This is the Ten Percent Happier Podcast, Abian Harris. Hello everybody, how are we doing? So much human suffering is caused by the fact that we are stuck in our heads captured by our thoughts, suckered by our habitual rumination and ancient storylines. Today we are going to talk about the science of getting out of your head, of escaping what is called the brain's Default Mode Network, which my guests today refer to as the House of Habit.
Of course, we need our default mode, our capacity to behave habitually in order to survive and in order to brush our teeth and tires shoes without undue cognitive demands. But if you are stuck in the default mode, you are missing out on quite a bit and you are susceptible to many, many varieties of suffering and unhappiness. My guests today are Dr. Zindel Segal and Professor Norman Farb.
They have a new book out called Better in Every Sense and in it they describe something they call Sense Foraging, which is a simple but very powerful practice designed to use our senses to turn down the more noxious aspects of the Default Mode Network, like being overly focused on ourselves or not receptive to change or newness in the world around us.
We talk about what Sense Foraging is exactly and how it can help us go from languishing to flourishing, how shutting down our senses can make us more vulnerable to depression, the differences and similarities between sense foraging and mindfulness, why counter intuitively most of us could use a little bit more chaos in our lives, how radical acceptance can be a starting point for sense foraging and the nine simple rules to sense foraging.
Just a little bit more about our guests before we dive in, Dr. Zindel Segal is a distinguished professor of psychology in mood disorders at the University of Toronto Scarborough and a co-founder of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy. Professor Norman Farb is an associate professor of psychology at the University of Toronto, Mrs. Saga, where he directs the regulatory and effective dynamics laboratory. Zindel Enorm, coming right up.
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Sure. A lot of my interest in working with mindfulness meditation to help people dealing with depression found its way into neuroimaging because at that time there was a compelling story of antidepressants changing the brain and serotonin deficiencies being a kind of iron clad argument for antidepressants.
The idea that somehow meditation could also help people was bolstered by the fact that neuroimaging findings showed that people who practiced mindfulness people, who practiced meditation also had changes in brain regions that were important in affect emotion regulation. I didn't have the expertise to conduct those kinds of studies, but I was able to connect with a colleague at the University of Toronto, Adam Anderson and his star graduate student happened to be Norm and Farb.
I think his star graduate student went to work for Apple, but I was like the backup star guy to know. His less well compensated graduate student is now your no author. Got it. But maybe more psychologically stable. Well, whoever means to be seen, a lot of that deep psychopathology emerges lead in life, so I'm a long game. So Norm, now that we're picking on you a little bit, what's your version of the story, how did this come about?
Yeah, so I would say like you, Dan, I was not a meditation guy at all. I really wanted to learn neuroimaging. I'd done like psychophysiology and I'd have the body response to emotions from master's degree and functional imaging, FMRI is really expensive. And I knew that Adam, my supervisor, had something cooking where he had a funded FMRI study and I wanted to do imaging and emotions for my PhD. And I was already the guy in the lab who did yoga, like on the weekends.
So it was mostly initially, I would say like a marriage of convenience where there's going to be this big imaging opportunity to be something kind of new and out there, which appealed to me. And it was kind of scary meetings in the start, because he's like a distinguished professor at the biggest mental health institution, center of prediction of mental health and Toronto. So in a quite a big power imbalance, I think when we first met, I was like a first or second year PhD student.
So at the start, I was just like the person grinding the scans and getting the analysis going. I think over the course of then, starting to try to write grants together and just like I know thousands of meetings, I think I heard you swear for the first time, maybe five years into a relationship. And I was like, well, I'm getting somewhere with this guy. And then Adam ended up leaving to Cornell. I ended up getting hired to stay on in Toronto as a professor.
And so now we're a bit more equalized in our roles. And we continue to meet and trade off clinical and neuroimaging expertise as a great papers. So it was really an organic relationship. And I did start to sip and eventually bathe in the coolative meditation over the two decades as well. So we kind of grew together. So let's start with a foundational idea for this book you've written. What is the default mode network? Yeah, I'll take that one as kind of a brain oriented one.
The default mode network is a constellation or group of brain regions that are activated when you let someone ostensibly relax in the scanner. So they're doing arithmetic or some kind of mental rotation or memory task. And you say, hey, just for a couple of minutes, just just relaxing up to do anything at all. And then all of these brain regions, especially in the midline of the brain and then a couple little horns above the ears light up when you tell the person they have nothing to do.
And so this led to this characterization that this is what the brain does by defaults when you're not up to anything in particular. And ostensibly, you know, because it does show up in early or mammals and other species, this was originally a network that kind of takes care of the interior state of the body. But more and more, we started to recognize that the default network can be activated intentionally and it gets activated when you start thinking about whether things apply to you or not.
So you see a word like honest, you think, oh, am I honest or am I not honest? And when you have those kind of thoughts, you can voluntarily activate the default network. But that was discovered maybe four or five years after the first publication showing that there's this really consistent, very strong pattern of activity that turns on when you ask people just to do nothing. Why do you call it the house of habit?
So one thing you notice that we notice with the default network is whenever things kind of become business as usual, and it feels as though the person is no longer putting in a lot of effort to manipulate things out in the world, the default network kind of takes over. So as an example, if you had someone pressing a button for left arrow on a different button for right arrow, and they just started doing that task, because the first time they'd done it, you're bit nervous about doing it right.
You get all this other stuff happening in the top and in front of the brain so they can make sure they're getting the job done. But after about 20 to 30 seconds, they're like, oh, really, that's it. I'm just pressing arrows. And that's how they're doing. A lot of that activation kind of quies it down and the default network kicks back in. And part of that might be because they're starting to mind wander a little. And part of it is also that they've automated their response to the world.
They've created a model for the world that exactly fits what they need to do and no updating is needed. And that's like the default networks bread and butter. And so what we've also started to see is that people who have really deep self-evalutive habits, like, remination, people of depression, show exaggerated activity of this default network.
And so these different like pieces of evidence come together that it's on when we're not doing anything in particular that what people report doing a lot of times when they're not doing anything particular, they think about themselves like, what's for lunch? What am I doing in the scanner? And that sort of thing that when they do explicitly think about themselves, the default network comes online. And then when they start to automate behavior, the default network also comes online.
And it converges to create this impression that what the default network is doing is instantiating and perpetuating our habits over time. And not only that, that our habits tend to be predominantly self-referential or self-evalutive, we're always worried about how things affect us in particular. So Zindal, would you say our default mode is a happy place or an unhappy place? I'd say it's an efficient place. I'd say it's a very self-focused place.
And I think that if we ever need to step out of those habits, it becomes very hard because we've relied on them and very often we have very few ways of thinking differently outside of habit. That's a huge focus in our book, which is to suggest that there are ways of stepping out of habit that are actually quite close at hand, but it's almost like a failure of imagination to be able to conceive them in the moments when we need them.
So what you're saying that our default mode is adaptive and useful. And if we have no other option, it can turn into an unpleasant and even hellish way of being. Yeah, I mean, automatic pilot, all of these terms are very familiar to us because they've been used to help us understand how we can do a lot of things and not have to devote
much attention to them. But when those things that we're doing roll into problem solving emotional situations or complex interpersonal relationships, habits themselves may not serve us any longer if we need to look at different options or consider other ways of responding that are different from ways that we've responded in the past. And I think that that's really where it starts to break down in those moments. What are we reach for?
It's other habits. There are other things we can do, but those are the first things that pop into our minds. Let me quote you back to you. There's a quote in the book that struck me, the DMN, that's your shorthand for default mode network. The DMN's mental routines evolved to help us survive long enough to reproduce, but they are agnostic when it comes to our individual well-being. Yeah, I think that's great. I think that was us in our editor.
Yeah, I'll take credit for that one. The default mode network for sure. It's absolutely essential. It's not voluntary that we have mental habits, that we have an internal narrative, that we have a sense of where we are in the world and some personal sense of identity. The fact that regardless of your philosophy, identity occurs ubiquitously, shows that it probably has some necessary evolutionary and life preserving function. So it's absolutely
essential that we have some sense of purpose and knowledge of what we're up to. We can see in disorders where that breaks down that it's catastrophic, depersonalization or de-realization disorders person really has no function or relation. At the same time, the things that we've learned just to get by in life are totally agnostic.
The system doesn't care at all about whether the model we have, it's as happy or content or fulfilled or related unless there's some sort of threat to our ability to do those two main things that evolution wants us to do, which is stay alive or at least stay alive long enough to procrate and pass on our genes. So when we think there might be some threat to ourselves, the default mode network actually isn't agnostic, it will become even more
active, it will tend to double down on the habits we already have. And if that leads us into a really dark place, so be it because survival trumps feeling good or connected or so on. Okay, so we've established the default mode network. Let's move on to another key pair of concepts, because we're going to stay on the definitional tip for the beginning of this interview before we get into the practical parts. So as I said, we talked about the default
mode network. You then talk about the difference between languishing and flourishing. So Zindel, why don't you pick up and describe what are these two states and what is the difference? Yeah, languishing is a term that actually was popularized during the COVID epidemic to suggest a state in which people are just getting by not a lot of satisfaction, not a lot of engagement with what they're doing, but surviving difficult circumstances and often
by retreating, avoiding and living lives of sort of quiet desperation. This is linked to people making decisions about work choices that involved, not willing to return to previous routines, something I was called the Great Resignation, but basically it's a kind of deficit of the reward system, the ability to feel motivated and incentivized by the same things
that kept us moving. It could be a low grade depressive reaction or a low grade reaction of despair and hopelessness to circumstances, often external circumstances that keep people living in a way that's very constricted. So that's languishing. It's kind of just day-to-day,
not really going anywhere, waking up the whole thing repeats again. And it's in contrast to flourishing, which I think is also a bit of a new agey concept where people can be seen to maximize passion, maximize engagement, pursue important values and goals, and allow themselves to have a trajectory in their lives where they can see themselves optimizing values and living in ways where they're both enriching and expanding their sense of
self and also contributing to those people around them. So there's sort of two contrasting views of lives lived through periods of time when conditions were very challenging. What is the connection between the default mode network and languishing versus flourishing? The default mode network allows us to engage in routines that are working for us that allow us to get through the day, but often they also keep us trapped in solutions to problems
that we face that have been kind of tried and true. And so it reduces novelty, it reduces curiosity, it reduces exploration, and it keeps us in a sense running off the same scripts. And I think as a result of that, the things that we're trying to put into the conversation involve much more of a commitment to curiosity, exploration and novelty as a way of trying to undo some of these tendencies that are overreherced and often automatic.
Okay, so Norm, I think this brings us to the central thesis of the book. How do we move from languishing to flourishing? How do we escape the more noxious aspects of the default mode network? Yeah, I think it's useful. It's already alluded to to remember that the default mode network is absolutely essential habits and ability to automate our experiences is essential, but to think of it as one of two major psychological forces that are being perpetuated in our lives,
which is a force towards stability. Right? So we're trying to find ways to have accurate models of the world and in doing so, we want to discount things that are going to disrupt our models and try to have a sense that we're in control, we know what's going on, and that can come at the expense of surprise, new connection, and change in general. And for us to really flourish, one of the central aspects of flourishing is this feeling that we're
growing and developing. If we were to tell anyone today as good as it's ever going to get, nothing's ever going to get better than it is now. You already know everything you're going to know about the world. So, yep, good luck. It probably wouldn't be the best day of that person's life. Right? The best days of our lives are often days where we feel
like we've expanded, grown, made a new connection, learned something. And so those are all aspects of change, which the default mode network is trying desperately to minimize, trying desperately to minimize how often we become surprised or have to update our own models or change
ourselves to accommodate the world. So, the thesis is that if we really want to have lives where we have flourishing, where we feel like we're growing and developing, we have to undercut the dominance that a fault mode network can develop a skillfulness in toggling from a state of automaticity when it serves us into a state of exploration where we're allowing the world to change us instead of always making the priority having the world
fall into line with our expectations and our models. So, we have to learn to step out of the house of habit. We have to learn to disengage from the default mode network as the dominant mode and find a way to balance that with another state, which we think is fundamentally distinct from moving towards automaticity and preserving habit, which we call a state of sensation.
Okay. So, say more about that. What is a state of sensation? So, if you think about the architecture of the brain being somewhat wiggly between people, there's still some very clearly delineated parts of the brain that are almost exactly the same for everyone including where the default mode network is and where the sensory cortices, where the parts of our brain that first put together sensory information from our sense organs like the heuridrums,
the retina of the eye, the surface of the skin and the feelings within our body. And these sensory neighborhoods are geographically distinct from the default mode network. So, you can think of the brain as being this massive factory trying to send resources, number one resource being oxygen, to different parts of the factory depending on what it's trying
to produce. And to the extent that we're putting a ton of resources into the default mode network, somewhat impoverishing our ability to accurately and dynamically represent sensory information. But the converse is also true. If there were a way for us to prioritize sensory input and integrating and exploring and expanding upon sensory information, we would be drawing
resources away from the default mode network. But at a higher implication level, that means we're also drawing resources away from the priority of stability towards the prioritization of change and growth. So, the fortunate thing for pretty much every person on the planet is that we do have the ability to choose where these resources are allocated. And we call
that ability attention. So, if we pay attention to our senses in a way that is genuine, and we say that the point of the exercise right now is actually to notice, like to notice the contours of my hand right now as I look at it, the weight of my hand and the air, you know, the colors, the different textures. And really that's the point in the exercise. I'm not trying to do anything, figure out what routine to activate with my hand at this
point. Then what I'm doing in this very moment is changing the priorities for the brain to activate sensory cortices. And by doing so, I'm necessarily pulling activity away from the default mode network. So, when we say, Engage in Sensation, we mean develop some sort of basic skillfulness in intentionally attending to the senses. Aren't you just describing mindfulness and meditation? No. No. I think what we're describing, this is potentially disruptive, are some of the
fruits of mindfulness and meditation. But I would say that the bar for entry is much, much lower. I mean, some of the motivation for writing this book has come from a kind of public health realization, you know, the successive year app and others notwithstanding that many people, they don't sign up for meditation. Or they try it, but they disengage
pretty quickly. And so, we're trying to find a way of providing them with some of the sensory saturated experiences that some people who practice meditation can get without the practice of meditation being required. Now, maybe that's a very short runway. And without a continuous practice of meditation, they won't get very much further down the
road. But for the purposes of what we're trying to suggest, there is this natural quieting response that happens when sensation is amplified through attention and the default mode or other parts of the brain that are much more thinking oriented, quiet down. And to be able to provide that to a very large number of people might be an important starting point. It's kind of like putting fluoride in the water. It's something that's going to touch
very, very many mouths. It may not fully have the same impact as going to the dentist
in terms of dealing with cavities and others or two things. But I think what's seductive to us is the reach of the possibility that people can very easily, and without much infrastructure, have this experience of sensation in a way that opens them up to the qualities of exploration, curiosity, complexity, change, that you can find in meditation, but that might help them to start to see things even differently on a moment-by-moment basis.
Yeah, I'm intrigued by that as well. The meditation is a pain in the ass, and a lot of, I mean, I do it regularly. A lot of people do it regularly, but it's hard to start a habit. It's hard to find the time. And even when you do start a habit, you can fall off the wagon. And so the fluoride analogy lands for me. Perhaps you could say a little bit more about what exactly is the difference between what you're proposing, the fluoride version, the widely accessible
version. What's the difference between what you're proposing and what I think a lot of people listening to this show will recognize as meditation? Yeah, I'll just take a crack at it. So, I think there is a way in which we're not trying to distance ourselves from the meditation world. In fact, and I've heard this a lot, people often stop meditating because they have misconceptions of what meditation should be doing. So, for example, people who start to meditate and find that
they're not really good at emptying their minds. And so it turns them off and they stop. Or they're not very good at producing relaxation on command. Meditation's not doing that for them. So, they stop. These are, I think, barriers for people to engage in meditation. And so, for us, what I would say is meditation practices that emphasize the sensory elements of the practice, rather than the conceptual elements, are more likely to be tractable for people.
Now, on the other end, the disruption that I think people are picking up from the book is that what we're suggesting to people when they practice sense foraging is something akin to a shift of attention into the sensory world. But the barriers are very, very thin because senses are ubiquitous, sensory information, and the possibility of immersion in any moment is right there, literally at our fingertips. And so, this shift can be made very easily, very quickly, very portably, without having
paraphernalia of a cushion and a this and a that and a place. And not that those are bad things, but that we can invite people into this theater to see maybe the first act of a play that they might want to continue to watch. But the price of admission is very, very low and they get a lot back from it. They get the neural benefits of this natural quieting. And they just start to realize, I think, over time that sensing is not thinking. Thinking is often the place where many
of their problems are are cooked up. And yet sensing might be the place where change is possible. Norm, he just used Zindle did term that he just introduced it into the conversation for the first time, sense foraging. What does that mean? So sense foraging is going to sound a lot like the John Cavitts in definition for mindfulness, but focusing specifically on sensation. So it's going to be paying attention on purpose. That probably sounds familiar. Stop right there. But to something sensory
that you can notice right now. And to do it with, I would say not an expectation, but with an intention to find something that is interesting, surprising, or unusual. So you can think of this as a refinement or a subsection of a broader mindfulness practice where we're really trying to do when we sense forage to say, I want to look for something that I can sense they would ordinarily ignore, right? That I would normally pass by. Not that we are physically blind or deaf to the world
around us, but we are intentionally blind to most things just so we can get through life. So we can get things done. So sense foraging is saying, you know, right here around me, what is something that I would normally dismiss? And how do I explore that for a moment or two? And what we predict is what will happen is something surprising. And you'll have to step into kind of not knowing. And if you really
don't know when you look at something, that's when you're getting into sense foraging. And it's more than just confirming, oh, there's a table here. I might be, I hadn't noticed the grains on this table before or I hadn't noticed how dirty it was or I hadn't noticed, you know, that it has a smell to it. You know, whatever it is, you're waiting and trying to be receptive for what's showing up in response to allocating your sensory attention. But there is an expectation that it's going to be
something surprising and probably something that might be of some use to you, right? I think that's why we use it. The term foraging, you don't go foraging in the forest, you know, saying, oh, it's all the same to me if I find a shantrol mushroom or a bearamal's me, can you go foraging thinking, like I'm hoping I find something useful. So, so paying attention on purpose in the moment, it's my sense is, but with the intention of finding something interesting, novel and potentially
useful to us. Well, let's get a little bit more concrete. Can one of you just walk us through? I know the book is loaded, loaded with these extra sense foraging exercises. Can you just give us a taste of what a sense foraging exercise would be like? I mean, I think one that I really like is first take
stock of like how much you actually care about what the space around you would like. So really just don't you know, even start since foraging or you think, but we're just trying to notice how much do I care about what this room around me is like, like right now we're in a studio space that we've never been before. It's tons of novelty. I'm really focused on this podcast. So if I first check in, I don't care right because I want to perform all in the podcast. So I notice I don't give a
shit. There's a lot of stuff to pick up right now. And that's sort of what's true of me right now. The second step would be then to say, okay, I want to set this intention that I'm going to get my self permission to go out of doing and performing mode and become receptive. So I'm going myself permission to care about what's around me. And then we can just take a few moments and actually look
around the room. And like what it's like to let go of the task set and actually, you know, care about like interesting accoutrements of this studio space, for instance. And so you can edit in or out as much that time as you want, but I would take it, you know, five or 10 seconds at least. And then you can come back and say, so, you know, have I noticed anything
different? So for me right now, I can notice actually feeling a bit more relaxed because I've put down the weight of to some degree, you know, I've been neurotic, I've put down all the way of performing well in a podcast environment. And I realize I'm also kind of grounded in this space. And so it's not a completely new exercise. You can say, well, this is sounds just like a grounding exercise that you might do if you have an anxiety. And so yeah, that's a sense that's a sense for
watching practice. Right. So I think what we're trying to introduce here is not like no one's ever heard of this before, right? This isn't not never described in mindfulness, right? It's never been done in counseling and psychology or any other tradition. It's more like this cuts across
all of these different wisdom traditions, modern and ancient. And what we're trying to do is really just show that there's this one mechanism that's that's really important that I think is still vastly underappreciated, which is how quickly we lose our ability to care about the space around us and within us. And as Indola saying, how eminently available it is, and without a lot of preciousness
or, you know, bowing and cow towing to tradition or anything like that, it's available. And there should be returns like immediately pretty much from us or living kind of stressed, over-automated, over-narrated lives. Coming up, Zindl Segal and Norman Farb talk about how shutting down our senses, being stuck in the DMN can make us more vulnerable to depression. And what radical acceptance has to do with all of this? This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. So we are nearly halfway through
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That's q-u-i-n-c-e.com slash happier to get free shipping and 365-day returns quince.com slash happier. Before we get back to the show, just a reminder about the Healthy Habits course over on the 10% happier app taught by Kelly McGonical and Alexis Santos to access it just download the 10% happier app wherever you get your apps. So let me just see if I can sum up where we are at this point in
the interview. Zindalol throw this at you. You acknowledge you're not saying something that these exercises, these sense foraging exercises and we'll explore a few more of them as this interview
continues. It's not, you know, something new in the universe per se, but you're trying to make a very urgent point that if we can get in the habit of dropping out of the spinning stories in our head, the spinning stories, the habitual thought patterns of the default mode network, if we can create a habit of it doesn't involve a cushion, it doesn't involve candles, it doesn't involve an alter, it's just you can do it wherever you are at any time of dropping into your senses and out of your
thoughts. This can have many, many salutary psychological consequences. Is that a rough summary? Am I in the neighborhood? Absolutely. I mean, even the well-worn phrase, just drop into your body is still a concept. And so we're trying to take it a little bit further by saying that caring, as Norm talked about, is really attending, but attending caring enough to
attend, I guess, to step out of what you're already attending to. But the body is a very big place and we're trying to increase the resolution of that sort of idea by saying when you shift your attention, shift it to sensations that are already present for you, that you can identify and that you can immerse yourself in, because those are real, those are present moment
oriented. And those have this natural, you don't need to push it yourself, effect on the ruminating, overthinking, self-referencing parts of the brain that can quiet down and then you find yourself in a different space. So you're saying there's a difference between sense-foraging and quote unquote, dropping into the body generally?
Dropping into the body is an invitation to potentially sense-forage. Look in the body, maybe you notice some pressure in your chest, maybe you notice that your temples are throbbing, maybe you notice something going on, but sense-foraging can also be feeling some air conditioning breeze pass by through your hair. It can help you see colors that are more vivid. It can help you hear sounds that are unanticipated and localize them in space.
It's all of the senses without any kind of, I guess, ulterior motive of looking for something that might connect to emotional state of mind or something that you're experiencing. It really is foraging through the sensory world, through the senses themselves and being curious about that. And I would say that the main shift is into a motive receptiveness, allowing sounds to arrive, allowing sensations to be noticed, allowing images to be recognized.
And in receiving, we're not really sure what we're going to be receiving until we start to categorize them a little bit further down, but that in itself is a very big shift, as Norm said, out of a task set, what do I do with all this information, what do I do next to, just letting it wash over me, and placing myself already in a very different type of relationship to it.
Yeah, I think it's definitely modeled in meditation instructions, but I've personally, just speaking from my own experience, I've done a body scam before where it's like a checklist. The toes, yep, feet, yep, ankles, yep. And like very little of that time is actually me in contact with my body. So we have this idea, like, well, I'm doing a body scan. Of course, I'm sensory and I'm in the moment. I'm not just using concepts, but you can completely, like,
rayify a body scan and just walk through to be like, do I still have a knee? Got a knee. Okay, did my body scan, my, it must be better personnel, right? And so, and that way all you're doing is model confirming. And of course, yeah, it's important to notice if there's something I miss in your body or your expectations are wrong, but you could also do a body scan in a way that has very little receptivity, right? And of course, if you listen to like a really skilled meditation teacher,
they will leave such big spaces that you're just like, come on, why am I still on my toes? I already found the toes. And then exactly you found the toes. So you conceptualize, oh, here's the toe. You got the thing. And now what? Right? And then, and so what we're trying to do is give our own,
you know, westernized scientific clinical psychology take on why this might be. And we have something I'd love to talk about if we have time is a lot of evidence both that through mindfulness training, these capacities are developed, but also when these capacities atrophy, this is where we really see deep suffering, like specifically depression vulnerability. Say more about that. So I think one of the big themes we talk about in the book is how wrong we were about what mindfulness
meditation was doing and about what made people more vulnerable to depression. We were wrong in almost the exact same way. So we went into studying some of the very first neuroimaging trials of mindfulness-based stress reduction. This eight-week course popularized by John Capitzon, probably the cornerstone of the modern meditation science movement. I'm thinking that what we're really going to see is this a very well characterized self-referential network, the default mode
network, was being turned off by meditation and that's why people felt better, right? Because you know, like, oh, they're doing this Buddhist drive practice. There's no self-sitter going to realize there's no cell phone. The self is out of the way. Your problems go away. So cool, like we're going to put them in the scanner. We know what the self-region looks like. We know it's actually a specific part in the front of the brain of the default mode network that's like some of the most
involved in self-judgment. And we should just see that turn right off. And then we scan people who, you know, done MBSR, mindfulness-based stress reduction, and we scan people who are weight-listed, so they're equally weird and wanting to do meditation to the hands of the training yet. And we didn't see any difference in the activity in the self-referential region, even people without training could turn it down a little bit, but there is no training effect there. And by contrast,
we finally sort of like stopped myopic. We just focusing on this one, the self-ferential region. We saw there were big training effects in that they were not in the default mode network. We saw that the training effects were that when people were thinking about themselves, they were starting to include activation of sensory parts of the brain, especially parts of the brain that map
about what happens on the surface of our bodies and inside of our bodies. And so the weakening of the dominance of the conceptual evaluative self did not come from destroying or undercutting the ability to have self-knowledge, as we know it, but rather by increasing the scope of self-knowledge to include dynamic, momentary sensory impressions of the body in the world at the same time,
concurrently with conceptual knowledge. So to extend slightly, I'll let's end up talking much more about this as we start to look at what happened with negative emotions, specifically with inducing sadness in people. We found a very parallel story that it wasn't so much the fact that people started to conceptualize and judge when they were exposed to sadness that was predicting
the magnitude of their sadness. And later in our larger studies, the likelihood of their relapse into depression, the biggest predictor of depression at the time that they're being the scan or future depression in our larger prospective studies was how much they were shutting down sensation of their bodies into some sense, even visual sensation of the film clips that they're viewing while they're in the scanner. That was the real canary in the coal mine. But it wasn't
something that the people were spontaneous reported, spontaneously reporting. This was an effect we saw in the brain. So it was the loss of this dynamic changing signal from the sensory cortices that was actually the risk marker. Everyone roomingates a little bit when they get sad and it turned out that trying to just get rid of a roomination was to ignore the reason why roomination can be so destructive. It's the echo chamber of those thoughts that's actually
destructive, not the fact that we have those thoughts to begin with. So I know that was pretty dead so we might want to unpack it a bit. Oh, it was great. Let me see if I can only just be the dummy here and see if I can restate it in ways that might approximate accuracy. I think what you're saying is that the problem comes when we are cut off from our body from our senses. And the problem isn't having sad or depressive thoughts, it's that there's no release valve when we're completely
disconnected from our senses. I think that's a great way to put it. Like if our senses are where change comes from and our thoughts are stabilizing crystallizing forces and all we have are the crystallizing forces and they're negative, then it's we can be condemned ourselves, right? Because I think, oh, I'm hopeless, I'm worthless, I'm a screw up. And then we're not receptive to new information. So the last thing that happened was this like this fact. And if it was competing with
like, oh, and there's a butterfly, right? And like, it's a really different place than that's all I have is this thought, right? And of course, however we're going to react if that's all there is, well, then more negative emotions spills up and then we turn even more away from it and all we've done is confirm we checked if the toe is there. We checked, oh, yep, screw up thought is still there.
No competing information. So one of the one of your part of your thesis here is that there's, I think you call sensation the chaotic counterbalance or counterweight to the the certainty, the habitual judgments of the default mode network. And chaos doesn't necessarily carry a positive connotation, but you really mean it in a positive way here that you said something quite poetic earlier, Norm, that in the default mode network, it's kind of us as an isolated ego
trying to control the world. In the sensory mode, we're letting the world change us. And so that is this kind of beneficent chaos that you're trying to get us to open up to because then we're not so stuck in, you know, our inner asshole. But yeah, like, if you take it too far, right? And this is stuff that I'm not sure you had around the show will it be Britain and and Jeremy
and Linda have studied it. You take it too far and you go completely sensory and you come when you find a way to completely undercut the default mode network, you also get pathology, right? If you're like, I'm going to become an agent of chaos and I will lose my ability to return to conceptual self-knowledge, then what you get is depersonalization and de-realization is sorted. The world isn't real and I'm not real and there's no room for motivation because there's no models
to be surprised. There's no model of behavior at all, right? As Will and V would often say, you know, you know, some would see a red light and they're driving and it wouldn't occur to them that the red light meant they should do anything with their foot is keep driving. So that's not good. But I think our thesis is that most of us aren't too close to the depersonalization de-realization edge. The problems that most of us are really, really steeped in self-concept and knowledge about
the world really is a certain way. And so for the majority of us, if we had to just get gas from base rates, which way would you want to move first to feel a bit more balanced between order and chaos, which is like a fundamental tension? Most of us could use a little bit more chaos in
our lives and don't worry. Like you're still going to remember to be the selfish jerk that you are that will come back from, we're not going to just lose track of that and be like, oh no, I didn't realize that was at stake even though in rare cases it can happen.
Zindal, what's going on in your head? You know, I think that there are a lot of ways in which we're trying to suggest to people that moving into uncertainty, giving up the sense of knowing what's coming next, categorization, labeling, all of these things are very helpful until they're not. But when people start to see that they're not, what's their next step? Where do they go? And sensation is very close at hand, but the intention when we meet sensation is really one of being
receptive. I think being receptive is an important way of helping people understand what it is that we're asking for. We're not asking for results. We're not asking for outcome because that's still very task-oriented. We're asking people to see what the next moment brings when they're able to pay attention to sensation and very often we're richly rewarded because there's so much that can come at us. And then, as Norm said, you know, you're sitting there, you're castigating yourself,
something didn't go right, this went wrong, and then it's like, wow, a butterfly. If you can notice that and pay attention to it, there can be an interesting shift in loosening the grip of the certainty and absolutism of a lot of the ways that we're conceiving that moment. And very often when we start to move into sensory enriched experiences, that's sort of what comes up. Like, oh, I didn't expect that to be there. Or, wow, that's really vibrant. Or this is really strong, or that's very
faint. And so now we're preoccupied with something else. And we're expanding the space in which our problems and our views of self-conset alongside the possibility that the world is changing and moving at its own pace that isn't necessarily coordinated with the way things are in our heads. Sometimes that can leave a little bit of space for people to start to see things or experience or think things through differently. You talk about radical acceptance or accepting turmoil.
Can you describe what you mean by that and how it's relevant to everything we've been discussing up into this point? You know, the radical acceptance phrase comes from the dialectical behavior therapy, tradition in which one of the ways of helping people who have high intensity, impulsive behaviors, and acting out and often associated with borderline personality disorder, there's a way in which radical acceptance tries to build the tolerance for distress.
And people where circumstances cannot change, they can't be forced, they can't, things can't be undone, people can't go back into the past and change things that have happened to them. So the radical acceptance is a starting point that allows people to maybe let go of some of those efforts and to start to script a different way of relating to those problems when they come up in their minds. And I think the radical acceptance that we're talking about isn't limited to those more
clinical situations. I think what we're talking about is this letting go of expectation and being willing to explore situations from the perspective of not having an answer at first, but making a move into sensation at first as a place in which to stand, even if some of those sensations may be
difficult to bear, even if those sensations can be challenging. The radical acceptance is a way of moving into that receptivity and seeing that sometimes putting a pause on answering, figuring out, generating outcomes can itself be an important step or an important strategy. And does radical acceptance happen in sense foraging?
I think it's a skill that can build up. I think accepting the physical or sensory world is, it is a radical act in the sense that you're moving out of business as usual and narrating and judging. But it's probably relatively achievable. I can accept that I have a feeling in my body in this moment. I can accept that I see something around me in this moment and I can question what
else am I ignoring? I think where it really gets radical in the sense of out there isn't we think about where this becomes not just a butterfly, but I'm seeing the hurt in my partner co-workers face and I didn't notice it before. I'm willing to start looking at the fact that I have misgivings about something that I'm doing or I feel that I don't have integrity in a certain part of my life. These are places that are, it would be more of a radical act to accept because it would be threatening
to the idea that everything's fine. Let's just keep going, which is sort of the default modern network process. We're modeling a behavior or scaffolding a process of receptivity in a place where probably it's going to start off at the level of like look a butterfly and that's why people can dismiss it for that reason and say, well, okay, so I'm just distracting myself like whatever,
is it what's different between this in potato chips? And you know, if you're really foraging into the savory fatty salty goodness of potato chips, like that can be a sense foraging practice. What we're also doing is creating a space where we can notice the kind of things that we deep down habitually have learned to navigate around so that, you know, maybe I'm harming someone else with
the way I'm used to being in the situation. Maybe the things I'm doing to get be successful or get things done in the world are actually really causing problems for me at a
level that I'm putting off that I don't want to acknowledge. And so to start to acknowledge those things is the same act of foraging, just that what we've seen from the neuroscience side is as soon as this negative information comes in, many of us have a deep seated habit of closing those gates to sensation and immediately trying to fix the thinnest wedge of the thing that we saw.
Right, so what I talk about for my personal experience sometimes is that having developed some arthritis in my hip after doing too much like ultimate frisbee and taekwondo and stuff like that in realizing I couldn't do those sports anymore and even yoga now is gone and kind of compromised. And the initial thing is like, well, how am I going to fix this? Right, like, do I need to do surgery, you know, physioprolysis it and totally going to fix it, do I have to take pain killers?
How am I going to fix the fact that I have this sensation that's not supposed to be there? And every time I come into contact with it, like, I don't like it, I need to find a way to fix it. This is what we call kind of an active influence. Like, I'm supposed to change the world because my model of my body is a model where, you know, I feel fine, I don't have pain, you know, it's like, a lot of us have the model of our body is like, like, we're 18, right? And we're just trying to
keep that model going. If I had any means necessary. And so where acceptance comes in is saying, like, you know, I'm actually suffering in some way or at least tiring myself. It's exhausting getting upset and angry and frustrated and avoiding all the fact that my hip doesn't work the same as it did, you know, even 10 years ago, and that it may never be fixable in the way that, you know, I ideally aspire to. What if my model was that now this hip doesn't turn as much and it kind of
gives me twingers during the day? And that was really like who I was. And I was really okay with the fact that's how I was. Like, not that I would like a twinge of pain or wouldn't be annoyed sometimes little loss of ability, but I was really okay with that's my that's now my model. I've accepted that's the model of my body. So now all of this like wearying, you know, how am I going to fix this hip? It's not necessary. Like, maybe at some point I wouldn't I will need to have a hip replacement,
but I don't have to stress over it every single time it shows up. It's like, oh, that's a deal with this problem all over again. It's not a problem anymore. And so I'm talking about a physical like an example here because I think, you know, all of us who as we get older realize that
there's this sort of ill kept secret that like things don't feel great all the time. As you get older and this is a major place where culturally we don't have the ability to we don't have a skill set for approaching these changes in a way that gives us eventually a place of satisfaction and peace.
And we argue that this act of sense foraging and learning to be receptive to what things are is the beginning of letting ourselves change in the sense that our models of the world, including the models of our own bodies and ourselves and our behavior get updated by the things that we really let ourselves notice. But it sounds like your argument for sense foraging is at least in part it can start as a way to help you press eject from the less helpful parts of
the default mode network. And then it, but over time it can morph into really changing the way you handle a world that is constantly in flux often in ways that might produce discomfort. Yeah, I think that the shift out of certainty and control is a tough one. I think that certainty and control and our models of the world being a certain way. We have a huge investment in keeping
them going. And then the models themselves get invested because in terms of forward feedback loops, we're often getting confirmatory information that says, yeah, this is the way things are working. Then things break down, things change, things shift. And that kind of straight jacket
strategy really isn't very effective. So when we let in new information, we let in the possibility of updating our models so that there is some room for breakdown, there is some room for getting older, there is some room for the inevitable kind of impermanence of life that starts to seep in. And with it, the possibility that our struggle against these things can be tempered
because we don't see them as an absolute challenge to our models. We see them as something which we have to negotiate with, we have to come to terms with and find a way of living with some of that in a way that's a little bit less contentious. Coming up, Zindle and Norm talk about the nine simple rules for sense foraging and what toggling is. Audible lets you enjoy all your audio entertainment in one app. You will always find the best of what
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time about how to do this sense foraging that's at the heart of of your book. You've got these nine simple rules. I'm going to list them and then if you guys can jump in and unpack whatever you think might be might require some more explanation. So here are the nine rules. One, you can't force it. Two, you can choose it. Three, you Biquity. Four, completeness. Five, concreteness. Six, immersion. Seven, safety. Eight, you own it. Nine, it's awesome. Say more about these if you don't mind.
I'll take a crack at this. You're going shopping at the local grocery store. You've got to be somewhere afterwards. You've got a shopping list. You've done this a thousand times and you've read the book and it's like, oh, so they're just saying go for a walk. That sense foraging. I think it's easy to dismiss or to see something about the book suggesting that but the possibility even in a kind of mundane and frequent setting like a grocery store still allows us to meet I think all of these
principles. So for example, ubiquity, it's right there. Look at the color of every pepper that's on display and try to define, sorry, try to label three of them to yourself. Try to look at the texture of the skin of some of the fruit on display. Those are ways of trying to leverage what's available in front of us for the purposes of sense foraging. So that's ubiquity, immersion. Instead of the shopping list and what you've got to put into your shopping cart, allow yourself to see that you're
in this highly stimulating environment with all of these things around you. You can't force it, meaning don't expect to get something out of this but allow yourself to fall into it and see what comes at you. Once again, the receptive mode, safety, going to be pretty safe in a grocery store. But if you're doing this with psychedelics or something like that, make sure that you know what you're doing at times it can be awesome. All of these things and these kinds of settings I think
are kind of available. And because they are that's sort of what I meant earlier when I said the bar to entry is quite low because you can pretty much find it anywhere. Norm, anything else you want to say about the list of nine? Yeah, I think the part I'd like to pick up on is just this idea of you can't force it but you can't choose it. It's not that like it's not a transaction, right? Like I'm looking at peppers,
so give me happiness. It's more that it's a commitment to understanding that like I am always, always kind of committed to a certain perspective that is largely invisible to me and I only really notice it when I make space for another way of being or weighing or relating to my experience to creep in. So I can't force my perspective to change because all of my motivation comes from
the perspective I'm stuck in. But at the same time, if I choose to take in other information, like I move from like, you know, thinking about my relationship with my students, let's say, to like the textures of the oranges, then all of a sudden things can kind of pop up like I'm just, I'm not in for this problem solving mode, my motion shift, my thought shift, I might end up having other insights I come back to the next time I come back to thinking about, you know, my early
relationship with my grad student or something like that. But I've created a space like I've given myself permission to shift, right? And I think that's where things can kind of get awesome. Like I just, I often think like how much of my time when I'm upset about something is there nothing about that upset anywhere around me except for the fact that I'm holding onto in my head? Right? Like there are times that someone is physically like in your face and is causing a harm and
some of us are privileged to not have it as much as often as other people. But I dare say that for for many of us, most of the time like you have a bad weekend, you're sitting around on the couch or something and you're holding onto something, you're carrying it with you and you have permission to choose to do something else. Like as opposed to just saying, no, like I'm bad for doing this and
then you're repeating the thing you're bad for also as you're rehearsing it. Like I can choose to just let myself relate to life as it unfolds in a way that's offered to me by the world around me. Right? And so when we say it's awesome, it's like when you get that something you can do, like that you can put yourself into a space to receive change from the world. It's like a super power in the same way that realizing that you can actually plan, you know, your day and not completely
screwed up with the superpower. It's like you can also unplanned your mind in a way. And so even if it doesn't always feel good, it's like awesome that you have this capacity just to unlock your mind. And I really think it is a skill that we could co-develop along with all the analytic and confirmatory and model building skills that we already have venerate in our current culture.
There's a poem by Mary Oliver Wildgeese. I don't know it by heart, but there's a great line in it that I think tries to capture exactly what we're saying, which is I think it starts like you don't have to be good. You don't have to crawl through the desert on your knees repenting. Tell me about loss. I'll tell you about mine. And then there's this awesome line. Meanwhile, the world goes on. And it's like all of these gears can be rotating in your head. All of these things loss. I'm good.
I'm no good. And you're on the meanwhile, the world goes on. Like all of these sensory things are going on regardless of what you're doing in your own mind. And they're also available for you to plug into. And that sometimes can actually pull you out of that. You list a bunch of access points for this sensory mode. You list them and then you conclude with a great line. Some of the access points are nature, exercise, art, travel, meditation, psychedelics. These are places where these are
target rich environments for the senses, for sense foraging. And then you say, then you admit, you know, this may sound a little obvious. And here's the great line. It's not rocket science, but it is neuroscience. And I'm going to steal that and use it all the time. Perfect. Yeah, the lungs there's some takeaway, right? I mean, it's like Bill Hader, the comedian was on this podcast a couple of months ago and he said
this really funny thing, which was, you know, he's he's started meditating. He's pretty committed to it. And one of his big and yoga and being in nature, all these other things that he's doing to work on his anxiety. And he said the worst part of his just admitting that the hippies were right. Yeah, I think there's something to that. I think part of you in talking about access points was like, you don't have to give your field to anyone guru or someone like that.
Like if you have a really, you know, divergent personality, and you're in your, you're just like, I don't want to subscribe to someone else's stuff, man. Like that kind of that kind of attitude. It's just like once you understand the principle, you might grudgingly accept like, oh, you know, this is what they were talking about. And at the same time, you can still like flex your individualism
and be like, and here's the way I sense for it. Right? Like, and it can be something totally weird because once you understand that it really is like a deep, we entrenched human principle that we can toggle between these modes of moving towards automaticity, moving towards receptivity and change. And yeah, like the hippies were right. And at the same time, like you get to make up your own a weird way of doing it that works for you as long as it's kind of safe and you're
hurting yourself for someone else and you kind of get it and no more power to you, right? And yeah, I guess that's kind of the idea. Everyone gets to have their own brand of sense foraging. No one gets to put the trademark on it. No, you just used a word, a key word. And I want to close on this word and Zindel, maybe I'll let you talk about it, toggling. Toward the end of the book, you say toggling is at the heart of it all. What do you mean by that?
You know, in the meditation world, there's often description of being and doing the idea that there are two modes available to us, almost like two gears. Most people function in their lives on one gear. The revelation and meditation can be that there is this second gear. There is this other mode. This is this other way of being and it has characteristics fundamentally different
than our habitual modes. And also it can be a mode in which there is less suffering because the principles of seeing permanence and satisfactoryness, selflessness are more available to us in that mode. So I think this is a kind of nod to the notion of two different modes, sense foraging versus house of habit. But the notion of toggling is that there is a vehicle that can transport us
between these two modes. And the the fare is not very high. The fare is essentially paying the price of a ticket via attention and via intention to care enough to recognize that at our fingertips, there are lots of sensations that we can plug into that we can start to receive in in addition to that to receive the messages that may be coming through with them that can give us a moment of respite. Norman said earlier that we don't want to leave ourselves there bathing in sensation but
really not knowing whether up is up and down is down. We want to have a way to go back, change, enhanced perhaps touched in some ways to the world that we've chosen to create a live in. And so the notion of toggling is once again two modes and availability and the capacity to transfer knowledge from one to the other. Is there some place either of you was hoping we would get to that we
that we didn't get to? Not for me. Norman, let me just ask the last question for you, which is can you just remind everybody of the name of the book and whatever website you've made or other resources that are out there that people can go check out? Certainly, yeah, the book is called Better in Every Sense and the website is www.betterineverysense.com and the books available kind of kind of everywhere you can search for it and order it online and send a lot of bookstores also. So
yeah, hopefully you can check it out. We have lots of little essays popping up in different media outlets and we'll try to make sure those are all linked to on the book website as well. Excellent. Norman Zindel, thank you very much for coming on. Thanks for having us, Dan. Take care. Thanks so much for your time.
Thanks again to Dr. Zindel Siegel and Professor Norman Farb. If you want to hear Zindel's previous episode on the show where he talks about depression and anxiety, specifically I've put a link to that in the show notes and don't forget to sign up for my newsletter over at DanHarris.com where you can get what are for me the biggest and most important, most easily operationalizable takeaways from the
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