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  • The Power of Telling the Truth: Mindfulness Lessons from Julie Lythcott-Haims

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October 23, 2025

Honesty becomes healing when spoken with mindfulness, compassion, and courage. Here’s how to practice it every day.

mindful communication telling the truth Julie Lythcott-Haims mindfulness, The Power of Telling the Truth: Mindfulness Lessons from Julie Lythcott-Haims

In this week’s Mindfulness Exercises Podcast, I sat down with Julie Lythcott-Haims, New York Times bestselling author, former Stanford Dean, and TED speaker with over 20 million views — to explore what it really means to tell the truth.

Ten minutes into our conversation, I felt both inspired by Julie’s courage and humbled by my own hesitation to share my difficult stories. What unfolded was a reminder that truth-telling isn’t about perfection — it’s about presence, honesty, and care.

Julie shared how a simple body-scan practice she learned years ago became her inner compass. By pausing to notice what’s happening inside, she learned to respond intentionally rather than react automatically.

Her words stayed with me:

“We don’t have to be perfect to serve just honest. Our truth, offered with care, is medicine.”

Below are the key lessons from our conversation and a few small mindfulness practices you can begin using today.

Truth-Telling Isn’t Reckless — It’s Regulated

Authentic honesty doesn’t mean blurting everything out. Julie reminded me that truth lands best when our nervous system feels safe and our audience is chosen wisely.

Try this 3-minute body check-in:

  1. Close your eyes and find one difficult feeling you’ve been avoiding.
  2. Name it gently — tightness, heat, buzzing, pressure.
  3. Ask: “What does this part of me want me to know?”
  4. Decide: Do I share, journal, or pause and resource first?

This small pause transforms honesty from impulsive to intentional.

Before You Help, Hold

Many of us rush to fix pain instead of simply holding space for it. Julie practices mirror-listening — reflecting what she heard, then asking permission before responding.

“I’m having a few thoughts would you like them, or would you prefer I just stay with you?”

This one question honors choice and deepens trust. I’ve seen it shift my own relationships from problem-solving to true connection.

Wildflower > Bonsai: A Mindful Parenting Metaphor

Julie offered a powerful image for mindful parenting and leadership:

“Kids are wildflowers, not bonsai.”

They need light, water, and room, not constant pruning.

Here’s her 4-3-2-1 teaching roadmap: 4 steps to teach any skill:

  1. Do it for them
  2. Do it with them
  3. Watch them do it
  4. Let them do it alone

3 things to stop:

  • Stop saying “we” when you mean “my kid.”
  • Stop fighting all their battles.
  • Stop doing their homework.

2 things they need most: Unconditional love and real contributions (chores).

1 experiment: For one week, skip homework questions — instead, ask about their interests. Notice what blooms when curiosity replaces control.

Belonging Grows When We Risk Curiosity

We don’t need perfect agreement to connect — only curious compassion. When conversation turns tense, try asking why or how gently to reach understanding beneath opinions.

Questions that invite depth:

  • What’s good in your life right now?
  • Why does that matter to you?
  • Who helped you love that?
  • What value is underneath?

You may still disagree — but you’ll remember your shared humanity.

“Memoir Is an Act of Service”

When truth-telling involves personal stories, timing matters. Some truths still live tenderly in the body; they deserve patience and protection. Julie suggests asking:

“What safety, support, or skill would make telling this wise?”

Sharing from stability transforms confession into compassion.

A Personal Moment

After our conversation, a loved one shared something painful. Instead of offering advice, I used Julie’s mirror-listening approach and stayed quiet.

Three minutes passed.

They found their own clarity.

And in that silence, I felt the fixer inside me relax — a small but profound shift toward peace.

Progress, not perfection.

Listen to the Full Conversation

🎧 Julie Lythcott-Haims on the Power of Telling Your Truth

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Final Reflection

The world doesn’t need more polished experts, it needs regulated, honest humans who can listen deeply, tell the truth gently, and act with compassion.

Truth is not a weapon; it’s a bridge.

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About the author 

Sean Fargo is a mindfulness teacher and the founder of Mindfulness Exercises, a platform dedicated to making mindfulness accessible to everyone. Sean's journey into mindfulness began after a career in international business, during which he was a Director of Product Development and Procurement in Beijing. Despite his business growth, Sean felt called to explore deeper aspects of life, leading him to ordain as a Buddhist monk in the Thai Theravada tradition. He spent two years immersed in monastic life, learning the art of mindfulness and meditation from some of the most respected teachers in the field.

Upon returning to the Western world, Sean sought to bridge the gap between traditional mindfulness practices and modern life. He worked closely with renowned meditation teacher Jack Kornfield at Spirit Rock Meditation Center and became a trainer for the mindfulness program born at Google. Sean’s work extends to advising technology startups like Elevate Labs and WellBrain (supporting people with chronic pain, trauma and addiction), as well as teaching mindfulness to top executives at companies such as PG&E, Reddit, and DocuSign.

In 2015, Sean founded Mindfulness Exercises to share the transformative power of mindfulness with a broader audience. His platform offers a wealth of free and premium resources, including guided meditations, worksheets, and a comprehensive mindfulness teacher certification. With a mission to help others develop mindfulness with integrity and compassion, Sean has impacted over 20 million people worldwide. Through his teachings, Sean continues to inspire others to live more present, loving, and resilient lives, especially in challenging times.

Sean’s deep commitment to mindfulness is not just professional but personal, as he tries to embody the principles of mindfulness in every aspect of his life and work.

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