Dr. Keltner has been tracking stress and meaning data for 35–40 years and reports stress is higher now than ever, with younger people struggling significantly.
A Harvard-trained scientist spent 40 years proving that one free minute of awe per day reduces depression, anxiety, and loneliness — and most people are skipping it entirely.
The Mel Robbins Podcast
A Harvard-trained scientist spent 40 years proving that one free minute of awe per day reduces depression, anxiety, and loneliness — and most people are skipping it entirely.
TL;DR
Dr. Dacher Keltner, UC Berkeley psychology professor and founder of the Greater Good Science Center, joins Mel Robbins to share 40+ years of research on happiness, purpose, and awe. Purposelessness is a feeling of mental diffuseness and low energy — not a permanent state — and can be shifted by asking two questions: what inspired you as a child, and who has inspired you most [1] — Dacher Keltner "There are six universal human strengths that orient people toward meaning: knowledge, courage, kindness, justice, transcendence, and creati…" 34:39 ? A one-minute daily awe practice is clinically shown to reduce depression, anxiety, and loneliness while boosting immune function and sense of meaning [2] — Dacher Keltner "Awe walks reduced pain in 75+ year olds: A study on awe walks found that elderly people aged 75 and older who took mindful awe-oriented wal…" 1:06:37 . The most actionable takeaway: step outside, pause your devices, and spend 60 seconds noticing the small and vast wonders around you [3] — Dacher Keltner "In a rare live experiment, Dr. Keltner guided Mel Robbins through a multi-sensory awe experience with a bouquet of flowers — sight, smell, …" 56:42 .
Dr. Dacher Keltner, UC Berkeley psychology professor and founder of the Greater Good Science Center, shares 40+ years of research on how to find purpose, experience awe, and live a more meaningful life. Includes the two key questions for discovering your purpose, the six core human strengths, and a one-minute daily awe practice backed by clinical evidence.
Mel Robbins kicks off with an intimate challenge to the listener — figuring out your purpose is one of the hardest things in life, especially when the world feels insurmountable. She introduces Dr. Dacher Keltner, the founder of UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center, as the guide for the journey. By the end of the episode, Mel promises, listeners will have answered two scientifically validated questions to discover their purpose, understand six common pathways to meaning, and mastered a one-minute habit that is both free and powerful enough to reduce depression, anxiety, and daily stress. The setup is warm, direct, and designed to hold both the skeptic and the seeker.
Mel reads three sponsor messages: Amica Insurance, positioned as an empathetic mutual insurer that puts customers first; Colgate Total Active Prevention toothpaste, framed around preventative oral health care before problems start; and Peacock's new series The Five Star Weekend, starring Jennifer Garner as a chef whose life unravels during a Nantucket gathering. The segment is fully commercial.
After the sponsor break, Mel returns with her signature welcome, specifically acknowledging new listeners and framing the conversation as a gift worth sharing. She introduces Dr. Keltner with his full credentials: distinguished professor of psychology at UC Berkeley, founding director of the Greater Good Science Center, author of over 200 scientific papers, and writer of six bestselling books. His most recent book, on the science of everyday wonder and how it can transform your life, anchors the episode's focus on awe as a practical tool.
Dr. Keltner begins by acknowledging the current moment of collective exhaustion and crisis, grounding his science in lived reality rather than optimistic abstraction. The core message: happiness research has shown that money and external circumstances matter only marginally — what matters most is cultivating small moments of joy, beauty, and gratitude each week, and making even brief social connections. He offers concrete evidence from three populations: high schoolers in under-resourced schools who studied more when they felt hope or awe; veterans with PTSD at twice the civilian rate, whose symptoms dropped by 32 percent after awe experiences [1] — Dacher Keltner "Veterans experience PTSD at twice the rate of average US civilians. Research showed that brief experiences of awe reduced their PTSD sympto…" 09:59 ; and COVID-era nurses and doctors who found profound moments of moral beauty even in the chaos of understaffed hospitals. The science isn't abstract — it's a battle-tested argument that these micro-practices are accessible to anyone, anywhere.
Moving from data to mechanism, Dr. Keltner describes what stress does to the brain and body: the amygdala fires up, threat is perceived everywhere, cortisol pulses through the veins, and the body behaves as if being chased by a predator. Even with abundant resources, that biological state is exhausting. The counterforce is precise: emotions like gratitude, beauty, and kindness activate the vagus nerve — the great wandering bundle of nerves in the chest — which calms heart rate, regulates the immune system, and releases dopamine. The result is the opposite of burnout: a sense of energy, purpose, and empowerment. Dr. Keltner connects this to the act of volunteering, noting that helping someone makes you feel powerful in a way that few other activities can replicate.
One of the episode's most consequential reframes arrives here. Mel asks Dr. Keltner to define purposelessness so that listeners can recognize it in themselves or their loved ones, and what emerges is a paradigm shift: purpose is not a thing you find, it's a way you move through the world. Purposefulness is sharp focus, forward momentum, and the dopamine energy of feeling connected to something larger. Purposelessness is the opposite — diffuse, vague, listless. Dr. Keltner illustrates through the story of cellist Yumi Kendall of the Philadelphia Symphony, who found purpose not in career success but in feeling connected to the history of music and the audience through every performance [1] — Dacher Keltner "Purposelessness isn't a life sentence — it's a mental state defined by diffuse thinking, low energy, and disconnection from anything larger…" 13:25 . He then shares his own experience of purposelessness following the death of his younger brother — grief that dislocated his sense of direction — and how returning to small acts of kindness and community became his path back.
Dr. Keltner pivots to the science of calling, referencing Yale's Amy Wrzesniewski and her famous research showing that calling is not the exclusive domain of artists or executives. Anyone — including a hospital janitor who literally cleans bedpans — can experience a deep sense of calling if they understand their work as serving a larger human need. The janitor's clarity ('I keep this place clean for the patients') is treated not as a coping mechanism but as a genuine expression of purpose. This framing is liberating: you don't need to change your job, your income, or your life circumstances to access a sense of calling. You need to locate within yourself the question of who you are and what you want to serve in the world.
Mel gives Dr. Keltner the floor to speak directly to the listener who is most disoriented — the person who genuinely doesn't know what they're supposed to be doing. His answer is philosophical before it's practical: the most important thing a person can do is develop a philosophy of life, a set of core moral commitments, ethics, and values that guide everything else. He notes that 60–70 years ago, 90 percent of Americans participated in religious institutions that performed this function — regular communal inquiry into life's big questions. That structure has largely eroded, and people are adrift without a replacement. He points to yoga, meditation, and especially nature (where 40 percent of Americans now find higher purpose) as secular equivalents. He introduces the 'social biome' concept — the idea that connection, like nutrition, needs variety and regularity — and suggests that simple, intentional acts like saying hi to strangers or having one good friend to talk to form the baseline of a healthy social ecosystem.
Mel reads ads for the Genesis GV70 SUV, emphasizing its standard 300 horsepower, dynamic drive modes, blind-spot cameras, and award-winning technology; Walmart Pharmacy, highlighting the Walmart app's ability to manage family prescriptions, transfer, and deliver medications; and Hallmark cards, framed around the emotional power of physical cards to transport recipients back to meaningful life moments.
With Mel noting the discouraging state of wonder she observes in young people versus her own college years, Dr. Keltner names the structural gap: we no longer teach philosophy of life as a core part of education. For millennia, the central question of growing up was 'Who are you and what do you want to give to the world?' Now it has been replaced with productivity metrics and career planning. He describes his own 500-student happiness course at UC Berkeley, where the primary goal is for students to locate a sense of soul — something sacred in themselves that guides their time on earth. He also notes that AI's threat to entry-level jobs could paradoxically create an opening: if the economic pressure to perform a certain kind of work eases, people may have more space to discover and follow what they actually care about. His father's career as a carpenter is offered as a model of dignified, purposeful work that perfectionist culture has wrongly devalued.
Here is the practical heart of the episode. Dr. Keltner introduces two questions drawn from narrative psychology: What inspired you as a child? Who has inspired you most in life? The answers reveal a person's core strengths, which he maps onto six universal virtue categories: knowledge (curiosity, learning), courage (risk-taking, boldness), kindness (volunteering, tending to others), justice (fairness, advocacy), transcendence (spirituality, meditation, wonder), and creativity (humor, art, storytelling). Crucially, these are not career categories — they are where you come alive, regardless of how you make a living. Dr. Keltner turns the mirror on himself: raised by an artist father and a literature professor mother, he was never good at making art, but being in museums, seeing plays, and reading fiction makes him most alive. He uses a 2003 panel with the Dalai Lama to illustrate how moments of deep inspiration from role models clarify what you care about — and then how that clarity becomes a compass for volunteering, friendship, what films to watch, and what books to read [1] — Dacher Keltner "If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you wanna be happy, practice compassion." 39:41 .
The conversation pivots to Dr. Keltner's signature research topic: awe. He defines it precisely — the emotion felt when encountering things that are vast and beyond your current frame of reference, whether a lightning storm, an incomprehensibly powerful U2 concert, or witnessing someone give everything they have to a stranger. It registers in the body as goosebumps, tears, and a warm heart, changing neurophysiology in measurable ways. He traces his personal path to studying it: raised in the countercultural Laurel Canyon of the late 1960s by an artist and a literature professor, in an environment that was itself awe-inspiring. He developed scientific tools to measure it — from having lab participants listen to music and look at big trees, to studying visitors at the Grand Canyon and the Great Wall of China and research subjects in art museums. The conclusion: awe is surprisingly easy to induce and measure, and its effects on human behavior and biology are profound.
Mel reads a second round of Genesis GV70 and Walmart Pharmacy ads, followed by a new read for Nutrafol, a peer-reviewed and NSF-certified hair growth supplement brand that is the number-one pick among dermatologists. The Nutrafol offer includes $10 off the first month's subscription and free shipping at nutrafol.com with promo code Mel.
Mel sets the scene with her upcoming Grand Canyon rafting trip and her obsession with catching barred owls at dusk, and Dr. Keltner uses these as entry points into the neuroscience of awe. When you encounter something beyond your frame of reference, the brain's default mode network — the headquarters of ego, to-do lists, and self-referential anxiety — deactivates. In its place, the vagus nerve activates, calming the heart, opening the chest, and producing a feeling of connection to others. Oxytocin is released, generating a 'we are all one' sensation. The immune system functions better. And crucially, the mind expands: you see yourself not as an isolated individual but as part of a larger ecosystem, a bigger story. Dr. Keltner's own experience backpacking with his daughter Natalie illustrates this — awe in nature consistently produces the feeling of being part of life itself, not separate from it [1] — Dacher Keltner "Awe deactivates the brain's default mode network — the ego headquarters — and activates the vagus nerve, releasing oxytocin and quieting th…" 49:15 .
Facing skeptics who questioned whether awe could matter during a rising mental health crisis, Dr. Keltner's lab produced data that silenced them: one minute of daily awe practice consistently reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, and loneliness. It also benefits the heart, improves immune function, and reduces systemic inflammation. He tells audiences of thousands of doctors and nurses that no intervention he knows of produces a comparable range of benefits at zero cost. The battle cry is simple — look around you, identify an opportunity for awe, and take it. Money, he adds, actually gets in the way of awe; the richest experiences of wonder are free [1] — Dacher Keltner "One minute of daily awe reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, and loneliness, while also benefiting the heart and immune s…" 52:16 .
With the health case made, Mel asks for the 'how.' Dr. Keltner's answer is structured but accessible. Step one: pause and put away devices. Step two: take a deep breath. Step three: orient to one of eight wonders identified in global research. These are: nature (go outside and look at the sky), moral beauty (think of someone who inspires you deeply), collective movement (a yoga class, a concert, a sports game), visual art (paintings, patterns), music (find a piece that makes you cry), ideas (something intellectually stunning), and the life cycle (reflect on the brevity and preciousness of time). Each of these, approached with intention for even one minute, produces measurable awe effects in the brain and body. The practice is global, cross-cultural, and completely free.
With a bouquet of flowers set up in the studio — tree peonies, anemones, garden roses, snapdragons, Queen Anne's lace, and lisianthus — Dr. Keltner turns the podcast into a live lab. He guides Mel through a three-stage sensory awe practice. First, vision: she moves her gaze from fine petal details to the full explosion of the bouquet, marveling at the improbability of something so intricate growing from a bulb. Second, scent: one rose transports her to weddings; another to her grandmother's hugs; a lisianthus to cut grass and her father mowing the lawn. Third, touch: the texture of petals returns her to childhood summers in western Michigan, lying in the grass and staring at the sky. Dr. Keltner frames the result beautifully — in just a few minutes, the bouquet became a doorway into Mel's bigger life story, connecting her to parents, husband, grandmother, and self. That's what awe always does: it reveals what was already there.
Building on humanity's deep heritage as a walking species, Dr. Keltner describes the awe walk study he conducted with neuroscientist Virginia Sturm. Participants in the control condition simply enjoyed their regular walk; those in the awe walk condition were instructed to look around consciously — from tiny details like bark patterns or raindrops to vast panoramas like cloud formations or open skies — and to seek places and objects that triggered childlike wonder. The results were striking: elderly participants aged 75 and older reported less physical pain, and a paper currently under review shows greater brain health six years after the practice. Mel adds her own variation — she hunts for naturally occurring heart shapes on every walk — and Dr. Keltner endorses the twist as a textbook application of his research. He even does awe walks in airports to manage flight anxiety, proving the practice is location-independent and stress-adaptive.
Mel asks Dr. Keltner to distill everything into the single most important action. He begins with a vulnerability: he was genetically wired for anxiety, panic runs on his mother's side of the family, and losing his younger brother brought profound grief that left him purposeless. His way through was not a technique but a prayer — Eleanor Roosevelt's nightly commitment to see the simple beauties all around her and be aware of the hidden loveliness that people ordinarily conceal. Those two words — simple beauties — became his anchor. They cost nothing, require no movement, and are available in a glass of water, a conversation, the memory of a loved one, or the light in a stranger's eyes. He quotes Thich Nhat Hanh on the miracle that is always present beneath the noise of fear. The episode closes with Mel affirming that purpose, meaning, and awe are the practical path to creating a better life — and that the whole journey begins by slowing down and looking.
Mel wraps the formal interview with genuine warmth, thanking Dr. Keltner for flying across country despite his anxiety and calling his research a treasure. She closes with her signature affirmation — 'I love you and I believe in you' — and encourages listeners to apply what they've learned. The legal disclaimer follows, clarifying that the podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. A few unscripted outtakes show Mel and the production team laughing about the flowers and mispronouncing flower names, offering a candid glimpse behind the mic.
The episode closes with two promotional segments. First, Morgan Stewart invites listeners to her new weekly podcast covering pop culture, fashion, and personal life with guest appearances, available on all podcast platforms and YouTube. Second, Capella University runs a motivational monologue targeting driven, achievement-oriented adults encouraging them to pursue a degree and visit capella.edu.
Chapter 1 · 00:00
Mel Robbins kicks off with an intimate challenge to the listener — figuring out your purpose is one of the hardest things in life, especially when the world feels insurmountable. She introduces Dr. Dacher Keltner, the founder of UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center, as the guide for the journey. By the end of the episode, Mel promises, listeners will have answered two scientifically validated questions to discover their purpose, understand six common pathways to meaning, and mastered a one-minute habit that is both free and powerful enough to reduce depression, anxiety, and daily stress. The setup is warm, direct, and designed to hold both the skeptic and the seeker.
Dr. Keltner has been tracking stress and meaning data for 35–40 years and reports stress is higher now than ever, with younger people struggling significantly.
Research on veterans — who have twice the PTSD rate of average US civilians — showed that brief moments of awe reduced PTSD symptoms by 32 percent.
Chapter 4 · 05:05
Dr. Keltner begins by acknowledging the current moment of collective exhaustion and crisis, grounding his science in lived reality rather than optimistic abstraction. The core message: happiness research has shown that money and external circumstances matter only marginally — what matters most is cultivating small moments of joy, beauty, and gratitude each week, and making even brief social connections. He offers concrete evidence from three populations: high schoolers in under-resourced schools who studied more when they felt hope or awe; veterans with PTSD at twice the civilian rate, whose symptoms dropped by 32 percent after awe experiences [1] — Dacher Keltner "Veterans experience PTSD at twice the rate of average US civilians. Research showed that brief experiences of awe reduced their PTSD sympto…" 09:59 ; and COVID-era nurses and doctors who found profound moments of moral beauty even in the chaos of understaffed hospitals. The science isn't abstract — it's a battle-tested argument that these micro-practices are accessible to anyone, anywhere.
Claims made here
Veterans in the United States have PTSD at twice the rate of average civilians.
Brief moments of awe reduced PTSD symptoms in veterans by 32 percent.
Veterans experience PTSD at twice the rate of average US civilians. Research showed that brief experiences of awe reduced their PTSD symptoms by 32 percent. If awe can do that in combat survivors, imagine what it can do for your Tuesday.
Chapter 5 · 11:20
Moving from data to mechanism, Dr. Keltner describes what stress does to the brain and body: the amygdala fires up, threat is perceived everywhere, cortisol pulses through the veins, and the body behaves as if being chased by a predator. Even with abundant resources, that biological state is exhausting. The counterforce is precise: emotions like gratitude, beauty, and kindness activate the vagus nerve — the great wandering bundle of nerves in the chest — which calms heart rate, regulates the immune system, and releases dopamine. The result is the opposite of burnout: a sense of energy, purpose, and empowerment. Dr. Keltner connects this to the act of volunteering, noting that helping someone makes you feel powerful in a way that few other activities can replicate.
Claims made here
Positive emotions like gratitude and kindness activate the vagus nerve, which calms the body, regulates the immune system, and releases dopamine.
Stress floods your body with cortisol and activates threat-detection. But gratitude, beauty, and kindness trigger the vagus nerve, which calms the body, regulates the immune system, and releases dopamine — giving you actual energy and a sense of purpose.
Chapter 6 · 13:25
One of the episode's most consequential reframes arrives here. Mel asks Dr. Keltner to define purposelessness so that listeners can recognize it in themselves or their loved ones, and what emerges is a paradigm shift: purpose is not a thing you find, it's a way you move through the world. Purposefulness is sharp focus, forward momentum, and the dopamine energy of feeling connected to something larger. Purposelessness is the opposite — diffuse, vague, listless. Dr. Keltner illustrates through the story of cellist Yumi Kendall of the Philadelphia Symphony, who found purpose not in career success but in feeling connected to the history of music and the audience through every performance [1] — Dacher Keltner "Purposelessness isn't a life sentence — it's a mental state defined by diffuse thinking, low energy, and disconnection from anything larger…" 13:25 . He then shares his own experience of purposelessness following the death of his younger brother — grief that dislocated his sense of direction — and how returning to small acts of kindness and community became his path back.
Claims made here
Amy Wrzesniewski at Yale developed the concept of 'calling,' showing that people of any profession can find deep purpose by orienting their work toward something larger than themselves.
Purposelessness isn't a life sentence — it's a mental state defined by diffuse thinking, low energy, and disconnection from anything larger than yourself. Purposefulness, by contrast, is sharp focus and forward momentum, and you can shift toward it today.
Chapter 7 · 17:40
Dr. Keltner pivots to the science of calling, referencing Yale's Amy Wrzesniewski and her famous research showing that calling is not the exclusive domain of artists or executives. Anyone — including a hospital janitor who literally cleans bedpans — can experience a deep sense of calling if they understand their work as serving a larger human need. The janitor's clarity ('I keep this place clean for the patients') is treated not as a coping mechanism but as a genuine expression of purpose. This framing is liberating: you don't need to change your job, your income, or your life circumstances to access a sense of calling. You need to locate within yourself the question of who you are and what you want to serve in the world.
Claims made here
Thirty to forty percent of Americans volunteer.
Dr. Keltner noted that 30 to 40 percent of Americans volunteer, and returning to this tradition is especially beneficial when feeling exhausted or purposeless.
A hospital janitor who cleaned bedpans said the work was vital because it kept the place clean for patients — and felt a profound calling. A world-class cellist felt connected to the entire history of music through each performance. Calling is about how you see what you do, not what you do.
Chapter 8 · 20:00
Mel gives Dr. Keltner the floor to speak directly to the listener who is most disoriented — the person who genuinely doesn't know what they're supposed to be doing. His answer is philosophical before it's practical: the most important thing a person can do is develop a philosophy of life, a set of core moral commitments, ethics, and values that guide everything else. He notes that 60–70 years ago, 90 percent of Americans participated in religious institutions that performed this function — regular communal inquiry into life's big questions. That structure has largely eroded, and people are adrift without a replacement. He points to yoga, meditation, and especially nature (where 40 percent of Americans now find higher purpose) as secular equivalents. He introduces the 'social biome' concept — the idea that connection, like nutrition, needs variety and regularity — and suggests that simple, intentional acts like saying hi to strangers or having one good friend to talk to form the baseline of a healthy social ecosystem.
Claims made here
Approximately 40 percent of Americans find a sense of higher purpose and spirituality through nature.
Sixty to seventy years ago, approximately 90 percent of Americans attended religious services.
Dr. Keltner teaches happiness to 500 students per year at UC Berkeley.
Approximately 40 percent of Americans find a sense of higher purpose and spirituality through nature, as people move away from traditional religious institutions.
Six or seven decades ago, 90 percent of Americans attended religious services, providing communal inquiry about life's big questions — a structure largely lost today.
Dr. Keltner teaches happiness to 500 students per year at UC Berkeley and emphasizes that developing a philosophy of life is the most important lesson.
Chapter 9 · 27:20
Mel reads ads for the Genesis GV70 SUV, emphasizing its standard 300 horsepower, dynamic drive modes, blind-spot cameras, and award-winning technology; Walmart Pharmacy, highlighting the Walmart app's ability to manage family prescriptions, transfer, and deliver medications; and Hallmark cards, framed around the emotional power of physical cards to transport recipients back to meaningful life moments.
Chapter 11 · 34:12
Here is the practical heart of the episode. Dr. Keltner introduces two questions drawn from narrative psychology: What inspired you as a child? Who has inspired you most in life? The answers reveal a person's core strengths, which he maps onto six universal virtue categories: knowledge (curiosity, learning), courage (risk-taking, boldness), kindness (volunteering, tending to others), justice (fairness, advocacy), transcendence (spirituality, meditation, wonder), and creativity (humor, art, storytelling). Crucially, these are not career categories — they are where you come alive, regardless of how you make a living. Dr. Keltner turns the mirror on himself: raised by an artist father and a literature professor mother, he was never good at making art, but being in museums, seeing plays, and reading fiction makes him most alive. He uses a 2003 panel with the Dalai Lama to illustrate how moments of deep inspiration from role models clarify what you care about — and then how that clarity becomes a compass for volunteering, friendship, what films to watch, and what books to read [1] — Dacher Keltner "If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you wanna be happy, practice compassion." 39:41 .
Start with two questions: What inspired you as a child? Who has inspired you most in life? Your answers point directly to your core strengths — the things that make you come alive — and those are your compass for a more purposeful life.
There are six universal human strengths that orient people toward meaning: knowledge, courage, kindness, justice, transcendence, and creativity. These aren't about your career or income — they're about where you come alive, and they're the compass for how to spend your weekend.
Dr. Keltner identified six core human strengths that can guide purpose: knowledge, courage, kindness, justice, transcendence, and creativity.
Chapter 14 · 47:15
Mel sets the scene with her upcoming Grand Canyon rafting trip and her obsession with catching barred owls at dusk, and Dr. Keltner uses these as entry points into the neuroscience of awe. When you encounter something beyond your frame of reference, the brain's default mode network — the headquarters of ego, to-do lists, and self-referential anxiety — deactivates. In its place, the vagus nerve activates, calming the heart, opening the chest, and producing a feeling of connection to others. Oxytocin is released, generating a 'we are all one' sensation. The immune system functions better. And crucially, the mind expands: you see yourself not as an isolated individual but as part of a larger ecosystem, a bigger story. Dr. Keltner's own experience backpacking with his daughter Natalie illustrates this — awe in nature consistently produces the feeling of being part of life itself, not separate from it [1] — Dacher Keltner "Awe deactivates the brain's default mode network — the ego headquarters — and activates the vagus nerve, releasing oxytocin and quieting th…" 49:15 .
Awe deactivates the brain's default mode network — the ego headquarters — and activates the vagus nerve, releasing oxytocin and quieting the mental noise of to-do lists and self-criticism. In that opened mind, you see yourself as part of something vast.
Chapter 15 · 52:16
Facing skeptics who questioned whether awe could matter during a rising mental health crisis, Dr. Keltner's lab produced data that silenced them: one minute of daily awe practice consistently reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, and loneliness. It also benefits the heart, improves immune function, and reduces systemic inflammation. He tells audiences of thousands of doctors and nurses that no intervention he knows of produces a comparable range of benefits at zero cost. The battle cry is simple — look around you, identify an opportunity for awe, and take it. Money, he adds, actually gets in the way of awe; the richest experiences of wonder are free [1] — Dacher Keltner "One minute of daily awe reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, and loneliness, while also benefiting the heart and immune s…" 52:16 .
Claims made here
Practicing one minute of awe per day reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, loneliness, and inflammation, and improves heart health and immune function.
Research data shows that money gets in the way of experiencing awe.
One minute of daily awe reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, and loneliness, while also benefiting the heart and immune system and reducing inflammation. There is no pill, supplement, or routine with a comparable evidence base — and it costs nothing.
Practicing one minute of awe per day was found to reduce depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, and loneliness, while improving heart health and immune function.
Chapter 16 · 53:57
With the health case made, Mel asks for the 'how.' Dr. Keltner's answer is structured but accessible. Step one: pause and put away devices. Step two: take a deep breath. Step three: orient to one of eight wonders identified in global research. These are: nature (go outside and look at the sky), moral beauty (think of someone who inspires you deeply), collective movement (a yoga class, a concert, a sports game), visual art (paintings, patterns), music (find a piece that makes you cry), ideas (something intellectually stunning), and the life cycle (reflect on the brevity and preciousness of time). Each of these, approached with intention for even one minute, produces measurable awe effects in the brain and body. The practice is global, cross-cultural, and completely free.
Put away devices, take a deep breath, and orient toward one of eight universal wonder sources: nature, moral beauty, collective movement, visual art, music, compelling ideas, or the life cycle. Spend one minute going from small to vast — and let your mind expand.
Research identified eight universal sources of awe: nature, moral beauty, collective movement, visual art, music, compelling ideas, and the life cycle.
Chapter 17 · 56:42
With a bouquet of flowers set up in the studio — tree peonies, anemones, garden roses, snapdragons, Queen Anne's lace, and lisianthus — Dr. Keltner turns the podcast into a live lab. He guides Mel through a three-stage sensory awe practice. First, vision: she moves her gaze from fine petal details to the full explosion of the bouquet, marveling at the improbability of something so intricate growing from a bulb. Second, scent: one rose transports her to weddings; another to her grandmother's hugs; a lisianthus to cut grass and her father mowing the lawn. Third, touch: the texture of petals returns her to childhood summers in western Michigan, lying in the grass and staring at the sky. Dr. Keltner frames the result beautifully — in just a few minutes, the bouquet became a doorway into Mel's bigger life story, connecting her to parents, husband, grandmother, and self. That's what awe always does: it reveals what was already there.
Claims made here
Humans have approximately 12 million scent receptors in the nose.
In a rare live experiment, Dr. Keltner guided Mel Robbins through a multi-sensory awe experience with a bouquet of flowers — sight, smell, touch — triggering memories of her grandmother, father, and husband. This is exactly what awe does: it connects you to your bigger story.
Dr. Keltner cited research indicating humans have approximately 12 million scent receptors in the nose that help us navigate and interpret the world.
Chapter 18 · 1:02:40
Building on humanity's deep heritage as a walking species, Dr. Keltner describes the awe walk study he conducted with neuroscientist Virginia Sturm. Participants in the control condition simply enjoyed their regular walk; those in the awe walk condition were instructed to look around consciously — from tiny details like bark patterns or raindrops to vast panoramas like cloud formations or open skies — and to seek places and objects that triggered childlike wonder. The results were striking: elderly participants aged 75 and older reported less physical pain, and a paper currently under review shows greater brain health six years after the practice. Mel adds her own variation — she hunts for naturally occurring heart shapes on every walk — and Dr. Keltner endorses the twist as a textbook application of his research. He even does awe walks in airports to manage flight anxiety, proving the practice is location-independent and stress-adaptive.
Claims made here
Awe walks reduced physical pain in elderly people aged 75 and older.
A paper currently under review shows that awe walks are linked to greater brain health six years later.
Adding a simple awe-orientation to your regular walk — noticing small and vast details, seeking childlike wonder — reduced physical pain in adults aged 75+ and is linked to greater brain health six years later. You can start today, anywhere, for free.
A study on awe walks found that elderly people aged 75 and older who took mindful awe-oriented walks felt less physical pain in their bodies.
A paper under review showed that people who practiced awe walks demonstrated greater brain health six years later, suggesting long-term cognitive benefits.
Chapter 19 · 1:07:40
Mel asks Dr. Keltner to distill everything into the single most important action. He begins with a vulnerability: he was genetically wired for anxiety, panic runs on his mother's side of the family, and losing his younger brother brought profound grief that left him purposeless. His way through was not a technique but a prayer — Eleanor Roosevelt's nightly commitment to see the simple beauties all around her and be aware of the hidden loveliness that people ordinarily conceal. Those two words — simple beauties — became his anchor. They cost nothing, require no movement, and are available in a glass of water, a conversation, the memory of a loved one, or the light in a stranger's eyes. He quotes Thich Nhat Hanh on the miracle that is always present beneath the noise of fear. The episode closes with Mel affirming that purpose, meaning, and awe are the practical path to creating a better life — and that the whole journey begins by slowing down and looking.
Eleanor Roosevelt ended every day by praying to see the simple beauties around her and the hidden loveliness in people. Dr. Keltner adopted this as his own life philosophy after losing his brother. It costs nothing and is available to anyone, anywhere.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
This episode
Yale professor whose research on the concept of 'calling' showed that people of any profession can find deep purpose by orienting their work toward serving something larger than themselves.
Spiritual leader whom Dr. Keltner encountered at a 2003 panel and who stated that kindness is a basic state of human nature and that compassion is the path to happiness.
Former US First Lady whose nightly prayer about seeing simple beauties and hidden loveliness in people Dr. Keltner adopted as his personal guiding philosophy.
Primatologist and hero of Dr. Keltner's who observed that chimpanzees and humans share a sense of wonder and spirituality defined as being amazed at things outside oneself.
Evolutionary scientist referenced by Dr. Keltner who believed that animals, including chimpanzees, experience wonder and awe, and who described life as 'endless forms most beautiful.'
Buddhist monk quoted by Dr. Keltner on the idea that much of life is oriented toward fear, but pausing allows one to see the miracles of everyday life.
Neuroscientist who collaborated with Dr. Keltner on the awe walk research that showed health benefits in elderly participants.
Former US Surgeon General referenced by Dr. Keltner for drawing public attention to the loneliness epidemic in America.
The world-leading research institute at UC Berkeley founded by Dr. Keltner that studies the science of happiness, well-being, and connection.
Dr. Keltner's institution, where he is a distinguished professor of psychology and teaches happiness to 500 students per year.
Orchestra whose cellist Yumi Kendall was interviewed by Dr. Keltner as an example of finding deep calling through connecting one's work to something larger than the self.
Destination of Mel Robbins's upcoming bucket-list rafting trip, used as a prime example of the kind of vast natural experience that triggers awe.
Stats
This episode
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Brief moments of awe reduced PTSD symptoms in veterans by 32 percent.
Veterans in the United States have PTSD at twice the rate of average civilians.
Positive emotions like gratitude and kindness activate the vagus nerve, which calms the body, regulates the immune system, and releases dopamine.
Approximately 40 percent of Americans find a sense of higher purpose and spirituality through nature.
Sixty to seventy years ago, approximately 90 percent of Americans attended religious services.
Practicing one minute of awe per day reduces depression, anxiety, daily stress, exhaustion, loneliness, and inflammation, and improves heart health and immune function.
Research data shows that money gets in the way of experiencing awe.
Awe walks reduced physical pain in elderly people aged 75 and older.
A paper currently under review shows that awe walks are linked to greater brain health six years later.
Humans have approximately 12 million scent receptors in the nose.
Thirty to forty percent of Americans volunteer.
Amy Wrzesniewski at Yale developed the concept of 'calling,' showing that people of any profession can find deep purpose by orienting their work toward something larger than themselves.
Dr. Keltner teaches happiness to 500 students per year at UC Berkeley.
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