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Dan Harris

10% Happier: How I Tamed the Voice in My Head, Reduced Stress Without Losing My Edge, and Found Self-Help That Actually Works--A True Story

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  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted5 years ago
    Tolle was forcing me to confront the fact that the thing I’d always thought was my greatest asset—my internal cattle prod—was also perhaps my greatest liability. I was now genuinely questioning my own personal orthodoxy, my “price of security” mantra, which had been my operating thesis since, like, age eight. All of a sudden, I didn’t know: Was it propulsive—or corrosive?
  • mata31has quoted7 years ago
    The voice comes braying in as soon as we open our eyes in the morning, and then heckles us all day long with an air horn. It’s a fever swamp of urges, desires, and judgments. It’s fixated on the past and the future, to the detriment of the here and now
  • Patricia Rodil Ghas quoted4 years ago
    Meditation is not about feeling a certain way. It’s about feeling the way you feel
  • Patricia Rodil Ghas quoted4 years ago
    are some books I like:

    On meditation

    Real Happiness, Sharon Salzberg

    Insight Meditation, Joseph Goldstein

    On Buddhism and mindfulness in general

    Going to Pieces Without Falling Apart, Dr. Mark Epstein

    Buddhism Without Beliefs
  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted4 years ago
    Compassion meditation (aka metta)
    At first blush, most rational people find the below off-putting in the extreme. Trust me—or, better, trust the scientists—it works.
    1. This practice involves picturing a series of people and sending them good vibes. Start with yourself. Generate as clear a mental image as possible.
    2. Repeat the following phrases: May you be happy, May you be healthy, May you be safe, May you live with ease. Do this slowly. Let the sentiment land. You are not forcing your well-wishes on anyone; you’re just offering them up, just as you would a cool drink. Also, success is not measured by whether you generate any specific emotion. As Sharon says, you don’t need to feel “a surge of sentimental love accompanied by chirping birds.” The point is to try. Every time you do, you are exercising your compassion muscle. (By the way, if you don’t like the phrases above, you can make up your own.)
    3. After you’ve sent the phrases to yourself, move on to: a benefactor (a teacher, mentor, relative), a close friend (can be a pet, too), a neutral person (someone you see often but don’t really ever notice), a difficult person, and, finally, “all beings.”
  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted5 years ago
    eal Happiness, Sharon Salzberg
    Insight Meditation, Joseph Goldstein
    On Buddhism and mindfulness in general
    Going to Pieces Without Falling Apart, Dr. Mark Epstein
  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted5 years ago
    . Go Easy with the Internal Cattle Prod
    9. Nonattachment to Results
    10. What Matters Most?
    Don’t Be a Jerk
    It is, of course, common for people to succeed while occasionally being nasty. I met a lot of characters like this during the course of my career, but they never really seemed very happy to me. It is sometimes assumed that success in a competitive business requires the opposite of compassion. In my experience, though, that only reduced my clarity and effectiveness, leading to rash decisions. The virtuous cycle that Joseph described (more metta, better decisions, more happiness, and so on) is real. To boot, compassion has the strategic benefit of winning you allies. And then there’s the small matter of the fact that it makes you a vastly more fulfilled person.
    (And/But . . .) When Necessary, Hide the Zen
    Be nice, but don’t be a palooka. Even though I’d achieved a degree of freedom from the ego, I still had to operate in a tough professional context. Sometimes you need to compete aggressively, plead your own case, or even have a sharp word with someone. It’s not easy, but it’s possible to do this calmly and without making the whole thing overly personal.
    Meditate
    Meditation is the superpower that makes all the other precepts possible. The practice has countless benefits—from better health to increased focus to a deeper sense of calm—but the biggie is the ability to respond instead of react to your impulses and urges. We live our life propelled by desire and aversion. In meditation, instead of succumbing to these deeply rooted habits of mind, you are simply watching what comes up in your head nonjudgmentally. For me, doing this drill over and over again had massive off-the-cushion benefits, allowing me—at least 10% of the time—to shut down the ego with a Reaganesque “There you go again.”
    The Price of Security Is Insecurity—Until It’s Not Useful
    Mindfulness proved a great mental thresher for separating wheat from chaff, for figuring out when my worrying was worthwhile and when it was pointless. Vigilance, diligence, the setting of audacious goals—these are all the good parts of “insecurity.” Hunger and perfectionism are powerful energies to harness. Even
  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted5 years ago
    I played with titles for a while (“The Ten Pillars of Cutthroat Zen” was briefly a contender), but then I heard about the ancient samurai code, “The Way of the Warrior.” I decided to create a version for the corporate samurai.
    The Way of the Worrier
    1. Don’t Be a Jerk
    2. (And/But . . .) When Necessary, Hide the Zen
    3. Meditate
    4. The Price of Security Is Insecurity—Until It’s Not Useful
    5. Equanimity Is Not the Enemy of Creativity
    6. Don’t Force It
    7. Humility Prevents Humiliation
  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted5 years ago
    Then it clicked. Per usual, Mark’s advice was sound, even if it took me a while to absorb it. Striving is fine, as long as it’s tempered by the realization that, in an entropic universe, the final outcome is out of your control. If you don’t waste your energy on variables you cannot influence, you can focus much more effectively on those you can. When you are wisely ambitious, you do everything you can to succeed, but you are not attached to the outcome—so that if you fail, you will be maximally resilient, able to get up, dust yourself off, and get back in the fray. That, to use a loaded term, is enlightened self-interest.
  • Henrik Ulrik Anker Hansenhas quoted5 years ago
    No,” he said. “That’s the tricky thing about what he’s saying to you. I’m sure there’s a way of doing it where you don’t have to be an asshole. I think it might be possible that you could give the appearance of being one of those guys while deep inside of you, you wouldn’t be.”
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