Janet Ettele on How Joyous Effort Transforms Our Lives | EP 614

1h 8m

On this episode of Passion Struck, John R. Miles chats with Janet Ettele, author, musician, and student of Buddhist teacher Khentrul Lodrö Thayé Rinpoche, about how the principle of Joyous Effort can change the way we live, work, and grow.

They dive into why living with purpose isn’t about ticking boxes or chasing external wins—it’s about how we keep showing up, with heart and intention, even when it’s hard. Janet shares her journey from Berklee College of Music to the Buddhist path, and how writing her “How Life Works” fiction series helped her bring timeless teachings into real, everyday life.

If you’ve ever felt stuck, drained by spiritual buzzwords, or wondered how ancient wisdom could actually fit into your modern routine, this episode is both grounding and uplifting.

Click HERE for the full show notes

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Together, John and Janet explore:

  1. Joyous Effort is not about forcing or hustling—it's a compassionate commitment to growth and presence.
  2. The Six Perfections (Paramitas) offer a practical framework for living with wisdom, generosity, and balance.
  3. Routine, repetition, and practice—often overlooked—can be sacred tools for transformation.
  4. You don’t need a monastery to practice spirituality; daily life is your training ground.


Catch more of Janet Ettele: https://janetettele.com/

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Transcript

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Coming up next on Passion Struck.

I also think that to the degree we are of self-absorption is the degree of our misery, just to being so self-absorbed.

Whereas in the Buddhist teachings that I've studied, and granted, there are different schools of Buddhism, I suppose.

The one I'm most familiar with is the Tibetan Buddhist teachings.

That's all about the intention to benefit others.

And I'm sure you've experienced this.

When you've done something to benefit someone else and you see that that joy or you just are aware of how that benefit has been meaningful to somebody else, that gets you, I think serves that purpose that you were saying to people who are missing.

Welcome to Passion Struck.

Hi, I'm your host, John R.

Miles, and on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips, and guidance of the world's most inspiring people and turn their wisdom into practical advice for you and those around you.

Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the best version of yourself.

If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays.

We have long form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders, visionaries, and athletes.

Now, let's go out there and become passion struck.

Welcome to Passion Struck episode 614, the podcast that ignites change from the inside out.

I'm your host, John Miles, and I'm thrilled to be back with you.

And I want to share a few quick updates.

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Now, if you've missed last week's solo episode number 612, I really encourage you to go back and give it a listen.

It's called How to Reframe Your Inner World When Life Feels Like Too Much, a guide to transforming your mental landscape when overwhelm sets in.

And on Tuesday, I had a profound conversation with Joseph Wynn, author of Don't Believe Everything You Think, where we explored how to break free from thought patterns that keep us trapped in suffering and self-doubt.

And today, we continue our month-long journey into mental health awareness.

This time through a spiritual and narrative lens with someone who brings ancient wisdom in everyday life.

Janet Edeley is a writer, musician, and devoted student of Buddhist Dharma.

Through her How Life Works series, Janet masterfully translates the six perceptions of Master Shantideva into modern parables that teach us how to live with more intention, mindfulness, and compassion.

Her newest book, How Joyous Effort Works, even features a foreword by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and explores how our actions when done joyfully and selflessly, can create ripple effects of transformation in the world around us.

In today's conversation, we explore how ancient Buddhist principles help us navigate modern challenges, the balance between inner growth and life's external demands, practical ways to apply mindfulness, compassion, and equanimity daily, while focusing on the happiness of others can lead to deep joy within ourselves, and so much more.

Janet's work is a gentle but powerful reminder that the sacred often shows up in the small moments and that a life well lived is one that blends effort with wisdom and service with joy.

Now, let's dive into this thoughtful and inspiring conversation with Janet Edelie.

Thank you for choosing Passion Struck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life.

Now, let that journey begin.

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I am so honored today to welcome Janet Edeley to Passion Struck.

Welcome, Janet.

Thank you.

Nice to be here.

I love to start these episodes out by asking opening questions that really get the guest to share parts of them that the audience may never have heard about before.

So one of those questions I like to ask is, what is the kindest thing a stranger has ever done for you?

There have been a lot of kind things,

but the first thing that comes to my mind is a long time ago, I was 17 years old.

I had gone with two groups of friends, two vans, to a Grateful Dead concert at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island.

It was March.

It was cold.

I had $5 in my pocket.

I got separated from my friends.

I think I was really eager to get close to the stage.

I really wanted to see Jerry Garcia as close as I could.

And when it came time to leave,

we had all agreed that we would meet by a flagpole outside the venue.

And I think what happened is each group of friends assumed,

actually they were friends of my older sibling of my friend.

So they didn't really know me really well, the two drivers.

And each must have assumed the other had me.

And the parking lot emptied out and emptied out.

And it was cold and it was windy and it was dark.

And I found a policeman and I said, can you help me?

I nobody's here.

I live in Connecticut.

And they said, well, we can't help you.

Go to the security office.

So I spotted the security office and I knocked on the door and they told me they were closed

and they wouldn't help me.

And I, of course, started to cry.

And there was a young man who saw me, must have sensed what was happening.

And he said, if if you don't mind waiting, I'm with my brother, he's disabled and his car has a special contraption to it to make it drivable.

We have to get it towed.

But once we get it fixed, if you don't mind waiting with us, we'll help you.

I said, okay.

And off we went

in the tow truck with two complete strangers.

And we get to the service station.

I called my poor father.

As a parent now, I think of what my poor father must have gone through.

It's probably 11.30 at night.

And I told him what happened.

And I think he got on the phone with this guy and must have given him the third degree.

What's your name?

What's your license number?

All the questions that father would want to know.

And

after the car was fixed, they drove me to Grand Central Station.

The guy walked me.

into Grand Central, walked me to the train, put me into the train safely.

It was like 4 a.m.

The milk train, I think it's called,

and gave me a kiss on the cheek and went away.

And I never saw him again.

I don't even know his name.

And I made it safely home.

It could have been gone quite horribly another way.

So I think that was a very, probably registers up there as one of the kindest things.

Thank you so much for sharing that.

I have never had.

the privilege of going to see the Grateful Dead in concert.

I've seen fish in concert, and that is quite a show.

But my father is 86 he seemed to be 87 and he was visiting me recently and he told me that he had purchased his first grateful dead album at the age of 86 and he says this is some pretty good music

he waited till he was 80 that's amazing did he get an lp does he have a turntable and everything

he always listens to things on a C D typically.

So he gave me most of his record collection.

So I don't think he uses the turntable that we had

when I was growing up anymore.

But it was just interesting to hear him saying, I'm just discovering the Grateful Dead.

And I said, you should listen to Fish then.

Well,

now I need to know what album did he buy?

I do not know, but they're all very good.

Well, they're all good.

I'm just curious which one he bought.

So we'll have to follow up with that.

Well, I live here in the Tampa Bay area, and we actually have one of the best Grateful Dead coverbed bands in the country.

They're called Uncle John's Band.

And every time they play,

deadheads

come from all over the area, and they typically have 300, 400, 500 people who come to the breweries or other event places that I've seen.

So still a huge following.

That's wonderful.

My son probably knows much more about the Grateful Dead than I do, and he wasn't even alive to see them as a band whole, but I'll let him know that about Uncle John's band.

You are the third or fourth person I've had on the podcast who went to Berkeley College of Music, ironically.

And one of them, Jeff Walker, I think was the chairman of the board of Berkeley College of Music.

Interestingly enough, I'm not sure if you're familiar with Jeff, but he has a great podcast called System Catalysts, and he started the contemplative science whole course at the University of Virginia and was its first president.

So he is also very big into mindfulness, Buddhist practices, etc.

That's so interesting.

Well, I bring this up because your path to becoming an author is really unique because we're talking about Grateful Dead and you started as a musician, which is why I asked you about Berkeley College of Music.

How did this journey go from musician to studying Buddhist teachings and eventually to becoming a writer?

Wow, well, writing I never did as an author, but I think going way back when I was probably 15 years old, and I had a teacher, I was sent away to school, and I had a teacher that encouraged me to journal.

And so I began journaling.

I also grew up in a time when people still wrote letters.

And I had a great aunt who was

60 years older than I was.

So she had the formality of letter writing and it was a beautiful form.

So you get into some practice of telling stories through your letter writing,

right?

Because this is where I went.

This is who I saw.

This is what it looked like.

So there was that.

And then when I went to Berkeley,

There was a teacher that was really influential.

I don't think he knows how influential he was for me, but he taught writing poetry.

He also was a song lyrics teacher at Berkeley.

His name is Pat Patterson.

And I took every single one of his courses on writing poetry, as many as I could while I was there.

So I had that sort of background in there.

The music.

and writing music, I was a composition major and I do feel that writing music and writing words has a lot of parallels parallels in common.

Things like dynamics, theme, motivic development, and things like that.

But

then I have to go really far ahead, skipping back up a few decades to when I had gone to New York University School of Continued Professional Studies, where I was taking a two-year program to become certified as a life coach.

And one of the books that was required reading is called The Mindful Coach by Douglas Silsby.

And he included in a lot of his pages little quotes that were

from the Buddha or Buddha's teaching.

And everything I read

really

struck a chord for me.

I thought, this makes so much sense.

It's just very practical.

It's wise.

You could just feel the wisdom in it.

And I started researching books,

reading as many books as I could on the subject.

And every book I read said, if you want to use these teachings, if you want to bring them into your life in a meaningful way, you need to find a teacher.

Long story short, it turns out five miles from my house is a Tibetan Buddhist Center for Universal Peace.

And that goes back,

I want to say, 16 years ago when I first

began going and listening to teachings and continuing to study and read.

And in the course of those 16 years, I met someone during one of the the classes we had a break and we were both talking about how much we wished that these teachings, which are so practical, and even though they're 2,500 years old, they still hold up.

And wouldn't it be nice if we could find a way to bring them into Western culture

without having to have people enter a Buddhist Dharma center or even decide to be Buddhist just to be exposed to some of this wisdom.

And I had that time been writing newsletters to promote my coaching work

and was weaving in some of the things I was learning with these newsletters.

And so we talked about that.

Turns out he was in the publishing business.

He had his own off, like a very small imprint of his own publishing company that was dedicated to Buddhist teachings.

And so he had this idea for a series and invited me to write them.

And that's how it started.

Yeah, so

the series he had in mind was based on a teaching called The Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life by Master Shantideva, who was an 8th-century Buddhist monk and scholar.

And so these Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life is also known as the Six Perfections.

So the idea was to have a book for each of the perfections and to write them as fictional, contemporary with contemporary characters living ordinary lives.

And

you get to see the main character learn,

think about what he's been taught, begin to put the teachings into practice in a way that any of us could really relate to.

Does that answer your question?

That's great.

It answered the next question I was going to ask you about the chance meeting with your publisher, but I want want to go back to something you talked about, and that is how we used to write each other's stories.

Because when I was at home this past year and I was going throughout my bedroom, I found this bag where my parents had put together all these letters that I had wrote to them and that I had kept from my time when I was at the Naval Academy.

And when I think about this art of writing people personal letters, there's really

a joy to it, especially receiving those letters that has really created a void, I think, in today's modern society.

And to me, this whole concept of writing a letter like that kind of ties into

the title of your new book, How Joyous Effort Works.

Because to me, when you were writing letters like that, it really was a joyous effort to put that into the world.

What are your thoughts on that?

I agree.

I think that there's so much lost

by

not having the letters any longer in our lives.

But in terms of the joyous effort, yeah, I guess in letter writing,

usually it's someone you love or at least feel very fondly toward.

And it's a joy to share,

to have, to be able to read what they're doing

and respond and share what you're doing.

There's a lot of, you could remain quite close

through that.

And maybe I took your question and went a different direction with it.

I'm not sure.

I wasn't trying to get you to go in any direction at all.

I just wanted to hear what your thoughts were.

I think it's a shame we've lost that art.

I really do.

It's not the only art that we have lost, but it really gets down to this big area of work that I'm studying right now

on the science of mattering, because I think we have really shifted so much in society from our lives and the connections that we had at one point throughout history to now this void that's been caused.

And it's interesting because in the book, you have this statement.

I'm going to read it.

The nature of an untrained mind is one of distractions since the lives we lead are a manifestation of the quality of our mind it's no wonder so many people feel their lives are out of control and you and i were talking before you came on about i have this saying

that I keep using because I think it adequately describes what's happening.

I call it the disease of disconnection, which to me is one of the largest epidemics that is impacting humanity.

How does what I just read fit into that disease of disconnection?

It fits.

It fits in terms of we are so distracted by,

I know people enjoy social media.

There's a lot of fun in that too.

But I feel like is in so many cases, it's look at me, look what I'm doing.

This is what I ate for dinner.

This is my new house.

This is this.

And it's not with the exchange, like a genuine kind of exchange of

story, of sharing, of your actual life.

But we're distracted by this sort of glittery idea of the attention.

It does seem kind of attention seeking, like a real need of being

all eyes on me.

And it's a little uncomfortable for me, but I think it doesn't hold up.

It doesn't have anything to really sustain anything of any true quality with.

Does that make sense?

It makes sense.

When I think of this disease,

it surely impacts the relationships we have in others.

But I think at the core of the disease is that people are losing connection to their very selves.

We're like losing connection to our souls because we're spending so much of our time thinking out of our body that we're not dedicating enough cycles to truly understanding ourself, our talents, why we were put here on earth, and most importantly, what's our contribution to help end human suffering?

What did you mean by outside of our body?

I'm not sure I understood.

Meaning we are constantly looking for I think, for external validation of ourselves.

And that comes through social media it comes through the gaming that people do it comes through the constant seeking for attention instead of really what is taught in buddhist teachings which is focus on mindfulness focus on consciousness focus on who we are as an individual and turning more inward.

And I think it's becoming a lost art for so many people.

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I think there's a lot to that, really.

I also think that to the degree we are of self-absorption, which is to being so self-absorbed in the Buddhist teachings that I've studied, and granted, there are different schools of Buddhism, I suppose, and the one I'm most familiar with is the Tibetan Buddhist teachings.

And that's all about the intention to benefit others.

And I'm sure you've experienced this.

When you've done something to benefit someone else and you see that joy or you just are aware of how that benefit has been meaningful to somebody else,

that gets you, I think serves that purpose that you were saying these people are missing.

What do you think?

I think that's a big element of it.

I think we've just gotten so focused on the importance of individual.

And I think a lot of the frameworks that are being put in place through technology are just reinforcing or highlighting the importance of the individual.

But what we're lacking is connection.

What we're lacking is community.

What we're lacking is

looking at how we as an individual help others, serve others, because I think that's what we're called to do.

I think that touches on something that is a real fundamental truth.

for in the studies that I've done is just about interdependence, which isn't unique to Buddhism.

We can see it in nature, right?

Everything is interdependent.

We can't grow things without the sun or the proper soil or the right conditions or the right temperature, right?

In our lives,

we've become so disconnected to even taking care of ourselves.

The electricity that lights our homes, the fuel that heats them, the clothes we're wearing, the food that we pick up from the grocery store.

Everything that sustains us is in dependence on others that we don't even know.

Talk about the kindness of strangers that we don't know, that they're as that really inspires gratitude

in ourselves.

And that also serves to bring to mind

that we're not isolated.

We're not living in

no matter how independent we think we are, we're not.

And I think that sometimes that experience of gratitude really helps open that heart to

feeling that connection a little bit more.

I agree.

And part of the reason I went down this path is Holiness the Dalai Lama wrote the foreword for your book.

And

everyone I've had on the podcast who has interacted with His Holiness, which is now probably nine to ten people on the show, all tell me that he has a really unique way that

he talks to them as an individual about their specific contribution to making the world better and how their small plays a bigger role in helping others and helping society

have you found the same things as you have interacted with him well i have interacted with him

only one experience of being in the same room with him, which was pretty phenomenal just to be in his presence.

But one of the things he's said often

is:

I am just one of seven billion human beings.

We see him as, oh my God, his holiness the Dalai Lama.

He brings it down to, I am just one of seven billion human beings on this planet.

And each one of us has

the potential potential to develop

further and to cultivate our ability to bring more compassion into the world around us, to extend that kindness to people who are strangers to us.

And his presence is pretty, pretty remarkable.

And I do sense that he really seeks to remind everyone of their, that kindness.

What does he say?

There is a quote of his that might be appropriate.

What is it?

He says, can I read this quote to you?

Sure.

He goes, we can reject everything else, religion, ideology, all received wisdom, but we cannot escape the need for love and compassion.

This then is my true religion, my simple faith.

In this sense, there is no need for temple or church, mosque, or synagogue.

No need for complicated philosophy, doctrine, or Dharma.

Our own heart, our own mind is the temple.

The doctrine is compassion,

love for others, and respect for their rights and dignity, no matter who or what they are.

Ultimately, these are all we need.

That's really a beautiful quote, and it reminds me of the work of the late Emile Bruno, who I highlight on this show a lot.

Emile was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, if you're not familiar with them, and died from brain cancer way too young.

But his work was really focused on dehumanization and how do we start seeing the other in conflicts as part of ourselves?

How do we see the commonality of all humanity?

so that we look beyond the differences and we look more to the commonalities in life and what draws us together as opposed to what is driving us apart, which to me, love,

compassion, gratitude, all those things that you just brought up play directly into that.

I think sometimes it's helpful to recognize that everyone has varying degrees of suffering that they're experiencing in their lives, and that that's just the fact of being human.

And as one of seven billion human beings, none of us is an exception to that.

And I think sometimes even just bringing that to mind is a reminder in a difficult situation or a difficult moment

to

just take that pause and just recognize that other person's

suffering that's in play at that time.

And that just brings up compassion and that changes the dynamic of everything

in that difficult situation.

I'm just pretending of one, but I think we've all experienced them before.

When you can bring compassion into any tense situation, it changes it profoundly.

You and I were talking about a previous guest of mine, Rick Hansen, before you came on the show.

And Rick has founded the Global Compassion Coalition.

I just wanted to bring that up because

He is seeing that, especially in young males, this is becoming less and less something that people are looking at as a strength.

And so he's trying to influence broader than that, but that is a core group of individuals he is really trying to put his focus on because so many young males today are adrift.

Do you see that through your work as well?

Do I see young males as being uniquely as being adrift compared to young women?

Or?

I guess that would be part of it.

I guess the first thing would be, be, do you think compassion in itself is starting to become

less of an art than it has historically been?

And do you think it manifests itself more in males or females, certain ages or not?

Gosh, I don't know that I know that I've raised sons who are both, if you looked at them, you'd think they're a couple of linebackers.

They're big, strong men, but they have very compassionate hearts.

I'm grateful that they have that balance.

But I think that men, I think we all need that

cultivating of compassion because, and I think that men, for having a program like your guest had set up for men, I think is really beautiful because I think there are a lot of

I think growing up as a young man today has in many ways probably been a little confusing for these kids as they've come up.

I remember when my sons were in grade school, they were like, they were confused because they were supposed to feel this guilt of they happen to be born white and they happen to be born male.

And

they were too young to carry that guilt

that they were starting to absorb already even in the classrooms.

at school.

So I think that's been hard for probably not just them.

They're okay.

They're not scarred for life by that or anything, but I think it's confusing, perhaps.

And I just wanted to point out that the Global Compassion Coalition isn't about just men.

It's really trying to establish compassion and justice as the foundation for all societies.

And one of the things that they're doing that I'm trying to start myself is to create a compassion circle, which they'll instruct you how to do in your local community so that you can start taking action and in your own community, which is, I think, how action usually starts.

And the more this is spread worldwide, the more it becomes a common practice instead of an outlier.

I just, where I was going is

Scott Galloway and others talk about young men being adrift today.

And one of the core

areas that he and others talk about is the lack of compassion and exemplifying these powerful types of people,

but not as much focusing on some of the inherent values that are needed to balance some of the powerful with

some of the other values that we need to survive in life.

That's where I was going.

Oh, okay.

Put it more in perspective.

I misunderstood that, but yeah, and I think across the board, this is needed.

And I'm curious: what are the methods that he's using to help bring this

into the communities?

Well, this is a global organization, so they're working throughout Africa, they're in Europe, they're in the United States.

They provide you with a core structure on how to develop these compassion councils, how to bring these lessons out.

So I'm at the beginning stages of the journey because I want to learn more about it and how they're trying to use this, as Malcolm Gladwell would say, to start influence a tipping point happening where this becomes more the norm instead of

not being the norm in society.

Yeah, I think I'd love to see that happen.

There's a lot of the opposite, and as we were talking earlier about social media, that is a huge distraction to a lot of young people.

So, to have something like that to help balance

that kind of influence would be huge.

Yeah, I remember I was interviewing Robin Sharma and he made this quote to me about what we're talking about.

He said, you can either play on your phone or you can change the world.

You can't do both.

I love that.

I love that.

And I think what he's just saying is where you focus your attention is where your actions will result.

And he's right, whether it's on that, whether it's on gaming, whether it's on addictions,

all those things hold us back from really fulfilling what we're put on earth to do.

It's like that expression, where thought goes, energy flows, something like that.

Exactly.

Right.

Yep.

And that's something we were, you were talking with your guests the other day about mindfulness.

And this is one of the reasons why mindfulness is so important to know where your thoughts are.

I've read that the average person here thinks anywhere between 12,500 to 60,000 000 thoughts per day and i i did the math i thought all right even if you were to sleep eight hours a day you would have fifty seven thousand six hundred waking seconds and you know how fast thoughts move through your mind so it's not a stretch to think that you could have even more than 60 000 thoughts per day but what i've also read is that somewhere between 80 and 98 percent of those thoughts are repeated daily so what meditation is a method of familiarizing your mind to something.

And if what we're doing in

this repetition of 80 to 98 percent of our thoughts repeated daily, we're having our very own very wild, very unconscious meditation that is deepening and deepening whatever these

thoughts are.

which is why cultivating mindfulness, starting to become aware of what are these thoughts and if they're not

if they're not conducive to a more peaceful way of life if they're based on things that aren't altogether accurate and true

the downside of that and the upside to cultivating awareness of those thoughts yes

reminds me of a teacher i had on the show a couple years ago i'm not sure if you've ever heard of dandapani Dupani.

No.

Don Dupani is a Hindu priest, and he was a Hindu monk for, I think, a dozen years.

And he wrote this book on the power of focus.

And really, it was the most profound lesson that he learned from his years of being a monk was that you can't be intentional about your actions unless you learn how to focus your mind on the right things.

And I talk about this in my book from last year where I cite them in this chapter.

I call it living a pinball life.

I use this analogy because I think so many of us today,

we live out our days as if we're like the ball in the game of pinball.

We're just bouncing off all the distractions, these 60,000 thoughts that we have throughout the day, and we let them play us instead of really being conscious and deliberate about

how we control those thoughts.

So instead of the game playing us, we learn how to play it.

And to me, it's a great analogy for life.

Yeah.

And the whole one of the core focuses of this podcast is really on, I believe it's the intentional choices that we make.

I call them micro-choices that end up resulting in either

a valley of despair that we find ourselves in or reaching peak states of fulfillment and self-awareness and self-transcendence.

And those micro moments really determine our choices.

So it's how do you start controlling your mind to control the micro choices that you make so they're leading you down the path that leads you to more fulfillment in your life and less ultimately regrets.

Right, right.

That's well said.

Very well said.

I like your pinball machine metaphor because I think it really fits to

thinking about the choices we make and things.

There is something taught in the Buddhist tradition called the Eightfold Path.

Have you heard of that?

Yes.

Yeah,

which is right view,

right thought,

right speech, right action, right livelihood.

right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration, which is what you were speaking about before.

And if we can just

bring our attention into that in our choices to check these things.

And of course, there's more to each of that.

That's like the tip of the iceberg.

But it's something that's manageable when you can put it into a context like that.

I think that's a great context for it.

I'm glad you brought that up because that is a great way to think about it as well.

which kind of takes the metaphor of the pinball and puts it into a framework that people can understand.

So I'll have to think about combining that in the future.

So thank you for that thought.

Absolutely.

Yeah.

In terms of mindfulness, there is

in Shante Deva, who was the person who did the teaching that my books are based on, there's one verse that I really love that he says, where would I find enough leather?

to cover the entire surface of the earth yet with leather soles beneath my feet it's if the whole world has been covered

and if that makes sense it's like this is back in the day when people were traveling on rugged paths and there were thorns and things to

get your feet but it's if you have leather you can't cover the whole earth with leather but if you can put a piece of leather underneath your feet like this pair of sandals

then you're not going to be hurt by these thorns.

And that's the same way with cultivating mindfulness.

We're not going to be able to change the entire world around us,

really,

as much to the degree that we wish we could.

But if we can control our own mindfulness, if we can really cultivate that, we can have a much more peaceful presence that we bring to the world, as well as the way we experience the world.

No, absolutely.

And I was going to go into Master Shantidava's teachings anyhow, so I'm glad you took us there.

I really thought it was interesting how you started the book by examining his life from eight centuries ago and how

he is amongst his peers, and his peers look to him as being lazy,

as not pulling his load, and so they create a test for him.

And I was hoping maybe you could pick up the story of what that test was and what has been written about how he handled that test?

Well,

yes, I can do that.

He wasn't eighth centuries ago.

He was during the eighth century.

Oh, that's what I meant.

Yes.

I knew that's what you meant, but I just wanted to say that.

Yeah, it seems like a

an unkind trick to do, but they really did, they couldn't tell him to leave.

They wanted him to be shamed into wanting to leave, is the way the story goes.

And so they invited him to do a teaching.

It should be something that had never been taught before.

And they built this throne, which is not like a royal throne, but a high platform that he would be sitting on so that everybody that attended,

it was going to be a huge audience, could

hear him and see him.

But there were no stairs to climb up there.

So the story goes that he touched the side of this throne and somehow managed to be transported right onto the seat of it.

And he taught this teaching.

It was like in song-like poetry kind of form.

And it was apparently just so profound, everyone

was astonished by the quality of his teaching.

And then when he got to the teaching on wisdom, they say, that he rose and could no longer be seen by most people unless those who were there had the kind of spiritual attainments that made it possible for them to see him.

And that's the story.

Well, isn't that like so many stories of famous teachers that you hear is that they have cultivated this internally until the moment comes when they start to share it.

And then when they do share it, it's shared with such profound knowledge.

And what was so interesting about this story is that they tried to trick him not not only into what they thought was putting him into an uncomfortable situation, but forced to teach something that the planet had never heard of before.

And then he does it so eloquently.

It's like a myth, isn't it?

Mythology that the hero has these

very

I can't believe you brought that up because I was just about to mention that book, The Power of Myth,

and Joseph Campbell and his amazing series he did.

Who was the man who interviewed him back in the, it was in the 80s?

Bill Moyers?

Yes.

You can still see it on YouTube.

I think it was done in six episodes.

It's brilliant, The Power of Myth.

Have you seen it?

I have seen parts of it.

I have not watched the whole thing.

I've read this book probably 10 times, but I have to go back and do it because to me, looking at what he, this interview took place in the 80s, and it's so interesting to me, how you see these common myths play out.

It's a different story, but basically the same story across so many different religions.

I'm listening to Yuval's new book, and he's talking about information and how information has evolved over centuries.

And he goes into Joseph Campbell as well and the power of myths and how myths have been a cornerstone of storytelling and getting information demonstrated or disseminated for millennia.

So, there really is something to this.

Yep.

Yep.

I think Carl Jung wrote a bit about this as well, didn't he?

He did.

It's fascinating.

And I guess, again, we realize that as one of 7 billion human beings,

our experience

is no different.

We might have a different setting that we're living these lives in now compared to a few hundred or a thousand years ago.

But

it's a lot of commonality, isn't there?

There's a lot of commonality.

And something that I took from Joseph Campbell's words was,

to me, it came across that throughout history,

there have been recurring patterns where people

stop going to church church as much.

Let's just say it in that common way.

And the way he was representing it was that the myths get old and they need refreshing.

And so new religions come about and they take hold because they spin the same stories in a way that relates to where people are in the modern lives that they live.

And so that's what happened from Judaism to Christianity,

etc.

And I'm not sure if it's true or not, but there sure seems to be some relevance to what he said.

And I remember I was, I had a really great teacher when I was studying the Bible, and he was a theologian, but he also had a PhD in history.

And

to me, a lot of the things that are said, especially in the Old Testament, are so hard to understand.

And he was able to really take those ancient words and he would represent them to, this is what it means in the 21st century.

And that translation, I think, is missing for a lot of people.

I think so.

What is this person's name that wrote this?

Well, no, this was just a pastor of a Methodist church I was taking this course on discipleship from.

His name is Terry, Pastor Terry.

But it...

I can

have asked for a better teacher because

you would read this and would get really stuck in trying to interpret what they were saying all the way back when the Old Testament was written.

And

he would have just these grand examples.

And it's been a decade since I, plus, since I took this course of what those lessons meant in today's world, which made so much more sense when you were reading it.

I wish more of the Bibles would do that interpretation.

And unfortunately, this Bible where I took copious notes from all these courses that he had taught got destroyed in the floods that impacted us four or five months ago so i lost that bible that i had had decades worth of notes written in i'm sorry wow that's a big loss but it sounds like you've got a lot of it still in your mind a lot of what you learned from this teacher.

But I think that Old Testament is really hard to get your mind around, isn't it?

The way things are presented, the things that are talked about are

hard to,

like you said, hard to put to today's times.

They are.

But it is interesting how Yuval in this new book was really talking about

when you think of Passover,

you're really getting people to think about lessons from the past and to do it as a ritual every year.

When you think about in Christianity, Easter and the Christmas season, you're really doing the same thing.

You're revisiting old myths and doing it as a ritual.

So it's really this interplay of ritual with information, with doing it on a consistent basis that ingrains these thoughts and lessons into people's minds.

Is that something you were asking earlier about compassion and the younger people

you i thought you were asking about young men earlier and that need for

connection and experiencing more compassion in their lives.

Is this missing ritual part of what you think is

perhaps lacking for them?

I think that could be part of it.

I just think that there is a void right now where they are very impressionable, and

that right now they're a lost generation, so to speak, and that something needs to fill that void.

And that void could be something very nefarious, or it could be something that is based on profound lessons that shape who they become is what I'm leaning into.

So even the six perfections, which you're writing about are important things.

The power of generosity.

ethics, which Ryan Holiday talks about a ton, patience, effort, concentration, as we were talking about before and wisdom they all are key steps to a path of enlightenment and they're just as relevant in the eighth century as they are today absolutely but it's but it's how do you like you're trying to do through your book and your story that you're telling it through it reminded me of robin sharma a little bit in the way you wrote it You're really trying to bring these six perfections

to a relevant state for people to absorb today.

Yeah,

is how I interpret what you're doing.

That is what I've been trying to do.

And I think it's been effective feedback I've heard from people that it's helped them.

I think that

one of the things beyond just hearing a teaching or reading a book or listening to a talk someplace is really the process of taking that what you've learned and spending time with it.

Teach in Buddhism the three stages of wisdom.

One is listening to a teaching.

The second is reflection, contemplation.

You really take the time to think about it.

Does this hold up?

Is it relevant in my life?

You have to really test it out for yourself.

And then the third step is meditation.

where you really that's that concentration where you've arrived at some understanding and you really bring that in a concentrated level into your practice and and meditation.

But then the more you rehearse this, remember I was saying meditation is a method of familiarizing your mind to something.

The more you rehearse this, the more adept you'll be at being able to put these things into practice.

So we don't leave it on the cushion, as you often hear people talk about, but we really do.

It's just ready to be put into practice in your daily life.

And I hope that

the books that I've written, in particular the character Troy, who's a young man who goes through the series, is beginning to assimilate these teachings into his life and meets challenges that, like I said before, are

challenges that are familiar to any of us in one way or another.

His journey really illustrates the challenge of balancing spiritual growth with everyday demands.

Right.

Which is a real concern for him.

He's not sure he can do it.

I think if you go back and you look at Abraham or Moses or people from the Old Testament, they probably had the same question about could they balance the two themselves, right?

Yeah.

And I think it's one of the universal struggles that we have.

And it's where do you put your priorities?

That same pastor I talked about, Terry, he used the Eisenhower matrix in a way I've never heard it talk about.

in a congregation.

He just said, your effort and your focus and everything else really comes down to your calendar and your pocketbook.

And

it's really your prioritization matrix for where you're spending your time.

So I did want to go into a couple more things about the book.

One of the most

downloaded articles I've ever written.

was on the importance of adult play.

And I'm going to tie this into the book because you write: joyous effort is like the wind that pushes you towards your goal.

And to me, what this really emphasizes is the importance of combining effort with joy or combining effort with play.

How does this differ from the traditional idea of hard work?

I think when you, in the context of the book that I've written, and

actually anything, is when you realize that there's a genuine benefit to something,

your willingness to put that effort into achieving that, whatever it is you want to do, you're going to be joyful in it because you're pumped, you're excited to do it, right?

So, it's a joyful effort when you know that at the end result is something that is going to be really fruitful or whatever your objective is.

In terms of play, I think that

you know, I should probably think about this a little bit more before I answer this, but I think that it feels playful when you're doing something with joy.

Creativity, creating art, creating anything.

There's an element of playfulness with that.

That's my first thoughts on that.

Okay.

And in your book, Troy Learns About Finding the Right Type of Teacher.

What qualities do you think someone today should look for in a mentor or guide, whether you're on a spiritual path or you're just looking for a life coach?

Well, first of all, that they themselves have studied, that you observe, in the Buddhist tradition, the old books say you should observe a teacher for 12 years before you take them on as your teacher.

Today we're not likely to do that, but that was in when that's for a spiritual guide because that's a life path pretty much and so you want to make sure you're on the right path that they live watch them observe them are they living

walking their talk

i think that's important

to notice are they patient do they have those qualities of patience and kindness and generosity the things that you would like to be achieving yourself.

If you were interested in learning carpentry, you'd want to look at the quality of work that carpenter you were studying from was producing.

So I think in the same way, it's like the quality of how someone is living is perhaps a little less tangible to and concrete to see.

But you've got to take some time, spend time with that person, and

just

be careful of what makes sense to you.

The Buddha said, see my fingers pointing to the moon.

don't is don't mistake my finger for being the moon it's because of my finger that you can see the moon

and so we want to make sure whoever we're taking on whether it's a coach or a mentor or a teacher that they see that and live it and can help guide you towards that in a really

ethical way

and in a kind way

thank you for sharing that.

For me, and I'll just apply it to my technology career.

I remember as I was looking for mentors for my career, I would always be looking for people who had done roles two or three ahead of where I wanted to be with the goal that they could help me short circuit much of the suffering that comes along with having to learn things the hard way.

and help me think about the decision framework that I was using and how I was intentionally approaching my career to eventually get to where I wanted to go.

But I think the same type of thought goes with any direction you want to take.

And so you really want to pick someone who fits the ideals of who you're wanting to be in the future so that they can help you grow to be a mirror of that image, so to speak.

And

what you said is someone who was two or three steps ahead of you, I forget the word you use, but who's already done it, who's achieved what it is you're striving to achieve yourself.

And I think in a spiritual situation, you can observe that quality in the person.

And I guess in any other sort of mentorship, it would be a parallel sort of analogy.

I was just driven crazy when you'd go into companies and they would assign you a mentor because I never wanted to be assigned a mentor.

I wanted to find a mentor who I wanted to live up to what I

saw in them and how they projected themselves.

A great example of this was when I was at Lowe's.

One of my mentors was this guy, Steve Salaji, who at the time was senior vice president over distribution systems.

He wasn't even in technology, but what I really loved about him was how he treated

people as if they mattered.

He would just see him

and the way he cared for people, the way he remembered them, the way he motivated them, the way he got people to do the impossible

were just skill sets that I didn't have.

So when I saw him embodying them, of course, I wanted to learn from him.

And sometimes,

you know, people always say, well, how do you approach someone about being a mentor?

Well, sometimes you don't even have to do it.

It just comes naturally by putting yourself in their presence that the more you're around them the more you start learning and then it gradually just turned into something where he would share more and more with me just because he saw i was becoming a disciple of what he was trying to accomplish and so sometimes it doesn't have to be as formal as i think people make it out to be I think that happens in life organically, like in your situation, and you had that sort of awareness that this is something

that you were inspired by what you saw in this mentor.

And so like a magnet, you went toward that.

That's again a choice that you made.

I think people have to be, it's a way of being proactive, right?

You're not passively just sitting in the shadows.

You put yourself in that environment to learn more closely.

I'll just tell you a simple statement.

I'll give you just a simple example from someone I really admire just by watching how intentional he was, and that is Perot Sr.

I got to meet him a few times over the years before he died.

And when I met him, he was an older man, and he would still come into Perot systems every single day.

He didn't have a leadership role at that point.

But what was so intriguing about it even then was he was constantly trying to learn.

And so every single day, he would come to the cafeteria.

He was always dressed in a suit, and he would pick a different random table to sit at.

And when he was there in front of the people he was sitting in,

it wasn't about Ross.

He was there to learn as much as he could about

the people who he was sitting with.

And then he would share connection with them.

And to me, it was just such a fascinating gift to see him give to others.

And you could see how much it meant to him that he was receiving that connection back.

And it was one of my favorite aspects of observing this great man who had so many accomplishments.

But when it came down to it, I think he knew that the most important one was the connection that we have with others.

And goes right back to what you were saying, we were talking about earlier, that disease of disconnection.

Just this is a man who

just that's how he lived and there was that connection and he created the connection for those that he shared that who he sat at the table with and had these conversations.

Just a way of

being present.

And Janet, if you could offer one piece of advice to someone who feels stuck or that they are missing that connection in their lives, what would it be?

Well, those are two different questions.

Are they feeling stuck or are they feeling they're missing the connection or are they feeling both?

Well, how about we just go with

how about one piece of advice to someone who feels that they are missing connection in their lives?

Well, I'd say a few things, like thinking about how actually not isolated they are, as I talked about earlier, but just understanding how everything that we have that sustains our lives is as a result of somebody else's work or kindness and get that feeling of gratitude.

And you begin to feel that sense of gratitude,

it changes your energy feeling and it's a sort of an opening of the heart.

And I think when we can open our hearts, we can take those little steps, the baby steps maybe initially, but just to have that casual conversation with somebody in the produce section of the supermarket or pick up the phone and call somebody you haven't spoken to for a long time.

Be the person to initiate that

kind of connection.

And I'm not sure what everybody's different, why they might feel that lack of connection.

Is it because they are feeling very shy or unworthy?

Some could be so many different reasons why they're feeling that that lack of connection that I don't know that there's one prescription for that.

But those are the first things that come to mind is just opening your heart,

even if that can be a small beginning by just realizing how lucky you are to be in this life

and how many, how to remember that things are always in the process of change.

And because of that quality of impermanence always being present, that you're not stuck in any moment or in any state of being.

And we have that potential to influence the change that we would like to create in our own lives through mindfulness.

Practicing mindfulness is another way to awareness of what are those thoughts that are running through your mind on a daily basis and how accurate, how truly accurate are they?

Because from our thoughts, we generate our feelings.

From our feelings we create our actions and from our actions we receive our results.

So there's a lot to it.

That's not an easy question, John.

Well, Janet, it was such a joy having you on today, speaking of your book, Joy.

And

can you please tell the listeners or viewers where they can learn more about you?

and pick up this book as well as your other books.

Sure, thank you.

My website is probably the easiest place to find me and to learn anything is my name, Janet Edelie, which is spelled E-T-T-E-L-E, janetedley.com.

My newest book is going to be released on January 28th.

It should be available anywhere you buy books.

Anywhere you buy books.

I don't want to specify just one place, wherever your favorite place is to buy books.

that's where you can get it.

And the other books are also available.

They're how generosity works, how the root of kindness works, how patient works, how patience works, and how joyous effort works.

And thank you so much for having me here today.

It was really wonderful to meet you and to have this conversation.

Well, thank you so much to Janet and thanks for being a listener of the show.

I always love it when I have guests on who have listened to previous episodes.

So I really appreciate it.

I've enjoyed them.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Stay well.

Take care.

Thank you, you two.

That was such a calming, wise, and meaningful dialogue with Janet Edelie.

Her ability to distill complex spiritual ideas into soul-nourishing stories is truly rare.

As Janet shared, the key to lasting fulfillment isn't in achieving more, but in how we show up for others, how we approach the ordinary with joy, and how we align our energy with a higher purpose.

Her message is one we all need right now.

That joyous effort rooted in compassion and intention is not only possible, but transformative.

So as we close, I want to leave you with a few reflection prompts from today's episode.

How can you turn your daily routines into mindful acts of service?

What does it mean for you to put joyful effort into your relationships, your work, and your healing?

How might shifting your focus from self-gain to other-centeredness create more peace in your life?

If today's conversation resonated with you, please take a moment to rate and review Passion Struck on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

Your feedback helps us grow and bring these powerful messages to more people around the world.

You can find Janet's books, including How Joyce Effort Works, by visiting the show notes at passionstruck.com.

And remember, you can join our growing free community inside the ignition room, subscribe to the Ignited Life newsletter on Substack, and watch the full episode and bonus clips on our YouTube channels.

And coming up next on Passion Struck, I'm joined by Dr.

Judith Joseph, one of the most trusted voices in psychiatry, to talk about her groundbreaking new book, High Functioning, and what it really means to heal the parts of ourselves no one else sees.

What I've found is that when you see people who are over functioning, a lot of times it's not just them.

It has been contagious.

It spreads to their families.

It spreads to their team.

It spreads even to their pets, right?

Everyone's not happy.

There's a lack of joy.

The anhedonia spreads.

to the ecosystem.

But if you can retrain yourself and start to engage in being present, slowing down and accessing life the way you should, then that spreads as well.

So you can actually reverse things if you're mindful and intentional about it.

Until then, live boldly, live with purpose, and as always, live life passion-structure.