Transcript
Coming up next on The Jordan Harbinger show, doing each of these habits, what we find is your brain actually starts to create a new pattern for how you look at the world instead of looking at the world and saying, Here are all the mistakes I see. Here are all the fires you need to put out first. If you do that, your brain never sees the positive. But if you start with a positive scanning for it, it turns out now you see that you have the energy and the intelligence to then start solving the problems you see within that environment as well. Welcome to the show, I'm Jordan Harbinger on The Jordan Harbinger Show, but he code the stories, secrets and skills of the world's most fascinating people. We have in-depth conversations with people at the top of their game astronauts, entrepreneurs, spies and psychologists, even the occasional former jihadi national security adviser or music mogul. Each episode turns our guests wisdom into practical advice that you can use to build a deeper understanding of how the world works and become a better critical thinker. If you're new to the show or you want to tell your friends about it, we've got our episode starter packs. These are collections of top episodes organized by topic that'll help new listeners get a taste of everything we do here on the show. Just visit Jordan Harbinger Slash start to get started or help somebody else get started. Today, we're talking with Sean A. One we recorded five six years ago unhappiness. This was really popular when it first aired. We decided to remaster it, re-edit it for you here this week, giving me more time to change diapers on our two week old daughter who was born over the break. He's a New York Times bestselling author of both The Happiness Advantage and Before Happiness. So he's a happiness researcher at Harvard, no less. He now consults at the Nfl. and VA DOD. Lots of other three letter places, and he's got a documentary on PBS and HBO. He's a big fan of the Teller's. It would seem three letter acronyms. That is, he's a positive psychology superstar, but not in that sort of toxic, positive way, if you know what I mean. On this episode, why scientifically happiness is a choice, as well as some happiness habits we can foster for ourselves also, which comes first. Happiness or success? Sean has studied happiness and will show us how being happy could be an advantage, even a competitive advantage in a marketplace. We'll also discuss how happiness helps with our personal and professional relationships and how we can cultivate this for ourselves. Of course, there's a whole lot more here as well, and this episode is very, very practical. Lots, you can apply here for yourself right after you listen here in this one with Sean A.. And if you're wondering how I managed to book all these amazing folks for the show, it's because of my network and I'm teaching you how to build your network for free. Over at Jordan Harbinger eCommerce course, the course is about improving your networking and connection skills and inspiring others to develop a personal and professional relationship with you. It'll make you a better networker, a better connector and a better thinker. That's Jordan Harbinger eCommerce course. And by the way, most of the guests on our show already subscribe and contribute to the course. So come join us. You'll be in smart company where you belong. Now here's Sean A.. So your show came out last night? How did it land? It went amazing. I was in Mexico when it came out, so I was getting all these reports from Twitter and Facebook, from people that are loving it. People writing in their psychologists, people, their coaches and teachers are saying, we need to put this positive psychology into practice when we're getting kids to play soccer and football, but also people writing in their had served in the military, you know, served 20 years in the military and were saying it was about time that some of this happiness research was getting into these places. So it was really exciting accelerating. Yeah, that makes sense. I mean, when I think happy, I think military, right? So maybe they need to. Maybe they do need a little bit of that. I think everybody needs it that what prompted you? Why did you go on vacation when your show was going to debut? Just timing worked out? Or were you just like, I don't need to be dealing with this anymore. It's out of my hands. Let's go sit on a beach. Well, we had an opportunity to do a global event where we had people come to do something called a vacation after it was half vacation, half positive psychology retreat, where they were learning about how to become happier on a vacation. So not just drinking pina coladas and tequila sitting on the beach. It was actually while they were there in Mexico. They were learning about all this research that could help them grow their companies, that could help them become happier, that could help them raise happier kids. So we had to do it because it was such a great opportunity. That's awesome. And if there's, you know, honestly my contribution to your happiness research pina coladas and tequila does the trick in moderation and moderation where it's all inclusive. So that makes it challenging. So that's very important. Yeah, exactly. Excellent. So let's talk about who you are and why people should listen to you for that matter. I mean, your bestselling author of a book called The Happiness Advantage and Before Happiness. You worked at Harvard, which of course, always carries a little sway. But most recently, your TV show has just launched on PBS, which is awesome. We have had both PBS and HBO, so I did a lecture series on PBS, which basically the course that was being taught at Harvard initially by Dr. Tal Ben Shahar, which became the most popular class at Harvard. We decided we need to get this research out beyond the Ivy Tower so that people outside of Harvard could have access to this research, so he's doing his research in different parts of the world. I've been focusing a lot on how we can bring this happiness research into companies. I started this in the middle of the banking crisis, but have also been working with the military and with the NBA and the NFL. That's why we had a PBS lecture series that came out. It was a one hour lecture where we were trying to get this research that the students at Harvard were hearing about how they could find happiness and success at the same time and provide that to millions. So it was really exciting. And then, of course, the HBO a state of play which was taking this happiness research into the military, into the NFL, which to me is really exciting. Earlier this year, I was out speaking at the Pentagon. It was a room full of senior warfare, specially officers, people who had led NATO's forces in Afghanistan and Iraq, who had seen combat and very difficult things. And I gave a talk and one hour of talk on happiness research, and even they confiscated my phone and put it into a sealed vault. That's how much security there was there in case I tried anything during a happiness talk. But afterwards, the one of the senior leaders came up to me and said, ten years ago, we could not have had a talk at the Pentagon on happiness. And what I loved about that is that the conversation is changing. I think happiness has gone from a soft word to something that people realize could not only bend the tracks of human potential to cause us to be more intelligent and creative and do better at sports. But that also was an incredible advantage. When it came, people started looking at business outcomes. In fact, my research basically shows that the greatest competitive advantage in the modern economy is a positive, engaged brain, which is why I think that this research is so important and so much of the work that you've been doing to get people to see that their behavior matters is crucial. Excellent. So tell me why the NFL, NBA, Dodd and lots of other three letter acronym places care about happiness. I mean, it's amazing you got on their radar even did a TED talk, and I'm starting to get a feeling that every acronym in the show is going to be three letters here. But even did a TED talk about happiness? Super popular? I get why people think about happiness, why people talk about happiness. But I think where we might be crossing into uncharted territory that I love, by the way, is when companies and big multi-million billion dollar industries are saying we need happiness now, you know, especially the Pentagon. Talk about unhappy places, right? Yeah, it's been fascinating watching this because we were not sure how this happiness research would take off. A lot of people have been talking about happiness for a long time. I think what has changed in the conversation as we're actually able to test it now we using different metrics using test of your neurochemicals, your biochemicals and your body, looking at your biometrics, heart rate variability and the sweat that even as at the tips of your fingertips, we actually can use all of that to be able to triangulate and find out pretty accurately not only people's levels of optimism and social connection, but a general sense of happiness. And I think that what's crucial is not only the fact that we can test this, but I think that we have to redefine what happiness as the pursuit of happiness. And this is why it's been so important to these companies. The way that I define happiness in this research is not mere pleasure because pleasure you can get, of course, you know, opening up the right soda can or eating a dessert, but it's short lived. What we're really looking for is long term and quantifiable, positive changes to people's lives. The way that we define happiness and this research is the joy that you feel growing towards your potential. And I love that definition for me to change the way that I pursued happiness because joy is something you can experience even in the ups and downs of life, even in the ups and downs of a market cycle, even when things are not pleasurable, like if you're going for a long run or you're working really hard on a project. And the other part of it that I love is that oftentimes we want happiness in the present and then we're kind of done and then happiness slips through our fingers. The reason that happens is that joy has to be linked to growth that grows towards our potential as athletes, as musicians, as parents, as teachers, as altruist, whatever it is that your potential is even your potential and your relationships, both romantic and your family relationships and just with your friends as you pursue that, that's where we're able to not only get people to experience joy, but actually sustain it. And why the companies get so excited is that as we've been doing this research, I've now worked with over a third of the Fortune 100 companies, and I've worked in 51 different countries and started this in the middle of the banking crisis. So I was working with large banks with UBS, American Express, Credit Suisse as they were going through this period where they couldn't pay people like they were wanting to, that they couldn't give bonuses. The market is collapsing. They weren't sure what they were going to do. In the midst of that, we could go and show them that. There's research specifically on this about how you can get people to not only believe that their behavior matters, but actually find joy in the midst of the process of rebuilding. And what we found is when people have that type of happiness, we find that their sales rise by 30 seven percent, their productivity rises by 31 percent. We found that they're 40 percent more likely to receive a promotion over the next two years, a period of time. They live longer. They have three times the creativity and their intelligence rises. So what's amazing about this? I think the companies and the military and schools are starting to get. Is that happiness is actually an incredible competitive advantage? That's pretty cool. I know from being in my role here, if I'm not happy or if I'm having a rough day or something like that, I'll often if I can't recover and rally off and cancel or reschedule the shows because I can't perform optimally on this if I'm unhappy or really stressed out or can't focus. And I think that that has to be true for people and sales, customer service, teaching any pretty much any role. I didn't realize your productivity went up, but it makes total sense if you're not lollygagging and distracted and you can focus better your, of course, your productivity is going to go up. You're absolutely right. It's so important because not only do people not perform at their highest levels, but they might go do something else and you might lose that great talent. And these companies, not just the Googles and the Zappos of the world, but you know, we're working with extremely large insurance companies. We've been working with nationwide insurance to train their sales force that when they're onboarded, they're learning that happiness leads to greater sales, not the other way around. We're doing some really large things that are exactly what you're seeing happen on your team, and it's exciting. One of the research studies that I find was incredible that shows the business and applicability of happiness. As at MetLife, they found that the top 10 percent of optimists amongst their insurance sales force were outselling the other 90 percent of the salespeople by another 89 percent. So they did a multimillion dollar gamble, and they hired people that were low on, you know, industry standard tests like what they would normally test you on when they hire, educate somebody but high on optimism. And by year one, they outsold the pessimists by 19 percent by year two by fifty seven percent. So what we're finding is that there's optimism if you can get it on your team and not only helps with sales, but it helps people want to stay there. It improves their immune systems. They take fewer sick days. They live longer. All these different types of benefits. Wow, that's great. So they basically took people that weren't necessarily good salesmen by mechanics, chose them for attitude and then trained them in the sales tactics. And of course, it took them a year learning curve. But even in their learning curve, they outperformed the rest, even in the learning curve. And that's why it's so exciting. That's why I think that there's so much connection between what you're doing and positive psychology, because part of what we're teaching people is your behavior matters. And when people see that there are very clear practical steps that they could take in their life to improve their happiness or improve their ability to connect to other people. What we find is when we do the research, we actually find that it has not just a small impact upon people's lives, but when people start to make these and apply these positive changes in their life. We can take people that were originally not good salespeople and we can get them to outperform the other salespeople by another fifty seven percent within a two year period of time, we can raise their productivity. We can get Navy SEAL low performers to act like Navy SEAL, high performers on these squad teams. The effects really go into every domain of our life. That is pretty incredible. I mean, just the military stuff is fascinating. So obviously, the fact that you've been able to do this and do this well, what's the science here? I mean, is happiness a choice? Can you say scientifically that happiness is a choice or trainable learnable? That's why I'm so excited people to for people to listen to this podcast, because what we teach in schools is that you are just your genes and just your environment. When I talk to people, they're like, I can't be happy because, you know, I was just born a pessimist, or I can't be happy because this is my external world or my neurochemicals prevent me from feeling happy. And it's not just happiness. We're told that about intelligence, about creativity, about our ability to connect to other people, about charisma. And it turns out, as we've been doing this research, I believe we're living through twin revolutions, a technological revolution that everyone knows about. But that technological one has allowed us to peer behind the curtain as we're looking at what the human brain is doing as you're experiencing the world. And what we realized was that there is a third path that as we research people, most people end up just like their genes and their environment. That's the average person. But if you look at those same graphs, we find that people can deviate dramatically from their genes and their environment. They can actually trump both. Let me put that another way. What we found is we can get people to do very short habits like a two minute positive habit for 21 days and within that period of 21 days. Not only can we trump their genes, but we can do this with eighty four year old men and Trump eight decades of experience, getting people who were previously not positive people to actually be bold level optimist. And we've been finding this in almost every domain of our lives. So part of what we're doing is we're actually showing the scientifically. Happiness can be a choice. And once you make that choice, it proves to be a great advantage in terms of our relationships, because positive people are perceived as being more attractive by the opposite sex, they're perceived as being more trustworthy in social situations and with sales. We find that they're more likely to receive promotions. We find that they're actually more likely to live longer. It turns out that as people make that choice, the effect spreads not only to them, but to the people around them, causing them to be. As well. Wow, so it's contagious. That's pretty cool, too. Did not know that. I mean, you hear about that. Let me tell you one really cool thing they're called mirror neurons. We just discovered them in the human brain a little while ago. But basically, if you see somebody yawn and then other people in the room start yawning, there's a biological reason for that. There are certain parts of your brain that activate when you see people around you yawn or smile. And as a result of that, they light up. They show activation in your brain, telling you that you're the one that's yawning. You're the one that's smiling, and you can pick up the fatigue of somebody sitting across the room. You can actually pick up the smile of somebody that's talking to you. Where this gets interesting is we found if you have 15 strangers waiting for a plane, they don't even know they're part of an experiment and you have an undercover researcher come near them and just act anxious. They tap their foot on the floor, they move side to side. They look at their watch repeatedly with a frown on their face. And within just two minutes, we found that seven to 12 of the 15 individuals were unconsciously start moving nervously in place or tapping their foot on the ground and are looking at their watch more than four times in two minutes. Which shows the reason for that experiment and why I'm telling you about these mirror neurons is because there's a biological reason for the emotional contagion that when you could be an incredibly optimistic person, you can pick up the negativity of people around you like second hand smoke because it's not just smiles and yawns that spread. But it turns out if you're surrounded by people that are focused on the negative or anxious or are down all the time, it turns out even if you're an optimist, you'll start to pick that up. Now, when I tell people about that, they immediately start cutting negative people out of their lives. But I think that this research is so much more powerful for you and for the people listening, because what this research shows is that when we choose to become more positive, when we create a positive habit in our lives and buffer ourselves against the negative, we can actually wirelessly change the brains of people around us, causing them to become more positive and actually trumping that negative effect. So the real question is, can we get ourselves become positive enough so that we can actually overcome the negative influences that are around us? You know, that's something we discuss a lot on the show, not the wireless reprogramming of other people, which sounds so nefarious and so good at the same time. But getting rid of negative folks around you and it can be really tough because some people write in and they go, Yeah, I know you say you only go as high as five closest friends, and I know you say that we should eliminate negative influences in our lives as much as we can. But what if it's my mom and then that's where it gets dicey and stuff like that, right? So this is great because now you're you're looking at not only do you have to or should be moving these negative influences away, but we don't have to be like, You're negative, I'm never talking to you again. You're absolutely right. Instead of having to eliminate negative people from our lives, we can actually become stronger than them by creating some of these positive changes, creating these positive habits within our lives that we've been studying a positive psychology. We can actually trap their negative effect. The key, I think, though, is once people hear about positive research, they go guns blazing at the most negative person that they know trying to change that person. And I think a much better strategy based upon this research is to go for the low hanging fruit, go for those people in our lives that are neutral or could be tipped in one direction or the other. And once we've actually moved them to become more positive, we've increased the number of people being positive about that negative person and social influence. And social psychology, as you probably know, is three things it's the strength of the message. It's how immediate the messages and the number of sources. If you can increase the number of positive sources around that negative person, you've actually dramatically increased your social influence over them, allowing them to start to make some of these positive changes. You're listening to The Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest, Sean A.. We'll be right back. Thank you so much for listening to and supporting the show. I really appreciate it. I love creating this for you. All of those discount codes and links, I know they can be a pain to remember. We put them all in one place on one page. That page works on your phone. Or at least it's supposed to. Jordan Harbinger RT.com Slash deals is where you can find all of them in one place. Please consider supporting those who support us. And now back to Sean A.. We might say out framing their negativity, right, you just come in, especially if they're not firmly entrenched, like you don't want to go with somebody who's been negative their whole life. That's our whole identity. But maybe just people who are maybe normally kind of, like you said, neutral. Maybe they're having a little bit of a bad day or a bad year. You can come in and really turn things around. And of course, that would seem to have a multiplier effect within a social circle or an office space, for example. Right. Because if you come in and your co-workers around, you are like, Oh, you know, this attitude shift is happening sort of near you as the locus. And then around them, even the most die hard negatives in the office. If everybody else is positive and having fun, either they're going to reject it outright and maybe quit and then you don't have to deal with them or they're going to go, All right, you know, subconsciously, I give up, I'm going to play the game. I'm the only Grinch and grump in the whole place. It's not fun anymore. Yeah, that's exactly how it works, right? Because what you're doing by making these positive changes is you're changing the social script, right? So we know on certain subways, sometimes in New York and in Boston, where I spent 12 years on the subway. There you learn the social screw up. I'm not supposed to necessarily look at other people, right? Or certainly not smile at them. But one of the studies we did at a group of hospitals down a Louisiana Post Hurricane Katrina as we just trained the the hospital employees to do what they do at the Ritz Carlton, which is we train them as they walk down the hallway. If they walk within 10 feet of somebody, they make eye contact and smile, and within five feet they'd say hello. It's called the 10 five way very simple to train. It takes one second to do, but what they found is that was worth tens of millions of dollars to the hospital because it significantly increased the number of unique patient visits. The patients were more likely to refer the care based upon the quality of care that they receive, and the doctors are actually significantly happier why they were there. So what we found is even these small little changes that there's a study that was done at Yale, they found if you have three strangers come into a room that all the different emotions the other two people will leave with an increased likelihood of experiencing the emotions of the most verbally or non-verbally express a person. That is kind of a convoluted way of saying that, yeah, can you clarify that? Yeah, it's not positive or negative people that when it's who's most verbally and non-verbally expressive of it. So one of the things I do at these organizations during my talks is I have a survey beforehand and we found that 31 percent of individuals are optimistic but are not very expressive of it at work. And I think that there's either two reasons for that, either they feel like that their optimism is not going to be seen in the right light or they think the other people around them are more pessimistic. Or maybe they feel introverted in those cases, right? But that means that a third of the people that that optimists is talking to, there's a third of a chance that I mean 30 percent chance that the person they're talking to that doesn't seem very positive is actually an optimist, but is not being expressive of it right now. The more people that choose to be verbally and non-verbally expressive of their optimism at work, it changes the social script, allowing unlocking those 31 percent to actually feel like they can be more optimistic and that they don't have to keep going along with the grumbling or the complaining. That's great because it gives them social permission to change their attitude. Kind of like what we said before. That's it. Excellent. Wow. So I want to jump back to something you'd mentioned earlier as well where you'd sort of hinted at this. That happiness begets success, not the other way around. He'd mentioned it, I think, in a sales context. And I totally understand that. But I want to clarify that. So which comes first happiness or success? Because I know from my Wall Street days everybody talked about success coming first, but I also know that that was the most back afterwards place that I've ever been in my life and I never want to go back. Yeah, we've done a lot of work with Wall Street. That's actually where I started doing all this research because a lot of this research in psychology is usually done with college freshmen where you're grading them and you know, they're in a psychology cla*s. But to test these things out and the messiness of life, even in the stresses of Wall Street, we start finding some pretty unique things about how people are trying to strive for happiness and success. So I spent 12 years at Harvard. And during that period of time, for eight of those years of counseling the students as they went through their time, they're trying to help them to be as successful as possible while they were there. And one of the things I noticed is they kept thinking, If I get into Harvard, once I have that success, then I'll be happier. And then after I left Harvard, I've been working with celebrities and professional athletes and musicians, and they thought, Well, since I get to this place, or as soon as I get, you know, $10 million or $100 million net worth, then I'll feel happier. And as we were researching it, we found exactly the opposite. This is actually the heart of all of my work and positive psychology. We found that most people think if I work harder, I'll be more successful. And as soon as I achieve these goals, my life or over the next year, then I'll feel happier and think, how can we do that? So projects over then I'll feel happier or like as soon as I get that car, I'll feel happier since against the right score, get this job or get the promotion, then I'll feel happier. But the problem is every time somebody has a success. The brain changes what success looks like almost immediately, exactly. So you win the state championship and high school? Well, now you have to win at a college, right? Then you got to go pro. And I've talked to NFL players who have won the Super Bowl and the next day, they're defending it, right? So it wasn't like it created happiness for the rest of their life. And the average NFL career is only three years. So this was in the state of play program, which is if you're hoping that happiness would happen to you at a certain successful level, it doesn't work. We were talking about this earlier, but earlier this year I got the opportunity to go out to Oprah's house and do a two hour interview with her on happiness and positive psychology research. And she told me that at the height of her career, she was the most depressed, which is incredible because she has all this money and opportunity and she producing movies. But she didn't necessarily feel it. And the reason for that is that every time your brain has success, your brain changes the goalposts of what success looks like. So if happiness for you is on the opposite side of some success in the future, monetary or work wise, you'll never reach that. And that's exactly true and what you're seeing on Wall Street. But flip it around. What we found is if we can find ways of deepening your social connection, raising your optimism, getting your brain to positive by creating a happier brain. It turns out every single success rate rises dramatically. Your productivity improves your likelihood. Promotion improves your likelihood of living longer improves. So basically, to put in a short form, we found that if you raise your success rates for the rest of your life, your happiness levels flatline. Flip it around if you raise your levels of happiness now in the midst of the challenge as you're trying to develop those relationships or to get that job, turns out your success rates rise dramatically. Are this makes a lot of sense. And this is why a lot of times these Olympic athletes, they get the Gold Medal and then it's like cool. And then three weeks later, nobody cares about you. Or maybe three months later and you're just like, Wait, I dedicated my whole life to that, and that's it. That was supposed to fix everything. Now I'm just a dude who has cool stuff on his mantle at my parents house. Of course, the happiness begets success and not the other way around. Like I said on Wall Street, a lot of those guys super wealthy making millions of dollars a year. I hated their lives. Their families were done with them, you know, they were divorced and miserable. They didn't see their kids. I can only imagine what Oprah's goal posts were at the height of her career when she wasn't happy. I was, she was. I'm going to do my show in outer space. I mean, you can only go so high, right? But you have to have that happiness beforehand. Otherwise, no matter what, you're not going to view yourself as very successful. That's awful. But the good news is right that we can reprogram that in ourselves and others. And in addition to that, for those guys there are hoping to get a girlfriend or when people are trying to get a job or break into the movie industry or the TV industry, for example, we found that if they choose happiness now, though, in their likelihood of actually finding a girlfriend rises, their likelihood of getting so it wasn't just about happiness for happiness sake. It turns out that happiness made them more successful as they were attempting to date or get jobs or to pursue that success. So we've sold happiness. Pretty good, I think. Are there hacks that we can make to create these changes and by hacks, I mean habits, whether or not that takes a ton of work or is something simple? I want to learn how to rewire these neural pathways in your brain because you're talking about trumping your genes, or at least what we perceive as our genes and creating effects that last for theoretically a lifetime and that help and work our relationships with our financial life. I mean, this is hugely important. Where do we begin with the action in this process? Well, that's what I've been looking for. So over the past 12 years, I've been looking for the smallest possible habit you can make within your life. That would have the biggest impact upon not only your happiness, but upon all of these business or educational or health outcomes. If you think about it, we've really only created one global habit and that's getting people to brush their teeth. We already eat naturally. We sleep naturally. We got people to brush your teeth and then done, and there's nothing else we actually got everyone to be able to do. And if you ask then us, we got the wrong one, we should have been flossing instead of brushing your teeth. But I'm glad we're keeping that one. But what I've been looking for is what if we added one extra two minute habit akin to brushing your teeth? It would not only improve your health, but actually raise people's levels of happiness and cause them to be more successful. We found five of those happiness hacks so far that take less than two minutes a day that have done for 21 days in a row can trump your genes and can actually trump up to eight decades of experience. And they're very simple. And you only have to do one of these. You don't have to do all five of these. But the first one we tested at American Express, we had people think of three new things that they were grateful for over the past 24 hours and write them down or say them. The key to this was that they had to be new each day. People, they were just saying things that they were grateful for. It didn't work because they kept saying the same things over and over again. Their health, their family, their job, and then they were done. They had to think each day about something new that caused them to be grateful. And what happens is as your brain is scanning for the positive, your brain actually gets better. Are at it, those neural pathways get stronger and your brain actually gets better over the entire course of the day of seeing the positives. There were already latent within that environment. We could take people that are low level. Pessimists have them do this for 21 days in a row by day 22 of their testing as low level optimists. And that's amongst eighty four year old men, and you could do this with four year old children all the way up to eighty four year old men. That's the first one three new things you're grateful for each day because it actually trains your brain to get better at looking for the positive. The second one is something called the doubler. I went through two years of depression when I was at Harvard, and this is the one that pulled me out of it. Well, we have people do is think of one positive experience you've had over the past 24 hours, one positive experience and then into a blank word document, into an app, into a moleskin. Whatever you want to do, you just bullet point every detail you can remember about that one experience. So you're not journaling about your whole day. You're just writing about what one experience, what you're wearing, what you're thinking about, what you're saying. The reason for that is your brain can't tell the difference between visualization and actual experience. So if you journal about a positive experience, your brain doubles that for you do it for 21 days. Your brain actually realized it connects the dots for you and you realize this. You have this trajectory of meaning running throughout your life. So fastest intervention we found for raising the level of meaning people feel with in their life during this is incredible. I did a study with the National MS Society. We did a program called Everyday Matters with people with a chronic neuromuscular disease with MS. And we asked them, Do you really think happiness is a choice? What we found previously in this research is that if you journal about positive experience for six weeks in a row with a chronic neuromuscular disease, six months later, they were able to drop your pain medication by 50 percent. These sound like small little tips or tricks, but these hacks really transform how the brain and the body work. And the last three are very quick and simple 15 minutes of fun cardio activity A half workout a day is the equivalent of taking an antidepressant for the first six months or for the next two years you have a 30 percent lower relapse rate. And the reason for that is not the endorphins that are released a short term happiness. The reason is that exercise is a starter drug. When people exercise, they believe that their behavior matters and it cascades to their next activity and the next one. People exercise in the morning are better at dealing with their inbox at two o'clock in the middle of the day. The fourth one is meditation. I've been doing this one out of Google, working with leaders like Ming Tan and some of the individuals and people operations at Google, where we have individuals to take their hands off of their keyboard for two minutes a day, go from multitasking to single tasking, just watching their breath go in and out for only two minutes and then go right back to work. Accuracy rates rise by 10 percent, happiness levels go up and the stress levels of people around you who are not practicing this attention training their stress levels drop too, which is incredible, and the final one is the most powerful of the five. This is what I've been doing out of Facebook and at Lululemon and at nationwide insurance. We've had them every morning. When they first open their inbox, they write a two minute email praising or thanking one person that they know and a different person for 21 days or so before reading any emails. You write a two minute positive email I wrote to a high school English teacher one day just said, You're the reason I fell in love with reading. You're the reason I wrote a book. Thank you for changing my life. It took 45 seconds to type. Took me longer to find that woman's email address than mine. Sure. If you do this for three days and wrote, the brain literally gets addicted to it because you're going to spend all day long thinking about how amazing you are for writing that email in the morning. But if you do this for 21 days and wrote your social connection, when we ask you about your social connection, it's actually incredibly deep and robust. You have twenty one people you've meaningfully and positively activated within their lives. Social connection is not only the greatest predictor of happiness, but we just discover the social connection as as predictive of how long you will end up living as obesity, high blood pressure and smoking. We fight so hard against the negative, and we forget to tell people how powerful a two minute happiness hack could actually be. This is the Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest, Sean A.. We'll be right back. By the way, you can now rate the show if you're listening on Spotify. This is a huge help. It makes the show more visible on Spotify as well. Just go to Jordan Harbinger dot com, slash Spotify or search for us in your Spotify app. Click those dots on the right to make it happen. Now for the rest of my conversation with Sean A.. I've definitely made reminders in my calendar to send these little emails, little texts, etc. the watching your breath go in and out meditation stuff, it's kind of funny because I think a lot of people don't really know what that means to watch a breath go in and out. They're thinking, Wow, it must be really cold at Google, watching your breath go in and out. But I did not know that about cardio. I mean, everyone knows all exercise makes you feel good. I didn't know it was as little as 15 minutes, and I didn't know the effect was as potent as taking an antidepressant, which explains my morning bike rides, which you know, is a lot cheaper than Xanax or whatever, whatever people are taking in the morning. This is great and just the gratitude exercise of scanning your day for three new things that you're grateful for. Do you do that in the morning then and then write them down and then just go on with your day? Or do you do it at the end of the day after you've had something to write down? The original research was right before you went to sleep at night because they think that if you do this right before you go to sleep, as your brain is ordering your memories from the day, it's actually doing it in a positive way. For me, I use this as almost as a benefit of during the day. Like if I'm starting to feel negative or tired during the day that this is when I use it. So I use it like a Red Bull, like it not only caused my brain to start activating again, but it actually quiets the part of my brain that's negative or frustrated. At that current moment. I do actually four or five these habits every day, and I use them usually at about. It's not exact, but about an hour and a half apart from one another as energy breaks. Because there's that great research that shows that if you take a break every 90 minutes, your brain and body actually recharge much faster and you could stay in the performance zone for longer. So I just spaced them out over the course of my day. But all of this research, all these habits were done in isolation. So basically, you can just pick one of these happiness hacks, do it for 21 days, and you'll already start to see the effect within two or three days because this is a set of habits and requires practice like any other skill. Yeah, so happiness is a choice, but it requires effort. But when people put in the effort, the exciting part about this research is it shows your behavior matters. We can actually make these changes. Wow. I mean, this is a positive set of habits are there are a lot of negative habits that people might be able to spot that are causing them to be unhappy. Yeah, absolutely. So a lot of people try and stop a negative habit and they don't put anything else in its place. So your brain doesn't have anything else to fill that time or that energy with. So it just goes right back to that negative habit. If you put in a positive habit, it actually allows your brain to be able to move away from the negative habit towards the positive one. But yeah, you start to see all these negative patterns in your life that you want to start fixing. One of the chapters in the happiness advantage is called Tetris Effect, and I love this one because we found that if you get people to play Tetris for five hours in a row, they start dreaming about Tetris. They've been there. Yeah, exactly. Know what it works with Goldeneye as well. If anybody remembers that game works with Halo. Pretty much works with any repetitive game that I've ever played, which is why I don't play video games anymore, because there's nothing like having Grand Theft Auto four going through your head for eight straight hours. That's so funny because in the book, I actually mentioned Grand Theft Auto for me. Yeah, exactly my problem. So it's called the Tetris Effect. If you play Tetris for five hours and your brain retains the pattern as you look at the world. Similarly, I was working with tax auditors at KPMG and we found that they spend eight to 14 hours a day reading through tax forms, looking for mistakes and errors, and their brains get stuck that when they become managers, all they could see are the mistakes and errors on their team, and they can't see any of the reasons why that team is doing well or their strengths. And when they come home, they treat their spouses and their kids like tax forms. They see all the problems first. So if there's a negative Tetris effect where the brain could be imprinted with the negative problem, right where you scan the world for the mistakes or the errors of the fires, you need to put out first. We can equally train the brain to create a positive Tetris effect, which is doing each of these habits. What we find is your brain actually starts to create a new pattern for how you look at the world. Instead of looking at the world and saying, Here are all the mistakes I see. Here are all the fires you need to put out first. If you do that, your brain never sees the positive. But if you start with the positive scanning for it, it turns out knowledge. You see that you have the energy and the intelligence to then start solving the problems you see within that environment as well. So you're right that these patterns exist all throughout. People will start to see them everywhere. Wow. So yeah, I can see that you'd be looking for negative patterns that would not be helpful at all. Sounds like my daddy was a key engineer at Ford for a while, and it was like, Oh, all is in one B plus what happened exactly? You're like, Hey man. Not a bad GPA. And then of course, he's like, No, I'm proud of you. I just want to know what happened. All right, fine. Now, happiness and smiling and things like that, we commonly equate those as attractive. Do you have scientific research to back that up or is that just is that still anecdotal stuff? No, it's actually scientific. We found it in multiple ways. So first of all, as people are responding to what they want and a potential mate. So this is for dating. They actually found that happiness was one of the highest qualities that they were looking for. At first, we were stunned about why that would be. You think it'd be OK, but. Illusionary, it doesn't make any sense, right, like evolutionarily, you want somebody who can stop that saber tooth tiger that's charging, right? So you want something that's big and strong and right or you want somebody who can keep the fire going. What would the value of happiness or humor be? Humor is actually one of the other extremely high qualities that people write. It turns out both of them are signals of what we call cognitive fitness. Basically, your brain is able to not only deal with the negative, but then it can actually go deeper to actually create positive within an environment. And the body intuitively knows that when you're positive, when you feel happier, it turns out your immune system improves your cells rebuild faster. You live longer. So actually, happiness is such an adaptive trait that it turns out that people very much look for that and potential mates. Anyone who can get them to laugh or to smile because both of those things cause your parasympathetic nervous system to activate, which is the exact part of your body that calms you down, causes you to perform at higher levels. And instead of running from saber tooth tigers, you learn how to build entire cities so you don't even have to worry about that problem. Wow, that is very cool. I never would have thought of this, of course, and very keen to hear about some of the research when we talk more. Last but not least, I want to leave people with this because I think it's all fine and good to develop these happiness habits and things like that. But what happens when we encounter stress? Because stress is the great derailing. You're doing your gratitude thing and you're watching your breath go in and out. You're like, This is great, and then you get an email. It's like all hands meeting tomorrow morning, 7:00 a.m. Make sure your car is packed and put everything in a box. Some of you are getting s**t canned. I mean, who knows what kind of email you're going to get? That's not too far fetched from how things were on Wall Street. Obviously, if you work at Google, you might have a little bit more of a pleasure working environment. But what do we do with stress in order to not let it just ruin us every single day? Because that was something that I struggled with for a long time, and even to the point where I'd see emails in my inbox from certain people who are always bullies or bearers of bad news in my heart would be like, and I'd be like, Oh my God, I'm nervous because see this knucklehead in my inbox. That's no good. So I needed to recondition my brain. I needed to sort of remap that. And I know a lot of people are going to be struggling with this. Even the people that implement everything, they're going to be like, This is so great, and then they're going to run into the brick wall of stress and it's all going to come crashing down. You're right, it's one of the most important questions. So that's why we we spent a good deal of time researching it just recently. In fact, I just had a paper published and the top psychology journal earlier last year with two researchers, one from Yale, one from Stanford. We were studying exactly this. Here's what we found. We're working with UBS in the middle of the banking crisis and when people are not getting their bonuses, they weren't being paid. There were massive restructuring, so they didn't know if they would have their jobs. Right now that I got it, I got it. There's a lot of people out there going, Boo hoo. The guys at UBS didn't get their bonuses and they got restructured. Nobody feels bad for Wall Street guys, but go on. You're right, you're right. Like they have less externally to complain about. But what we found is that only 10 percent of our long term happiness is about the external world. We found incredibly happy people and unhappy people living in the shantytowns and Soweto South Africa that was working with. And the same thing on Wall Street. I found some very negative people, but also some very positive ones. Same the conditions. And the real question is why, right? Like everyone experiences stress to some extent. So what we looked at is we found that most people's view of stress caused them to feel sicker. What we are discovering was that if you go through a stress management program, they tell you stress is related to the 10 leading causes of death and disease. The World Health Organization found stress to be the number one killer. It destroys every organ in the body, so they're like, whatever you do, don't stress at work, right? But as soon as you hear that information, you're like, Well, I feel a lot more stressed and stop emailing me so much. You're destroying every organ in my body. But all their research is true. But there's equally true research that we never talk about. The shows that that stress I'm not talking about good stress like you stress, I'm talking about like high levels of negative stress in the middle of a crisis. We find that your immune system has the highest possible level. Your brain speeds up. Your memory improves. Your social support actually deepens if you think about it with the work I've been doing with the military. They don't onboard you into the military with beach vacation. They onboard you with boot camp. They intentionally put you in a stressful situation, but it creates these meaningful narratives that people talk about for the rest of their lives. So what we did was we split up the employees. Half of them received this idea. That stress is bad. Here's how you can fight and flee from it as hard as you possibly can in your life. And the other side stress is enhancing its key to your potential. Here's how you embrace it and utilize it. I thought the second group might show lower stress, but six weeks later, equally high levels of stress for both groups. But the group that saw stress not as something that's always bad, but something that could be enhancing. We saw a 23 percent drop and their health related symptoms 23 percent drop in all the negative effects, which means. That stress is inevitable in our lives, but its effects upon us are not. And it's changed by how we perceive stress with our lives. If you are trying to decrease all the stress in your life, so you could be happy. You will lose that game, right? Because stress has to be there for us to be able to function fully, but also stresses enhancing it causes us to achieve our potential. But if you change your viewpoint to say, look this negative guy at work or the stress I'm feeling on this project or the stress I'm feel like for this game that's coming up or the stress I feel for combat that those are the very things that are actually gut feeling. My behavior causing me to be a better soldier, cause me to be a better salesperson or a better friend in times of need. And what we found is suddenly the same stress caused people's levels of energy to rise. Their health and immune system improved. And it turns out when they came home at the end of the day, they were less tired. So stress is effects can actually be changed by changing your brain. Wow, that's awesome. So you can remap what stress does to you. Exactly. Oh man, that's very powerful. That causes so many deleterious health effects, so many lifestyle effects. It ruins relationships. It causes you to leave your career. But if you can remap that, you can restructure that. You're literally it's as close as it comes to like kung fu manually changing what's going on in your body. That's exactly it. And that's what the military is brilliant. That that's the very first thing is put you through as much stress as possible, but that stress causes people to not only feel more confident when they finish boot camp, but they actually have created these deep, deep relationships and friendships, which we could be using within our schools and our businesses if we change the way that we were looking at stress. Most people see stress as something that's an unfortunate event in modern life, but stress is actually something that causes our bodies to push themselves to their limit and a very positive way. Absolutely awesome. Thank you so much, Shawn. We're going to link to your book and of course, any links that we can find to some of the media in your TED talk in the show notes as well. And thanks so much for your time. Welcome back from Mexico and congrats on all this success. Thank you so much for having me on. I've got some thoughts on this episode, but before I get into that, here's what you should check out next on The Jordan Harbinger Show. Any time you catch yourself comparing yourself to others, you have to stop and say, That's what I'm doing. Don't do that. Oh God. Easier said than done. Yeah, I know. But I'll tell you, once you know that the knowledge is power, I was just at a bachelor party and some of my friends were like, Oh man, some of our friends, they just became like high school teachers. And I was like, Well, let me stop you right there, you know, happy those people are. They figured out what they wanted to do when they were like twenty four. They got married to somebody they'd been dating for a while. They had kids well before age 30. They're satisfied with what they're doing and a lot of ways they have way more free time than you and I. We cannot sit back and just we're wired in a way that we're always dissatisfied. They're wired in a way where that is fine. I'm jealous of that on many levels. One in six Americans have actually stopped talking to a family member because of the election. That's pretty scary. It's almost one in five now. Yeah, politics has become super hyper attenuated in our culture, where it's taken on this outsized role in importance to assume at home. And I mean, is this what you were saying? It's like Jordan made this joke on Instagram, and so therefore I know it's residing in the depths of his heart. Like, I bet you, he bears animus towards some racial group, something wild bleep. But that's exactly what we're talking about motive, attribution asymmetry on the basis of ad hominem. Don't be that guy. Ninety three percent of us wish the country were more united. You're part of the problem when you do that. So I got a win win win proposition for our listeners and viewers today. Number one is I'm going to make you more persuasive. I'm going to make you happier and I'm going to start a social movement in your heart in a tiny little way to bring our country together. And that's answering hatred with love as much as you possibly can for a great discussion and how we can bridge the divide in our relationships, our country and even within our families. Check out Episode 211 with Arthur Brooks here on The Jordan Harbinger Show. I just love Sean's research here. It's really interesting to hear that happiness comes before success. I always kind of felt like that may be true, but you never really know, and certainly this is the opposite of what society itself teaches us. And now that Sean has actually gone out and tested this, it makes perfect sense now that you think about it. Happy people produce better results and are more productive, although sometimes this can be a bit counterintuitive and surprising. Now it's finally happening where institutions are investing in the happiness of the people that work there because it affects the bottom line positively, which is great news for everybody who works anywhere, for anything, I'd say. So thanks so much to Sean. His books and documentaries, of course. Linked available in the website on the show notes at Jordan Harbinger dot com. Please use our website links if you buy books from the guests. It does help support the show. Transcripts are in the show notes. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram, or you can connect with me on LinkedIn as well. I'm teaching you how to connect with great people and manage relationships using the same software systems and tiny habits that I use every day. That's our six minute networking course, and the course is free. It's over at Jordan Harbinger RT.com Slash course I'm teaching you how to dig the well before you get thirsty and build relationships before you need them. It'll change your life, at the very least your professional life, but probably also your personal life. Jordan Harbinger Accom slash course This show is created in association with PodcastOne. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogarty, Milo Campo, Ian Baer, Josh Ballard and Gabriel Mizrahi. Remember, we rise by lifting others. The fee for the show is that you share it with friends when you find something useful or interesting. If you know somebody who's interested in happiness research or maybe has the equation backwards. Share this episode with him ! Hopefully you find something great in every episode of the show. The greatest compliment you can give us is to share the show with those you love. In the meantime, do your best to apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you listen and we'll see you next time.
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