Transcript
A (0:01)
I don't know what's right for a person, but there's something inside of them that knows what's right. We all have an appointment with our own souls, and the question is, are we going to keep that appointment? You pay a price if you live in violation of what is most deeply true inside of you.
B (0:20)
Hey guys, how you doing? Hope you're having a good week so far. My name is Dr. Rangan Chatterjee and this is my podcast, Feel Better Live More. Have you ever felt that there's something deep within you that knows who you really are, that part of you which has remained constant throughout your life that knows exactly what you're meant to be doing, even if you're not fully aware of it? Well, this powerful idea is at the heart of today's conversation. Dr. James Hollis is back for his second appearance on my podcast. James is 85 years old and a world renowned psychoanalyst who has been practicing for more than four decades. He's also the author of an incredible 22 books on personal growth, meaning and purpose. James believes each of us has an autonomous inner guide. We, when we ignore it or can't tune into, manifests a stress, burnout, low mood, or a nagging sense that something is missing. And if you've ever found yourself thinking on paper, my life seems pretty good. So why do I still feel empty then? I think this conversation is going to stop you in your tracks. Now I want to make something really clear. If you've tuned in for some quick tips on how to improve your health, then in all honesty, this is probably not the right conversation for you. But if you're looking for something deep, authentic and thought provoking that may fundamentally change the way in which you live, then you've absolutely come to the right place. James is regarded as a complete legend by so many people around the world, myself included. And for me, it was an absolute privilege to be able to talk to him and for a second time. In so many ways, we have become a culture that no longer values the words and wisdom of our elders. And I believe this has come at a huge cost. As someone who spent a lot of time thinking about and finding meaning and purpose in my own life, I know what a massive difference it makes. This conversation was both humbling and inspiring. And if you're someone who's feeling a little bit lost and in need of some direction, I'm certain that what James has to share will resonate. This is a conversation that keeps on giving the more times you listen to it. As with each and every Listen, you're likely to gain more insight about your life. So settle in and open your mind to some big ideas and meaningful moments. This is my conversation with the one and only James Hollis. I guess where I wanted to start is with this. How do you define a life of meaning?
A (3:32)
This is a good question. I think meaning is not something we go out and find as if it's hiding somewhere in Brighton or something. Meaning rises out as an experience when whatever is going on within us or whatever we're relating to in our outer world is in accord with the agenda of our soul. Now, I know that's very vague, but, you know, to give a. I think an example, let's say I'm supposed to adopt a certain career or a certain athletic regimen or a certain ideology, and that will, quote, make me happy or bring me meaning. And perhaps it will to a certain degree. But in the long run, if I'm giving my energies to something that's really not in alignment with what's true within me at the deepest level, a level which I may not know much about, consciously so I had my own experience of that. I think I told you the first time we met. I'd achieved all my outer goals in my mid-30s and then was hit with a serious depression. And it was an opportunity for me to sort of go within. It was a necessity, not an opportunity. It was a necessity to go within and to explore. Why is the psyche autonomously withdrawing its approval and support from the places that I want to put it, or the world tells me I ought to be putting it there. And that was the beginning of a different kind of journey, of recovery of personal authority and striking out in some very large and new direction. Directions. So meaning is something experiential, I think. It's not conceptual. We may, from the conscious standpoint, assess things from time to time. Of course, there's a place for consciousness here, but it's not like meaning is hidden somewhere and we have to go find it. Because, you know, many times, for example, people are in extreme circumstances, but intrapsychically they are. Well, they are in the right places. They should be. As Jean Paul Sartre said, sometimes the person who is in prison is freer than the one who imprisons. And I think what he was getting at there is maybe the person who's the imprisoner is a functionary of the state, let's say, or he does it because it's his job or even a certain ideology. But the prisoner has a sense. My being here is a statement of my values or my being here is an expression of my willingness to care deeply about some value. And so I can have a sense of great meaning intrapsychically, even when my outer world is quite conflictual and even painful. So I don't think meaning is something we choose, although we can choose paths that bring us into that accord. It's something we can experience, and we experience the loss of it. So many times, as we all know, people have achieved their goals, and there's a dissatisfaction to it. There's a sense, after a while, of indifference or boredom or ultimately depression. And in those moments, what you see there is. There's an autonomy of something inside of each of us. That which I would also say knows us better than we know ourselves. It has its own agenda. And you can call it the agenda of nature seeking to express itself, or the will of divinity, if you so wish to. To use that metaphor. And that's something transcendent to ordinary ego consciousness. And when I'm in right relationship to that, even if everything else around me is troubled, then there's that sense of interiority that supports, you can put it this way, what supports us when nothing supports us? Now, I've learned the hard way, and I know other individuals have as well, that even when our normal coping strategies or ideas about self and world are no longer working very well, there's something inside that still can sustain us and pull us through those times in very meaningful ways. And it'd be nice to be able to package that and merchandise that. But it's something autonomous. It lies wholly without my will to call it up. Although, as I said, I can use my will to perhaps make those sorts of choices that might be difficult choices, but which bring me into that right relationship.
