Skip to content
Home » The Psychology of Obsession, Rumination & Letting Go – Dr Rick Hanson (Transcript)

The Psychology of Obsession, Rumination & Letting Go – Dr Rick Hanson (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of psychologist Dr. Rick Hanson in conversation with Chris Williamson of Modern Wisdom podcast episode titled ” The Psychology of Obsession, Rumination & Letting Go”, July 17, 2025.

The Endless Arising of Now

DR. RICK HANSON: In Buddhism, there’s this view in early Buddhism especially that life is very unsatisfactory because everything keeps ending. Well, wait a second. First of all, if you’re not attached to what’s happening, the fact that it’s endlessly changing is not itself a problem. And meanwhile there’s the endless arising.

And so there’s some physics about that. Why is there time at all? And one of the leading theories comes from this Professor Muller at UC Berkeley, that the Big Bang universe is a four dimensional space time universe. Space is expanding. There’s evidence for that. And we don’t notice it because it’s so big. We’re continually being stretched just a tiny, tiny wee bit.

But time is the other dimension of the expanding bubble of the Big Bang universe. So maybe the next moment is simply what’s occurring as the temporal expansion of the universe proceeds. So we are always in creation, at the leading edge of now, in the temporal expansion of the Big Bang universe. Whoa. And so things are ending because there’s the endless expanding into the next moment. And isn’t that the coolest way to kind of relate to what up?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: It’s so funny that you decided to start your soliloquy with that because I wanted to talk about change. I wanted to talk about letting go today. And there’s a… I think a lot of people like the idea of being someone who can deal with change well. And I think a lot of people probably are, you know, if they were to look at their past, they actually probably did deal with change well when the change happened, but maybe not so well in advance of it occurring.

Fear of change is a real source of pain for a lot of people.