris, ah.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
You know, like... But making a positive suggestion for connection.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes, yes. Because often, when we vomit the problem, which I do too at times, um, when we vomit the problem, the other person is like, "Well, well, what do I do about that?"
- MRMel Robbins
Right.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
But what if we come with a suggestion of something that would help me feel more connected? And it can be small. It can be, you know, taking a walk. It can be, "Could we plan a night, just the two of us, to go out to dinner this week?" Something very specific that's not hard to say yes to-
- MRMel Robbins
Hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... to try that first. Now, what if you're lonely and what you realize is that, "I get scared when I'm with other people. Like, I'm afraid of being rejected." So, that's something that's possible to work on. There are, first of all, books you can read about getting through social anxiety. There's therapy for it. The- perhaps you have a trusted friend or a family member who you could talk to about what it's like to walk into a room and realize that you're afraid that people aren't gonna like you, because many of us have that feeling. So, social anxiety is one common reason why we hold ourselves back from people. Sometimes, it's that we need to put ourselves in situations where connection is easier. The way to do that, they've actually studied this in research, the quickest way to make friends is to do something you care about or something you love to do, do it alongside other people, and do it again and again with those same other people. So, let's say you love gardening. Let's say you love pickleball. (laughs) Let's say you love fighting for climate protection, right? Anything that you love or that you're passionate about, put yourself in a situation where you can do that activity with other people. Because, first of all, it brings you in contact with new people. It also puts you in a situation where you share something. "We both are worried about climate change," or, "We both love bird watching," so you have an immediate place to start conversations. If you're feeling awkward, "Well, how do I talk to this stranger?" And so, that turns out to be the quickest way to make new relationships. The other thing that's worth remembering when you're thinking about talking to someone new is: it's not gonna go well every time, and that's okay. Think of it more like being up to bat in baseball. Like, if you hit the ball one time out of three, you are doing amazing. And chances are, you're gonna get a friendly response from a stranger many more times than one out of three. Most of the time-... people are gonna be kind to you and gonna respond well.
- 24:27 – 26:41
Remember THIS when you’re trying to make new friends.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
But don't worry if somebody doesn't. It might mean that they're just having a bad day or they're not in the mood to talk. So, r- remind yourself that it's okay to try multiple times to talk to new people, and that sometimes it's gonna go well.
- MRMel Robbins
You did a mini Harvard study-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... on your own life.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And I would love to have you walk us through how you do that for yourself.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Okay. What we call the mini Harvard study was noticing how my view of my life changes as I get older, as I go through different phases of life, okay?
- MRMel Robbins
Why is that important?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Why is it important? Because I used to imagine that once I got into my 20s, okay, I was supposed to find a profession, and I was supposed to find a partner, and I had my friends, and I was done, and I wasn't really gonna change very much, and I would just go through my life and then die. And of course, we know that doesn't happen. But it's very important to remind ourselves of how much life changes and how much we change. So, the mini Harvard study is just go find a photograph of yourself, maybe when you're half as old as you are now. Look at that photograph and ask yourself, "What did life look like to me when I was that age? What was important to me? And how is it different now? How is it the same? What are, what's important to me now that has always been important? But what has changed?" And what you'll see is how we all grow and change as we go through life, and that that's not only okay, that's absolutely essential.
- MRMel Robbins
So, I, uh, got a photo of myself. I am 27 years old in this photo.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Aw.
- MRMel Robbins
This was the day, if you're watching on YouTube you can see it, if you're listening. It's a photo of Chris and I hours, literally, after we had just gotten engaged.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Uh.
- MRMel Robbins
And this is kinda halfway through life.
- 26:41 – 29:05
Mel shares what was happening in her life at 27 years old.
- MRMel Robbins
And so, what are the questions that I'm asking myself?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
So, the question is, what did life look like to you then? What was most important to you then?
- MRMel Robbins
Um, I felt like I had my whole life ahead of me, and I was building a life with Chris. And I guess what was important to me them was just him and making money.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
Like, that was the focus. Like, how am I paying my rent? 'Cause I was a public defender working for Legal Aid in New York City.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And it was very hard to pay my bills-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm-hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
... in New York City on $19,000 a year.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Ugh.
- MRMel Robbins
And so, I just was maniacally focused on making money, and what is my next career move? And how does Chris feel about me? And that was the focus in life.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Okay. Perfect. Now, what now? What's most important to you now as you look at your life?
- MRMel Robbins
Oh boy. Um, so much. I mean, if I had to boil it down, it would be relationships. It would be my-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm-hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
... relationship with Chris, the people I work with, our children-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... our friends.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
Family.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And do you feel like you have your whole life ahead of you?
- MRMel Robbins
I do. I really do. Like, I think one of the things that has happened for me is that there was a gripping when I was 26 years old. Everything felt like life or death. And that might've been because I had no idea how much childhood trauma had impacted me.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm.
- MRMel Robbins
I was still profoundly struggling with anxiety, so-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm.
- MRMel Robbins
... I lived in a very fight or flight-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
... space, and I had not discovered the life-changing impact of really working on your inside life-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... and settling your nervous system. And, you know, I would, the way that I would put it is I was really obsessed with the curtains on the window, what things looked like-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- 29:05 – 31:28
The advantage to getting older.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
we look beyond to, "Oh my gosh, the world is so beautiful. The world is so full of richness," right?
- MRMel Robbins
Yeah. Because I was so obsessed with the stuff on the surface, right? Like, the outside stuff. The, you know, I'm using the curtains as a metaphor, but the car that you drive, the amount of money that you make-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah, yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... the friend group that you're in, how much you weigh, what you look like, where you're buying a house. Like, all that stuff on the outside, that it fueled a lot of insecurity, and I didn't know what to do with it. And so when you... When I think about where I'm at now, I am so focused on enjoying the view, and I really do believe that the best years of my life are ahead of me-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
... that there are people that I will meet in the future that will be some of my most important relationships and friends that I haven't met yet.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes, yes. Now, one thing I wanna say is that when you opened this podcast, you reminded our listeners we're all gonna die. Life is going to end. And what we think happens, there's good research on this, is that as we get older, the reality that life is short, that it's limited, rather than making us depressed, it actually makes us happier, because what we do is we start savoring life.
- MRMel Robbins
Mm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
We start paying attention to what's really important.You know, the curtains, the brand of my car, not so important as, you know, "Am I good to my family? Am I doing things that mean something to me in my life?" Right? And so, what happens is we shed some of the things that when we put them next to the fact that life is short, they sort of fall away. They, we realize they're just not that important.
- MRMel Robbins
So, Dr. Waldinger, based on this study, what do we get wrong about happiness?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well, we get wrong all the things that the culture tells us will make us happy. So, the culture says, "If you buy this make of car, you're gonna be happy or you're gonna be cooler. If you serve this brand of pasta to your family, your family dinners are gonna be blissful," right? That's the message of the pasta ad we see on TV. "If you use this face cream, you're never gonna get old. You're certainly never gonna look old," right? We're
- 31:28 – 40:31
What do we get wrong about happiness?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
sold all these messages about what will make us happy. If you achieve a lot at work, people come to me saying, "I feel terrible because I'm not a billionaire yet."
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And when I ask the question, "Well, what's the billion dollars going to be for?" many of them are wide-eyed. They're like deer in the headlights. "W- well, I don't know. I just feel like I need to become a billionaire." So, we're given these messages that this is what's important when it turns out that those things don't actually make us happy, but they are measurable. They're like badges of achievement, and so we want those badges. It's sort of like our watches can, can tell us, "Okay, you've done 10,000 steps today."
- MRMel Robbins
Right.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Is that really what matters, what my watch says? Or, is what really matters how my body feels when I move, right?
- MRMel Robbins
Yeah.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And so, what we want is to get beyond the badges of achievement to the substance of our life.
- MRMel Robbins
Why do we go after all of this wealth and all of this stuff when I think deep down we all kinda know it's not the answer-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... but we can't help ourselves from chasing it? You know what I mean?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. Well, because it looks like something we could get and then be done. That if I get there, then I'm gonna be happy, right? If I, that billion dollars, when I reach that billion dollar mark, then I'm gonna be happy. What turns out is that life isn't like that (laughs) .
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
You know, when we say life is a journey, it can sound like a cliché but it's not. Life is an ongoing process of change. What that means is we're never done. Our relationships are never done. Our happiness is never constant. We're gonna move from being more happy to less happy, back to more happy. That's the truth of life, even though what we wish for is a final resting place where it's never difficult again. That doesn't exist.
- MRMel Robbins
If you're constantly chasing things, and you said getting to that final place, like I get that house on the beach, I get the money in the bank, I find the love of my life, all these things that we're chasing, chasing, chasing because we think that we get there and we will have that exhale-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... and we'll feel what we wanna feel.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
How do you counsel people, especially based on what you've seen in this study, to wrestle with that though?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well, the first is to recognize it, to believe it. Most of us say, "No, wait, there has to be a way." In fact, so I'm a, a Zen master, I'm a roshi, and so people have said to me, "Well, you're finally at a place where you're always calm, you're always clear about life," and I say, "No, some mornings I wake up confused or sad or I feel like I'm doing it all wrong," and they say, "Wait, no, not you. You, it can't be, you can't have those ups and downs," and I say, "Yes, me, everybody on the planet." So, the first thing is to recognize it and then to say, "Okay, but there are ways that we can work with the challenges that are always coming our way. We can work with the ups and downs." There's a saying from Jon Kabat-Zinn that I love. He said, "You can't stop the waves, but you can learn how to surf." You can't stop the waves of challenge, and unhappiness, and anxiety, and anger that come our way at times, but you can learn how to surf. You can learn how to work with them better.
- MRMel Robbins
Dr. Waldinger, I am loving this so much because you are making me think about the deeper meaning of life, and here's what I wanna do next. I really wanna get into, "What do I do? What do I do?" So, don't go anywhere, make sure you share this conversation with people that you love. Take a listen to our sponsors. Dr. Waldinger and I will be back after a short break, and we are gonna dig into all of the steps, all of the actions, the simple things you're gonna do to create a good life. Stay with us. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and I'm so excited because I can finally tell you about a free gift that I've been working on just for you. It is a two-part video training called Make it Happen with Mel Robbins. It teaches you how you go from thinking about what you want to actually doing it and making it happen. I'm doing this because I wanna thank you. Thank you for being here with me on social media. Thank you for being a fan of The Mel Robbins Podcast. You made us the fifth most followed podcast in the world last year. Wow. So, I've poured my heart and soul into this free two-part video training just for you as a thank you. I wanna teach you how to apply everything that you're learning to make real results happen in your life. How do you jump in? Great question. Go to melrobbins.com/makeithappen. Last year when I did a training, more than half a million of you took advantage of it. This year's training is even better. Again, go to melrobbins.com/makeithappen.Welcome back. It's your friend, Mel. I'm so thrilled that you're still here with me and Dr. Waldinger. So, Dr. Waldinger, can you give us more advice on exactly how we can implement this wisdom?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well, by doing a lot of the things that science tells us makes us stronger. So for example, not being reactive when we can help it, when we can take a moment to stop and take a breath when we're feeling challenged. So when we're feeling anxious or angry or scared, to just stop and be with it for a moment and say to ourselves, "Okay. What's happening now? Um, what's causing it? What is my wisest way to deal with this challenge right now?" So just stopping, taking a little mini timeout, taking a breath is the first step. And then using what I call our wise mind to say, "Okay. What has worked well in the past? What hasn't worked well?" So, you know, you get the email that makes you angry-
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... and you wanna fire off an angry email in response, and you stop, you take a breath, and you say, "Okay. What would be the wisest way to deal with this email that I wanna get so mad about?"
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right? And sometimes, "I'm gonna sleep on this. I'm gonna wait till tomorrow morning and see how it looks to me tomorrow morning." Now, sometimes we don't have that time, uh, to step back, but most of the time, we do. Even if our partner says something that makes us furious, can we not rise to the bait, but can we stop and take a breath and say, "I'm just gonna take a moment here to hear what you said and think about how I can respond to you"? Right?
- MRMel Robbins
I wish we, uh, would have had this conversation two days ago.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. (laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
Because there... No, I'm not kidding. Because there's a text that I sent, that I sent in the heat of, like, an anxiety wave.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
(laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
And now I am sitting here. Two days later, it's not been responded to by the other person. And I, of course, am managing the wave of, "Oh my God. I wish I hadn't had sent that."
- 40:31 – 46:14
What does money have to do with happiness?
- MRMel Robbins
What did this 86-year-long study at Harvard tell you about the role that money plays when it comes to happiness in your life?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
It's complicated. So, money matters. Money matters. What we find when we do research on this is that having our basic needs met is vital. So, food security. Like, think of the, the billions of people who are food insecure, people who don't know where they're gonna sleep tonight, people who don't know if they can educate their children, if they can pay for their medication. Having those basic financial needs met is essential. So there have been estimates in the research of, you know, you need to make at least $75,000 a year in the U.S. But whatever the, the amount is, and it's kinda arbitrary, it's really, "Can I get my basic needs met?" And until that happens, we are significantly less happy. But then, if I make $75 million a year, that's not gonna make me a whole lot happier than having my basic financial needs met. That's important because if I set out to make myself happy by trying to make a lot of money, it's a fool's errand. It's not gonna happen.
- MRMel Robbins
It's hard, though, to really accept that that's true. And I've been in situations in my life, both when I was at the beginning of my career as a public defender, right, not making money, not able to, like, make the ends meet.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right.
- MRMel Robbins
I've been in a situation in my marriage where we couldn't pay our bills. We were just absurdly in debt, and there were liens on the house. And there is a level of acute and chronic stress-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yep.
- MRMel Robbins
... and anxiety that you feel-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Absolutely.
- MRMel Robbins
... when you cannot buy groceries or pay your rent.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Absolutely.
- MRMel Robbins
And so, when you're in that situation, I hear what you're saying, which is, until you can get your basic needs met-... accessing a deeper level of happiness is gonna be really difficult because you're not thriving. You have legitimate stress and problems that are overtaking your body and your mind, and that's a very, very real thing. So money becomes a really important tool-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... to be able to relieve stress and solve some of your problems, but if I'm listening closely, you're saying it's not the point of your life.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right.
- MRMel Robbins
And too many of us fall into this trap where we believe, because of what we see on social media or what is celebrated in our culture, the new cars, the mansions, the jets, the all of it, that you start to think that it's the point of your life.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
And so, we should think about money as a tool, not the point?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Exactly. To think, "Well, what's the money for?"
- MRMel Robbins
Mm-hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And, when I answer that, "Is that likely to actually make me happy?" So, we can each do a little internal check, "What are the times when I've been the happiest? Was it actually when I had that new car? Um, maybe for a few minutes. But was it actually when I had that wonderful time with my niece and we just spent an afternoon knocking around the city of Boston together? That was magical for me," right? So, what I know when I check in with myself is that the times that I'm happiest are having experiences with people I care about, doing things I care about, that they don't happen to be the things money can buy. But if I were making $19,000 a year in New York City, darn right, money matters hugely.
- MRMel Robbins
Right.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And- and you're absolutely right that it's- that it's a level of stress that prevents us from being happy until we have those needs met.
- MRMel Robbins
That was a great question that you asked us to contemplate. And so, I wanna ask you as you're listening to just stop and think back on your life right now, and if you think about times where you are the happiest. What's interesting as I reflect on that question, it is 1000% when I am out doing something with other people.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
It is being, for me anyway, outside. We're hiking. We're sitting and watching the sunset. We are out working in the yard. We're exploring some new area. And it's with other people-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... and these experiences. And so, I suppose, if you can even just switch your perspective and think about money as a tool to help create more of those connections and experiences with other people, you have a completely different lens on it.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Exactly. And they've actually studied this. They actually studied, like, what makes us happier, paying for material things with our extra money-
- MRMel Robbins
Yeah.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... or paying for experiences? And what they find is that paying for experiences, whether it's, you know, going to a national park, uh, tickets to a basketball game, going to a museum, whatever it might be, that makes us happier and it makes us happier for longer than buying a physical object. Um-
- 46:14 – 48:29
How do we stop comparing ourselves?
- MRMel Robbins
does comparing where you are in life to somebody else impact your happiness?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
There's a quote from Teddy Roosevelt that I love. He said, "Comparison is the thief of joy." And what we find when we study this is that people who compare themselves to other people more often, day-to-day, uh, in a given day, you are less happy. And the people who don't compare themselves as much feel better about life and better about themselves.
- MRMel Robbins
How the heck do we stop? Isn't it human nature to compare yourself to somebody else?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
It is human nature, but there are situations that pull for comparison and there are situations that don't.
- MRMel Robbins
And by pull, you mean it is triggering you to do it?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
It makes us compare.
- MRMel Robbins
Gotcha. Okay.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Like, we almost can't help it.
- MRMel Robbins
Yes.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Okay, so what pulls for comparison? Doomscrolling through social media pulls for comparison. When I look at other people's curated lives, other people's photos of beautiful meals or great vacations, and I compare it to my own mundane life of driving through traffic, I think, "Ugh, you know, ugh. I'm not living my best life. Everybody else has it figured out," right?
- MRMel Robbins
Right.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
So social media, if we consume it passively, pulls for comparison. But what about gardening? (laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right? What about bird watching? Uh, it doesn't really make us wanna compare. It's just, "Oh my gosh, that's so amazing," right?
- MRMel Robbins
What would you say though to a 20-year-old that's listening to this? Because we have a huge range of listeners and there's tons of families that share episodes back and forth-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... moms and dads sending to sons and daughters and vice versa. And so, what would you say to the 20-year-old? Because the second that you said, "Bird watching-"
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
(laughs) Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
"... and gardening-"
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
It's like... (snaps fingers)
- MRMel Robbins
... which by- you know, I'm going on an owl walking date with my husband, uh, you know, like a tour with a local thing in our community on Sunday and-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
I love it.
- MRMel Robbins
... and I can't wait. But if you had said, "Bird watching and gardening" to me-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Forget it.
- MRMel Robbins
... when I was in my 20s-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right.
- MRMel Robbins
... I'd be like, "Uh, delete."
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
No.
- MRMel Robbins
"Not
- 48:29 – 56:52
How to find happiness when you’re in your 20’s.
- MRMel Robbins
listening to this anymore."
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Exactly.
- MRMel Robbins
So what do you say somebody in their 20s who has grown up with a phone in their hand-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... who is now in a generation and in a life experience where everybody's outside life is on display, and it makes you feel terrible on the inside about where you are?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... and what I would say is make sure you're spending a lot of time in real life, a lot of time away from your phone, or at least with your phone in your pocket, never taking it out, with people, in activities that you love. So, what are the activities that you love? Is it playing basketball? It could be just hanging out with your friends doing nothing. I actually heard a story today on NPR about how video games can put some people into a state of flow, where they're just in it, they're just, like, doing the game.
- MRMel Robbins
Yeah.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And they're not thinking about, they're not comparing themselves.
- MRMel Robbins
Yep.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
They're just, uh, like, just trying to get better at this game. Now, can it, can it addict us? Yes, it can, but video games can be a w- a break from this comparison on social media. Um, so there are all kinds of ways to, to find those places in your life where you're just in an activity that you love, that you're engaged in.
- MRMel Robbins
You know, I, on that note on video games, I think it's, this is a really important experience to share, is that I think they're very different than your kid or your loved one scrolling on social media, because the social media and the surfing is passive and video game playing is very active. And I remember when our son started getting super into video games, my husband and I would be in the kitchen arguing, 'cause I was a big gamer when Atari came out and played video games all the time, and so I'm defending our son, like, "He doesn't need to be outside," like, "he loves it, he's really good at it. Wha- there's nothing wrong with gaming. I know, I know you didn't game." And I remember having this huge epiphany once where I went to check in on him one afternoon and he had a headset on and there were seven of his friends playing.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And he wasn't alone. He was not only in a state of flow, doing something very active with his mind and solving problems and doing all this stuff, but he was talking to his friends as they were all playing this game together. And I say that because I think we often look at what's happening on the outside without realizing, oh, there may be something deeper here. And with video games, it doesn't surprise me that there's not only the state of flow, but a lot of people have found ways to stay very connected to other people by playing together.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. And that's such an important point, because, you know, we have these stereotypes, particularly of boys and young men, that, "Well, they're just kinda loners and they're on their video games and they're not making connections." But what you said is exactly right. Many young men will say, "I'm with my friends and we're doing this thing." I mean, how is it different from playing basketball with your friends? Now, there's a physical element, but still, there's a connection element in basketball and in some video games that I suspect is pretty similar.
- MRMel Robbins
When you look at the research from this 86-year-long study, what did the participants say at the end of their life?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
What were their biggest regrets and what were the big lessons?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Okay. The biggest regrets, two categories. One was, "I wish I hadn't spent so much time at work. I wish I had spent more time with people I cared about," almost the number one regret. And then the other regret, and this came more from women than from men, was, "I wish I hadn't worried so much about what other people thought," and that, so those are the two big regrets. The things that people were proudest of were not their achievements, and many people had achieved a lot. It was people, it was, "I was a good mentor, I was a good partner, I was a good parent, um, I, uh, was a good boss." You know? It was always about the relationships. Even among people who had won huge prizes or gotten big accolades, that's not what they named when they were looking back on their life.
- MRMel Robbins
You said the biggest regret, particularly for women, was wasting so much of your life worrying about what other people think.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
How do you stop doing that?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well, it's realizing that, first of all, most of that's not gonna matter when we're dead. (laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right? But what will matter, "Am I treating people well?" That will matter and people will remember it even after we're gone. It's not what people think, but it's what I do. So, one of the sayings I like a lot is, "20 years from now, the only people who will remember whether you worked late are your children." And so if you think about it, so much of what we worry about, like, "Is my boss gonna like me? Are people gonna think I'm a good this or that?" It's not gonna matter down the road. But whether I was a good, ethical person, that's gonna matter a lot. We matter and our behavior matters, but it's not necessarily other people's opinions about whether my curtains were the right shade of blue on the windows.
- MRMel Robbins
Yeah, you're missing the point.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
So, you said at the very beginning that the single biggest takeaway from this 86-year-long study on adult development at Harvard is that a good life is made from good relationships. So, let's focus on what makes for good relationships, and let's start with, what kind of relationships do you need in order to have a good life?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. Okay. So, there's a kind of bedrock relationship type that everybody needs, which is......who has my back? So, we asked our study members at one point, "Who could you call in the middle of the night if you were sick or scared?" And most people could list, you know, several people in their life. Some people couldn't list anybody. And some of those people were even married, and they didn't list their spouse. Right?
- MRMel Robbins
Wow.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
So we think that everybody needs one person, in my world we call it a secure attachment, to another person, where you feel like, "If I'm in trouble, that person would be there for me."
- 56:52 – 1:02:12
What kind of relationships do you NEED to have a good life?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
how do I take a risk in my life? You may have someone in your life, maybe it's your spouse. And if you start to take a risk, like starting a new podcast, you might run it by them and say, "What do you think? Do you think I could do this?" We need somebody to say, "It's okay, and I'm here. Even if it doesn't go well, I've got your back." Right?
- MRMel Robbins
I feel like that's the whole purpose of this podcast for the person listening.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
That it is a refueling.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
That it's a place you can come, ah, back to, like a home base, and hear somebody who really means it say, "You got this. Yes, you can."
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
"You can." Exactly.
- MRMel Robbins
Well, Dr. Waldinger, I mean, talking about relationships and connecting with people, I already have a dozen people that I am going to share this conversation with. And so, let's take a quick pause, hear a word from our amazing sponsors, because they allow us to bring this to you at zero cost. And while you're listening to our sponsors, take a minute and share this with somebody that you love. Because as you're learning, relationships are what create a good life. And Dr. Waldinger and I will be waiting for you after a short break. Stay with us. Hey, it's Mel. And you know what? I want you to stop thinking about what you want and watching videos on YouTube and actually go out into your life and do something about it. Because action is the answer, and the first action you should take is jump into my brand new free training. It's called Make It Happen. This training gives you the tools to go from thinking to doing. It's packed with science. It comes with a free workbook, and it's exactly what you need right now. More than half a million people are taking it, and the fact is, you do have the power to change your life, and I wanna help you. All you have to do is click in the link in the caption, or go to melrobbins.com/makeithappen. It's free. You jump right in. I'm gonna be your coach. I created it for you. Why wouldn't you take this opportunity to make your life better? Go do it. Do not miss out on the life you could be living. Let's make it happen together. Welcome back. It's your friend, Mel. I am so glad you're here. Thank you for sharing this conversation with the people that you love. I know it's gonna make a huge difference. And we're learning incredible insights from the 86-year-long Harvard Adult Development Study. We're here with Dr. Robert Waldinger, who is breaking down the amazing insights from this research study and helping us live a good life. One of the findings of the study is that your relationships not only create a good life, but they actually make you healthier.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
They make you live longer. And so, can you talk a little bit about how the connection that you feel with people in your life, or even warm connections with strangers, helps you manage stress?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. I mean, there are a bunch of ways it does that. One is it makes us feel we're not alone, and feeling like we're not alone is vital. Feeling like someone will catch me if I fall. Right? Uh, feeling like we belong. It's one of the reasons why feeling part of a group matters. It's why being excluded from a group is so painful. We need to feel like we belong to feel good about ourselves. So, even the small interactions we have, like when you, you go into the coffee shop and you have a nice exchange with the barista who makes you, you know, your latte, is that moment of connection where, "Yeah, you know, how's your day goin'?" And, and sometimes people will actually tell you how their day, they'll really tell you, not just on automatic pilot. And that that helps us feel like we're with someone else and we, we belong, uh, and we're seen by someone else.
- MRMel Robbins
Can you talk a little bit, based on the research, of why these small moments and these small conversations, even with a stranger, throughout the week, really are an important part of living a good life?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
What we know is that those conversations with strangers, again, help us feel connected, help us feel affirmed. Um, they did an experiment (laughs) in Chicago where there's a- there are a lot of commuters on the Chicago commuter rail system, and they assigned some people to do what they normally did on their commute, which is to look at their phones, or read a book, or whatever, listen to music, and the other people were assigned to talk to a stranger. And they asked people, "How much do you think you're gonna like this assignment?" And the people who were told they had to talk to strangers thought they were not gonna like it. When they completed their assignment, they were all asked, "How do you feel now?" The people who talked to strangers were way happier than the people who just sat and did what they normally did on their commute. And it seems that the connections we make are energizing much more often than not. Yes, sometimes we can get into a conversation we don't like, but more often than not, it's like, "Oh, it's nice, it's nice to say hello to you. It's nice to complain about the weather together," um,
- 1:02:12 – 1:10:17
What will help you get the most out of life?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
whatever it might be, it just makes me feel like I belong.
- MRMel Robbins
This is something that I have always done. I always said it was because I grew up in the Midwest, just very friendly. I just am always talking to people. I'm always saying hello to people. I'm the person that gets onto an elevator, we're staying at a hotel and there was this big electrical conference there, and so we get into the elevator yesterday, it's probably 7:30 in the morning, it is full of... Just imagine a group of seven electrical contractors, okay?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. (laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
Like get that picture in your mind, they're all kinda standing there quiet, and I'm like, "Hey guys, what's up?" You know? (laughs) And first, silence-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Like, "Who is this?"
- MRMel Robbins
... yeah, and I'm like, "How's the conference?" And they're like, "Oh," you know, and then one guy starts to talk-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... and then all of a sudden, like popcorn popping, next thing you know is we're going down the 17 floors, we're chatting it up, and I'm recommending the almond croissant at the bakery in the café. And so I love that, and I realize that it's not even about being extroverted, because I'm really more of somebody, I'm realizing, who's more ambiverted. I'm extroverted at work, but then I'm literally-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... a "I never leave my house" kind of thing.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
But I am so energized by it.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right, so how did you feel at the start of the elevator ride and then at the end? Can you compare?
- MRMel Robbins
1000% I compare. As I got out of my hotel room alone, and I'm checking my phone as I'm walking down the hallway, and then I'm turning right to walk down the other long hallway, and I'm still on my phone, and I'm thinking about my workday, and I'm trapped in my head, and then I walk over to the elevator, and then I hit the button, and I'm so not present that I step on the first elevator that dings, and it's going up, not down.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
(laughs) Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
So then I go up alone in the elevator-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm-hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
... for another seven floors, and then the first contractor walks in. And the second I looked at him, and I said, "Good morning," and he smiled and said, "Good morning," I felt a little burst of energy. It was like I was immediately now in the moment.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And not on my phone. I was now present with another human being staying at the same hotel. The doors shut, and as we start to descend, I turn, I'm like, "Were you in the elevator with me yesterday morning?" And he kinda laughed and he's like, "I don't think so," and I'm like, "Well, you probably would have remembered it, because I was yapping with everybody in the elevator, but there was somebody in there," and then the doors open, and now we're talking. And so then somebody else gets in, and we, I say, "Good morning," and then the guy looks up and says, "Good morning," and then we stand in, and then the doors open again. And so as everybody then starts to get on-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
You were the greeter.
- MRMel Robbins
Yes, but the energy in the elevator shifted.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
(laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
Nobody was on their phone.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And we didn't solve-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... the world's problems.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
But even just getting off the elevator, and then as I exited, "Have a great day, everybody," and a b- you know, a couple people, "Hey, you too," you know, kinda thing, I was present, I felt a little less alone, I felt a lift of life force energy-
- 1:10:17 – 1:14:47
What to hear if you don’t have a romantic partner.
- MRMel Robbins
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. So actually, (laughs) um, I was, uh, talking about this to a group of people, and one woman raised her hand and said, "Well, given all you've said, if I don't have a partner, should I just walk in front of a bus now?" And the answer is absolutely not. You don't need a romantic partner, that romance is great, sex is great, intimacy is great. And intimacy can be with all kinds of people, right? So, it may be that you don't have a romantic partner right now in your life. That doesn't mean you never will. But if you don't have one now, there are ways to be intimate with close friends, with other family members. And so, what we're finding is that these benefits of relationship don't require a marriage license. They don't even require living in the same place with somebody. That you can have people in your life, maybe just one or two, who are your close friends, who you share your life with, um, and that there's no special arrangement you need to have with them. Now, that said, what we do find in the research is that living with somebody in an intimate partnership actually keeps you healthier longer and helps you live longer. But it, there's no mystery about it. It's because it's somebody to remind you to take your medication-
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... when you're older. It's somebody to remind you to get off, off the couch. It's somebody to, to drag you out to, uh, to a gathering when you're kinda stuck watching Netflix. And-
- MRMel Robbins
You make it sound so romantic. (laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Well, I know, I know, it's not so romantic, but, but it is really just the day-to-day that other people make us better by keeping us on track. It's somebody to get up for. It's somebody to get dressed for. That's one of the reasons we find that many times when one partner dies, the other partner kinda doesn't live that long afterwards when we're very old, because there's a way that living with another person helps us stay in the world and take care of ourselves.
- MRMel Robbins
Is that kinda the same reason why pets are so good for your health?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Oh, yeah. Pets are great. First of all, they get us up. They get us to walk. Um, but also, pets love us, especially dogs. Dogs are particularly emotionally attuned to their masters. Pets provide comfort in a way that, again, literally lowers the fight or flight response. You can, we can measure it. When we're petting a dog, ah, the, the body calms down.
- MRMel Robbins
I wanna go back to something that you said. You mentioned something about, like, even just having a friend or two...
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... that you have a much deeper or an intimate connection with. Do you have two or three examples...... that might get somebody's mind thinking about things that they could plan or do, or ways they could look at their friendships-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
... to amplify them?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
I do. You know, our lives are so busy, and we're pulled in so many different directions. And, you know, what we find is that often we want to see people, but we don't. So, one of the things you can do is set up a regular contact with somebody. So let's say, maybe they were just one or two or five people who you say, "I gotta have these people in my life regularly." Make it happen. I'll give you an example. My co-author for this book we wrote, The Good Life, is Mark Schultz. He's been my collaborator for 30-plus years, but he's also my friend. So, every Friday at noon, we get on the phone. He's, he lives in Philly. He's not around Boston. So, I might see him once a year in person. But for 30-plus years, we've had a phone call every Friday at noon. And yeah, we- we do talk about research, and we talk about our writing together, but we talk about our kids and our marriages, and we talk about everything. Now, one of us has to cancel if we're not gonna meet Friday at noon. That means that it's gonna happen by default. And that means it happens, much more often than not. It's rare that we cancel a time. What if you had a friend like
- 1:14:47 – 1:18:45
#1 pro tip for nurturing your friendships.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
that, who you said, "Once a month, we're going out to dinner." So what I'm saying is, try making s- one thing regular in your life with a friend or a sibling, or somebody who you just wanna say, "I don't wanna lose this connection."
- MRMel Robbins
I wanna tease that out 'cause I think this is something that you could listen to and kinda nod along, and be like, "Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh." And so I wanna make sure that you really understand what we're saying here, because over and over and over again, living a good life is about the things that are right in front of you that you're not seeing.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And everybody's busy. And if this matters to you, what he's recommending is that you schedule it as a reoccurring appointment. It is already set up. The babysitter is locked in, or your friend is on board. And so, you've already done the hard part of moving from thinking about it to doing it, and the appointment itself is what keeps you connected. Like, if you have it in the calendar, it's more likely to happen. And there's something that I did that really helped me tremendously, which is, I have a habit every morning where I send a text to a friend or a family member, just saying, "I was just thinking about you," or sending a photo, or whatever else. And if I really do wanna get together, I say, "I would love to see you. Are you around next Thursday?" Or, I saw this photo come up on Facebook. I just say, "I was thinking about you." And we underestimate how much it means to somebody else, and making it a habit to do that first thing in the morning every morning has kind of fanned the embers of old relationships, of people that are still friends, I just never see 'em. People that I went to college with, high school with, people that I used to work with. Like, you have many more people in your life than you realize. And these small habits actually help them contribute to creating a good life.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Absolutely. Mel, you are the poster child for what we call in the book "social fitness," these small actions, like physical fitness, like something you do every day to keep yourself socially fit. And it can be small things, like a text. Um, it could be, you know, somebody with a long commute, like you say, "Well, I can't add anything to my time." Well, if you have a hands-free phone in your car, use your commute time to talk to somebody instead of, you know, listening to music or listening to the news. Talk, reach out to somebody. There are all kinds of ways you can add to your life without having to add so much time that you are more stressed.
- MRMel Robbins
Did the study give you any guidance on what makes for a good friendship?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. Several things. One is what we call authenticity, and all that means is, I feel I can be myself with this person. Like, I don't have to put on any kind of act. I don't have to hide big parts of who I am with this person. That that sense of just being able to show up as yourself means a huge amount, in terms-
- MRMel Robbins
Mm-hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... of the comfort with which you can be together. The other thing that makes a good relationship is curiosity. So, if you think about it, especially with long relationships, we think, "Well, I know this person. I know the, what they're gonna say. I know how they're gonna react." Bringing curiosity, even to long-standing relationships, can be so good. Like, one of my, one of my meditation teachers actually taught me this first. He said, "Your job when you go sit down on your cushion now for the 1,000th time, as you meditate, is to ask yourself, 'What's here that I have never noticed before?'" So what if you're sitting
- 1:18:45 – 1:26:06
How to have deeper conversations with your friends.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
across from your friend at the coffee shop, and you ask yourself, "What's here that I've never noticed before?"
- MRMel Robbins
Hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
And just bring curiosity even to the relationships that you think are routine, mundane, you know like the back of your hand.
- MRMel Robbins
You know what's interesting that I just thought about, is that if you think about your own life, and you go back to, like, half the age that you are, looking backwards, you realize how much you've grown-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm-hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
... how much you've changed-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Mm-hmm.
- MRMel Robbins
... how different of a person you are.And yet, we don't give that same perspective to the people in our life. Like your mom has gone through the exact same amount of growth even though the habits on the outside look the same. Your partner is a totally different human being-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
... even though they look the same to you. Your friends have had so many things happen in their life that have changed who they are and what they care about, and yet you still show up and talk about the same old sports team and-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... how are the kids.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
And there's something so much deeper going on.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. To notice how somebody has changed can make someone feel so seen and understood.
- MRMel Robbins
Do you have a good question? Like how would you advise us if, you know, you're sitting here listening to this, and you're considering everything, and you're thinking about the just treasure that is right in front of your face-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... with the people that are already in your life. How do you lean in without sounding like some-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... weird cheese ball that's just listened to a podcast episode and now you're like, "So, you know, have you thought about how much you've changed in the last-"
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right. Right. Right.
- MRMel Robbins
"... half decade?"
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Right. Right. Right.
- MRMel Robbins
You know, "I'm curious." Like what's a way to, like, broach this with somebody?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. Well, one thing we could do is notice change. Like to say-
- MRMel Robbins
Hmm.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... "You know, you're doing that differently than you used to. Tell me about that." Or- Or, "You know, I've noticed this. Is that right? Do you think that this is more important to you than it used to be?" Or, you know, just to notice and ask, "Have I got that right?"
- MRMel Robbins
I can think about a time when my brother-in-law turned to me and he said, "You know, you're really different than you used to be, and I just wanted to acknowledge, like, just how much work you've done and, like, how fun you are to be around." Of course, I immediately went to make myself wrong, like, "Wow, I must've been a real bitch for him." (laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
(laughs)
- MRMel Robbins
But- But it was-
- 1:26:06 – 1:29:32
The most important thing to know about raising healthy children.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
we teach curiosity. We teach turn-taking. We teach mutuality. So one of the things that we know in a good relationship is that one person doesn't occupy all the airtime. Well, where do kids learn that? First, they learn it at home. And so, how do you have discussions where you share the airtime rather than one person taking it all?
- MRMel Robbins
What role does forgiveness or acceptance play in creating a good relationship, particularly with family?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes, I mean, the things we've been saying, so one habit is being curious about how they're changing right in front of you, and then, um, going with the flow, so if someone is changing, not opposing that. Think of all the pain we cause each other by saying, "No, no, you can't grow up to be an engineer. You have to be a doctor," or, "You can't grow up to be a woodworker. You have to be a lawyer," however we decide someone else has to live their life. That is a recipe for pain and suffering-
- MRMel Robbins
How come?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
... in families. Because each of us is, is who we are, right? Each of us is this unfolding being who has their own likes and dislikes, their own talents. And so if I think, "Oh, my child has to be like me," that's a recipe for disaster. Um, so what if we could really be curious about, "Who is this being that I've brought into the world? And how can I help this person express who they are in the world?" That's a big factor in which families thrive.
- MRMel Robbins
When you look at couples, and this innate desire that we have to either change or control them-
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah.
- MRMel Robbins
... and you just mentioned that one of the amazing things that you can do for someone is to step aside and not interrupt the flow of them changing, I was just curious, what do you think the balance is between the nudging, "Get off the couch. We gotta take a walk. You've been sitting at your desk all day," and stepping in and trying to control somebody?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
I'm gonna quote a famous Zen teacher who told his monks, "You're perfect just as you are, and you could use a little improvement."
- MRMel Robbins
(laughs)
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
So, (laughs) it's this kind of paradox that, yes, we want to accept each other, and we wanna help, help each other be better, right? So it is a little of both. Like, we don't wanna just accept kids and let them do whatever they want, because they'll, they'll be heathens. They won't learn to function in the world.
- MRMel Robbins
They're also not adults yet.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
They're not adults yet. They're not able to choose for themselves. We can't say to the toddler, "Sure, go out and play in the street if you want to." No. And you're right. We, we do wanna say to our partner, "Come take a walk with me. You know, we've spent enough time on the couch." The balance is trying to let someone be who they are but to nudge them in the ways that we can to be healthier,
- 1:29:32 – 1:34:30
How to help your kids and loved ones meet the challenges of life.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
to, to do things that, that we think will help them be happier. So it's always walking a fine line.
- MRMel Robbins
Is there any strategy based on the research that works better than others? Because I think, especially as you age, and you see somebody's health decline, and you want them to take better care of themselves, did anything emerge from this study that's like, obviously pressuring isn't gonna work, but is there something that you can do in terms of how you show up that makes it more likely or triggers intrinsic motivation for somebody else to wanna do that work to improve themselves?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yeah. Um, first of all, let people learn from life. Don't shield them from the consequences of what they choose. If somebody says, "Well, I, I don't really wanna get a job," "Oh, okay. Well, so how you gonna pay your rent?" There are lots of things we can do to help people meet the challenges of life by not shielding them from the challenges of life. That matters. You know, we- th- this often happens in the realm of addiction with loved ones, that we have to, uh, let people deal with the pain of losing a job, of losing a partner, because they're not present, because they're addicted to some substance, that we don't try to run in and make it all better. We let people, when we can, face the real-world consequences of the choices they make, and hopefully learn from them, 'cause that's how we all learn.
- MRMel Robbins
Beautiful. In chapter five, there was this really interesting statistic about the fact that we spend half the time thinking about something else rather than being in the present moment.
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes.
- MRMel Robbins
Can you talk a little bit about the importance of your attention?
- RWDr. Robert Waldinger
Yes. Yes. So, paying attention to just what's here now i-... is something we don't normally do. Our minds carry us off into thinking about the future or thinking about the past, and in some ways, that's helpful. Like, to be able to anticipate the future is a good thing. It's one of the reasons why we survive so well. And thinking about the past lets us learn from the past. So, all that's good, but what we know is it doesn't make us as happy as being in the present, as me paying attention right now to what it's like sitting here talking to you, what the chair feels like under me, what the air feels like on my skin. That all of that, when I can let myself be present for it, actually makes me feel more alive. So, the practice of coming back into the present, that's part of what flow is. Flow is just being present for what is. You don't have to sit on a meditation cushion to do this. You can take a walk in nature and you get outside of your thoughts about the past and present. You just look at, "Oh my gosh, that tree is so beautiful," and you're just right there in the moment, um, you know, or you're right there with your friend. And so, what we find when we study this, is that when we are in the present moment, our mood is happier than when we're thinking about the past or thinking about the future.
Episode duration: 1:39:26
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