TLDR: In this intimate conversation, three experienced teachers—Jack Kornfield, Anne Lamott, and Tami Simon—explore the transformative power of stories and how they can soften our hearts, unite us across difference, and remind us of our inherent beauty. They discuss practical approaches to writing and storytelling as spiritual practice, the role of vulnerability in deepening connection, and how to maintain a generous vision of the heart even during uncertain times. The talk weaves together Buddhist meditation practice, Christian contemplation, and the craft of writing as a path to awakening and compassion.
What makes stories so powerful in times of uncertainty?
Stories function as more than entertainment—they are a technology of the heart. When the world feels fragmented and fear-driven, stories invite us to see through a different lens entirely. Anne Lamott emphasizes that stories have the capacity to soften us in ways that ideology or argument cannot. A well-told story about a real person's struggle or joy bypasses our defensive armor and touches something true in us. Jack Kornfield, drawing on his decades of Buddhist practice and teaching, suggests that stories remind us we are not alone in our suffering or our love. They create a bridge between the isolated self and the shared human experience.
This is especially urgent in moments of political and social fragmentation. Rather than leading with fear or judgment, Kornfield and Lamott advocate for what they call "looking out with a new pair of glasses from the heart instead of from our fear." This shift in perception—from fear-based seeing to heart-based seeing—begins with exposure to authentic stories. The conversation suggests that in dark times, it is not certainty we need, but the reminder that others have walked difficult paths before us and have found ways to love, to laugh, and to serve. Stories are that reminder.
How does writing function as a spiritual practice?
For both Kornfield and Lamott, writing is not separate from meditation or prayer—it is a form of them. The act of putting words to experience requires a slowing down, a deepening of attention, a willingness to notice what is actually true rather than what we think should be true. Lamott describes the practice of "writers walks"—deliberate time spent moving through the world with the intention of noticing, collecting images, overhearing conversations, and asking oneself: what does this moment want to teach me?
This mirrors the Buddhist practice of mindfulness, in which one learns to observe the arising and passing of sensation, thought, and emotion without commentary. In writing, the same skill applies: you notice what wants to come through you, and you follow it with honest attention. Kornfield speaks to the discipline required—how one must "bow the ego" at the monastery, learning humility before the vast intelligence of the dharma and before the simple truths that emerge when you stop insisting on your own story. Writing from that place of humility yields work that rings true because it has been sifted through genuine inquiry rather than manufactured for effect.
The conversation also touches on the struggle of writing—the blank page, the self-doubt, the pressure to perform or impress. Yet both teachers suggest that these difficulties are themselves part of the path. They teach you where you are still defended, where you still believe you must be perfect, where love has not yet reached. To write authentically is to write your own enlightenment process, page by page.
What does it mean to hold a generous vision in dark times?
One of the central themes is the question of how to maintain hope and generosity when the news is dire, when injustice is visible, when aging and mortality are undeniable. Kornfield draws on his long engagement with Buddhist teaching and his study of Ram Dass's life and work. Ram Dass, the American spiritual pioneer who learned to love everyone through decades of practice, stands as a model for what it looks like to hold a generous vision not from naïveté but from hard-won understanding.
To hold such a vision requires what the conversation calls "the work"—consistent spiritual practice, prayer, or inquiry that recalibrates your nervous system and your perception away from contraction and toward openness. It is not positive thinking, which is fragile. It is rather a deepening trust, built through thousands of small acts of compassion, meditation, and remembrance, that the human heart is capable of extraordinary tenderness and repair.
Lamott speaks to aging and mortality as teachers of this generosity. The acknowledgment that we do not have unlimited time, that we will lose people we love, that our bodies will fail—this recognition can either calcify us in fear or crack us open. The conversation suggests that stories, and the vulnerability they require, are one of the primary ways this opening happens. When we tell the truth about our struggles—about failure, doubt, illness, grief—we give others permission to do the same, and in that mutual recognition, a kind of tenderness arises that is proof against despair.
Why does vulnerability matter in spiritual practice?
Both Kornfield and Lamott return repeatedly to vulnerability as not a weakness but as the cornerstone of genuine spiritual work. Vulnerability is the willingness to let yourself be seen—flaws, contradictions, uncertainties and all. In Kornfield's time as a Buddhist monk, he had to surrender the image he had of himself as a spiritual seeker and allow himself to be a beginner, to fail, to not understand. This bowing of the ego is painful but liberating.
In writing, vulnerability takes the form of revealing what you actually think or feel, not what you believe you should think or feel. Lamott's work has long modeled this—her essays and memoirs include moments of rage, addiction, doubt, and low self-esteem alongside moments of grace. This honesty is what makes her writing so widely recognized as true. When a reader encounters such vulnerability, they feel less alone. They feel permission to stop performing.
The conversation suggests that this permission is not trivial. In a culture that constantly pressures us to appear successful, healed, certain, and together, the act of saying "I don't know" or "I was wrong" or "I am afraid" is a radical reclamation of authenticity. And it opens the door to genuine connection. You cannot truly meet another human being while you are in armor. Vulnerability is the removal of armor.
What is the "heart cave" and how do we live from it?
Anne Lamott references Ram Dass's concept of the "heart cave"—an interior sanctuary of the heart that remains untouched by circumstance, accessible even in suffering. To live from the heart cave is to orient your consciousness not toward the reactive mind (which is shaped by habit, fear, and self-protection) but toward a deeper source of wisdom and compassion that exists in all of us.
This is not escapism. The heart cave is where you go to remember what is true: that you are loved, that you are part of something larger than your individual struggles, that your capacity to care and to serve is real and available. From that place of remembrance, you can then move back into the world with a different kind of presence. You can hold both the reality of suffering and the reality of beauty. You can see another person—even someone you disagree with—and recognize that they too are struggling, that they too contain light.
Kornfield's decades of Buddhist practice offer a map for this interior work. Meditation, in this context, is not about achieving a blissful state but about training the mind to rest in awareness itself—the knowing capacity that underlies all experience. From there, compassion arises naturally, not as a moral duty but as recognition: there is no true separation between self and other.
How does the practice of "all in this together" transform our relationship to others?
Jack Kornfield's new book, All in This Together: Stories and Teachings for Loving Each Other and Our World, serves as a touchstone for the conversation. The title itself points to a fundamental spiritual insight: we are not isolated individuals competing for limited resources and recognition. We are fundamentally interconnected. Our healing is not separate from others' healing. Our liberation does not come at others' expense.
The conversation explores what it takes to actually live from this understanding, not just intellectually assent to it. It requires both genuine spiritual practice and a deliberate shift in how you perceive others. Lamott describes how Jesus and Buddha both taught this—that the stranger, the enemy, the person you have nothing in common with is your sibling, worthy of the same love you give your own child. This is not sentimental. It is a direct teaching about the nature of mind and heart.
The work, as Kornfield emphasizes, is to prove it to yourself through practice. Through meditation, through prayer, through deliberate acts of kindness even when your fear-mind resists, you gradually rewire your nervous system and your perception. You begin to see less the surface differences that divide and more the fundamental humanity that unites. Stories accelerate this process because they put a face and a voice to that humanity. When you hear Anne Lamott tell a story about her struggles with faith, or Jack Kornfield recount a moment with his teacher in a Thai monastery, you are not just receiving information. You are being invited to recognize yourself in another person.
What is the relationship between protest, aging, and spiritual practice?
The conversation touches on themes of protest and social action alongside aging and spiritual deepening. This pairing is intentional. Both Kornfield and Lamott are not interested in a spirituality that bypasses the real suffering in the world or that uses meditation as an escape from injustice. Rather, genuine spiritual practice should deepen your sense of responsibility and love for the world.
As we age, the stakes become clearer. You cannot pretend you have unlimited time to make a difference. You cannot defer the work of becoming kinder, more awake, more available. The conversation acknowledges that aging also brings losses—of physical capability, of people we love, of certainty about the future. Yet it also brings a clarification of what matters. Much of what seemed so urgent when we were younger falls away. What remains is love, connection, and the desire to ease suffering.
From this place of clarified urgency and deeper love, protest and advocacy become expressions of the heart rather than expressions of righteous anger. You act not because you are certain you are right, but because you love the world and everyone in it, including those you oppose. This is more sustainable, less brittle, and more likely to actually create change.
Where to go from here
If this conversation resonates, the first step is to slow down and notice your own stories—the narratives you tell about yourself, about others, about what is possible. Spend time on what Lamott calls "writers walks," whether or not you identify as a writer. Walk slowly through your neighborhood, your workplace, or a natural place, and practice attention. What do you notice? What moves you? What wants to be known?
Consider taking up a meditation practice or deepening one you already have. Kornfield's books and teachings offer accessible entry points into Buddhist mindfulness. The practice of sitting quietly and observing the breath, sensations, and thoughts as they arise is the foundation for learning to rest in awareness itself rather than being driven by reactive habit.
Read Jack Kornfield's All in This Together and Anne Lamott's essay collections. Notice how their vulnerability and specificity create a feeling of recognition in you. This recognition is the reminder of your own beauty—the proof that you are not alone, that others have faced what you are facing, and that the capacity to love and to wake up is available to all of us. Look for opportunities to practice what the conversation calls "the work"—consistent, humble engagement with your own heart through prayer, service, or deliberate acts of kindness. Finally, consider how your own stories might soften others. What truth are you carrying that the world needs to hear?



