Explore every episode of the podcast How to Train a Happy Mind
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dr. Cornel West: Truth, Justice, and Love #169 | 27 Aug 2024 | 00:43:41 | |
Dr. Cornel West combines a formidable intellect with an enormous heart and an unceasing drive for social justice that transcends his multiple identities as an academic, author, philosopher, theologian, political activist, social critic, and public intellectual. Many of you even know him as an actor for his brief, but memorable appearances, in The Matrix films. Of course, Dr. West is also an independent candidate in this year's U.S. Presidential Election. Scott spoke with Dr. West a couple of weeks ago about compassionate leadership, nonviolence, social and economic justice, and the balance between inner and outer transformation that he believes is required to truly steer the world toward the thriving of all human beings and all life on earth. | |||
| DJ Spooky + Snibbe at the Rubin Museum #168 | 20 Aug 2024 | 00:49:39 | |
A couple of months ago, Scott Snibbe was in New York City for a conversation with Paul Miller at The Rubin Museum for the release of his recent book, How to Train a Happy Mind. Paul is an old friend who'd be famous enough for his incredible pioneering work with collage hip hop music as DJ Spooky, but he has so many other identities as an author, public intellectual, and artist. | |||
| How to Heal Despair with Venerable Robina Courtin #162 | 11 Jun 2024 | 00:47:03 | |
Our very first podcast guest, Venerable Robina Courtin is back in today's timely episode on how to deal with the despair and hopelessness many people feel today about war, injustice, inequity, and the environment. Venerable Robina was ordained as a Buddhist nun in the late 1970s. She's worked closely with her teachers Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche, to help spread Buddhist wisdom as an editorial director of wisdom, publications, editor of Mandala magazine, executive director of Liberation Prison Project, and the lively, charismatic touring-teacher of Buddhism. | |||
| Susan Piver: Understanding Our Differences with the Buddhist Enneagram #117 | 20 Sep 2022 | 00:42:59 | |
Bestselling author Susan Piver is a powerful Buddhist teacher who shares her wisdom and guided meditations weekly through her Open Heart Project and community. Her new book is The Buddhist Enneagram in which she helps us understand how differently each of us sees and understands the world. Through her unique Buddhist take on the Enneagram's nine different personality types, Susan shares how understanding our differences can lead to deeper and more compassionate connections with our partners, colleagues, and everyone we encounter, transforming our difficult emotions into pure expressions of our basic goodness. | |||
| The Determination to Be Free - Guided Meditation on Renunciation #18 [rebroadcast] | 13 Sep 2022 | 00:23:30 | |
Dostoevsky once said, “The best way to keep a prisoner from escaping is to make sure he never knows he's in prison.” This is the point of meditating on renunciation: to gain a clear-eyed sense of our state of mind right now, with many moments of frustration and anger and impatience and craving: feelings that we'd rather be free from. And turning away from these delusions toward liberation, a the true source of refuge that we can find within our own mind. | |||
| The Red Pill of Renunciation – Embracing Reality as It Is #17 [rebroadcast] | 06 Sep 2022 | 00:27:14 | |
What do The Matrix and Jerry Seinfeld have to do with renouncing suffering? Renunciation, the determination to be free, self-compassion, letting go of suffering—in Buddhism these are all the same thing. | |||
| Meditation on Healing Anxiety with Ven. Amy Miller #116 | 30 Aug 2022 | 00:17:33 | |
Venerable Amy Miller leads a Buddhist meditation for healing anxiety. This practice helps you create a safe mental space, reconnect to the positive, and relax your body through breathwork and thought-replacement. | |||
| Transforming Anxiety, Depression, and other Difficult Emotions with Ven. Amy Miller #115 | 23 Aug 2022 | 00:56:07 | |
Buddhist nun and teacher Venerable Amy shares how we can practically manage anxiety, depression, and other difficult emotions with Buddhist meditation and mind training techniques. Episode 115: Transforming Anxiety, Depression, and other Difficult Emotions with Ven. Amy Miller | |||
| Letting Go of Suffering - a Guided Meditation #16 [rebroadcast] | 16 Aug 2022 | 00:28:04 | |
A clear-eyed meditation on suffering: both what suffering is, and the mental source of suffering in our delusions of attachment, anger, and self-centered ignorance. We practice the antidotes to these delusions, giving us tools for a more balanced, less self-centered view of our experience that offers sustained stability and happiness through life’s challenges and desires. | |||
| Am I More Important Than Everyone Else in the Universe? #15 [rebroadcast] | 09 Aug 2022 | 00:38:41 | |
Do each of us believe deep down that we’re just a little bit more important than everyone else? My happiness, my goals, my relationships? The root cause of our suffering from the Buddhist perspective is this belief, a delusion called ignorance, seen as the true source of all our suffering: from disappointment in the face of life’s setbacks, to the dissatisfaction we can feel even when we get exactly what we want. It’s a retelling of the Buddha’s very first teaching, The Four Noble Truths: on suffering, its causes and antidotes, with a modern twist. | |||
| “Cutting the Cat in Two”: A Guided Meditation for Dealing with Conflict #114 | 02 Aug 2022 | 00:14:26 | |
Dr. Mark Westmoquette leads a Zen Buddhist meditation to help navigate conflict in your daily life. He uses the story "Cutting the Cat in Two"—a famous Zen koan—to lead the practice and illustrate the importance of embodiment and shifting one's perspective. | |||
| Zen and the Art of Dealing with Difficult People with Dr. Mark Westmoquette #113 | 26 Jul 2022 | 00:46:37 | |
Dr. Mark Westmoquette is an astrophysicist who became a student of Zen Buddhism and yoga. Now an author and meditation and yoga instructor, Mark has written a new book called Zen and the Art of Dealing with Difficult People. In this podcast episode, we talk about this meaty topic of how to deal with difficult people who Mark calls 'troublesome Buddhas,' from our boss to our partner to world leaders and that person who takes your parking space. | |||
| Finding Refuge in the Mind - A Guided Meditation #112 | 19 Jul 2022 | 00:28:53 | |
What do you do when you’re alone? When you’re scared, anxious, lonely, afraid, or feeling strong craving? In our guided meditation we explore the Buddhist view on refuge and how to find a deep source of strength and peace within our own minds. | |||
| Robert Thurman & Scott Snibbe at Tibet House: How to Train a Happy Mind #161 | 04 Jun 2024 | 00:40:40 | |
In New York City, a couple months ago, I had the honor of sharing a public conversation with one of my Buddhist heroes, the renowned author and scholar Robert Thurman. In this episode's conversation, we share an edited recording from that evening, talking about everything from overcoming self-hatred, enjoying pleasure without attachment, getting ghosted by the Dalai Lama, and how one might come to have compassion for someone as dangerous and deadly as Vladimir Putin. | |||
| What Do You Do When You're Alone? #14 [rebroadcast] | 12 Jul 2022 | 00:27:45 | |
What do you do when you’re alone? When you’re anxious, lonely, or afraid, when you feel strong craving? What do you turn to? In this episode we look at where our mind runs when we feel pain, when we don’t feel balanced or whole. We’ll examine the Buddhist view on this subject that reveals a deep source of strength and support within our own minds accessible to each of us any time we need it. | |||
| Guided Meditation on Giving and Receiving Love with Buddhist Psychologist Lorne Ladner #111 | 05 Jul 2022 | 00:23:17 | |
Buddhist psychologist Lorne Ladner leads a meditation on giving and receiving love, a loving-kindness meditation with themes of connection, gratitude, and warmth. | |||
| Buddhist Psychologist Lorne Ladner on Depression, Compassion, and Positive Psychology #110 | 28 Jun 2022 | 00:46:38 | |
We talk with clinical psychologist and Buddhist practitioner Lorne Ladner about his patients' top questions, the difference between selfishness and self-compassion, setting healthy boundaries, and treating depression with Buddhist psychology. | |||
| Meditation on Mental Cause and Effect #12 [rebroadcast] | 21 Jun 2022 | 00:22:53 | |
A meditation practice of self reflection, taking control of the mental cause and effect that's normally unconscious: the habits and activities conditioned by evolution, our upbringing, society and the media. This is a practice you can do at the end of each day: reviewing your day, rejoicing in the positive, and finding ways to sincerely forgive yourself for anything that you regret, so you can sleep better and be your best self the next day. | |||
| Mental Cause and Effect #11 [rebroadcast] | 14 Jun 2022 | 00:32:34 | |
Science has greater and greater mastery in understanding and controlling physical cause and effect, from planets to particles, but we are only starting to understand cause and effect in our minds. Evolution, habits, and society all affect our behavior. How do we gain conscious control of our behavior, much less our thoughts? One method is a daily practice of self-appreciation and self-forgiveness that lets us release regret and pain to face each day with renewed presence and joy. | |||
| Meditation, Science, and Christianity with Father Laurence Freeman #109 | 07 Jun 2022 | 00:21:51 | |
Catholic priest and Benedictine monk Father Laurence Freeman discusses the role of community, meditation, contemplation, and science in his life and his dialogues with His Holiness the Dalai Lama. He emphasizes his trust in humanity and the importance of wonder in our daily lives. | |||
| Universal Love in Christianity and Buddhism with Dr. Greg Hillis #108 | 31 May 2022 | 00:41:12 | |
Christian Scholar Greg Hillis speaks of the parallels between Christianity and Buddhism, the possibility of universal love, mystical experiences that break through to the beauty and interconnectedness of reality, and social activism that respects—and even loves—those we disagree with. | |||
| Guided Meditation on Impermanence #10 [rebroadcast] | 24 May 2022 | 00:21:25 | |
A guided meditation on impermanence that helps us release fear and anxiety to embrace the constant change at every scale of reality: from particles, possessions, homes, and the environment, to our thoughts, feelings, and perceptions, and relationships. When we embrace impermanence, we more easily take on challenges like today’s Coronavirus crisis. We become more fully present to those around us and we can even more deeply appreciate life’s impermanent pleasures. | |||
| Embracing Impermanence #9 [rebroadcast] | 17 May 2022 | 00:24:03 | |
We cling to things as if they won’t change, but change is the nature of reality. When we embrace impermanence, we prepare ourselves for big changes, and are able to let go of our fear and anxiety to become more fully present to those around us, to make the most meaningful choices day-to-day, and to more deeply appreciate life’s fleeting pleasures. | |||
| Guided Death and Rebirth Meditation with Laurie Anderson #107 | 10 May 2022 | 00:21:35 | |
Laurie Anderson leads a meditation on death and rebirth, guiding you through the Buddhist understanding of death, the bardo, and a joyous rebirth. These tracks come from Songs from the Bardo, an album inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Meditating on death is a powerful Buddhist practice that enhances gratitude, helps you embrace impermanence, and increases mindfulness. | |||
| Guided Meditation—Mental Cause and Effect #12 [rebroadcast] | 28 May 2024 | 00:23:39 | |
A meditation practice of self reflection, taking control of the mental cause and effect that's normally unconscious: the habits and activities conditioned by evolution, our upbringing, society and the media. This is a practice you can do at the end of each day: reviewing your day, rejoicing in the positive, and finding ways to sincerely forgive yourself for anything that you regret, so you can sleep better and be your best self the next day. | |||
| Laurie Anderson's Buddhism: Art, Meditation, and Death as Adventure #106 | 03 May 2022 | 00:40:02 | |
Grammy Award winning artist Laurie Anderson, a longtime student of Buddhism and meditation, shares her personal path with Buddhism, approaching art with a beginner’s mind, staying present with suffering without letting it overwhelm you, and making our lives meaningful. | |||
| Ten Million Percent Happier - Interview with Scott Snibbe #105 | 26 Apr 2022 | 01:01:48 | |
Scott Snibbe becomes the interviewee in this week's episode as Ven. Fabienne Pradelle speaks with him about finding meaning and spirituality through art and creativity, love without attachment, misconceptions about Buddhism, the afterlife, and our infinite potential. | |||
| Guided Meditation on the Mind #7 [rebroadcast] | 19 Apr 2022 | 00:28:23 | |
This guided meditation takes us through different ways of observing the mind, first examining its ever-present parts: perception, feeling, will, and awareness. Then we explore the nature of subjective reality itself by asking what is the mind without thoughts? Where is the space of our consciousness? And, how finely can we slice moments of consciousness? Do we ever arrive at a quantum of consciousness? | |||
| What Is the Mind? #6 [rebroadcast] | 12 Apr 2022 | 00:19:16 | |
If the mind is our thoughts, then what is it that observes those thoughts? What are we without thoughts? Do we ever truly see an object, or only its mental reconstruction? Though we are all convinced that we have one, science has no agreed definition for consciousness or mind. Even subjectively, the mind is elusive, difficult to pin to any specific mental experience. | |||
| Dr. Thupten Jinpa on Buddhism, Science, Compassion, and Climate #104 | 05 Apr 2022 | 00:51:26 | |
Dr. Thupten Jinpa on the intersection of science, Buddhism, and critical thinking; how Buddhist principles can help us solve the climate crisis; and how to lead fulfilling lives at home with our families and relationships. | |||
| From What If to What Next — Rob Hopkins' Climate Optimism #103 | 22 Mar 2022 | 00:49:51 | |
Rob Hopkins, climate activist, co-founder of the Transition Network and host of the podcast series From What If to What Next talks about an engaged, passionate form of Buddhism that actively works for positive change in our communities and in the world. | |||
| Kim Stanley Robinson on Solving the Climate Crisis, Buddhism, and the Power of Science Fiction #102 | 15 Mar 2022 | 00:50:09 | |
Kim Stanley Robinson is one of the greatest living science fiction writers, and one of the few people ever to have developed a credible solution to the climate crisis, which he describes in his latest novel, The Ministry for the Future. In this interview, we talk about climate change solutions, Buddhism in his life and work, sci-fi and cli-fi (climate fiction), colonizing Mars, the outdoors as meditation, and how to stay optimistic. | |||
| What to Do With Your Next 24 Hours Alive (Guided Meditation) #5 [rebroadcast] | 08 Mar 2022 | 00:16:13 | |
A guided meditation on the preciousness of our next 24 hours alive and our unique place in the universe as science understands it: intelligent, self-aware beings at the end of 14 billion years’ cosmic and biological evolution. | |||
| The Preciousness of Life, From Cosmos to the Kardashians #4 [rebroadcast] | 01 Mar 2022 | 00:18:47 | |
“It is not more surprising to be born twice than once,” Voltaire once said. In this episode we contemplate the miracle of existing at all, from our place at the end of our universe’s 14 billion years’ evolution, to the simple joy of another 24 hours alive that Thich Nhat Hanh describes in Peace Is Every Step. | |||
| Guided Meditation: Empathetic Joy with Ayya Dhammadipa #101 | 22 Feb 2022 | 00:12:57 | |
Ayya Dhammadipa leads a 12-minute meditation on empathetic joy, also known as mudita. In this practice, we use joy that is sparked by the joy of other beings to radiate this state of mind, allowing the opportunity to go beyond ourselves and into a much vaster space of joyously relating to the world. | |||
| Mental Cause and Effect #11 [rebroadcast] | 21 May 2024 | 00:32:34 | |
Science has greater and greater mastery in understanding and controlling physical cause and effect, from planets to particles, but we are only starting to understand cause and effect in our minds. Evolution, habits, and society all affect our behavior. How do we gain conscious control of our behavior, much less our thoughts? One method is a daily practice of self-appreciation and self-forgiveness that lets us release regret and pain to face each day with renewed presence and joy. | |||
| Gifts Greater Than the Oceans with Ayya Dhammadipa #100 | 15 Feb 2022 | 00:49:21 | |
Ayya Dhammadipa is a Buddhist nun and teacher with a unique background: Before becoming a nun, she got an MBA, worked in investment banking, and was a devoted mother. For twenty years, she studied in the Zen Buddhist tradition, but now practices the earlier Buddhist lineage of Theravada. In this episode, she talks about these interesting turns in her life, where mindfulness fits into a complete path of self-development, how to balance motherhood with practice, and the misunderstood benefits of giving and receiving. | |||
| Stabilizing the Mind and Watching Thoughts (Guided Meditation) #3 [rebroadcast] | 08 Feb 2022 | 00:30:35 | |
A complete guided meditation session expanding your compassion, stabilizing concentration on the breath, and observing your thoughts. | |||
| What Is Meditation? #2 [rebroadcast] | 31 Jan 2022 | 00:33:54 | |
Over the past few years meditation has become popular as a way to help reduce stress, be focused at work, sleep better, or simply relax. Yet meditation isn’t just a tool to improve focus or relax, but a way to strengthen the positive qualities we all naturally possess: compassion, kindness, generosity, patience, humor, and finding joy in everyday life. This episode explores this higher purpose of meditation through the less familiar technique of analytic meditation that uses stories, thoughts, and emotions to steer our minds toward happiness, meaning, and benefiting others. | |||
| Mommysattva: Meditation and Motherhood with Jenna Hollenstein #99 | 25 Jan 2022 | 00:33:24 | |
Author, mother and meditation teacher Jenna Hollenstein joins us to challenge the stereotype of Buddhist practice as solitary and silent, offering instead an engaged, active form of mindfulness and compassion that mothers can practice in everyday life as a Mommysattva: a warrior of compassion, wisdom, and lovingkindness. | |||
| A Guided 10 Minute Meditation to Calm the Mind | 21 Jan 2022 | 00:10:10 | |
Even a short 10-minute meditation has the power to calm your body and mind. Here’s a helpful guided meditation that in just 10 minutes a day can improve your well-being. Even though it's short, this is a complete meditation session including establishing proper meditation posture, motivating our meditation to be a force for good, stabilizing the mind on the breath, letting go of thoughts, cultivating beneficial thoughts, and a dedication to seal your meditation practice. | |||
| What Is A Skeptic's Path to Enlightenment? #1 [rebroadcast] | 18 Jan 2022 | 00:18:19 | |
Two years ago, we created A Skeptic’s Path to Enlightenment to share the rich tradition of Tibetan Buddhist analytical meditation in a form that requires no belief beyond what science currently accepts. The first 40 episodes of the podcast gradually go through all of these topics, in order, beginning with appreciating the gift of our life and our place in the universe, and gradually moving up to cultivating boundless compassion for all beings and understanding the ultimate nature of our inner and outer realities. Over the next year, interspersed with new interviews, we will be re-releasing updated versions of these talks and meditations every few weeks. | |||
| Guided Meditation: Turning Towards with Ben Connelly #98 | 11 Jan 2022 | 00:26:48 | |
Soto Zen Teacher Ben Connelly leads a guided meditation integrating two ways of meditating in the spirit of the Yogacara tradition of Buddhism. | |||
| Esoteric and Everyday Buddhism with Ben Connelly #97 | 04 Jan 2022 | 00:47:17 | |
Soto Zen Teacher Ben Connelly joins us to explore the relationship between science and reality, whether karma really exists, and how to be a Buddhist activist while remaining unattached to "winning." In the process, Ben teaches us about the ancient Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu and what the Yogacara school of Buddhism teaches us about taming our minds. | |||
| Dr. Rick Hanson on Embracing the Positive without Denying Pain #48 [rebroadcast] | 28 Dec 2021 | 01:06:43 | |
Dr. Rick Hanson shares powerful insights from neuroscience on how to practically embrace the positive in our lives and grow our extraordinary potential for inner happiness without denying any of our pain. While speaking authoritatively on contemplative neuroscience, Dr. Hanson also humbly compares our current knowledge of the brain to physics as it was 300 years ago, and shares tantalizing thoughts on where neuroscience might go in the coming years. Dr. Rick Hanson is a psychologist, Senior Fellow of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley, and the New York Times best-selling author of Buddha’s Brain, Hardwiring Happiness, and his latest book, Neurodharma. | |||
| Robert Thurman on Enlightenment, Time, Skepticism, and Science #50/51 [rebroadcast] | 21 Dec 2021 | 01:05:11 | |
Dr. Robert Thurman touches on some of his most profound points in this special interview rebroadcast: from the nature of time, to what is enlightenment, to why there’s no evidence for “nothing.” He talked about what a psychonaut is and the importance of skepticism in Buddhism and in science. Please enjoy this wonderful conversation with one of the world’s greatest minds. | |||
| Contentment and Ambition with Yangsi Rinpoche #160 | 14 May 2024 | 00:31:27 | |
Yangsi Rinpoche's gave a beautiful talk a couple of months ago with the intriguing title "Contentment Plus Ambition." He was generous enough to sit down with me afterwards for an interview about the same topic in which he talks about how to practice real self-compassion and even how we can create the causes for world peace. | |||
| Guided Meditation for Fear with Kiri Westby #96 | 14 Dec 2021 | 00:09:10 | |
Lifelong human rights activist, writer, and Buddhist practitioner Kiri Westby guides us through a 10-minute guided meditation for fear, drawing upon her days working in war zones and her harrowing imprisonment in China. | |||
| Finding Fearlessness with Kiri Westby #95 | 07 Dec 2021 | 00:46:18 | |
"In that moment, I literally let go of my life. I was sure that that was the end of my life. There was not a part of me that didn't think I was going to die in that moment." Lifelong human rights activist, writer, and Buddhist practitioner Kiri Westby spoke to us about how her Buddhist practice helped her through imprisonment in China and the role of Buddhism in her humanitarian mission. Hear how her Buddhist upbringing led to her making international headlines as an imprisoned activist in China protesting human rights abuses in Tibet. | |||
| Vaccines and Compassion #94 | 30 Nov 2021 | 00:47:58 | |
How does the Buddhist view on compassion help us think about COVID vaccine controversies? What do the Dalai Lama and the Pope have to say about vaccination? Without arguing for any one position, host Scott Snibbe and Producer Tara Anderson talk about how to stay loving and connected to people we disagree with, how to avoid "compassion fatigue," and how to (not) convince somebody to see things our way. Scott and Tara also share personal stories about growing up in an anti-vax household and deciding whether to vaccinate their young children. | |||