Change Your Brain Every Day - How To Squash Automatic Negative Thoughts Today – Part 2 of an Interview with Tom Bilyeu

Episode Date: July 6, 2017

Certain skills may come easier to some than others, but no one learns anything without putting in some level of effort into execution. Quest Nutrition co-founder Tom Bilyeu, Dr. Daniel Amen and Tana A...men discuss how leading with belief, adaptation, and killing those automatic negative thoughts can lead to success in business and in life.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. I'm Dr. Daniel Amen. And I'm Tana Amen. Here we teach you how to win the fight for your brain to defeat anxiety, depression, memory loss, ADHD, and addictions. The Brain Warriors Way podcast is brought to you by Amen Clinics, where we've transformed lives for three decades using brain spec imaging to better target treatment and natural ways to heal the brain.
Starting point is 00:00:30 For more information, visit amenclinics.com. The Brain Warriors Way podcast is also brought to you by BrainMD, where we produce the highest quality nutraceutical products to support the health of your brain and body. For more information, visit brainmdhealth.com. Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. So we are back with our friend Tom Bilyeu. Hopefully you heard the first podcast. He is one of the co-founders of Quest Nutrition Bars, and his story is just amazing. So today we're going to be talking about how he killed his aunts, his automatic negative thoughts, and how important
Starting point is 00:01:10 that was in his life. So you had the chance to actually meet Tom and have dinner with him. I did, and it was so cool for me. In the last podcast, we talked about purpose and why, and he came up to me at dinner. We were both speaking together at the success event in Dallas. And he told me how important my work had been to him, especially about killing the ants. So welcome back. And let's talk about ants and how they can infect, infest people's lives. Yeah. So that, the first book of years that I got a hold of was Making a Good Brain Great, which by the way, that title was so enticing to me. I thought, okay, I've got to read this. And diving into that book just really from beginning to end was incredibly powerful. And it was at a point where I was really trying to understand the brain and understand like how it was essentially manifesting my entire
Starting point is 00:02:09 reality. And as I began to realize just how important the brain is, and that we're really like our lives are a reflection of the health of our brain. And then getting to that concept of automatic negative thoughts, it was like that lightning bolt moment where you realize my entire life is about that. I spend so much time in a negative dialogue with myself, but never really thought to immediately kill those thoughts. And the problem is with automatic negative thoughts, they feel real. My brain wants to believe them. My brain wants to go, yeah, yeah, yeah, this negative thing about you, this is really true. And because it's true, you should indulge it. And so those voices, that concept of all the things that you're doing wrong, all the ways in which you're bad, all the ways in which you're not good enough,
Starting point is 00:02:56 it felt weird to try to silence that because it felt like then I was lying to myself and I wasn't like accepting like how bad I was and you know, all the things that I was lying to myself and I wasn't like accepting like how bad I was and you know, all the things that I was bad at. So you really gave me permission to go, wait a second, this is counterproductive. Like even if it is real, that's almost irrelevant. Yeah. Is it moving you towards your goals or not? Like, is it actually helping you build a better life? Is it helping you lower your anxiety? Is it helping you be more optimistic and feel better about your life to shake off any residue of depression or anything like that? And for me, my real struggle was anxiety. And I just found that the anxiety was building and building and
Starting point is 00:03:37 building. And it was like, I began to understand enough about neurons that fire together, wire together to know the more I indulge this negative cycle, the more that I indulge in a vision of a future that hasn't happened yet, by the way, but I'm painting it as if it were completely real and entirely negative, and it's making me really anxious. Like, the more that I was doing that, the more concrete it was becoming,
Starting point is 00:04:00 the bigger my anxiety response was becoming, the faster it was coming, and I just thought, whoa, this concept of automatic negative thoughts is so critical because if I can catch it early, the bigger my anxiety response was becoming, the faster it was coming. And I just thought, whoa, this concept of automatic negative thoughts is so critical because if I can catch it early, if I can kill those, if I can get myself into a positive dialogue, imagining a positive future that I can replace literally the neurological wiring that's creating this anxiety with something positive that makes me feel calm, it makes me feel confident that I could really begin to reverse this process. So I love what you're saying. And it is, I'm also very anxious.
Starting point is 00:04:31 I'm also hard, like I'm hardwired to be a little intense. I'm a neurosurgical ICU nurse and we're slightly intense people. Yeah. So- Don't forget the red hair. Yeah. So it's just sort of in my DNA,
Starting point is 00:04:44 but you've really helped me with that. I mean, really helped me when we first met. You helped me get this skill set of questioning my thoughts and going through the entire process. But I've also come up with, well, it's actually a question I got from you, but I love it and I've planted it so deeply in my life. It's sort of a shortcut because I'm a really busy person. So, now I sort of have the skill set down, and I've got this concept, I will ask myself this question, when I'm really upset about something, I'll get upset really quickly. And then it's like, does this have eternal value? And it's somehow it just reframes it for me. I've had cancer. So if it's not cancer, it's like, really, does it have eternal value? And so, you know,
Starting point is 00:05:22 we came home from a vacation because we were having construction done on our house. We walk in and they put the wrong floor in. And I mean, most people would flip out, right? So I was upset for, you know, I don't know, 20 minutes, 30 minutes. And then, and then you just slip right into that. Does this have eternal value? What difference does it really make? It's going to get fixed. So what? I mean, and I've done that with crashing my computer or whatever, but that shortcut of does it have eternal value?
Starting point is 00:05:51 It's not cancer. My kid is healthy. It's, you know what I mean? Like it's, you just, that shortcut of getting yourself there quickly. It's really helpful. So I've learned as a psychiatrist that most people are their own worst enemy. There's a Ziggy cartoon, we have met the enemy and he is us. Right.
Starting point is 00:06:10 And it comes often from an undisciplined mind where there's nowhere in school. I mean, I had to take English 12 times to get through high school. I mean, every year it's English and every year it's math. And I love Paul Simon's song Kodachrome, which starts, when I think back on all the crap I learned in high school, it's a wonder I can think at all. Where one of the most important skills is how to manage your mind. Right.
Starting point is 00:06:45 Because whether you believe you evolved or you were made, it was an anxious time back then when you had to worry about the tiger or the lions or whoever wanted to eat you. And so we are wired for negativity. We're wired to pay attention for fear. But now it's different. And yes, there are things you want to be cautious about. But most of it's not real. And we worry about things that really don't matter. And you need to discipline your mind like you discipline your body. I mean,
Starting point is 00:07:26 that's how you got those abs. It's you disciplined what you ate, you disciplined how you exercise. And there's so few people that actually bring it to their mind to learn how to not believe every stupid thought you have, how when you feel sad, mad, nervous, or out of control, write down what you're thinking and just question it. Maybe it's true, maybe it's not, but just the act of writing it down helps to get it out of your head. The example I often give is, if I get the thought, Tana never listens to me. And I've had that thought. And then if I write it down,
Starting point is 00:08:16 I realize, well, how stupid the thought is. Because, I mean, maybe she's not listening to me today because she's distracted or something's going on with her daughter or they put the wrong floor in. But when I write words like always or never, every time, I'm not telling myself the truth. And that's why I love the New Testament verse, John 8, 32, know the truth and the truth will set you free. And the truth is sometimes she doesn't listen to me and sometimes I don't listen to her because I'm busy. See, I like the turnaround. I love the opposite when you turn it to its opposite.
Starting point is 00:08:55 You know, oh, that person is so irritating. I'm irritating. Well, that's true a lot. You know, it just instantly sort of deflates that balloon right so there's a technology to killing the ants or to getting rid of the automatic negative thoughts write it down see if you can identify what type of distortion so in making a good brain great or change your brain change your life i talk about there are 10 different types of ants. And people with anxiety like me, Tana, probably with you, we're just masterful at fortune telling ants, where we're predicting the worst, and then we're making it worse. And I tell the only people really should be predicting the worst are contract lawyers, right? I mean, your contract lawyer should predict the worst and should
Starting point is 00:09:45 protect you from that. But doing it moment by moment in your life triggers panic attacks. So I have a question. How important was this skill set in helping you in your success? I mean, you're incredibly successful. So how important was that for you? Yeah, incredibly. So I'll credit my success entirely to what I've been able to do with my brain. So I'll often shorthand that to reading. But what I mean by that is, you know, really getting the knowledge that I need to go out and execute. And at the end of the day, anybody's success comes down to the ability to execute. So you have to at some point get out of the like thinking mode and really go do something. And a big part of it for me was having to come to understand that I could learn
Starting point is 00:10:31 anything I needed to learn. And that was a big deal for me. And so instead of being trapped by insecurity and that, oh, you're never going to be good enough, you don't know this, you're not as good as them, all the things that the ants were telling me, I really had to get control of that so that I could put myself on a path to mastery. At the end of the day, you're only going to go as far as you believe you can go. That was a huge breakthrough for me to realize that the human animal leads with belief. If you believe you can do it, then you'll actually be able to do it for no other reason than you'll take the steps to actually acquire the skills, right? So we are an adaptation machine. It is what humans do. We learn, we get better, we can go into a novel environment and figure it out. And we figure it
Starting point is 00:11:13 out through trial and error. You don't walk in and just know or be great at it. I mean, even Einstein wasn't born knowing physics. Maybe he was born with an unusual curiosity for physics, maybe he could grasp it faster than other people. But at the same time, he still had to go in and learn it. So that is true for all of us. But most people don't believe that they can actually learn whatever that thing is. So getting control of my automatic negative thoughts, flipping it, realizing that I could learn anything I put my mind to, I was going to have to put the work in.
Starting point is 00:11:42 But in doing that, then I became a skill acquisition machine. And that really is what my success rests on top of. Say more about that. A skill acquisition machine. I love that. Yeah, that's good. People often say that what Darwin said was it's the survival of the fittest, but he didn't actually say that. Somebody else has said it like 100 years after his death. What he said was, it isn't the strongest of the species that survive nor the most intelligent, but rather the most adaptive to change. And when I think about how humans have become the apex predator, it really is because we are the most adaptive. There's no other animal that you'll find in as many regions on the
Starting point is 00:12:21 planet. And there was a point at one point where James Cameron, the film director, was at the bottom of the Marianas Trench. Okay, so everywhere from, you know, the Arctic to the bottom of the ocean. I mean, it's literally crazy how we're able to adapt to our environment, create technologies. And that is the supreme human gift,
Starting point is 00:12:42 is our ability to adapt. Now, the problem is we can adapt to the negative, and that's where I think anxiety comes from. You become so obsessive, and all the machinations of myelination kick in, and you literally wire your brain to become anxious, to become prone to panic. You've trained your brain to do that. But the fact that we can take conscious control of those processes and through disciplined practice really force ourselves to go in an opposite, more productive direction is our great gift. And I just don't think enough people really understand that you can acquire any skill you want if you're willing to put in the work. Now, there are some people that they're going to get
Starting point is 00:13:20 an early win in things that other people wouldn't. Some people don't struggle with something that somebody else will. I mean, that's just the nature of the beast, but it doesn't mean that you can't do it. It just means that you may have to work a little harder than the person next to you on that particular skill, but you can acquire them. My friend, Jacob has cerebral palsy. I love using him as an example. He has a, he's a cerebral palsy, slurred speech, you know, very difficult time verbalizing. He's in a wheelchair with spasticity and he's getting his black belt. So whenever someone tells me they can't do something, I just, you know, I think of Jacob and I like to show Jacob's picture. And I'm like, tell me again
Starting point is 00:13:56 why you can't do it because I'm having a hard time understanding. So it's pretty amazing so the ants really limit us from having great relationships from being successful at work even from managing our health I think people who struggle to lose weight or overcome their health challenges it's often because of the limiting belief they have, along with some particularly toxic thoughts like everything in moderation, which I often say is the gateway thought to hell. It's generally your excuse to do the wrong thing
Starting point is 00:14:38 that will hurt yourself. This is so important. When we come back, we are going to talk about mindset. I mean, we're really talking about mindset now, but we're really going to explore it and how mindset can change your life and your business. Stay with us. Thank you for listening to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. We have a special gift for you. It's an opportunity to win an evaluation at the Amen Clinics. All you have to do is subscribe to this podcast,
Starting point is 00:15:09 leave a review and rate us on iTunes. To learn more about Amen Clinics and the work we do, go to amenclinics.com. You can also learn about our nutraceutical products at brainmdhealth.com. Thanks for listening.

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