What Is Your Life's Purpose? | Oprah's Book Club with Eckhart Tolle
“A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose” by Eckhart Tolle available here.
“The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment” by Eckhart Tolle available here.
"Stillness Speaks" by Eckhart Tolle available here.
For more information you can visit Eckhart Tolle’s website.
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@Oprah
Oprah’s Book Club: Presented by Starbucks offers a conversation with global thought leader Eckhart Tolle about his groundbreaking work, "A New Earth," which has sold fifteen million copies worldwide. Oprah says it has had more effect on her than "any other book by a living author."
Eckhart talks about overcoming cancer and reveals simple, transformative lessons on diminishing ego and becoming a more conscious human being. Oprah and Eckhart also engage readers, including the actor Chris Evans, as they share their favorite teachings and quotes from the book.
Eckhart and Oprah are joined by a live audience at the Starbucks Reserve® Empire State Building® store for conversation over the new Starbucks Cortado, a small but robust coffee classic made with three Starbucks® Blonde Roast ristretto shots and velvety steamed milk.
Whether you're new to Eckhart's work, or have been forever changed by his wisdom, this is the conversation for our times.
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Transcript
Speaker 1 We're going to have a great show, you and I. Here comes the man, y'all.
Speaker 1 The man.
Speaker 1 Mr. Tole.
Speaker 3 Can't you see it?
Speaker 1 We're in a coffee house having coffee with Eckhart, I'm telling you.
Speaker 1
Hi, everybody. I am so excited to welcome you to Oprah's book club presented by Starbucks.
It's so good to be here at the Starbucks inside the Empire State Building, right in the center of Manhattan.
Speaker 1 So, hello to all of you who are listening on the podcast or watching us on my YouTube channel.
Speaker 1 We joined forces with Starbucks to bring three of what I think are some of the best things in life: books, coffee, and conversation, all together in one place.
Speaker 1 And Starbucks paired this month's book club selection with a strong cortado and so enjoy yours okay let's have a toast to you toast to you thank you i also really appreciate the idea of meeting a friend for coffee with a book don't you like that idea especially if you get to talk about this book After 109 book club selections, I have never chosen the same book twice until now.
Speaker 1 Eckartoli's A New New Earth, Awakening to Your Life's Purpose. As one of the great spiritual teachers of our time, even one conscious press
Speaker 2 is a mini meditation.
Speaker 1 I believe Eckhart's work has never been more relevant or needed as it is today.
Speaker 2 Deep within you, there is a silent power.
Speaker 1
Over the years, right now, you all are online with me from every corner on our planet. I've always been eager to share a new earth.
This is my own freed copy of the book.
Speaker 1 This year marks the 20th anniversary of the book. It's been translated into 50 languages and sold more than 15 million copies.
Speaker 1 On this podcast, we're taking a deep dive into some of Eckhart's key concepts like recognizing the ego.
Speaker 2 And so to note your own ego is already an awakening.
Speaker 1 How to stay in the present moment.
Speaker 2 The beginning of present moment awareness is to be aware of your sensory perceptions.
Speaker 1 And we'll hear from readers.
Speaker 5 I was blown away when I read your book.
Speaker 1 About how Eckhart's teachings have transformed their lives.
Speaker 6 It was absolutely my aha moment, and it just felt very freeing, and it gave me a lot of hope.
Speaker 1 So I want to just say that 16 years ago, I read this book around 2007, and I really was...
Speaker 1 changed by the book, A New Earth. I would have to say that this book
Speaker 1 has probably had more effect on my life than any other book I've read by a living author. Okay?
Speaker 1 So that excludes the Bible.
Speaker 1 But by a living author, I would say this book has had the most impact on my life. And I thought I was having a pretty good life.
Speaker 1 And my life experience, my experience of myself as a human being, as a being on the planet, my ability to separate my thoughts from myself and to realize that I am the awareness disguised as a person.
Speaker 1 My ability to understand what he says on page 41, that life will give you exactly the experience you need for the evolution of your consciousness. And how do you know that?
Speaker 1 Because that's the experience you are having right now. My ability to accept that.
Speaker 1 My ability to recognize that all stress is wanting the moment you're in to be something else and that you are causing most of your suffering because you can't accept the present moment for what it is.
Speaker 1 I mean, it changed me and changed me and changed me and changed me. I thought I knew what ego was until chapters two and three of this book.
Speaker 1
It changed me and changed me and changed me. It uplifted my life.
and enhanced it in ways that I cannot even describe. And I will tell you, it's the one book that is constantly by my nightstand.
Speaker 1 So I have the Bible there, I have have Mary Oliver's poems there, and I have Eckhartolli's A New Earth There, consistently all the time.
Speaker 1 And every couple of years, I go back and I reread the entire book. And I was thinking about where we are in the world right now and what our consciousness really needs is
Speaker 1 a little enhancement, I thought.
Speaker 1 And I thought, there's no book that's had more influence or power, in my opinion, to change the way you you think about yourself and the way you think about the world than a new earth.
Speaker 1 And this just happens to be, I think, the 20th edition of it. And I will also say this, over the years, I have met multiple, multiple, multiple, multiple spiritual teachers, spiritual thinkers,
Speaker 1 voices of our time.
Speaker 1
And I will have to say, no, person have I met that had absolutely no ego other than this man. This man is a walking example of walking the walk.
Eckhart Tolle, welcome.
Speaker 2 Thank you. Thank you.
Speaker 1 And so
Speaker 1
I ran it back in 2007, 2008. We did a 10-part series on every chapter.
And at the time, we were just beginning to Skype. Can you all remember those days? We were just beginning to Skype.
Speaker 1 So the very first sessions, every time we were together, Eckhart would go, can you believe we're seeing people?
Speaker 2 I can see you can you see me
Speaker 1 and now it sounds like you know that was ancient times ancient times so let's start with a basic
Speaker 1 a new earth 101 for those watching and listening who've not read the book yet how do you explain the core message of a new earth
Speaker 2 well first the general context is that
Speaker 2
Humanity or human beings are not a finished product. They are evolving.
And
Speaker 2
the other context for it is the evolution of consciousness in human beings. And we are all part of that evolution of consciousness.
And so the subtitle is Awakening to Your Life Purpose.
Speaker 2 And life purpose is twofold. One is the personal purpose, whatever you are called upon to do in this lifetime, outer activities, your job, whatever it is you do, that is your outer purpose.
Speaker 2 There is a more important underlying deeper purpose that needs to flow into whatever you do in your outer life.
Speaker 2 And that deeper purpose is to become a more conscious human being, to embody the evolution of consciousness, the flowering of consciousness.
Speaker 2 And that's to do with diminishment of the ego, to discover within yourself that which
Speaker 2 continuously prevents you from evolving.
Speaker 1 So it's about we are here to evolve more consciously as conscious beings.
Speaker 1 And the purpose is to work towards diminishing that thing we call the ego.
Speaker 1 One of Eckhart's core teachings is that we are not our thoughts. I know that's a challenging concept.
Speaker 1 Eckart says the compulsive thinking that plagues most people is a form of addiction, one of the most pervasive on the planet. It fuels our ego.
Speaker 1 Thinking separates us from our true self or the transcendent as Eckhart calls it. He says the only way to reach this deeper dimension is through the practice of presence.
Speaker 1 Now I will tell you all a really funny story. When I first had this conversation with Eckhart, I remember saying to you, I really think I have my ego pretty much under control.
Speaker 1 Okay, so the very next day, I had a doctor's appointment to get a mammogram. And normally, because I am a known person,
Speaker 1 I am brought around the back of the doctor's office and I'm taken in the back and I don't have to wait in a line and I don't have to sit.
Speaker 1 And so on this particular day, I am brought to the front and everybody's sitting there in the waiting room. And I think, oh, well, this is a nice experience.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 1
So I thought, well, let me just enjoy the moment, the present moment. So I start talking to people.
Oh, what are you reading? And
Speaker 1 so the appointment was at 11.
Speaker 1 And about 11.20, I remember getting up and calling my assistant, Libby. And I said, Libby,
Speaker 2 what is going on here?
Speaker 1 I am at the doctor's office to get the managram. What is going on? And she says, oh, don't worry.
Speaker 1 What they're going to do, they're going to take you in the back, and then they're going to put like an apron on you, and then you're going to have to take off your top.
Speaker 2 I said, Libby, I know what a manager is.
Speaker 2 I want to know why am I in the waiting room.
Speaker 1 And then right in the middle of that went, I think that's my ego.
Speaker 2 I think it's my ego.
Speaker 1 It's my ego that felt like, why am I waiting when I've never had to wait? And it was shown to me the exact next day after I told you how it was all in control.
Speaker 2 So did you discover the ego
Speaker 2 in the moment that you were speaking or
Speaker 2 just afterwards or was it right afterwards? in the middle of me saying I know what a mammogram is
Speaker 2 I thought oh
Speaker 2 there she is there's the ego that's the thing that you thought you had under control yeah but that's a good sign because to to discover the ego in the moment it arises requires
Speaker 2 a fairly high degree of presence. Many people would only discover the ego maybe hours later or the next day and then think back about, oh that was the ego
Speaker 2 if you notice the ego in the moment it arises me means you're really
Speaker 2 quite present yeah and and to notice the ego in oneself the moment it arises is
Speaker 2 a gain in consciousness it doesn't mean that you failed it's not not a defeat it doesn't mean oh I there's the ego gain or I was still stuck in the ego no
Speaker 2 because presence is there at the same time.
Speaker 1 Because the awareness that that is what is happening is what helps you diminish that ego.
Speaker 2
Yes, the awareness frees you from ego. The first thing that awareness does, it breaks the identification with the ego.
Yes.
Speaker 2 So people who are ego-possessed, they don't know they have an ego because they are so identified, the ego, it becomes them. It is the person.
Speaker 2 And so
Speaker 2 to know your own ego is already an awakening. Yes.
Speaker 2
So what is it that awakens? The awareness. So that's the awareness is consciousness.
And normally consciousness is always absorbed by the mind. And that becomes the ego.
Speaker 1 Awareness is really who you are.
Speaker 1 Because you say in the very beginning of your book, Stillness Speaks, which if you just want to introduce someone to these principles, I think Stillness Speaks is a wonderful way to do that because you don't have to read it all at one time.
Speaker 1 They're like little paragraphs that bring you into the space of stillness.
Speaker 1 And you say on the very first page that it is the awareness of these words on the page and that awareness bringing them into thoughts. You are that awareness disguised as a person.
Speaker 2 Yes.
Speaker 1
That is who you really are. Yes.
And if you are not operating from that space, which most of us can't do that all the time, you do. I have seen you live your life this way.
Speaker 1 But there are many times where I have to bring myself back to that. And I will say that before reading A New Earth, I thought ego meant people who were arrogant or people who were,
Speaker 1 you know, always trying to boss other people around, or it meant that you were somebody who thought you were better than other people. I didn't realize.
Speaker 1 that every one of us has an ego and it's your role in life to keep that thing in check and to separate and understand your true self from the ego that is consistently trying to rule your life.
Speaker 2 Yes. Well, also, you don't need to wait for
Speaker 2 the challenge to come into your life. Also, discover that
Speaker 2 at any moment,
Speaker 2 at this moment, as you're sitting here, there is your experience of this moment, sensory experience, visual, auditory, auditory, that's part of the present moment.
Speaker 2 And if you want to go deeper into the present moment, that's already a wonderful thing to become aware of your surroundings rather being totally absorbed into the stream of mostly useless thinking.
Speaker 2
So you become more acutely aware of your surroundings. And often you find there's an aliveness around there, no matter where you are in this room.
So
Speaker 2 I call it sometimes the beginning of present moment awareness is to be aware of their sensory perceptions. Oh,
Speaker 2 and for some people, that's like waking up out of some kind of dream because they were always immersed in thinking about past and future,
Speaker 2 only peripherally aware of the present moment.
Speaker 1 And also wanting to be, I remember reading this, I think it was either in
Speaker 1 A New Earth or Power of Now, that stress is wanting the present moment to be something other than what it is.
Speaker 2 Yes.
Speaker 1 And that you all relate to that, right? And that you're stuck in traffic and you're like stressing about getting to the da-da-da.
Speaker 1 If you just relax, first of all, if you can't move the traffic, then what are you stressing about?
Speaker 1 And if you just relax into it and accept, get to acceptance of this present moment, it makes everything
Speaker 2 flow more easily.
Speaker 1 And I have found that that principle of being able to be in the present moment, which has now become my greatest gift to myself, is the best offering you can give to yourself and to anybody else.
Speaker 1 Because it means you accept this moment for what it is, and even if the moment isn't what you want it to be, you can't begin to change it until you get to acceptance.
Speaker 2
Yes, that's the basis for also a basis for intelligent action. or wise action.
I think the key word is wise, whereas wisdom and there's intelligence. Yes.
Speaker 2
An intelligent person can easily have a huge ego. So you cannot equate the ego and intelligence often come together easily.
Wisdom is something different. Wisdom arises out of the awareness
Speaker 2 moment. So to have to make wise decisions, the basis for a wise decision is first an acceptance of what is right now
Speaker 2 rather than a reaction against what is, an emotional reaction against it,
Speaker 2 that prevents you from arriving at a wise decision of what to do. But if you can accept this moment as it is, and then one could say
Speaker 2 a higher intelligence
Speaker 2
begins to operate, and that is wisdom. That higher intelligence is wisdom.
It can then operate.
Speaker 1 You accept the moment and then say, now what do I need to do?
Speaker 2
Exactly. Then I've accepted it.
You get it?
Speaker 1
You get the difference? Instead of resisting the moment. Yes.
And I find a lot. lot of people are in resistance of whatever the moment is right now in big ways and little ways in their life.
Speaker 2 Yes.
Speaker 2 I also noticed or sometimes observed people who run a business and of course if you run a business continuously obstacles arise this is normal every day some kind of obstacle arises and people who are egoically possessed they become angry and reactive and they fight their obstacles.
Speaker 2 They immediately have an angry reaction when an obstacle arises. But there are some people, the most successful people,
Speaker 2 they look at the obstacle instead of reacting against it, they immediately see what it is that can be done to either circumvent the obstacle or transform it into something positive. Right.
Speaker 2 That you direct attention to the situation. And I call that responding rather than reacting.
Speaker 1
Yes. Yeah.
For me, that is the obstacle shows itself and I immediately say to the obstacle, what are you here to show me?
Speaker 1
What are you here to teach me? Yes. And accept that you're here to show me something.
and then try to figure out what it is you need to do. Yes.
Yes. I know Annabelle in our audience is a first timer.
Speaker 1
Annabelle, tell us about your experience. Hi.
I felt like reading this book now was at the right season of my life. And knowing that I was going to read it in community, I wanted to be very present.
Speaker 1
So I highlighted and took notes in a way that I've never done before. I don't like writing in my books.
I want them to be pristine.
Speaker 2 I kept a list of all my aha moments.
Speaker 1 But I loved writing my notes and my questions because I feel like it's going to be a gift to my kids. When they read it, it'll be almost like a conversation
Speaker 1 and it'll shed light on what I took away from the book.
Speaker 2
So thank you. All right.
Very good.
Speaker 1 Terrific. Director and actor Chris Evans is an avid reader of Eckhart's work, and we asked if he wanted to join this book club conversation.
Speaker 1 And even though he's filming a movie on the other side of the world, Chris is zooming from Athens.
Speaker 2 Whoa, look at you.
Speaker 2
Hey. Hi, Chris.
Hello.
Speaker 9 It's an honor to be here.
Speaker 1 Thanks for listening. We'll be right back with more of my conversation with Eckhart Tolle.
Speaker 2 Listen in.
Speaker 10 Starbucks, it's a great day for coffee.
Speaker 1
Welcome back to you. I'm talking with the great spiritual teacher, Eckhart Tole.
I am so glad that you are with us. Thank you for joining us.
Speaker 1
I have to tell you, I thought I was the biggest Eckhart person on the planet, but you have taken it to the next level, I hear. Tell us about your tattoo.
I don't have an Eckhart tattoo.
Speaker 2 Yes, I do.
Speaker 9 I do have an Eckhart tattoo. It's actually from Stillness Speaks.
Speaker 9 And of the... you know, the many lines in his books that have resonated, this one just felt like a real North Star.
Speaker 9 It was a line that said, when you lose touch with inner stillness, you lose touch with yourself. When you lose touch with yourself, you lose yourself in the world.
Speaker 9 And, you know, I put enormous emphasis on the practice of stillness, which is basically the practice of being present.
Speaker 9 But you can't be present unless you're accepting of the moment, accepting what is, surrendering to it.
Speaker 9 You know, I think, I think, well, as I'm sure you all know, most suffering comes from resisting in some capacity what is. You know,
Speaker 9 you either resist and struggle or you surrender and accept. And one of those things will bring you closer to who you are.
Speaker 9 And one of those things, you know, you're on the risk of losing yourself completely.
Speaker 2 Wow.
Speaker 1 So why do you think this particular quote resonated so profoundly with you, Chris?
Speaker 9 I think to some degree, the industry I'm in, you hear stories of people losing themselves. But I think
Speaker 9 through the practice of stillness, all those other downstream lessons and practices occur. The act of recognizing that you're not the voice in your head.
Speaker 9 You are just the awareness of it.
Speaker 9
That voice, that compulsive stream of labeling and comparing, that's not who you are. That voice wants to pull you out of the moment.
That voice wants to...
Speaker 9 you know, analyze the past and worry about the future. If you follow that voice too long, you identify with it and your suffering will just spiral.
Speaker 9 So that initial quote that I have on me forever just felt like a real foundational building block to this world.
Speaker 1 And where is it on you?
Speaker 9 Right on my chest, right there.
Speaker 2 Okay, okay, I love that. Okay, I love that.
Speaker 1 Did you have a question for Eckhart?
Speaker 9 Yeah, I do.
Speaker 2 I had, well,
Speaker 9 it was kind of a two, it was kind of a four-parter, but I'm going to spare you.
Speaker 9 I guess my question is, you know, you've been doing this for so long.
Speaker 9 Do you still have access to your former suffering? Can you recognize it? And
Speaker 9 do you still feel that suffering the way you did then? Or do you look at it through different eyes, through a different lens?
Speaker 9 Does it still resonate the same way?
Speaker 2 I don't feel the suffering anymore at all.
Speaker 2
It's like evaporated. I remember it.
I remember, for example, that
Speaker 2
in my childhood, I was mostly unhappy because of an unstable family background. I didn't have a happy childhood.
I remember that. But on a feeling level, I don't revive it.
It's not there anymore.
Speaker 2
It exhausted itself. It evaporated or it got burnt up by the presence.
I don't know exactly how to put it. But
Speaker 2 the unhappiness has not survived in me, except as a
Speaker 2 memory, but not on an emotional level. So it's gone, which is good.
Speaker 1 Isn't that a profound thing to be able to say? The unhappiness has not survived in me.
Speaker 1 The seeds of Eckhart's evolution emerge from a difficult childhood. Born in Germany in 1948, Eckhart's parents separated when he was a child.
Speaker 1 He eventually became a distinguished research scholar at Cambridge, but his burgeoning success failed to soothe the anxiety and depression that dogged him.
Speaker 1 At age 29, pushed to the brink of despair, Eckart contemplated suicide. It's in this moment of pain, a new awareness was born.
Speaker 1 Eckart says he experienced a spiritual transformation so profound, his suffering disappeared.
Speaker 2
Unhappiness for many people becomes an intrinsic part of their sense of identity. Yeah.
And so that's also explains why many people have a resistance.
Speaker 1 As every therapist knows many people have a resistance towards letting go of their unhappiness so the the therapist tries to because that has become their identity that's their story they think they lose themselves if let go of their unhappiness they're not complaining about being unhappy yes yes yeah yeah I know Chris I was saying to the audience before I don't know if you heard me Eckhart is actually the only person of the thousands and thousands and thousands of people I've interviewed who has no ego who just I mean who is who who not only writes about it, but actually lives it and walks the walk.
Speaker 1 And so I'm not surprised that your unhappiness has not survived in you.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 1
Pretty incredible. Yeah.
Yeah. Well, thank you so much for joining us on the other side of the world.
Thanks for taking the time to Zoom with us. Thank you so much.
We love that tattoo.
Speaker 2
Thank you for having us. Thank you, Chris.
Abbott.
Speaker 1 Thank you.
Speaker 1 Michelle, where are you? You have a question. Go ahead.
Speaker 3 Just to share that I read your book back in, I guess, 2007, and it sparked that awareness in me.
Speaker 3 But it wasn't until these past couple years of great trials and tribulations that the discipline, the motivation to become more present,
Speaker 3 to survive very challenging things,
Speaker 3 to get relief from great pain and suffering. So
Speaker 3 it's been an awakening in me. I still get lost in the illusion of my mind.
Speaker 3 But with great gratitude, it happens for shorter and shorter periods of time.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 the gift has been a true reclaiming of my spirit,
Speaker 3 that which is unshakable.
Speaker 2
Thank you. So thank you.
I have a comment on that.
Speaker 2 When life gets challenging,
Speaker 2 a human being can go two ways. And very often, when life gets difficult, some loss, obstacle, many ways
Speaker 2 challenge can present itself,
Speaker 2 you can either become more
Speaker 2 identified with the ego and you become more unhappy, you become a very unhappy human, reactive, angry, resentful. despondent many many many negative states can arise when you're being challenged
Speaker 2 That's one way you can go.
Speaker 2 Or the other way you can go, and that usually happens if there's already a certain amount of presence in you, you've already practiced or you've had glimpses of presence or even more than glimpses of presence, when then a challenge comes, it can easily happen that the challenge, one could almost say, forces you into becoming more present.
Speaker 2 It deepens your presence.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2
an example from even from my life, there's always a presence in my life. There's always a presence.
Sometimes it's in the background. When I talk now, there's a presence in the background.
Speaker 2
I can sense the stillness behind the words. And one could say the words come out of the stillness.
And that's even when I go about my daily business, there's always two ordinary things.
Speaker 2 There is that sense of peace.
Speaker 2
You are aware of the awareness. I'm aware of the awareness.
And then two and a half years ago, I went to the doctor. Another doctor story, you had one, now I have one.
Speaker 2 I had certain symptoms,
Speaker 2 intestinal symptoms, finally had to have a colonoscopy.
Speaker 2 After the colonoscopy, the doctor said, you have cancer.
Speaker 2 Oh.
Speaker 2 And when you hear that, usually,
Speaker 2 I mean, it could mean Yes, you could have a few more years. It could also mean you only have six months or 12 months.
Speaker 2 When you hear that, that's so I was a little shocked
Speaker 2 the person was shocked
Speaker 2 and
Speaker 2 immediately
Speaker 2 I noticed an
Speaker 2 enormous intensification of presence
Speaker 2 as if somebody had turned up the dimmer switch and
Speaker 2 on a practical level, 10 days after the diagnosis, I had an operation. But in those ten days,
Speaker 2 I spent hours and hours in intense presence, usually presence in the background. And at this presence came into the foreground.
Speaker 2 So I would sit in my room, just no thought in my head at all, just an enormous amount of awareness, just filled with awareness. I could feel the cells of the body filling with awareness.
Speaker 2 And I believe that was a kind of self-healing also.
Speaker 2 And I had the operation, and they took section out of my colon.
Speaker 2 And then after the operation, another scan
Speaker 2 and said, fine, it hasn't spread anywhere. And I continued with the wonderful presence practice because presence is also extremely healing.
Speaker 2 So I gave that as an example for when you're really challenged and you're already familiar with presence is,
Speaker 2 then you will find that you become, through the challenge, you become more present.
Speaker 2 so it it it deepens you at any challenge then deepens you to rather than the challenge making you more unconscious I think this is really hard what you're saying is real you are really ET your initials are ET and you are like ET
Speaker 1 sitting here in the chair
Speaker 2 because
Speaker 1 I don't know nobody else who could do that. You know,
Speaker 1 you hear that you get the cancer diagnosis and you go, oh, oh, I think my presence is going to come forward. You know, that's really, really
Speaker 1 challenging for most of us in the world.
Speaker 2 Yes, yeah.
Speaker 1 And that's just because you stay in that space. It's always there.
Speaker 2 You are always aware that you are aware. Yes, yes.
Speaker 1 And you are always aware, even when you're speaking to us right now and having this conversation, that what you're saying, that your thoughts are not you.
Speaker 2 Not losing oneself in this thought stream, even when one speaks. You can often see when you observe people having a conversation or discussion, they easily lose themselves in their thought stream.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 When the emotion comes in, the moment you identify with the thought
Speaker 2 very quickly, an emotion will come in also.
Speaker 2 And then you start arguing. When you have conversations with your family, do you lose yourself in your mental positions? And then the other mental position becomes to you an enemy.
Speaker 2 So that's very important to practice presence when you meet your family members and they may have different opinions and your different mental positions.
Speaker 2 Can you allow them their mental position and don't equate their mental position with
Speaker 2
who or what they truly are? There's a being underneath their mental position. They are not their mental position.
That's just the ego.
Speaker 2 So then you can sometimes you can be compassionate towards their mental position and allow them to have this. You don't need to put them right and say, no, you're wrong.
Speaker 2 The moment you get into right and wrong argument, your ego is back. The ego loves proving other people wrong.
Speaker 2
And so of course, you need to be right. Being right is one of the great things that the ego strives for.
That's right.
Speaker 1 And so I think in one of the books, you talk about,
Speaker 1 do you want to be right?
Speaker 1
Or do you want peace? Yeah. Yeah, that was another huge lesson for me.
Do you want to be right or do you want to have peace?
Speaker 1 And I didn't realize in all those years when I'm like, well, I know I'm right. I know I'm right.
Speaker 2 I am right.
Speaker 1 I even had a t-shirt that says, I know I'm right.
Speaker 1 That
Speaker 1
is, that's an egoic move. You know, I thought it's just like, I know I'm right.
So.
Speaker 2 Yes, yes. Even if, I mean, sometimes you do know that you're right because there are certain facts, some facts you can.
Speaker 2 And some people may deny certain facts
Speaker 2 and you know very well that you are right and they are not. And yet you can state your belief or your position.
Speaker 2 You can say, well, let's say, how long does it take for the light from the moon to reach the earth? And this person says, oh, it takes 10 minutes. And you say, no, I know it takes
Speaker 2
one and a half seconds. Okay, you happen to be right.
But then allow that person to have their opinion instead of beginning to argue.
Speaker 1 So your need to prove that you're right is your ego. That's the ego.
Speaker 2 needing to you. Yes.
Speaker 1 And how other ways does the ego show up? Because we wanted to establish that from the beginning. Like the difference between you and your ego is.
Speaker 1 I'm so glad you all are joining me on this podcast.
Speaker 2 We will be back in a moment with more of Eckhart Tolle.
Speaker 2 Listen in.
Speaker 10 Starbucks, it's a great day for coffee.
Speaker 2 We're back with Eckhart Tolle talking about his life-changing seminal book, A New Earth.
Speaker 2 Yes, the question is,
Speaker 2 how do you recognize the ego in you when it arises? It's usually
Speaker 2
not a pleasant place to be. The ego is usually recognized as ultimately dysfunctional in yourself.
So, any negative emotion that arises tends to be part of the ego. It starts with irritation.
Speaker 2
It's a relatively minor negative emotion. It can easily become amplified and evolve into something bigger.
But let's start with simple irritation.
Speaker 2 If you're able to observe an irritation in yourself,
Speaker 2 you can observe how does it arise.
Speaker 2 And you may find,
Speaker 2 and this investigation, how does it arise, already requires some awareness. Yes.
Speaker 2 And so, so, and then you might notice that the irritation arises because there's a thought in your head that says something about whatever it is that you're irritated about.
Speaker 2 You were sitting in the waiting room, the doctor's office, so most probably your mind was beginning to speak to you, saying, This is awful. Why are they
Speaker 2 totally ignoring me? Don't they know who I am? Yeah.
Speaker 2 And then you, if awareness comes in at that moment, you can observe that what your mind is saying creates the irritation.
Speaker 1 What your mind is saying is creating the irritation,
Speaker 8 not the situation.
Speaker 2 Right. And if you can discover that, that's an enormous discovery.
Speaker 2 And I sometimes recommend you should ask yourself, how would I experience this situation if I did not add any thought to it, if I just accepted it for what it is, the bare is-ness of this.
Speaker 2 And then you're sitting in the waiting room, to go back to the example, and you're just enjoying the people.
Speaker 2 breathing observing what are you reading okay good yeah yeah yes so and so the discovery that same thing with sitting in traffic people get so crazy sitting in traffic yes how would I experience this moment if I didn't add any thought to it It's just presence.
Speaker 2 You're present with what is.
Speaker 2 And that's also, that is how the ego shrinks and shrinks and shrinks as you practice that.
Speaker 1
Eckhart says, as we grow spiritually, the ego becomes less less reactive. When we encounter obstacles or difficult people, we face them consciously.
The ego believes fighting back is power.
Speaker 2 But Eckhart says the opposite is actually true.
Speaker 1 Authentic power comes when we surrender and, as he writes, love the is-ness of the present moment.
Speaker 1 Okay, Denise, S, where are you? I heard you gave this to your adult children for Christmas. Oh, yes.
Speaker 2 We are going under the tree.
Speaker 1 You had an awakening about the ego also?
Speaker 5 I believe so, yes.
Speaker 5 I was blown away when I read your book because I had been on a search for years, five years, digging, and I felt defeated. And so I read your book.
Speaker 5 And on page 193, it says, knowing about yourself is not who you are.
Speaker 5 And at that moment, I thought I lived in my identity my whole life. Yeah.
Speaker 5 Every, you know, coming from divorced parents, narcissistic influences and mother. And the minute I read that chapter, I slept like a baby and I haven't thought about that since.
Speaker 5 Would you say that's an awakening?
Speaker 2 Oh, yes, definitely.
Speaker 2 Yay!
Speaker 2 Pretty good. Thank you.
Speaker 2 Thank you for your work. That's a wonderful awakening.
Speaker 1
Yeah, that's a big one. That's big.
That's a big aha that opens the door to many other ahas.
Speaker 2 It's fantastic. One of the most important teachings from ancient Greece is the dictum, know thyself from the ancient Greece.
Speaker 2 That was inscribed in the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, the famous place, carved into the walls of the temple, know thyself.
Speaker 2 And that doesn't mean at the deepest level, it's not knowing about yourself, the stories of your life, the story of your life. There's a place for that too.
Speaker 2 If you go to a psychoanalyst, psychoanalysts will
Speaker 2 bring up all kinds of hidden memories and so on. That
Speaker 2 might have limited usefulness, but eventually you have to go beyond that and go to deeper.
Speaker 2
Yourself is the awareness. Your true self is not whatever arises in the awareness.
Your true self is the awareness itself. And the recognition of that in yourself is also stillness.
Speaker 2 The recognition of the awareness in yourself is also stillness. And whenever you accept this moment as it is,
Speaker 2
that portal opens up. Because that acceptance of what it is brings you to that state of inner peace.
And
Speaker 2 that's how it works. So
Speaker 2 the practice then should be... this continuous endeavoring to work with the present moment.
Speaker 2 I sometimes say yes to the present moment, say yes to your experience of this moment, whatever it is you're experiencing this moment, accept it because it already is.
Speaker 2 If action is called for, that's fine, then the acceptance becomes the basis for action. So that is
Speaker 2 to find yourself, you need to let go of the that continuous resistance that is inseparable from the ego.
Speaker 2 When you let go of resistance, the ego begins to shrink.
Speaker 2 The ego needs fighting the ego needs enemies enemies in the not necessarily but also in the form of other people enemies in the form of other groups of people political groups or whatever it may be but it also needs enemies in the form of even situations in which you can find yourself and you don't like the situation so you make the situation into an enemy or something that you have to do.
Speaker 2 You're doing it, but you don't really want to be doing it. You're doing it reluctantly.
Speaker 2 So you make the doing into also into a kind of enemy so whenever you're doing something also to give your fullest attention and not doing with some hidden resentment that's also very dysfunctional state yeah and that also strengthens the ego it's all these are all aspects of ego yeah so it requires a lot of inner vigilance that's all the and your your your main purpose in life is to to have that inner vigilance to have inner peace yeah yeah and it's it's the thing that i ask myself
Speaker 1 all the time before making any decisions is, is this my ego? Or am I doing this from the state of real awareness? What is the reason? What is the real intention behind it?
Speaker 1
Because if it is an ego-led decision, is going to get me in trouble. Or I'm going to end up being resentful.
Or I'm going to end up being upset with myself or someone else.
Speaker 1 And I think being upset with yourself is actually worse than being upset with other people.
Speaker 1 So I'm constantly asking that question of myself for almost everything that I do is like, is this an ego move or is this coming from my pure self?
Speaker 2
That's a wonderful question. Yeah.
But at other times, the ego can also arise so suddenly and spontaneously that you don't have time to ask yourself before,
Speaker 2 suddenly it's there.
Speaker 2 And then
Speaker 2 you recognize in that moment or just after that moment, ah, there it is. There it is.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1
Grace is 26 years old and here with her mother. And I heard you wrote a note in your book.
What is it?
Speaker 4 Yes.
Speaker 6 So my aha moment came fairly early into reading the book. And it is when you explain that we are not our thoughts.
Speaker 4 We are that space before the thoughts.
Speaker 7
And that really floored me so much that I needed to take a pause. And I just kind of...
sat with it for a second and then I really wanted to visualize it.
Speaker 6 So I wrote in my book, you
Speaker 6 and I underlined it and I left a space in between and then I put thought and underlined it.
Speaker 4 And that might sound simple, but I really just needed to actually see that physical space between the two things.
Speaker 6 For me, I've spent a lot of my life struggling with anxiety and depression.
Speaker 4 I've been through a lot of therapy.
Speaker 4 And reading that gave me pause because I had just accepted that
Speaker 4 over-intellectualizing, over-analyzing my thoughts, that's just been my normal for quite, for most of my life.
Speaker 4 And this made me realize that that might not actually have to be the rest of my life.
Speaker 2 And it. Oh, I love that so much.
Speaker 8 That's good.
Speaker 1 That's a big aha.
Speaker 6 It was absolutely my aha moment. And it just felt very freeing and it gave me a lot of hope.
Speaker 7 And I want to thank you for that.
Speaker 4 And my question is,
Speaker 4 what does that space, I guess, mean to you, that space before the thoughts?
Speaker 4 And also, how do we protect it when we're so socialized to constantly attach to our thoughts or to solely identify with our thoughts? How do you protect that space before the thoughts?
Speaker 4 How do we protect our eye?
Speaker 2 Yes, the wonderful question.
Speaker 2
And a wonderful insight you had. It's just amazing.
Really good. So, yes, protecting it because this world will always challenge you with
Speaker 2 continuous noise, continuous mental clutter,
Speaker 2 especially since we have invented all these devices that can amplify the mental clutter that was already there. Before I go more deeply into your question, a little thing.
Speaker 2 You know, people always send text messages and then you have to look and so book message comes in, what's going on.
Speaker 2
I sometimes send, I haven't done it in a while, but I'll do it again soon. I sometimes send people a space message.
I send them its
Speaker 2 brackets,
Speaker 2 an empty space, and another bracket.
Speaker 2 And so they get a message of one bracket.
Speaker 2 Another bracket?
Speaker 2 No words. And so people who know, they know that if they get that from me, they know, ah, it's a space,
Speaker 2 inner space.
Speaker 2 Okay, E.G., go ahead.
Speaker 2
I'll send you one soon. Okay, good.
I'm sure you can.
Speaker 2 But you are fine. You don't need it.
Speaker 2 So that space is extremely important. So how do you protect it?
Speaker 2 You protect it by
Speaker 2 as much as possible being aware of that space. To be aware of that space,
Speaker 2 a little help,
Speaker 2 something you can do is don't underestimate the importance of breathing, conscious breathing, not necessarily as a structured practice, but simply no matter where you find yourself,
Speaker 2 there isn't anything in particular to do, maybe you're waiting for something or whatever. Be aware of your breathing, take attention, observe the breath as it flows in and out of the body.
Speaker 2 The moment you start observing the breath,
Speaker 2
the mental clutter stops. and there's a spaciousness there.
It creates spaciousness. It takes attention away from the stream of thinking because you cannot both think and be aware of your breath.
Speaker 2 So even now you can verify that in your own experience. Be aware of the breath as you're breathing now.
Speaker 2 And while you're aware of the breath
Speaker 2
going in and out, in that moment you're not thinking. There's an inner spaciousness that arises.
You can use, because the breath is always there, but most of we are not conscious of it mostly.
Speaker 2 And then the breath also puts you in touch with the inner, what I call the inner body feeling,
Speaker 2 to feel the energy in your body,
Speaker 2 especially if you feel into the abdomen, you breathe into
Speaker 2 the belly region, and then you feel that there's an energy here, which the Japanese since then called Hara, this is the energy that is here.
Speaker 2 And you feel
Speaker 2 an energy that lives in you, that's the animating presence, the intelligence that inhabits the body and then you if you feel it here you can also feel it spread out into the other parts into your legs and arms and and then you you begin to be aware of the the animating presence in your body and that free that is spacious takes you out of the mental clutter
Speaker 1 One of Eckhart's renowned practices is what he calls inner body awareness meditation. He says, when we focus on our breath and the aliveness in every cell, we free ourselves from the grip of the ego.
Speaker 1 Our compulsive thinking recedes and with it go our fears, resentments, and negativity. Over time, Eckhart says, breathing and inner body awareness lead directly to alert stillness and inner peace.
Speaker 2 So breathing, breath awareness, and leading to inner body awareness. And then you can be somewhere, you're in traffic.
Speaker 2 for a moment before you were irritated and suddenly you remember spaciousness breathing inner body awareness I love that process I also anytime you're having a conversation or having a thought
Speaker 1 and you are aware of the thought, like you can hear yourself speaking and you are aware that you're having that thought, remembering that you are the awareness. You are not the thought.
Speaker 1 You are the awareness disguised as a person. You are not the thought.
Speaker 1 And the thoughts that you're thinking are very separate, are separate from your awareness of the thoughts, where is the big Y O U resides.
Speaker 1 The big I am. That's where the real I am resides.
Speaker 1 Are you following? You know what we're talking about? I know y'all do over here.
Speaker 8 Y'all are like,
Speaker 1 yes, yes, yes. Eckhart says most people carry within them an accumulation of prior emotional pain, what he calls the pain body.
Speaker 1 It can be unresolved stress, negativity, or fear that impacts a sense of well-being and is a source of suffering for many.
Speaker 1 Eckhart explains, once we recognize the pain body for what it is, we are held hostage no more. Awareness is the first step toward freedom.
Speaker 1
Our discomfort becomes so great, we take action to alleviate it. Eckard explains, the pain body may seem like a huge obstacle.
However, it also can be a powerful catalyst to awaken.
Speaker 1 Thanks for listening. We'll be right back with more of my conversation with Eckhart Tolle.
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Speaker 1 Welcome back to more of my conversation with spiritual thought leader Eckhart Tolle. Let's get to somebody on this site: the difference between your thoughts and the awareness of the thoughts.
Speaker 1 Who wants to speak to that on this side?
Speaker 2 Hi.
Speaker 8 You know, I was thinking just when you said that about the parent-to-child relationship, the pain body.
Speaker 2 Right before I was born, my parents lost a child.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 8 to say that defined who I was
Speaker 2 for
Speaker 2 decades,
Speaker 8 you know, is putting it lightly.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 8 when I, you know, let that thought go that I didn't replace someone, I am not.
Speaker 8 here just to fill a void,
Speaker 8 it really started to help me learn, oh, I'm a person, I'm an individual, I exist for a reason.
Speaker 2 And,
Speaker 8 you know, the pain that my parents went through
Speaker 8
was so passed down to me. Yeah.
It was in my mom when she was suffering. And I think, you know, I just think about the power of that thought that I replaced someone and I wasn't meant to exist.
Speaker 8 I read the the book in college in 2005 or 6
Speaker 8 because I was so confused, I was so lost, I was so sad. And I think
Speaker 8 back to those times and I'm like, I can't even recognize that person
Speaker 8
until my early 30s, where I finally, it all clicked. Like you said, it stays by my bed.
Yeah. And I read it
Speaker 8 all the time because it makes me feel less alone. This room makes me feel less alone to know that I matter and I'm here for a reason and it's not just the thought in my head.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 1 I hear exactly what you're saying.
Speaker 1 But that would color your whole life because it's the way your parents would treat you, the talking about the loss that they had, and that would color the way you were raised and the way you were born and the way you saw yourself.
Speaker 1 And then to reach a point, first of all, I want to cry because we celebrate the fact that you reached the point that you realize that your being here here is because you matter and not because you were here to replace somebody else.
Speaker 2 Well, another comment on this.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2
One can easily inherit a painful sense of identity. Every human is born into a particular situation, the environment, parental environment, cultural environment.
And humans can easily be born into
Speaker 2
an environment that gives them a painful sense of identity. It can be individual identity, as in your case.
It can also be a painful collective identity. If you're born into
Speaker 2 a group of people that
Speaker 2 are then you're born with a painful sense of identity and
Speaker 2 again
Speaker 2 it's important
Speaker 2 the ego does not want to free itself from that because that is its identity.
Speaker 1 The ego loves that and the pain body really loves that.
Speaker 2 And that becomes the danger for
Speaker 2 considering yourself as a victim.
Speaker 2
There's no denying that there were and are people who are victims of other people. There's no denying that.
However, the danger is when you recognize that
Speaker 2 you were a victim or even your ancestors were victims, that you can inherit that.
Speaker 2 The important thing is to go beyond having a victim identity, which means you seek your sense of self in having been a victim. The ego loves that too.
Speaker 2 The ego will cling to that because then the ego
Speaker 2 seeks
Speaker 2 always
Speaker 2 superiority. Now you might want to ask, well, how is the ego superior if it has a victim identity? Well, the reason it is superior when it has a victim identity.
Speaker 2 The implication is that other people who do not have the victim identity are morally superior to those who are not victims or who are regarded as perpetrators.
Speaker 2 Immediately, to be a victim puts you into an imagined moral superiority to what that's the ego loves at, obviously. So you need to differentiate between recognizing certain facts that happen.
Speaker 1 The ego loves to think I'm better than them.
Speaker 2 Yes, normally better than they are.
Speaker 1 And the ego loves to other.
Speaker 2
It will seeks some way of doing it. Yes.
If you can't be the great victor, then you can be a great victim. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1
We had so much more to talk about. We're going to continue with another episode.
So I hope you'll join me for part two with Eckhart Tolle and A New Earth. Thank you, Eckhart Tolle.
Speaker 1 Thank you for the gift that is a new earth. Thank you to our extraordinary partner, Starbucks, for supporting us here.
Speaker 1 I hope this episode actually inspires you to read A New Earth and talk about it with a friend, maybe over a couple of Starbucks. And thank you for listening and watching.
Speaker 1 We hope you all join our community and become a part of all of our conversations on the Oprah podcast.
Speaker 1 Subscribe to the show on YouTube and follow us on Spotify and Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen, everybody.
Speaker 8 A new earth.
Speaker 1 Thanks.