We discuss how to make hosting more fun and less work by reflecting and making notes after each gathering; we include specific tips from our own experiences as well as creative suggestions from listeners. We also answer frequently asked questions about the “Read 25 in 25” challenge to help us all make reading a daily habit in the new year. Plus, we share terrific holiday hosting hacks from listeners.
Resources and links related to this episode:
- “Habits for Happiness” course
- Read25in25
- Design Your Year
- Rolling cart
- Elizabeth is rereading: Your Table Is Ready: Tales of a New York Maitre D’ by Michael Cecchi-Azzolina (Amazon, Bookshop)
- Gretchen is reading: North Woods by Daniel Mason (Amazon, Bookshop)
Get in touch: podcast@gretchenrubin.com
Visit Gretchen’s website to learn more about Gretchen’s best-selling books, products from The Happiness Project Collection, and the Happier app.
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In his famous collection, Meditations, the Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius observes: “Reject your sense of injury, and the injury itself disappears.”
I thought of this aphorism recently, when a writer friend and I were talking. We were both working on projects written from the first-person perspective, with stories drawn from our own lives.
She said to me, “I’m really hurt. I gave my draft of my memoir to my husband to read, and he keeps putting it off and putting it off. He doesn’t want to read it. I’m so upset.”
I said, “You know, Jamie never reads any of my drafts. He never reads anything I write, actually, and he never listens to the Happier podcast.”
“Really?” my friend said. “Doesn’t that bother you?”
“No,” I said honestly. “I asked him about it. I said, ‘Is it that you feel awkward reading my work, like the way a parent feels when their second-grader goes on stage to sing a solo? Or is that it breaks down privacy, by giving you insight into what I think and feel, in a way that you don’t get in everyday life?’ And he said, ‘Both reasons.’
“So it really doesn’t hurt your feelings,” she said skeptically.
“Nope,” I said. “Really, I’ve never thought about it much. I get it. Plus, I put out so much material. He wouldn’t be able to keep up.”
Thinking about Marcus Aurelius’s observation also reminded me of something my mother told me, with some amusement. I don’t remember making this comment, but apparently back when I was in seventh or eighth grade—an age when my parents were driving my friends and me around a lot—I told my mother, “In the car, it’s better when parents don’t say anything.”
My mother and I laughed, and I said, “That’s so rude! Did you feel hurt or mad?”
“No,” my mother said. “It’s just that age. Kids feel so self-conscious. And I liked to listen in on the conversations, anyway.”
Sometimes, of course, we do feel hurt, and sometimes we wouldn’t choose to have a different response, or it wouldn’t be appropriate to try to have a different response.
But in some situations when I’ve felt hurt or annoyed, I’ve found that it’s helpful to ask myself, “Might someone else view this encounter differently? In a way that means that they don’t feel hurt or annoyed?” And I can often think of a perspective that helps me to feel better.
“Reject your sense of injury, and the injury itself disappears.”