About ten years ago in front of 5.019 million
people according to the Nielsen ratings I had a panic attack on live television. I was doing a job that I'd done many times
before which was filling in as the news reader on Good Morning America. The job basically entails coming on at the
top of each hour and reading a series of headlines to the audience, bringing them up to date
on the news of the day. And I was happy and excited to be there. I had no way to foresee what was about to
happen. As soon as the anchors tossed it over to me
I was in the middle of the first story and I was overtaken by this irresistible bolt
of fear. My heart started racing, my palms were sweating,
my mouth dried up and my lungs seized up. And I was simply unable to breathe. You can see it and hear it on the tape. I'm gasping for air. It would have gotten a lot worse, it would
have become something like the famous clip from Broadcast News where Albert Brooks breaks
out in flop sweat except for I did something halfway through my newscast I'd never done
before which is I quit. I gave up. I punted. I sent it back to the main hosts of the show. What I said was, "Back to you Robin and Charlie." But it was actually Diane Sawyer and Charlie
who were anchoring and in my panic I was unable to remember that. And you can see that actually in an absurd
little crescendo roll video of Harry Potter which was the next story I was supposed to
read that the control room thought I was going to read but I was unable to do so. And in the moments afterwards I realized that
I'd had a panic attack. And I was deeply, deeply embarrassed. It wasn't until later that I learned what
caused it. I went to see a doctor who is an expert in
panic and he asked me a series of questions, one of which was do you do drugs. And I sheepishly said, yes, I do. And he leaned back in his chair and said,
"Mystery solved." The backstory is I got myself into trouble
basically because of a desire to do great at my job which is something I think a lot
of people can relate to. You might call it ambition or just a drive
for excellence and being in love with my job. I got to ABC News when I was 28 years old. And if you look at the pictures I look like
I'm barely post pubescent. And I was working with these giants like Diane
Sawyer and Peter Jennings and Charlie Gibson and Ted Koppel and I was keenly aware of how
green I was, especially when compared to these famous people I had been watching on television
since I was a kid. And my way of coping with that was to become
a workaholic. And I threw myself into the job and after
9/11 I volunteered and spent many years overseas in Iraq and Afghanistan and the Middle East. And when I came home from that I developed
a depression and I self-medicated with recreational drugs which was a toweringly stupid move on
my part. And even though I wasn't doing it when I was
working and definitely not when I was on the air, I learned from my doctor in his office
after my panic attack that the drugs I was taking, cocaine and ecstasy raised the level
of adrenalin in your brain and basically guaranteed that I had the panic attack. So that moment in the doctor's office when
he explained to me what a moron I'd been, I knew I had to make some changes in my life. And that set me off on a strange little unplanned
journey that I talk about in my book, 10% Happier. Coincidentally at around the same time my
boss at the time, Peter Jennings, had assigned me to cover religion for ABC News, a job I
didn't want because I had been raised in a very secular environment. My parents were both scientists. And I tried to tell him I didn't want to do
it and he told me, "Shut up kid, you're gonna do it." So I ended up spending many years meeting
people of faith and it really changed my view of the world and it showed me the value of
having a view of the world that is larger than your own narrow self-interest. I read a book by a self-help guru by the name
of Eckhart Tolle. He has sold millions of books. I had never heard of him. A producer recommended I read the book because
she thought maybe it would be a good story. So I read the book and at first I thought
it was irredeemable garbage, nonsense. There's a lot of grandiose language in there
and pseudoscience and over promising about how this book is gonna change your life. But then I stumbled upon this diagnosis of
the human condition that I'd never heard before. Eckhart Tolle says we all have a voice in
our head. He's not talking about hearing voices in the
schizophrenic sense. He's talking about our inner narrator, the
thing that wakes us up in the morning and yammers at us all day long. It's an unpleasant stew of negative, repetitive,
ceaselessly self-referential thoughts constantly judging, wanting, not wanting, comparing ourselves
to other people, casting forward into an imagined future, remembering an idealized past as opposed
to being where you are right now. And I thought yeah, that describes me. In fact, that voice pretty much is responsible
for all the things that I'm most ashamed of in my life including that panic attack in
front of millions of people. And so I was completely captivated by this
description of the human condition and I went and met Eckhart Tolle and I found him to be
almost exactly the same in person as he is on the page which is he's half incredibly
interesting and incisive and half deeply, deeply confusing. So unsatisfied by that encounter I then went
off and met a bunch of other self-help gurus who also left me confused. Many of them left me mildly infuriated because
they were full of a word that starts with S and ends with T. And my wife at some point
after hearing me yammer on about Eckhart Tolle and the like for many, many weeks gave me
a gift. She gave me a book by a guy named Dr. Mark
Epstein who's a psychiatrist in New York City who writes about the overlap between psychiatry
and Buddhism. And I realized when I read this book that
all of the smartest stuff in Eckhart Tolle's book was actually taken pretty much from the
Buddha. And unlike Eckhart Tolle the Buddhists have
some actionable advice for dealing with the voice in your head. The problem was I didn't want to do it. Their advice is to meditate which I always
thought was uniquely ridiculous and only for people who live in yurts and are really into
aromatherapy and collect crystals, et cetera, et cetera, and wear little cymbals on their
hands. But, in fact, as I learned there's an enormous
amount of science that says that meditation is a simple brain exercise that can have an
extraordinary impact on your brain and your body. It can lower your blood pressure, boost your
immune system and literally rewire key parts of your brain that have to do with self-awareness,
compassion and stress. So when I heard that I decided to give it
a shot. So now I find myself in this funny position. I always thought that meditation was uniquely
ridiculous. Now I'm a daily meditator and, even worse,
I'm a public evangelist for meditation. What I like to say though is it's not gonna
solve all of your problems. All those self-help gurus who tell you that
you can magically cure everything in your life through the power of positive thinking
-- that's baloney. It's not gonna happen. It's demonstrably untrue and possibly even
a damaging message to send. However, meditation is a scientifically tested
simple thing you can do every day that will make you significantly happier. I called the book 10% Happier for a couple
of reasons. One, I wanted to counter-program against the
over-promising of the self-help gurus. But also it's -- I think we're ready for a
more mature, realistic dialogue about happiness. And nothing's gonna solve all of your problems
but meditation can change the relationship between you and that voice in your head which
is responsible for most of the things you're probably most embarrassed about in your life.