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Happiness Break: A Meditation to Inspire a Sense of Purpose

4/30/20268 min

Take a few minutes to reflect on someone who inspires you, and how you can embody the values you admire in them.

How To Do This Practice: 

  1. Arrive and Settle: Find a quiet place to sit or stand. Gently close your eyes or soften your gaze. Take a few slow, steady breaths, allowing your body to relax and the noise of the day to quiet.
  2. Call to Mind Someone Who Inspires You: Think of a person whose character deeply moves you—someone whose courage, kindness, integrity, or compassion stands out. Let one specific moment come to mind when they embodied those qualities.
  3. Replay the Moment: Picture what they did as clearly as you can. What action did they take? What values were they expressing? Stay with the details of that moment and what made it meaningful.
  4. Notice How It Lands in Your Body: As you hold this image, turn your attention inward. What do you feel physically? Warmth, openness, a softening, maybe even emotion rising—just observe without judgment.
  5. Name What Matters to You: Reflect on why this moment resonates so deeply. What value or sense of purpose does it point to—justice, care, truth, courage, love? Let yourself name what feels most true for you.
  6. Ask yourself: What’s one small way I can live this value today? It might be in how you speak to someone, how you show up in your work, or how you care for yourself or others. Carry this intention with you as you move forward.

Scroll down for a transcription of this episode.

Today’s Happiness Break Guide:

DACHER KELTNER is the host of the Greater Good Science Center’s award-winning podcast, The Science of Happiness and is a co-instructor of the GGSC’s popular online course of the same name. He’s also the founding director of the Greater Good Science Center and a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.

Related Happiness Break episodes:

Embodying Resilience: https://tinyurl.com/46383mhx

A Meditation on Becoming a Gift to Life: https://tinyurl.com/yc76n7ur

Visualizing Your Purpose: https://tinyurl.com/3ndn95zr

Related Science of Happiness episodes:

What’s Your “Why” in Life?: https://tinyurl.com/b38kdt68

How To Ground Yourself in Nature: https://tinyurl.com/25ftdxpm

Pause to Look at the Sky: https://tinyurl.com/4jttkbw3

Follow us on Instagram: @ScienceOfHappinessPod

We’d love to hear about your experience with this practice! Share your thoughts at happinesspod@berkeley.edu or use the hashtag #happinesspod.

Find us on Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/2p9h5aap

Help us share Happiness Break! Leave a 5-star review and share this link: https://tinyurl.com/2p9h5aap

Transcription: https://tinyurl.com/33uyrykc

Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Dacher Keltner· Host0:00

    [gentle music] Welcome to Happiness Break, a series by The Science of Happiness, where we take a little break in our day to try different research-backed practices and meditations to help support ourselves and connect us with the world around us. Today, we're turning our attention towards our sense of purpose in our lives, or sense of meaning in what we do, by homing in on what values we hold most dear and who inspires us to live up to those values. In the literature, this is known as moral beauty, that other people's sacrifice, and courage, and sense of justice, and humility can inspire us to live up to those values that are so important to our sense of purpose. So for example, for a lot of scientists like me, Jane Goodall is a person of moral beauty, and her devotion to studying the chimpanzees that she studied, her sense of wisdom and understanding, really in promoting a new science and the preservation of different species, inspires me to think about how to be a better scientist living with purpose. So today, we'll contemplate the moral beauty around us that inspires us to live with greater purpose. Research suggests that when we have a strong sense of purpose, we're happier, we have healthier habits, and stronger relationships. And a sense of purpose, cultivated by things like moral beauty, is linked

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