The older I get, the more I enjoy acting like a kid.
I jump at every opportunity to do backflips in the pool and absolutely love seeing the circus when itās in town. Iāll giggle over banana splits at Fluffy McCloudās and relish the silly moments when my friends want to watch an animated movie or order an absurd treat like Carvelās āFudgie the Whaleā ice cream cake. Every few months, my partner and I make a pilgrimage to the desert where we climb huge rocks and lie beneath the stars to feel existentially tiny.
Iāve loved all of these activities since I was young, but my last year has been especially joyful since I started learning the art of childlike wonder.
The phrase first came into my life as a way my partner would justify ordering Shirley Temples, but the more I thought about childlike wonder, the more I began to notice it. Iād find posts about it on social media and contemplate it with friends, including my co-worker Kailyn, who told me about the whimsy she felt as she rolled down a grassy hill at the Getty Center.
Southern California is filled with gorgeous Buddhist temples, meditation gardens, churches and synagogues that inspire awe. Here are some worth a visit. Get ready to be wowed.
And though these notions arenāt new to the world, recent research shows that experiencing awe and wonder can positively affect our mental and physical health, ultimately benefiting our lives. So in 2023, I sought out experts on awe and play and tried to reframe my life in L.A. around the big and tiny things that propel people into states of reverence and joy.
Through this, I discovered something profound yet simple: With the right perspective, and a little bit of effort, we can teach ourselves to generate childlike wonder in all sorts of places.
1. Look for awe in the mundane
Though Dacher Keltner has lived in Berkeley since 1996, he still has a distinctly SoCal vibe. His flowy blond hair looks eternally sun-kissed, and his disposition is equal parts optimistic and laid-back.
āRaised by an artist and a literature professor and living in the wild Laurel Canyon in the late ā60s, you know, life was awe,ā Keltner said from his light-dappled kitchen.
A psychology professor at UC Berkeley, Keltner has been formally studying awe since 1999. As a scientist who focuses on the social functions of emotion, Keltner recently wrote āAwe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Lifeā and was a consultant on Pixarās āInside Out.ā
Keltner said that when he first started researching awe, there were a few early studies on goosebumps, chills and neuroaesthetics, but no one had really zeroed in on the impact of the feeling.
āI always think in terms of phenomena. Where is the motion? Where do I see it? How do I feel it?ā Keltner said. āIt just seemed like almost everything that really mattered to me ā from being at a concert, to sports teams I love winning a championship, to people I really admire, to having children ā itās just all awe.ā
Atheist Adventures offers non-believers in Los Angeles and beyond the opportunity to experience wonder and awe in the most inspiring places in the West.
Nearly 25 years later, Keltner has these experiences ā and what triggers them ā down to a science.
āAwe is an emotion that you feel when you encounter vast things that are mysterious,ā he explained. āWonder is what follows awe. It is a mental state, less so an emotion. Itās just a mental state where youāre curious and wanting to explore and discover.ā
Keltner has been able to determine eight wonders of life that often propel people into states of awe: moral beauty (witnessing the virtue of others); collective effervescence (often experienced in large groups like those at weddings, rallies or sporting events); nature; music; visual design (beautiful buildings, paintings and the like); spiritual and religious experiences; life and death; and epiphanies.
Learning about these different kinds of wonder made it easier for me to zoom in on moments of awe that I couldāve otherwise forgotten, like carving through Laurel Canyon this summer in my beloved convertible, listening to KCRW play Samphaās āSpirit 2.0ā as the moon rose over the city.
When it comes to researching awe, Keltner often mixes qualitative questions and stories with quantitative measurements. One of his experiments had people create self-portraits while looking at either Yosemite Valley or San Franciscoās Fishermanās Wharf. The self-portraits from Yosemite consistently had smaller subjects, suggesting that peopleās sense of self ā or ego ā can shrink or even disappear when theyāre experiencing awe.
āHow much awe do you feel? Tell me a story? How small is your self? Do you feel humble? Draw a circle of the people youāre part of?ā Keltner said as he listed various ways to measure awe. āGoosebumps, tears, vagal tone, default mode network deactivation, vocalizations, body postures. I mean, man, we can measure it, and that in its own right some people would not have predicted.ā
Shrinking your ego or āselfā may sound intimidating, but I like to think about it as feeling like a little guy. That might come from something literal ā like wearing a size 5XL sweater for comfort ā or it could be more poetic, like finding places where you feel tiny. I often experience this when I dive into the Pacific and roast marshmallows over the fire pits at Dockweiler Beach. Maybe youāll get that same 5-year-old-in-an-adult-body sensation learning about far-off galaxies at Griffith Observatoryās planetarium or feeling the wind whip over the edge of a canyon.
2. But donāt forget to appreciate wonder in unsurprising places
Some of Keltnerās eight wonders might feel a bit obvious ā of course youāll feel awe when a new baby is born, or while processing a life-changing epiphany. Itās not shocking to learn that people access awe and gratitude while volunteering in their local communities, and by reflecting on the people who shaped their moral compass.
āWe were surprised that moral beauty was the most prevalent source of awe around the world,ā Keltner said. āPeople arenāt talking about the Grand Canyon; what theyāre talking about, itās like, āMan, I had this teacher and she did everything for her students.āā
Spiritual wonder is another form of awe thatās always at our fingertips. Angelenos can partake in death meditations and sink into sound baths. We take trips to breakup boot camps, energy vortexes or atheist retreats. We laugh and cry inside the most ethereal sacred spaces and find ways to revel in the beauty of our loneliness.
For Keltner, working on this book in the wake of his brotherās death made grief feel like its own complex yet obvious source of wonder. His work made him wrestle with the awe-lessness that he was feeling, and eventually brought him to appreciate the cycles of life that are constantly in motion around us.
Your obvious sources of wonder might look different. I know that awe is guaranteed when I plan a night out with my friends at a crowded gay bar or buy tickets to see BeyoncĆ© perform for a silver-swathed crowd of thousands at SoFi Stadium. I know Iāll find it at weddings, as I watch loved ones reflect on finding someone who turned their world upside down, and Iām guaranteed to feel it every time I get to hug my mom or dad, who live 2,500 miles away.
People arenāt talking about the Grand Canyon; what theyāre talking about, itās like, āMan, I had this teacher and she did everything for her students.ā
— Dacher Keltner, author of āAwe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Lifeā
When I really need to ground myself, Iāll return to my favorite botanical gardens. Though I love taking special trips to the Huntington (to marvel at bonsai trees and sample various teas) and Descanso Gardens (to appreciate summer nights filled with ambient music and glowing foliage each winter), Iām loyal to UCLAās garden, which is completely free. I find awe in the monstera leaves, often larger than my head, and make silent wishes on my favorite orange-and-black koi fish every time I visit.
Itās also easy enough to stumble upon the kind of jaw-dropping and awe-inspiring nature and design that Keltner mentions around California: We have drive-through redwoods, architectural triumphs, vibrant fields of flowers and spectacular ceilings. I can visit national parks of every flavor; float in lakes and swimming holes; and trip on psychedelics in the desert.
Zion, Mesa Verde, Arches, Grand Canyon and Joshua Tree all in one epic journey? We did it. Hereās how it played out.
All of these channels for accessing wonder make Keltner hopeful: If awe is able to quiet the negative voices that get trapped in our heads, perhaps this sensation can better peopleās lives.
āI started to think about the problems associated with too much self-focus ā depression, rumination, anxiety, shame, self-harm, suicide, body-image issues,ā Keltner said. āPeople are sick of the self-focus [thatās] imposed upon us by Instagram and the like. They want to be free of the self.
āHereās an emotion that frees us of that, and gets us to see how weāre a part of much larger things,ā he continued. āAnd what good news.ā
3. Allow yourself to be more playful
Though prioritizing awe is a huge revelation, itās only one piece of this existential puzzle.
So many of the things that brighten my life are tethered to the softest and brightest parts of my childhood. My partner and I make up silly dances and comedy bits as we move through the day to make each other laugh. Even as I try new hobbies, I find myself returning to the activities that I loved when I was a teenager: swimming, watercolor painting and pottery. When I need to get out of a deep emotional funk, Iāll usually order birria tacos and put on my favorite movie of the last two decades: Pixarās āRatatouille.ā
Thatās all to say that staying close to my playful childhood habits has made it easier to access awe, so I wanted to find out how these aspects of life are intertwined.
Stuart Brown, founder of the National Institute for Play, began studying play in 1966, when he was tasked with figuring out a motive behind the Texas Tower shooting.
āI subsequently went to the Texas state prison system, through a grant, and studied homicidal males,ā Brown explained. āAnd I found out in a pilot study of 26 or so of these individuals, that their play life was very different than a control group.ā
This study set Brown on a lifelong mission to study play and how it shapes peopleās lives and allows them to enter a gleeful state. Throughout the years, he has interviewed thousands of people ā āfrom Nobel laureates to murderersā ā to map out their play patterns.
Brown listed examples of his interview questions: āWhat did you really, really enjoy as a kid? Whatās a joyful moment you had? Whatās the first toy you had? Did you have pets? Were there vacation times that were tremendously important? Can you remember a moment of joyfulness where you were absolutely at peace with yourself?ā
From those interviews, Brown identified the different play patterns that naturally manifest in each person. For some, that looks like body play ā think of dancing or playing a sport ā while other people will be more interested in musical play or object play (think of using a Lego set or collecting stamps or keys).
Brown likened these play patterns to our fingerprints, saying theyāre deeply embedded within each of us, but he added that many people donāt prioritize play as a significant part of personal well-being and fulfillment.
āCan you remember a moment of joyfulness where you were absolutely at peace with yourself?ā
— Stuart Brown, founder of the National Institute for Play
Thatās one huge challenge that the NIFP comes up against: Many people donāt see play as indispensable.
āIf you go back 50 years, people didnāt know that sleep was important,ā said Tony Christopher, the executive director for the institute. āAnd today, itās very clear that [if] you donāt get a good nightās sleep you are far from at your best.ā
And when people donāt get to play, there are clear drawbacks. Brown said that people can be grumpier, more rigid, and worse problem solvers when theyāre play-deprived.
āFrom birth to death, [play is] a part of being human,ā Brown said. āBut when itās not experienced, there are consequences. And the consequences are mild depression, or an outlook thatās not optimistic and not creative and not innovative.ā
4. Fill your life with people who expand your universe
When I hear Brown talk about play, it makes me think about Randy King Lawrence, the man behind Echo Parkās colorful and astounding Phantasma Gloria. Lawrence is the kind of person who always brings out my playful side, constantly showing people new ways to look at the world. Heās convinced me that everything looks a little more beautiful through one of his metal stencils or ruby-colored marbles.
āItās just so damn fun, and itās so easy,ā Lawrence said of his art as we stood in his front yard in 2022. His words and enthusiasm struck me with a feeling that is now, clearly, awe. I had just moved to L.A., and seeing his art was one of the first experiences that convinced me that moving across the country wasnāt a massive mistake.
Iām lucky to be surrounded by many people who love to play, like my friend Charlie, who brought me to Griffith Park for Clown Zoo last spring to partake in a night of comedy. I think of my friends Sophia and Riley, who joined me at Akbarās craft night one rainy Wednesday to decorate paper owls with pom-poms and beads, or Simone, whom I met in a ceramics class, and all of the long days weāve spent at the Pottery Studio experimenting with glazes and throwing pots that sometimes crumple.
Whether you want to try candle making, Jaipur block printing, glass blowing, neon bending or woodworking, L.A. has a space for that.
My roommates sometimes tease me about how silly my schedule often sounds ā Iām not free that night because Iām seeing Cirque du Soleil. Wednesday I have to wake up at 6 in the morning to see the Oscar Mayer Wienermobile with the Los Angeles Breakfast Club ā but these activities keep me feeling playful. Sometimes Iāll be sampling various crafts around the city and learning archery in Van Nuys, or jet-skiing to Catalina and riding railbikes through Ventura County.
But you donāt need to buy a jet ski or start woodworking to play more (though those are both great ways to get the feeling going). Swapping stories, making weekly or yearly rituals with friends and attending dinner parties are all great ways that adults can play.
āAdult play is not the same as childhood play,ā Brown said. āWe all have changed our tune as we age. Iām a grandfather and telling stories to my grandkids is a lot of fun to me. Whereas if I was telling stories when I was 18, I would have thought I was nuts.ā
5. Slow down to appreciate things you take for granted
When Ingrid Barreneche is having a tough moment, she likes to move slowly and spend a little time on her patio.
āI walk out there and just close my eyes and I let the sun touch my skin,ā Barreneche said. āThat contact with the sun makes me feel immediately alive and [makes me] wonder.ā
Barreneche, who did her MFA thesis on reclaiming wonder, was inspired by Rachel Carsonās 1965 book, āThe Sense of Wonder.ā Barreneche still creates art thatās intended to āawaken the viewer to rediscover the wonders of the world around them,ā and as a resident of Boca Raton, Fla., she often finds awe and joy in admiring the fruit trees that surround her.
āIn my backyard, I have a starfruit tree, and my nephew [and I], we call the tree the giving tree,ā Barreneche said, a nod to the book by Shel Silverstein.
āItās such a beautiful thing and people throw [it] away ā thereās just fruit everywhere,ā she continued. ā[When] thereās too much going on, we donāt notice those things.ā
She described wonder as something that comes from her gut ā a deep, instinctive practice that shapes the way she views the world throughout each day.
āI paint every day; I cook; I walk the dogs; I love,ā she mused. āIāve been with my husband 27 years, and I wonder, āHow come Iām so blessed to have a love in my life? And such a good human being?āā
That perspective is exactly what Catherine LāEcuyer, author of āThe Wonder Approach,ā suggests for those who are trying to reconnect with wonder.
āWonder is the desire to know,ā she said. āWonder is not taking anything for granted, so it is seeing things as if it were for the first ā or for the last ā time.ā
āI paint every day; I cook; I walk the dogs; I love. Iāve been with my husband 27 years, and I wonder, āHow come Iām so blessed to have a love in my life? And such a good human being?āā
— Ingrid Barreneche, artist
LāEcuyer, who is a doctor of both education and psychology, said that adults often approach the world with more cynicism, which is āthe opposite of wonder.ā
āIn my speeches, I often invite people to identify how capable of wonder they are by asking them, āWhen you woke up this morning and you saw the person that was at your side, did you feel wonder and awe?āā LāEcuyer continued. āWe adults tend to get used to the beauty of the world and take it for granted.ā
Talking with LāEcuyer made me feel lucky to have a love who makes every morning feel more exciting than the day before. My partner, Reanna, always finds new ways to make me appreciate the world on a deeper level. They introduce me to their favorite foods ā a bucket of popcorn at Brain Dead Studios, or maybe a Fat Salās sandwich ā with unbridled enthusiasm and always make me laugh while we run errands. On date nights, theyāll surprise me with mini-golf games at Sherman Oaks Castle Park or trips to the piers of Marina del Rey to admire the basking sea lions.
Weāll often spend joyful afternoons at their favorite museum, the bizarre and wonderful Museum of Jurassic Technology, which serves tea in a captivating rooftop garden filled with doves. Sometimes Iām able to bring them to a new-to-us hidden gem, like the Velaslavasay Panorama, which houses a breathtaking 360-degree panoramic painting of Chinaās Shenyang city in the early 1900s.
Even on the hardest days, appreciating the presence and company of a loved one is a sure-fire way to access a little wonder.
6. Create new daily rituals, like āawe walksā
Keltner speaks of the world with an unbridled enthusiasm, as if he can find awe in nearly everything around him: when heās noticing how the leaves change color in the fall; when heās revisiting the music of Brian Eno; when heās reading the work of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman or Rachel Carson.
He makes his work a daily practice through taking āawe walks,ā where heāll slowly observe the beauty surrounding him. Heāll often focus on small details, like a leaf on a tree, and then expand out to the big picture.
āYou can get to awe quickly, but to really make it rich, itās got to be part of this broader pursuit of wonders ā of life,ā he said. āItās about a lot of deeper stuff. Itās about your life philosophy, and what you find meaningful, what Aristotle called eudaimonia: What do I care about? And how do I find it in music? And then act upon it?ā
By centering awe, Keltner believes that people are more inclined to preserve nature, help each other and reach ābig ideas that move our mind.ā
āAwe tells you whatās sacred to you,ā he said. āAnd we will fight for sacred stuff; we will sacrifice for whatās sacred.ā
The daily awe practices that Iāve integrated into my own life are fairly simple. I now take a 30-minute-long walk every morning, and try to take a photo of something special that I wouldnāt have noticed if I were in a hurry. As I explore my neighborhood day after day, Iāll find myself pausing to take in a lush natural tunnel made by curving trees and the tropical birds that one of my neighbors keeps in their front yard.
Iāve been trying to slow down and really appreciate the beauty thatās constantly around me. Iām acknowledging the small and special joys, pausing for even just a second to acknowledge a new leaf that sprouted on one of my houseplants, or how lucky I am to live two minutes from a taco stand with the best homemade tortillas Iāve ever tasted.
Iām doing my best to appreciate my life for what it is ā not what it once was, or not what it could be in the future. (Thereās no way to say that without it feeling corny, so please cut me a little slack.) It doesnāt always feel like itās working, but Iām sure that even the most optimistic people still have bad days.
I donāt believe that awe will combat all of the depression and anxiety that plagues my brain, but I know that strengthening my sense of wonder has helped me appreciate things more deeply. I hope that Iāll continue to find awe each morning, as the sun streams through my window and my partner snores lightly from the other side of the bed.
If nothing else, I hope that this reinvigorated sense of playfulness and wonder will keep compelling me to move through the world with a little more kindness and buoyancy, so I can float down the river of life knowing I didnāt miss all the beauty it has to offer.
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
Weāll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.