Harm reduction secrets | Nicole Lee
46:41
Can we have too much compassion?
12:12
Flourishing through compassion
6:54
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@maggiemurray6228
@maggiemurray6228 3 күн бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed your conversations and hearing more about the diploma course through Wendy's experiences of developing and running the course. It's definitely given me a flavour of how it would be structured and sounds incredibly supportive for people to develop the skills at their own pace. Thank you for your questions to bring clarity to the training. Much gratitude as always
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 3 күн бұрын
Thank you Maggie. And yes, it was so great to get a little look (and listen) inside the CMF diploma! Wendy and the team are doing such a great job with it!
@veronicadanielsson7777
@veronicadanielsson7777 5 күн бұрын
Yes! I would love that T shirt!
@tonyburton419
@tonyburton419 7 күн бұрын
Mix of ACT, DBT and CFT - Stan - maybe CFT leans into a more 3rd wave mode after all? Great video, fine bullet points. We can own stuff that might have contributed to our "suffering", but recognise this, develop compassionate understanding and take forward a different direction.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 6 күн бұрын
Beautifully stated, re your summary of this video. Re CFT and other approaches…I interviewed Paul today!! Brilliant chat, loved it. And he touches on his integrative approach. Will be up in a few weeks 👌.
@SM-yf7cs
@SM-yf7cs 7 күн бұрын
Pray! Call the Name of Jesus... ❤
@tonyburton419
@tonyburton419 9 күн бұрын
Dennis makes some excellent points - reflective, not overly rigid, and cautious with his thinking. Going to have to listen to the whole of this again. Great guest.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 8 күн бұрын
Yes, Dennis is awesome. And I agree, well worth a second listen. He goes in some fabulous directions!
@julie5668
@julie5668 9 күн бұрын
I would love a one-to-one session with Dr Doty.
@shcc5589
@shcc5589 10 күн бұрын
What a compassionate conversation. I have deeply resonate with the "Civil War" idea, it's definitely an internal civil (parts) war where the inner critic attacking it's on system (community) parts and where himself have been created by neglecting care givers which were supposed to be the safe "civil" to internalize. Speaking of Schema Therapy, one of the things that supports me allot to activate the soothing system and restoring the capacity for self compassion is children books, and recently there are few new ones about self compassion for kids which are simply amazing. It's OK -Wendy O'Leary and Good Morning, I Love you, Violet ! - Shauna Shapiro PhD. Maybe interesting to hear your thoughts on those books 😊
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching and commenting. Your elaboration around the ‘civil war’ idea is really helpful. And CFT definitely does try to think about it a multiplicity/multiple selves/parts kind of way. And yes! I will check out those children’s books for sure. I am familiar with Shaliros work, and will also look into the other one! Thanks again!
@DJSTOEK
@DJSTOEK 12 күн бұрын
Thanks
@Sagehealth
@Sagehealth 13 күн бұрын
He disparaged the Secret program AND Rhonda Byrne in typical yesterday's Stanford mysogynist misunderstanding! The spiritual FLOW of connecting with the HIGHEST AND BEST GOOD for EVERYONE is definitely taught by all the teachers he mentioned, but Doty's EGO has not found balance, equilibrium or ANY spiritual humility or connection! Like MANY successful academics and scientists, he is thinking correctly (finally) about the necessity of COMPASSION and KINDNESS, as so many of us already have found. However, his compassion has not found its depth yet. He is still BRAGGING about his accomplishments!! GREAT, he did good at Stanford ( full disclosure: I"m a UC Berkeley grad, older than Doty and have studied with, learned things from as best I could, and become Friends with almost ALL of those brilliant spiritual leaders.} Doty is on HIS path, but has not yet encountered his INNER MYSTIC. Good luck, blessings, and stay the course of COMPASSION. {A TEST: how much compassion do I have for each homeless American, or Palestinian, or Columbian citizen who is homeless in the hundreds at your door!} And, his compassion does not yet extend to those who suffer with negative attitudes!! I am an energy psychologist and hypnotherapist, and recommend to Doty that he go much DEEPER into himself. I think Dick Schwartz's IFS therapeutic approach might be transformative for Mr Doty. Thank You. Blessings, love and PEACE to both of you for ALL the GOOD you are intending to do!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@wendywood4719
@wendywood4719 15 күн бұрын
Thank you Chris and Stan for bringing such wisdom to us
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 15 күн бұрын
Thank you, Wendy!
@Alfonsina_Lk
@Alfonsina_Lk 16 күн бұрын
I don't know why everytime I subscribe to this channel, I appear unsuscribed 10 minutes later and it is a pity because I don't receive alerts about this amazing contents. Thanks for this channel, it is very helpful for learning and applying compassion ❤
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 16 күн бұрын
Oh, I’m sorry to hear that. I feel like I have heard about the same thing happening on other, bigger channels. How frustrating! I’ll look into it, but KZbin can be quite the mystery! And thank you for watching, and trying to subscribe!! I really appreciate you being here 🙏.
@Alfonsina_Lk
@Alfonsina_Lk 16 күн бұрын
❤❤❤
@richardwylie07
@richardwylie07 20 күн бұрын
Great interview Stan. I was blown away when Dr Lee mentioned Ben Cousins' father driving him to a drug deal. That story has stuck in my mind for many years as an act of 'radical compassion'. Incredible.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 19 күн бұрын
Yes, radical compassion indeed! Compassion is being sensitive to suffering and taking wise action to alleviate suffering or prevent it. And courage is often the key!
@sharonwerner7949
@sharonwerner7949 21 күн бұрын
Thank you. I've found Russell's first book to be so helpful and have been looking forward to the workbook. And thank you for bringing up the topic of "angry women." It was both painful and validating to hear.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 21 күн бұрын
I think the workbook will be great! And yes, thinking about anger across genders is important.
@sharonwerner7949
@sharonwerner7949 21 күн бұрын
Beautiful, thank you! I have been learning more about schema therapy and this episode is such a wonderful bridge between the two therapies, which seem to have so much common ground. I see so much commonality between the Healthy Adult and the Compassionate Self as well as between "multiple selves" and schemas/modes. I believe I first encountered schemas (at least in terms of schema therapy) from a book by Chris Germer, including the value in being able t o identify schemas as "tender spots" we can remain aware of in our self-compassion practice. So, thank you for bringing this subject to your series! Much wonderful food for thought.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 21 күн бұрын
Thank you Sharon! And yes, “tender spots” is such a sympathetic and poetic way to think about schemas. And yes, much overlap as you say. I am becoming more and more interested in schemas therapy and cft integration!
@jez770
@jez770 22 күн бұрын
Theres nothing wrong with wanting physical items like a nice car or a nice house. Using the moralistic terms "self serving, narcissistic" is totally out of line when describing someone who simply wants a perfectly legit thing, be it a Ford Fiesta or a Porsche, a 1 bed flat or an 8 bed house. This guy is literally just describing "the secret", but using slightly different terminology, so as to lend himself an aura of authority - to sell a book that doesn't really add anything practical to the subject that hasn't been described in dozens of existing books. He is just saying the same thing, maybe with a weak reference here or there, his book isn't the "antithesis of the secret". He, in fact, is the narcissist - not those applying the "law of attraction", ie. those attuning their mind to that which they want (rather than that which they don't want), and didn't need his advice on how to do so.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 22 күн бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to watch and consider the video, and for your comprehensive comments! I agree there’s nothing wrong with physical items, as you say. And it can be very powerful to attune the mind in a way that helps us to achieve the life we want. Thanks again!
@kizzyshealingpraktijk
@kizzyshealingpraktijk 23 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your insights. I’m a guide in the field of grief and loss. So interesting that connection with shame.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 23 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching! And given the work you do, check out the video from the week before Dr Germer, an interview with Darcy Harris who does a lot in the field of compassion based approaches to working with grief. Compassion-based approaches to working with grief, with Darcy Harris kzbin.info/www/bejne/pXmVgKp-gb9li9U
@ashnishah5703
@ashnishah5703 24 күн бұрын
@shcc5589
@shcc5589 24 күн бұрын
Every word....🙏 May the world, now more than ever would be able and opened up to this brilliant though simply natural human capability (not to say a core need). I know personally how hard is it to get open to self- compassion and to self-kindness in general because of an attachment traumatic childhood experiences, but it's there, inside of each and every one of us human being. Amen to that 🙏🙏 and thanks for spreading the word🙏🧡 such a needed and important one.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 24 күн бұрын
Thank you. And I agree completely!
@GeoffreyAkwete
@GeoffreyAkwete 25 күн бұрын
Absolutely courageous
@GeoffreyAkwete
@GeoffreyAkwete 21 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for tremendous endurance in the lives of the needy.
@kittenastrophy5951
@kittenastrophy5951 25 күн бұрын
So to speak, by order of one's seriousness, gilt > shame > embarrassment. Aren't them?
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 24 күн бұрын
Great question! I fell like that’s right with respect to shame and embarrassment, but guilt is thought o be quite different. Check the video I did on the difference between shame and guilt: Shame or Guilt: Different Emotional States with Different Motivations kzbin.info/www/bejne/eZ2khWmIasiXpdU
@donovangray4246
@donovangray4246 Ай бұрын
You mention the fact of a person having intrinsic worth for just being human, however I was raised Catholic and told that you had no worth outside of your value as being good enough according to your efforts to God and your parents. It would take a long time to believe that you had such worth if you were raised to believe that you couldn't earn it without the church's approval of you.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Yes, you make a great point. Our experiences growing up can be very powerful in terms of self-worth and self-compassion. Religion, culture, family environment, and so many other contextual factors during childhood can shape our sense of self and our sense of self-worth, and we can feel very stuck. With time and practice we can sometimes shift these feelings, but it’s hard. As Kristin said, if we can begin with moments of self-compassion, becoming aware of our own suffering, knowing we are not alone, and then offering ourselves kindness, then we can begin to ease our own suffering and move towards growth and flourishing.
@SM-yf7cs
@SM-yf7cs Ай бұрын
Jesus Christ is God! ❤
@lmansur1000
@lmansur1000 Ай бұрын
I know that the material you are teaching would be more effective to me if you gave examples from your own life. What brought you to realize all that?... that, to me, would be more empowering for understanding the principles that you are talking about... not just as theories but in practical examples from your own experience . I have only listened to 13 minutes on this one but also saw you in another interview with Marianne Williamson and that pulled me in. But still, to show how you came to what you know thru your own life will be so effective, I feel. Wishes for continues success and happiness on your journey.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for watching! You might be very interested in Dr Doty’s first book, Into the Magic Shop, where he does just what you have suggested. In fact, that first book of his is a memoir that dives very courageously into the realities of his life and how he discovered his teachings. Also, just in case you are interested, my TEDx talk also explores my own personal journey into compassion and self-compassion, and I’d be delighted if you felt interested in watching that. It’s only about 16 min. kzbin.info/www/bejne/nHPPi617obRnaLssi=iKqd-3dDCkyphbtW Thanks again! Stan.
@lmansur1000
@lmansur1000 Ай бұрын
@@drstansteindl Thank you for your helpful response and I shall listen to your Ted Talk tonight! 🙏🌺🌱
@lmansur1000
@lmansur1000 Ай бұрын
@@drstansteindl I just listened to your Ted Talk and it was real and authentic for sure. Very helpful. I also listened further than 13 minutes to your interview with Dr. Doty. Yours was definitely personal and that people can connect to. Dr. Doty, after a while started talking about his journey which was more down-to-earth and more interesting to listen to. (In fact, I saw him at the edge of emotions and then he seemed to push them aside because of who he is - a friend of the Dalai Llama etc... and being a neuro surgeon). But to make a difference, depending on who the audience one is intending, it is so much better in my opinion to make it real and authentic rather than lecturing or advising. Maybe he is still 'work in progress' re his journey. To unfold and emerge is not easy and is scary. I would have asked him whether the manifestation he managed to do, if he would have been better off without it, for e.g.. Maybe he can advise about that - to both combine the inner work with the outer manifestation but also relate it to his journey. My thoughts! and I do not mean to intrude. As an interviewer. it would be a good idea to challenge them with compassion when they pontificate so they may come back to earth and talk to us humans in a real way that would help us relate and understand. Thank you for connecting and listening - compassion is a challenging one... and self compassion is so very important ... to have true compassion (and not condescending compassion) for others, it will be very natural when one works on their own suffering. So you are heading towards the right direction and I wish you all the very best! Thanks again for the opportunity.
@Heiditopanga
@Heiditopanga Ай бұрын
Superb interview 🙇🏼‍♀️
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thanks! Glad you liked it :).
@Alfonsina_Lk
@Alfonsina_Lk Ай бұрын
Thanks much for this beautiful interview❤🎉
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thank you for watching and I am so glad you enjoyed it!
@Amor-Fati.
@Amor-Fati. Ай бұрын
Is there a cure to being to compassionate. Too much empathy
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
This is a brilliant question and a tricky one to answer. For me there might be two parts to it. The first is the importance of wisdom in compassion. Taking wise action is key. What is it that would be helpful in this situation, rather than harmful? There are a number of "near enemies" of compassion, such as pity, taking over, knowing what's best etc. The second part is the importance of balance across the three flows of compassion: compassion for others, receiving compassion from others, and self-compassion. Jack Kornfield once said, "compassion without self-compassion is incomplete," and I think there is also a lot of wisdom in that. So it is really important that we make sure our own needs are met in order to sustain meeting the needs and offering compassion to others. We could spend hours diving into your important question, so that's just a couple of thoughts. Thanks for watching and commenting!
@Amor-Fati.
@Amor-Fati. Ай бұрын
@drstansteindl That was some very wise words indeed. And very helpful. If i gave myself, even half the compassion I give to others, then maybe I wouldn't get taken advantage of by the usual, emotional vampires. Your perspective, was an approach, I didnt even think of. Thank you so much! My kindness, is no longer a weakness👍
@StarceySMMA
@StarceySMMA Ай бұрын
great podcast
@selengebacin3030
@selengebacin3030 Ай бұрын
Really liked the way dr steindl interview dr james doty..he gave space for dr j doty to answer it very clear way without interrupt it..and all questions are worthy..👍🇸🇬🇸🇬
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for your kind words!
@tonyburton419
@tonyburton419 Ай бұрын
Over the next 3 days, I can catch up with recent missed podcasts...home alone for a few days!
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Sounds awesome!
@justbecause968
@justbecause968 Ай бұрын
Thank you the way you explain things is very clear and helpful
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
I’m glad it helped!
@hadleymanmusic
@hadleymanmusic Ай бұрын
ive found its tit for tat . if you buy one the other comes with it
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thanks for your thoughts :).
@lisal3928
@lisal3928 Ай бұрын
This is incredible and total truth!! It confirms a lot for me and the compassion I feel for others, as well as other relevant items noted.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thank you! Yes, Dr Doty is incredible :).
@georgeweller1
@georgeweller1 Ай бұрын
Thats not the point. The compassion is misplaced or will make things worse. Either A) the turtle is bad, or B) helping the turtle is bad. For A) the turtle *deserves* to be tangled. Maybe its eating endagered jellyfish, or maybe its Hitler tangled up on the beach. Do you still help him? What if people are upsert or angry because you did this. For B) maybe helping the turtle will make others angry with you. Maybe the turtle it has to learn to untangle itself, or maybe untagling the turtle releases yet more trash onto the beach getting other turtles ensnared, or perhaps in the process you injure the turtle and it struggles making the knots even tighter... imagine an angry conservationist seeing this happen and yelling at you. Compassion is NOT SAFE.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for going onto the next video and giving it a watch! I can see you were open to it, but then the metaphor and what it was trying to explain didn't land well. You are very concerned that compassion will have a negative impact, and the risk of such a negative impact is too great. And, although you didn't say this specifically, you may feel that self-compassion is also too risky in terms of negative consequences. I appreciate what you have said and respect that perspective. Compassion is not safe. And it is true that it takes a lot of wisdom, strength, courage and commitment to be compassionate towards others, and towards ourselves. I'm curious, what about the other side of the argument? What are some of the possible benefits to compassion, if any? In what situations might compassion be a good thing? And what about self-compassion? What might be some example scenarios where you would encourage someone to be kind, supportive, encouraging, compassionate towards themselves?
@georgeweller1
@georgeweller1 Ай бұрын
@@drstansteindl I mean self compassion. I am bad, therefore being compassionate to myself is wrong. Any alleged benefits of that compassion are irrelevant. I would of course tell my friends to be kind to themselves but they’re not vile, worthless losers. I don’t want to be kind to myself. I don’t deserve it. Others will react badly. Let’s say I owe you $10,000 but you catch me treating myself to something expensive instead of paying you back. You’d be justified in being angry with me, much as I’m sure you wouldn’t admit to it. “No, no just keep taking me for a ride” as you seethe quietly to yourself. People ARE kind, and I am a burden on them. A leech. And at any moment they are liable to suddenly snap and turn on me in a way that I entirely deserve. I have a great deal to make up for… being kind to myself would be a terrible thing to do to all those people.
@Fillysopher
@Fillysopher Ай бұрын
Why does this sound like thr - man is evil inherently by Christians.
@warrenisaac5634
@warrenisaac5634 Ай бұрын
Great interview! Dr. Doty is someone everyone should listen to! Thank You both!
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Totally! I agree :).
@spiralsun1
@spiralsun1 Ай бұрын
He mentioned that he was not “living in his car” … I am living in my car the last 5 years 😂😮. I have top 1% IQ, and as high as is possible on “openness” trait. I am also 95% on “agreeableness”. All I ever wanted to do was help people. Sometimes you don’t get reciprocated with that. Just wanted to point that out. 😐
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Hi, and thanks for watching and offering your thoughts. Sounds like you’ve been going through some tough times, despite some real strengths and positive qualities. I hope things turn around and head in the direction you may wish for. Thank you for pointing that out. Sending you compassionate wishes.
@belcenkci5588
@belcenkci5588 Ай бұрын
Hey! I agree with you. I am highly intelligent and compassionate parson like you, and no reciprocation is part of my story as well. I have experienced it last week, this week and many times before. Yet I agree also with Dr Doty. Helping and giving to others can make us feel happy and satisfied Several days ago I helped a homeless woman, who turned rude to me despite my several help attempts to her. I felt hurt although I knew that the homeless lady was not mentally right. Yet my hurt didn't stop me from using another help opportunity to her, Then the same day I had the opportunity to help a mentally normal stranger, who was deeply grateful. That made my day. Yes, no reciprocation many times, but we still can attach a good vibe to the experience as we did the right thing and relieved a person's suffering to a certain degree. We can still feel good about ourselves when we look back at it after years. Not having helped would not have made us happy.
@spiralsun1
@spiralsun1 Ай бұрын
@@drstansteindl Wow, thank you 🙏🏻 ❤️!!!
@vera821
@vera821 Ай бұрын
Stop helping people and help yourself because nobody else will.Help animals instead they are grateful and no evil in them!Good luck!
@Amandahugginkizz
@Amandahugginkizz 26 күн бұрын
In another interview he said "I lost everything but I want to make it clear I wasn't homeless or anything I was a neurosurgeon still making more then 99 percent of people" well that's be nice because I had an absolute shitty absuisive horrible childhood, then had kids and actually was homeless living in a fln tent in the summer with 3 kids while my hsband was enlisted on the military!!! Whew glad neurosurgeons are taken care of, fuck the military though they can all live on cardboard boxes 😂
@johnsiekrause4109
@johnsiekrause4109 Ай бұрын
Im sorry you dont believe in God,you are teaching his very lessons,Dont let your left hand see what your right hand is doing,God Bless You
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thank you for watching and offering your thoughts.
@karenhansen4770
@karenhansen4770 26 күн бұрын
What the hell is this fellow is saying that is new. No offense but he is really boring.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl 26 күн бұрын
@@karenhansen4770 Oh! Well, no offence taken, I guess. I find him quite interesting, and his books are great. But each to their own :).
@georgeweller1
@georgeweller1 Ай бұрын
You acknowledge that we might resist self-compassion but offer ZERO advice on *how* or *why* we should be compassionate to ourselves. What would be the benefits of being compassionate? You might as well ask what would be the benefits of lying cheating and stealing to get ahead. How would robbing a bank benefit me? All this self-compassion nonsense makes me so angry. There’s no REASON to put one’s self first but bullshitters tell me to just do it anyway.
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
First, thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts and feelings with me on the topic of self-compassion. I'd hate to come across telling you "to just do it anyway" so I do totally respect if this is not for you. Second, in terms of how to be compassionate to ourselves, there are many videos on my channel that discuss that, including the one just after this one you watched ( kzbin.info/www/bejne/rqPRkneGfqh9kNk ). Bear in mind that this was from 2019, and there are lots of other ones since. But that might not be of interest, which is obviously fine. And third, I'm sorry that you had to experience so much anger. Anger is a real source of suffering, and is often a target for self-compassion. Remember, self-compassion is simply being sensitive to our own suffering and doing something that might help alleviate that suffering. It's not really putting yourself first or things of that nature. Compassion is just trying to help ourselves (and others) suffer less. But I hope all of this is ok for you. I really do appreciate that you took the time to watch and consider the ideas, and if they are not for you that is absolutely fine. Thanks so much.
@wendywood4719
@wendywood4719 Ай бұрын
I can recommend Russell's latest book
@brookerobitaille745
@brookerobitaille745 Ай бұрын
Very good interview thank you
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thank you! Glad you found it useful :).
@man_ssy4551
@man_ssy4551 Ай бұрын
In bible all this manifest explain clearly..whoever chase material in this world would be attached
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thanks for watching. I appreciate your point of view.
@annemartin1072
@annemartin1072 Ай бұрын
Just great. Thank you for the interview. Iv been listening to the audible, 'Into the Magic shop,' - most days for years just an hour - my psychotherapist recommended it. I was looking forward to listen to his new one. Mind magic. Enjoying it...
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Thank you! Yes, Dr Doty offers lots of great insights in the pages of those two books :).
@mritchie85
@mritchie85 Ай бұрын
CFT works towards de-blaming and de-shaming the self for difficulties we experience
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Precisely!
@mritchie85
@mritchie85 Ай бұрын
@@drstansteindl That popped out to me when you said that so I wrote it down in my own words, just for some context. I was referred over to your channel thanks for sharing this it's very helpful.
@sharonwerner7949
@sharonwerner7949 Ай бұрын
Thank you. This is very interesting to consider the aspect of classical conditioning. The learned association between panic and self-compassion. One would assume the same connection could be made between anger and self-compassion. I'm thinking of Thich Nhat Hanh: "Hello, my little friend anger. I know you well. I will take care of you."
@drstansteindl
@drstansteindl Ай бұрын
Love that! We want to bring compassion to our most difficult emotions :).
@wendywood4719
@wendywood4719 Ай бұрын
Wonderful work from Professor Frankie Maratos