How to Simplify Your Life in 2026 — New Tips from Anne Lamott, Claire Hughes Johnson, David Yarrow, and Diana Chapman (#864) - The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

Executive Leadership Life Simplification Tim Ferriss Show Anne Lamott Claire Hughes Johnson David Yarrow Diana Chapman Photography

Summary

This Tim Ferriss Show episode explores the theme of simplifying life to combat overwhelming complexity. Four previous guests share personal decisions that dramatically simplified their lives. David Yarrow, a renowned photographer, discusses choosing not to remarry after divorce to maintain focus on his children and career, and deliberately reducing his circle of close friends from 60-70 to just 7-8 people to preserve his energy. Claire Hughes Johnson, former Stripe COO, emphasizes the shift from default 'yes' to default 'no,' prioritizing people over tasks, and making self-care non-negotiable by scheduling exercise and sleep as core job requirements.

Diana Chapman, conscious leadership expert, presents three major decisions: eliminating obligation-based living in favor of 'whole body yes' decisions, creating relationship contracts using the 15 commitments of conscious leadership to minimize drama, and holding two opposing truths simultaneously (work matters and doesn't matter) to achieve sustainable living. Anne Lamott, bestselling author, shares her transformation at age 60 when she stopped seeking external validation, reclaimed her authentic self, and learned to breathe consciously, emphasizing that 'the point is not to try harder, but to resist less.'

Key Takeaways

[2:36]
David Yarrow made the counterintuitive decision not to remarry after his divorce at 40, despite the emotional vulnerability and self-doubt he felt. This choice allowed him and his ex-wife to remain close friends and co-parents without the complications of blended families. 'We often think about how different it would have been if we'd both gone and remarried and started new families. As it is, the four of us now spend an awful lot of time together as a unit. It's abnormal probably for outsiders, but I think because we've been through pain and seen from the outside the issues that perhaps others can have when stepchildren are introduced into things, we recognize that it was right for us.'
[5:25]
Yarrow dramatically reduced his circle of close friends from 60-70 people to just 7-8, recognizing that true close friendship is impossible with large numbers. He learned this during a family bereavement when he realized he only wanted to speak to his closest people. 'I think that principle holds true at 30 close friends or 20. I think I probably have now, outside my immediate family, seven or eight people that I'd consider very close to.' He treats energy as 'a luxury brand' that must be 'fairly elusive at times' and invested wisely.
[6:34]
Yarrow operates without an agent, which initially created complexity through direct requests, but ultimately simplified his life by eliminating the middleman's 'financial thirst' and allowing him direct control over decisions. The key insight is that 'the ability to say no comes with age' and recognizing when every part of common sense suggests something is a 'suboptimal use of time.' He advocates for having fewer commitments done well rather than spreading energy thin across many obligations.

Action Items

Put your hand on your belly and inhale slowly all the way down until you can see your hand rise
Anne Lamott's first breathing technique for conscious breathing and simplification
Imagine your heart has nostrils and experience expanding your heart by breathing through it
Anne Lamott's second meditation technique learned from Ram Dass for heart-centered breathing
Start each year by identifying who are the most important people in your life to spend time with
Claire Hughes Johnson's people-first approach to decision making - if someone isn't on this priority list, it's easier to say no
When you say yes to something, clarify your specific goal and mission for that commitment
Hughes Johnson's practice to avoid overwhelm by being clear about why you're there rather than trying to maximize every aspect
Schedule self-care activities like exercise and sleep as non-negotiable calendar items
Hughes Johnson treats these as job requirements rather than optional extras, booking other things around them
Track what gives you energy versus what drains it, then protect the energy-giving activities
Hughes Johnson's method for identifying what's truly important to your well-being and effectiveness
Create relationship contracts with people you spend meaningful time with using agreed-upon principles
Diana Chapman's approach to eliminate drama by having everyone agree to the same relationship 'rules' upfront
When you want to blame someone, instead take responsibility for how you co-created the situation and 'teach a class' on it
Chapman's no-blame practice that transforms victim mentality into ownership and problem-solving

Books Mentioned

From Strength to Strength
by Arthur Brooks
Claire Hughes Johnson borrowed the concept of prioritizing people over tasks from this book, helping her focus on who matters most rather than just what needs to be done
The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership
by Diana Chapman (co-author)
Chapman uses these commitments as the framework for relationship contracts with everyone she spends meaningful time with, originally developed for business but applied to personal relationships
Bird by Bird
by Anne Lamott
Tim Ferriss mentions this as one of his absolute favorite books and a favorite of many people trying to simplify and do one thing well, one step at a time
Scaling People
by Claire Hughes Johnson
Hughes Johnson's book on tactics for management and company building, which is how she became known and met Tim Ferriss
Good Writing
by Anne Lamott and Neil Allen
Anne Lamott's most recent book, written with her husband Neil Allen

People Mentioned

Terry Ritchie
Anne Lamott's Diocesan priest friend who told her 'the point is not to try harder, but to resist less' - a quote that instantly simplified life for her
Ram Dass
Spiritual teacher who taught Anne Lamott the meditation technique of imagining your heart has nostrils and breathing through your heart to make it bigger
Patrick Collison
Stripe CEO and founder whom Claire Hughes Johnson told about her 'retention exercise' when she decided to prioritize self-care as part of her job requirements
Grace
Diana Chapman's friend who used playful role-playing (pretending to be 'Grace Ann' with a Southern accent) to address hurt feelings and maintain connection
Neil Allen
Anne Lamott's husband and co-author of their book 'Good Writing'
Derek Sivers
Mentioned as a featured guest in past episodes of Tim's simplify series
Seth Godin
Mentioned as a featured guest in past episodes of Tim's simplify series
Martha Beck
Mentioned as a featured guest in past episodes of Tim's simplify series
Maria Popova
Mentioned as a featured guest in past episodes of Tim's simplify series
Morgan Housel
Mentioned as a featured guest in past episodes of Tim's simplify series
Cal Newport
Mentioned as a featured guest in past episodes of Tim's simplify series

Notable Quotes

"the point is not to try harder, but to resist less"
— Terry Ritchie (Anne Lamott's priest friend)
This insight instantly simplified Lamott's life by showing her the futility of endless striving to achieve, improve, and impress
"I think energy is a luxury brand. And like any luxury brand, it's gotta be fairly elusive at times"
— David Yarrow
Explaining why he reduced his close friendships to preserve his energy for what matters most
"the ability to say no comes with age"
— David Yarrow
Reflecting on how he learned to decline suboptimal uses of his time
"I feel like I need to be needed and that I earn love and affection by saying yes and being of use to people as opposed to just being me"
— Claire Hughes Johnson
Her honest self-assessment of why she over-commits and struggles with saying no
"simple happens when your inner and outer worlds are in agreement"
— Diana Chapman
Her definition of what she calls a 'whole body yes' - when every part of you aligns with what's happening externally

Other Resources

The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership
framework
Diana Chapman's methodology for creating relationship contracts that eliminate drama and complexity
Five Bullet Friday
newsletter
Tim Ferriss promotes his free weekly newsletter that shares cool discoveries, with 1.5-2 million subscribers
Whole body yes
concept
Diana Chapman's term for when inner and outer worlds are in complete alignment, creating simplicity
No blame zone
relationship practice
Diana Chapman's family rule where instead of blaming, each person takes responsibility and 'teaches a class' on how they co-created the problem
Default yes to default no
decision framework
The career transition Claire Hughes Johnson learned from Tim Ferriss about switching from saying yes to everything to being more selective

Full Transcript

Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferris. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferris Show. This time around, we have a different format from my usual long form interviews. This is bite sized tips from people I love who've been on the podcast, And here's the theme. Many of us feel like we're drowning in complexity. I think day on day, the world just seems insane, whether that is with respect to inboxes or decisions or otherwise. Perhaps you're even slipping in and out of overwhelm. I've been there. So I wanted to hit pause myself, figured some of you might wanna do the same thing, and ask a question. What are a few decisions, say one to three, that could dramatically simplify my life in 2026? To explore that, I invited four listener favorites to chime in with their personal stories and what they have done themselves. David Yarrow, who is one of the world's best selling fine art photographers. His story is crazy. Listen to his episode on the podcast a few out more. He has sold more than a $125,000,000 worth of photographs. There's a lot more to his career. So there's David Yarrow, Claire Hughes Johnson, one of my favorites also, former Stripe chief operations officer, that's COO, who helped scale Stripe from under 200 employees to more than 7,000 employees. Diana Chapman, coauthor of the 15 commitments of conscious leadership, and Anne Lamott, New York Times best selling author of Bird by Bird, one of my absolute favorite books. She's written much more, of course, but Bird by Bird is not only my favorite, but a favorite of many, many people who are simply trying to simplify and do one thing well, one step at a time. Past episodes of this simplify series feature lessons from Derek Sivers, Seth Godin, Martha Beck, Maria Popova, Morgan Housel, Cal Newport, and many others. So be sure to check those out. But in the meantime, please enjoy this wide ranging but intensely practical episode on how to simplify your life. Optimal, minimal. At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking. Can I ask you a personal question? No. I would assume that perfect time. What it's like to be alive? I'm a cybernetic organism living tissue over metal endoscopy. Me, Tim Ferriss Show. My name is David Yarrow. I'm a British photographer that works principally in America. We sell our art through the fine art market, around the world, but principally in America. I think the number one thing that I did to simplify my life was not to get remarried after I got divorced at a very young age of maybe 40 years old. My wife had given me the two most important things in my life, my two children. And it would have been easy at that stage of enormous self doubt to jump into a new life with someone else, and that could only have made life more complicated. I've got massive respect for people to choose to take that path. But for me, I had my family, and I didn't want it to get it more complicated. I just hoped that the reasons why we'd separated would over time heal as we matured as individuals. And that luckily is exactly what happened, and we're far better friends. We spend a lot of our lives together now, and we often think about how different it would have been if we'd both gone and remarried and started new families. As it is, the four of us now spend an awful lot of time together as a unit. It's abnormal probably for outsiders, But I think because we've been through pain and seen from the outside the issues that perhaps others can have when stepchildren are introduced into things, we recognize that it was right for us, not right for everyone, but it certainly allowed us both to focus on our jobs and the other parts of our lives without the stress and complications of complicated families. I think complicated families can lead to complicated lives. And I think if you're single, but you have the mother of your children as close to you as you possibly can, it does allow you to be not selfish, but self indulgent and appreciative of your goals. And I think it's led to a far stronger relationship with my children than otherwise would be the case. And if you have a strong relationship with your children, I think it makes it much easier to be productive in other parts of your life. That is not to preach to anyone else. I've made more mistakes than most people. But I do know that the simplification of my life born out of the decision not to seek comfort in a second marriage was key to the happiness in my life. I think another tenet of the simplification of my life, which has been very, very necessary, is to have a perpetual filter in my address book and specifically in terms of the number of close friends that someone in the late summer of their life can have. In when I was young, I used to believe that it was an asset to have 60 or 70 people that you could call close friends. I think that's impossible. It's almost an oxymoron to say you can have 60 close friends. I think that principle holds true at 30 close friends or 20. I think I probably have now, outside my immediate family, seven or eight people that I'd consider very close to. I had a bereavement in the family recently and with my brother, and, ultimately, I didn't wanna speak to too many people. I It was too emotional, and I just spoke to the people that I was closest to. I'm a person that likes to give energy to any relationship, and I think energy is a luxury brand. And like any luxury brand, it's gotta be fairly elusive at times. You need to invest in yourself, and I've been very guilty of investing too much in people that perhaps don't deserve it or won't reciprocate it. That's not to be mean. It's just common sense. I think in business as well, a corollary of this is I don't have an agent. I've never have had an agent. I know there's very good agents in the world that earn every penny, but I found a lot of them to be slightly financially thirsty and slightly goal hungry when it comes to taking the a claim. And the lack of an agent has meant that there's been a lot of direct contact one to one with me. Will you do this? Will you do that? And the ability to say no comes with age. I think I was far too willing to say yes to things where every sinew of common sense suggested that was a suboptimal use of time. I think the idea of going out seven nights a week is totally exhausting, and it impinges on the two nights where you do have to give good energy. I don't think I'll reverse this trend. I might end up with no friends, but I think having 10 friends is the right number for me, and it has ultimately simplified my life. Hello. Claire Hughes Johnson here. I've spent over twenty years scaling tech companies first at Google and then as the chief operating officer of Stripe for many years. And I guess I'm best known for writing a book called Scaling People, Tactics for Management and Company Building. And that is how I met Tim. I'll be honest. I'm surprised Tim asked me to talk about simplifying my life because that is not something that I think I'm particularly good at. In fact, I think in my interview with Tim, he ended up advising me. And I think the advice he shared was there's a point in your career when you switch from default, yes, which is a great position when you're trying to meet people and learn new things and build your connections and your network and your career to default, no. And that was one of my big lessons from our conversation. But with that, maybe not confidence inspiring introduction, I'll share some thoughts on simplifying my life. I think the first actually thought for me is I needed to understand why I said yes to too many things. And that involved doing some introspection and some work. And, yes, getting some help in talk therapy, which is not something I've had a lot of success with. But for some reason, I feel like I need to be needed and that I earn love and affection by saying yes and being of use to people as opposed to just being me. And I'm still working on that. So that's number one to simplify your life is why is your life complicated? And mine has always been complicated because I say yes to too many things. All right. So second lesson is I think I mostly borrowed this from Arthur Brooks book, From Strength to Strength, but you'll find it in a few different sort of prioritize your life advice books. And that is, I think we sometimes get too oriented toward tasks, jobs, things we need to do with our time. And if you flip it and think about people, it's easier to see your priorities. Like, who are the people that I most want to spend time with? The easiest one for me is my children. But instead of thinking, well, I want to do this thing, like go see this soccer game or go to my friend's book event. I think, well, who's the person involved? And I start the year with, like, who are the most important people in my life to spend time with? And if it's one of the people on that list, I'm going to say yes. And it doesn't matter what we're doing. It's helped me to make sure I'm spending time with the most important people. And it's really easy now when someone asked me to do something that compromises time with my children. I just say no because they are the most important. I left an event today early to come home to have dinner with my son. So that's the people flip. When I do say yes, I'll also mention that I've learned to be better about understanding. Okay. Why did I say yes? What's my goal? What's my job at this thing that I said yes to? And sometimes you get into a situation you think, well, I should be networking. I should be meeting people. But maybe I just went to give a talk and I'm going to give a talk and then I'm going to leave. Or I went to meet just one person who I wanted to catch up with and I go and spend time with them and then I can leave. But keeping your eyes on your mission for how you're spending your time can help not feel so guilty about not doing the other things that might be in front of you with your yes. The final way that I've simplified my life is I've built some things into my, again, my calendar and my time that I think people think of as sort of extracurricular that I've realized are just too important to skip. The most notable of those is time to exercise. I am not a big athlete. I wasn't a super successful athlete in high school. I worked out a little bit in college, but I came to understand that exercise is important to my mental health and just feeling good in my body and being a confident person and a well balanced leader, getting sleep is also very important to me and my success. And once I realized that I wasn't as effective, I certainly when I started at Stripe, I was compromising on sleep. I was compromising on exercise. I didn't compromise on having dinner with my kids most nights when I wasn't traveling, but I was compromising myself. And I had this realization that to be the best leader, I needed more sleep and more exercise, and I made it part of my job. And I told Stripe CEO and founder Patrick that I was going to embark on a retention exercise, meaning retain myself at the company. And that meant I was going to come in a little late one or two mornings, leave early one day, and I booked time with a friend to work out. And I just instead of just doing it on the weekends, I made time during the week to get enough exercise. And I also started to have rules for myself about when I would shut the laptop and get to bed. And that probably did retain me for a few more years. I guess I still work part time at Stripe, so maybe it's a long term retention. Nobody knows. You don't know what that thing is for other people. But if you think about, like, if your energy is this these scales and unbalanced, am I getting energy from how I'm spending my life, or is it being taken away? Try to measure what it is. It might be spending time with an elderly parent. It might be time with your kids. It might be exercise. It might be having a deep conversation with someone once a week about a topic that's not your work. But look for what those things are and track them and then make sure you're booking time for those things into your calendar as if it's a job. And don't be apologetic. Don't compromise that thing unless it's an emergency. Really don't compromise it and book around it. And I think the people who know me really well are surprised at how much I prioritize getting a workout done. And I no longer feel guilty about that. I feel really good that I've decided this thing is important to how I live my life and it's not negotiable. Longtime listeners know how important privacy is to me. In fact, my friends would call me paranoid, or they used to call me paranoid. And now they think I was just depression in a sense. These days, you may have noticed it is a lot harder to protect privacy. Anyone can find your information with a quick search. It's shockingly easy, and I've had friends and paid people to red team me to try to find my info. And, what you'll notice is that shadowy data brokers quietly collect and trade your home address, phone, family members, and more. It's a mess. You have to have a plan for defense, and you can fight back with Incogni. That's I n c o g n I. Incogni automatically removes your information across four twenty plus data brokers with 1,000 plus additional sites covered in their unlimited plan, and they keep it scrubbed automatically. Deloitte has independently verified the headline numbers. In other words, two forty five million plus removal requests. And the company adheres to strict security standards with an A plus rating from the Better Business Bureau. And with their unlimited plan, if you find your info on a site they don't monitor, send them the link and their privacy team will handle it. Go to incogni.com/tim, incogni,.com/tim, and use code Tim at checkout to get 60% off of an annual plan. One more time, incogni.com/tim. As many of you know, for the last few years, I've been sleeping on a Midnight Luxe mattress from today's sponsor, Helix Sleep. I also have one in the guest bedroom downstairs, and feedback from friends has always been fantastic. It's something they comment on without any prompting for me whatsoever. I also recently had a chance to test the Helix Sunset Elite. The Sunset Elite delivers exceptional comfort while putting the right support in the right spots. It is made with five tailored foam layers including a base layer with full perimeter zone to lumbar support right where I need it, and middle layers with premium foam and micro coils that create a soft contouring feel. This spring, if you're thinking about upgrading your sleep, Helix will ship it to your door for free in The US, let you sleep on it for one hundred and twenty nights. And if you don't love it, they're happy with Helix guarantee. It makes returns completely painless. So check it out. Go to helixsleep.com/tim for 27% off-site wide. One more time, that's helixsleep.com/tim for 27% off-site wide. Check it out. Hi there. This is Diana Chapman, and I am passionate about conscious leadership. I spent the last twenty years disrupting many influential leaders around the globe, teaching them that the thing standing between them and their next level of impact is usually themselves and most often their fears. So I've been asked to talk about decisions I've made that have helped simplify my life, and one of the key things I've learned is that simple happens when your inner and outer worlds are in agreement. I call that a whole body yes, that every part of me is in alignment inside with what is happening outside. I'm congruent. And when that happens, so much complexity drops away. I'm excited to share these three decisions I've made. And the first one is I made a decision a decade ago that I would no longer live in any obligation. And what that means is I don't live anymore from a should. I should do this. I should do that because that's what a good daughter or a good partner or parent or friend does. Instead, I deeply listen. Is this what wants to happen? Would this serve me and them and my aliveness and the world as a whole? So now my choices come from a deep place of trust and no longer from the fear of disappointing people or breaking habits that you're supposed to do. I do wanna clarify one thing here. Some people ask, does that mean you love all the activities you are a part of with the people you do them with? And the answer is no. My husband might ask me to go to a concert of one of his favorite musicians, and I might not love that music. But what I would really enjoy is being with him, celebrating one of his favorite musicians, and being in all that joy with the crowd. That I have a whole body yes to, and so I go free of obligation. My inner and outer worlds are in agreement. The second decision I made, and this is a biggie, is that I decided that I wanted to create a relationship contract with every person I spend any meaningful amount of time with in my life. It's very similar to if I asked someone to come play a game with me, and I'd say, hey, here are the rules of the game, and I wanna ask if based on those rules, you'd be willing to play with me. And the value of all of us agreeing to a set of rules is that we have so little drama playing the game. And so I use that same concept with all of my close relationships, and I ask all of them, would you join me in a way of doing relationship? I use the 15 commitments of conscious leadership, which is based on the book of the same name I coauthored. And these commitments I brought to the business world, but they originally were in my personal life. And I started them in my relationship with my husband. And these commitments are ways we agree to do life, and then we make clear agreements with each other around how to do those. So for example, in all of my close relationships, I make an agreement with everyone that we don't blame each other. That instead, we each take a look at how we are cocreating whatever it is we would like to change. That way we're in a constant state of learning and growing and no blaming. Gosh, that ends so much drama and low drama makes a very simple life. When my family and I agreed that we would end blaming in our home, we literally put signs up around in different rooms with the word blame with a circle around it and an x through it. So when anybody blamed, any one of us could point to the one of the signs and say, reminder, you're in a no blame zone. And then the agreement was rather than blame, we would take responsibility for how we were co creating the thing that we were complaining about and teach a class. So an example might look like I blame my family for making a mess in the kitchen, and instead, I say, I wanna take responsibility. I don't have clear agreements with you guys about how we keep the kitchen clean, and so I'm co creating a messy kitchen. So I don't wanna blame anymore. I wanna take responsibility for how I have a part to play in this. And rather than blame, I wanna clean it up. And in this case, make some clear agreements so we can permanently end this pattern that recycles over and over again. I had a client who called and was frustrated because his CEO, who he reported to as the COO, was not giving him the feedback he wanted for his professional development. He was blaming. So I said, hey. Remember, we've committed to no blame, so now teach me the class. I too wanna have my CEO not give me the feedback I want for my professional development. So teach me, how do you make sure you don't get the feedback you want? So my client thought for a moment and said, okay. Here's some ideas. Here's how I do it. Step one, when the CEO cancels one on one meetings on a regular basis, don't complain about it. Don't ask them to get rescheduled and assume other things are more important than you. Two, don't ask for feedback. Just sit around waiting, feeling entitled, but don't clarify that it's important to you. Three, when feedback occasionally does come, don't appreciate it, don't value it. Instead, particularly valuable feedback, and therefore, don't encourage the person to give you more of it. So I said, great. If I did those three steps already, I would probably create the exact same issue that you have. Then my client agreed to go back to the CEO and say to him, hey. I wanna take responsibility for how I'm not getting the feedback I want, And he taught the class to his colleague. That's how it's played. Another thing we agree to is to stay deeply in curiosity and not get caught up in being righteous with one another. And if we do notice righteousness, just gently invite each other to see that in the game we're playing, that's considered a quote foul, and we recommit to coming back to curiosity. We also make agreements about letting it be okay to feel our feelings and let the other one have their feelings. You know, a lot of drama comes because we're trying to control each other's feelings. When my son was applying to colleges, he really wanted to go to Berkeley. And the letter came and he and my husband and I were sitting together in a room and he was rejected. And in that moment, he started to cry. And I jumped in and started to say, it's fine. It's fine. You're going to UCLA. That's such a great school too. And my husband interrupted and said, sweetheart, let him feel his feelings. And so my son let a few tears come through so he could let go of the vision he had of going to Berkeley. Once he did that, which only took about thirty seconds, he was then able to open up and be excited about the opportunity to go to UCLA. I'm so grateful that my husband called out the pattern of how I was trying to control my son's feelings, really so that I could control my own. So he asked both my son and me to feel our feelings. We also make an agreement that we reveal to one another any thoughts we've had three or more times so we don't withhold because when you withhold, you withdraw, and when you withdraw, things get complex. And then of course, gossip can get started and then you really get complex. We also agree that we do our best to keep our agreements. We only make agreements that we're really willing to honor, and we do our best to do what we say we're going to do. Another one of my favorite agreements is to play with things when they start to get serious. That's one of my favorite ones to do with the people around me who are willing to do that, because my goodness can we move through a lot of complexity quickly if we can play. 40% faster, it says that kids learn when they're playing, and I think probably the same thing is true for adults. I'm really lucky that I have so many people that will play with me when things get serious. My friend Grace is one of them. And one day I get a phone call and I pick up the phone. And on the other end, there's this very playful voice in a southern accent, and it said, hi. My name is Grace Ann. Is this Diana? And I said, yes. It is. Well, Diane, I wanna let you know, Grace, I've learned is real hurt by something you said the other day. Now, she's not gonna call you and tell you that. She's kinda prideful, but I'm calling because I thought maybe you'd like to know and give you a little hint about that. And I said, Well, Grace, Anne, thank you so much. I'm really grateful. And she said, you're welcome, and she hung up. So, of course, I picked the phone back up and called Grace, and I said, hey, Grace. I wanna let you know that I have a sense that you might have been hurt by something I said the other day. And she said, yeah. You know, actually, I was. And we got to have a conversation about it and move through it and come out on the other end close and connected. And I so appreciated that she didn't know how to reach out, but through play, she was able to learn, and so was I, how to come back into connection. A third decision that I made in my life occurred at a time where I was working really hard, more hours than I ought to because it was compromising my health and well-being, which has its own kind of complexity. At that time, I believe that the overwhelm came because I really wanted to be right in a story I had that my work in the world really mattered. And because it really mattered, I had to push myself and drive myself, and that wasn't working. So I came to a decision in which I wanted to hold two truths equally. And the two truths for me are my work does really matter. The values I hold, the intentions I have, where I place my attention, All of these have impact on others. And that really matters at the same time. I choose to hold the belief equally that my work does not matter, that the world would be just fine if I was no longer here. This is a wonderfully brilliant, intelligent world, and it can figure itself out without me. And holding these two truths together, offers me the opportunity to live in congruence, listening to what is mine to do? What is not mine to do? How do I do it in a way that is sustainable? Because living unsustainably creates a tremendous amount of complexity. And it's the kind of complexity I don't want to live with any longer. It is my great hope that some of these ideas inspire some of you and that in trying them on for yourself, you discover there is real liberation and aliveness and joy in the experience of having your inner and outer worlds in agreement. I am wishing you all so very well. Cheers to being human. It is not for the faint of heart, and if we can make it a little simpler, amen. Hi. My name is Anne Lamott. I'm the author of 21 books. The last one was called Good Writing, which I wrote with my husband, Neil Allen. At the age of 60, twelve years ago, I woke up feeling a heaviness on my chest, a cellular understanding of how much I had been carrying all these decades that were things my parents had told me about myself that were simply not true. My parents were very progressive, but they started seeing me for my achievements at five or six instead of for the goofy loving being that we are all underneath the surface. When I decided on the right to be who I truly was instead of the person I had always agreed and striven to be, I e highly successful, endlessly charming, life got a lot more simple. I had to do the deep dive into the belief that I needed people's respect and affection to feel of value, to feel that I was a valuable human being. Once I realized that this feeling wasn't out there, but that it was rather going to be an inside job, my life got much quieter, and I could slow down and actually live it, savor it, breathe it in. Reclaiming the goofball inside helped me reclaim curiosity, which they had stopped grading for by about first grade, and this made everything so much simpler. I no longer had to keep the same six plates spinning in the air so people would think I was fabulous. I discovered that I didn't have to keep trying so hard all the time in every way. My Diocesan priest friend, Terry Ritchie, once told me that the point is not to try harder, but to resist less. Hearing this instantly simplified life for me, seeing the folly of the endless trying to achieve, to improve, to impress, whatever, helped me find my way back each day and and in every way to one simple thing I wanted to bring my focus and best self to. I was no longer in the frantic, striving, complex world of needing people to validate my parking ticket because I was affirming my own worth. I could breathe again, and there is no more simple, profound, enriching change we can make than learning to breathe again. To really breathe gives us an umbilical connection to life, to the universe, our own hearts, and our deepest selves. Two meditation techniques helped me learn to breathe with consciousness. One was simply to put my hand on my belly and inhale slowly all the way down until I could see my hand rise. I ask you, is there anything more simple than breathing into your hand and watching your tummy go up and down, expand, and contract? The other technique was something I learned from Ram Dass who taught that we could imagine our hearts as having nostrils and experience expanding our heart in this way. The heart is our spiritual core, and it feels just wonderful to make it bigger. 60 was a significant birthday because I realized I was starting the third third of my life. Many people I love deeply had died, and I truly got on a cellular level that we're all on borrowed time, and it's good to remind oneself of that. It makes life so much more simple when we stop hitting the snooze button and start being more intentional about how we spend our days and our life force. I felt like I had been flying around in the little plane of me with the all the tense little boxes of no longer meaningful stuff that was so hard to let go of, but that it was keeping me flying too low metaphorically. So with the help of wise teachers, I started tossing it out of the airplane, and I felt myself begin to rise. Simplicity in life is related to creating spaciousness and greater weightlessness, reclaiming curiosity and spaced outedness, which brings us back into the present moment, the momentous moment, which is home. Thank you. Hey, guys. This is Tim again. Just one more thing before you take off, and that is five bullet Friday. Would you enjoy getting a short email from me every Friday that provides a little fun before the weekend? Between one and a half and 2,000,000 people subscribe to my free newsletter, my super short newsletter called Five Bold Friday. Easy to sign up, easy to cancel. It is basically a half page that I send out every Friday to share the coolest things I've found or discovered or have started exploring over that week. It's kinda like my diary of cool things. It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading, albums perhaps, gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcast guests. And these strange esoteric things end up in my field, and then I test them, and then I share them with you. So if that sounds fun, again, it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend, something to think about. If you'd like to try it out, just go to tim.blog/friday, type that into your browser, tim.blog/friday, drop in your email, and you'll get the very next one. Thanks for listening. As many of you know, for the last few years, I've been sleeping on a Midnight Luxe mattress from today's sponsor, Helix Sleep. I also have one in the guest bedroom downstairs, and feedback from friends has always been fantastic. It's something they comment on without any prompting from me whatsoever. I also recently had a chance to test the Helix Sunset Elite. The Sunset Elite delivers exceptional comfort while putting the right support in the right spots. 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It's shockingly easy, and I've had friends and paid people to red team me to try to find my info. And, what you'll notice is that shadowy data brokers quietly collect and trade your home address, phone, family members, and more. It's a mess. You have to have a plan for defense and you can fight back with Incogni. That's I n c o g n I. Incogni automatically removes your information across 420 plus data brokers with 1,000 plus additional sites covered in their unlimited plan, and they keep it scrubbed automatically. Deloitte has independently verified the headline numbers. In other words, 245,000,000 plus removal requests. And the company adheres to strict security standards with an a plus rating from the Better Business Bureau. And with their unlimited plan, if you find your info on a site they don't monitor, send them the link and their privacy team will handle it. Go to incogni.com/tim, incogni.com/tim, and use code tim at checkout to get 60% off of an annual plan. 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