Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - Stop Anxious Chatter & Harness Your Inner Voice with Ethan Kross Episode 94
Episode Date: February 16, 2021What do you do when you are stuck in an anxious loop in your mind? How do you zoom out of tunnel vision? Acclaimed psychologist, Ethan Kross, has done the science behind our inner voice and knows once... and for all how to stop the chatter. He comes on the show today to share tried and true methods on lowering and managing stress, getting control of emotions, and how to coach yourself to a bigger perspective. Everyone deals with spiraling chatter. We have the motivation to change it. Now Ethan Kross is providing the tools. About the Guest: Ethan Kross is one of the world’s leading experts on controlling the conscious mind. An award-winning professor in the University of Michigan’s top ranked Psychology Department and its Ross School of Business, he studies how the conversations people have with themselves impact their health, performance, decisions and relationships.Ethan’s research has been published in Science, The New England Journal of Medicine, and The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, among other peer-reviewed journals. He has participated in policy discussion at the White House and has been interviewed on CBS Evening News, Good Morning America, Anderson Cooper Full Circle, and NPR’s Morning Edition. His pioneering research has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Harvard Business Review, USA Today, The Economist, The Atlantic, Forbes, and Time. Finding Ethan Kross: Visit his website: https://www.ethankross.com/ Read Chatter Twitter: @ethan_kross To inquire about my coaching program opportunity visit https://mentorship.heathermonahan.com/ Review this podcast on Apple Podcast using this LINK and when you DM me the screen shot, I buy you my $299 video course as a thank you! My book Confidence Creator is available now! get it right HERE If you are looking for more tips you can download my free E-book at my website and thank you! https://heathermonahan.com *If you'd like to ask a question and be featured during the wrap up segment of Creating Confidence, contact Heather Monahan directly through her website and don’t forget to subscribe to the mailing list so you don’t skip a beat to all things Confidence Creating!  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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San Antonio, Texas.
I'm on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me, you're going to chase down our goals, overcome adversity and set you up for
better tomorrow.
I'm ready for my close time.
Hi, and welcome back. Thank you so much for joining me back here
again today. I'm so excited to be with you. And I'm really
excited for you to hear the interview that I have for you today.
It's really good. Ah, I think so. Okay.
So I want to share two stories.
One that I was reminded of from years ago
and one that happened this week
because I definitely took learnings away from both.
The first one is actually a chapter
in my first book, Confidence Creator.
If you haven't read it yet, you've got to check this book out.
It's, I get unbelievable feedback on Confidence Creator. If you're in business and sales or you just need some confidence, it is, oh my gosh,
it's the go-to. It's still my go-to, I love it so much. Okay, so as you know, I used to be a cheap
revenue officer in media. And before that, I was a VP of sales in media, you know, coming up
the corporate ladder. So I was in the radio business and we would always have these
annual meetings where we would bring in a talent and up and coming artists, someone who
would perform for us while we would do awards and award dinners and whatever. Clearly I don't
miss it. Let's just put it that way. But you know, that was back when I was definitely one of the only women in the executive team
and it was a very male-dominated, older, white male business.
Shocker, right? That's not shocking to anyone. So anyhow, I think this one took place in Philadelphia
and it was, gosh, it was a while ago because Taylor Swift was about 16 years old.
She was right on the precipitous of making it.
She was just on that cusp, right?
She was very well known.
She was being played on the radio,
but she wasn't mega superstar the way she is yet.
And I want to tell you, she looked very different, right?
She definitely looked
like a young girl with chubby cheeks and, you know, acne and big, big curly hair. And
I'm not sharing this with you to give her a hard time because the girl's gorgeous,
obviously, and she looks like a supermodel. But it just reminds me of how much things and
people can change over time. And again, over time is the key point here.
So back then, she was about 16, you know, maybe about to turn 17. So this is a long time ago.
What is this girl now? She's in her mid 20s, right? It's at least a decade ago. And it was just
funny because in the moment, you know, I didn't know who she was. She happened to be sitting at my
table for dinner with her mother. And she and her mother were just so sweet and so kind. And,
of course, I had to chat them up, right? So I'm chatting them up. I have no idea who they are.
And she was singing country music primarily back then. I am not a big country fan. So I was just
chatting with them because I genuinely liked them.. They were so nice so down to earth
Just really cool people
So the evening's going on we're having a great time chatting and talking and all of a sudden I see a man that I work with named Danny
Jump up on stage grab the mic and start his roast and he was roasting me and
Back then in corporate America,
when something totally inappropriate like this would happen,
I would just try to grin and bear it and not cry,
because I was one of the only women.
I definitely looked different than the other women
that were there.
And I was embarrassed, but I didn't know what else to do.
I never thought to stand up and say,
this is totally inappropriate, you know, put the mic down, old man, or something.
So I would never have said that back then. So I tried to just run and bear it and hold back tears,
hoping it would be over soon, which was super sad. I was really sad inside and felt terrible.
And a young Taylor Swift, who was sitting next to me leaned over and said, um, why is he doing
this? I said, I have absolutely no idea. And she said, what's his name? And I said, it's Danny.
She picked up a pen and walked out of the room. It was, you know, everyone thought that she was just
either getting ready to perform or she was pissed at what he was doing, you know, nobody knew, I guess.
I didn't know what she was doing,
but she disappeared and I looked at her mom
and I said, she okay, and she said,
oh yeah, don't worry, Taylor's fine.
And her mom knew what she was doing somehow.
They didn't speak words about it,
but her mom just knew her daughter, I guess.
And so, I don't know, 10 minutes pass, right?
And Taylor doesn't come back.
And then someone takes a stage and introduces Taylor Swift and up and coming superstar.
You know, and it's funny because I remember back, we dealt with Taylor on all the time
because that was our business, the radio business, the talent was the focal point and the product
that we would sell.
And sometimes people would make it and sometimes they wouldn't, but you didn't
really know. I mean, you'd have a hunch of who would make it, but we never really knew who was
going to make it because plenty of people were coming up and didn't make it. And in the music
business, oh my gosh, you see it happen all the time, right? It's really cutthroat. It's really
hard to make it. And even some really talented people didn't make it. But as we know, we already know
the end result on this one, this catcher did make it holy cow. She made it huge. So they
call her out and she comes out of the hall, guitar in hand, big puffy curly hair and her
chubby little cheeks and walks up on stage, the cutest young lady. And she says, I know everyone thought I was gonna sing
my new number one single, but I'm not Danny,
this one's for you.
And when she sat in the hall, she was writing a roast
about Danny.
And in 10 minutes, she lyrically roasted Danny beautifully.
She burned him like, this is the moment I knew I've never seen
anyone write a song. I've never seen anyone come up with something in 10 minutes that is so freaking
good and funny and burning someone and classy and what oh she nailed it. The whole room went wild. Everyone was on their feet screaming, standing ovation,
even Danny, who she had just roasted so eloquently,
stood up and said, I have to hand it to you.
You got me on this one.
You definitely, you take the cake.
That's all you.
And everyone was cheering for her,
waiting in line to get an autograph.
Everyone knew this girl. She's going to make it. Everyone knew this girl, she's gonna make it.
We see all these people that don't make it,
but after that, everyone thought this girl
should really get a chance.
And this girl's got such talent.
But for me, it's such an interesting thing
because I didn't get up in the potential
start of her in that moment,
because I was stuck in my moment, right?
I was thinking, gosh, this moment sucks,
and I'm so grateful, someone took up for me. I'm so grateful. I'm not alone.
And that was a really big deal. So when I look back on that experience, so that was over 10 years
ago, fast forward to today. And I see how incredibly successful Taylor Swift is, how she's everywhere,
and how she gets attacked a lot, but how she always stands up.
She isn't the role over and look the other way person.
She's the, I'd rather be accused of being in someone's face and do the right thing,
then turn a blind eye to bad behavior, which she's right all day every day.
And I look back on that night, and I remember how she made me feel amazing,
supported, not alone. And so two things that I take away from that
are one, you need to play a lot of dinner parties for radio stations before you ever play
in arena, right? Because that was over 10 years ago. Can you imagine how many dinner parties
like that she had to play before she started actually playing sold out arena. So we don't always see the work that goes in behind the scenes.
I do see it sometimes and I forgot about it myself, right?
Because now I see her on these epic little virtual stages now, but you know, major stages
and I've been to so many of her concerts and they're all sold out and huge arenas.
And I'm just asking everyone, don't forget about those small crappy dinners
that she had to play.
God only knows how many she had to.
I was only at one of them.
And I'm sure there were a heck of a lot more
before you live in the arena.
So don't get caught up in landing the arena,
get caught up in taking the action to play the dinners.
And that helped me refocus this week, right?
Because I played a lot of crappy proverbial dinners
or I have over the past three years
as I've completely changed my career.
Doesn't mean that I'm not going to be playing the rena.
It's because, oh, hell, yeah, I am.
But thank you to Taylor Swift for reminding me,
there's legwork that goes in before you land that first arena.
The second thing that that night taught me was,
you're going to have a lot of opportunities in your life to do the right thing.
And when you do, whether it's hard or scary or uncomfortable, always do the right thing.
Always own your voice and your power when you know it's right.
Even if it might go against what everyone else thinks.
That young girl took that stage, wrote a song in 10 minutes, didn't know how anyone was going to respond.
And I can tell you this, she didn't care. And she won the crowd over by being herself and standing up for what's right.
And that was just such a really powerful experience for me.
Okay, cut to one other quick story I wanted to tell you that happened this week.
So I've been getting into Clubhouse and if you're not on Clubhouse yet, you have to get on Clubhouse. It's super
interesting. One more thing to do, I know. And it definitely does suck a lot of time out
of your day or week. But it's a really cool way to meet people, answer their questions
live with very little work. And what I mean is it's an audio-only platform,
so you can literally be getting ready for bed
in an hour before bed instead of watching TV,
put in your AirPods and answer questions live for people.
And it just, you can help people a lot.
But what it does is it humanizes you and others, right?
So maybe people only see your social media
or they don't listen to the
podcast. And if you're listening right now, you're going to love Clubhouse because you're
someone who likes the audio element. So I would definitely encourage you download the app
Clubhouse and check out the different rooms and follow the people that you want to meet
that you want to ask questions to it. So cool. And I collaborated a lot this week with Alex
Carter, who I love, who if you haven't heard her episode on the show, you have to go back and listen to it because I just got a note from someone who had an opportunity
to negotiate for more money for his job.
He went back and listened to that episode again and then he added 10,000 to his ask and he
got everything he asked for.
So I'm so proud of that.
So definitely go back, check out the Alex Carter episode.
So so good. And anyhow, I was on a clubhouse
room with Alex every night this week, actually, or last week, and it was going great. And we also had a
moderator that was on who Alex and I both work with. And so she moderates the room and Alex and I
answer the questions. And it was going fantastic. And we were getting great feedback. And every night,
when we would get off, I get these really meaningful DMs of thank you so much for your help and that is so kind of you guys to offer your service for free and just so
not super nice, right? It makes you feel happy that you can help other people, especially when I look back and think,
God, I wish I had opportunities like that when I was struggling before, you know, so it's it's kind of great that now you can't give back, right?
So that's a beautiful thing about getting older.
Okay, so anyhow, I was doing a room with Alex.
Hollow is moderating.
I'm still pretty new.
I've only been on for, you know, doing events
for a couple of weeks.
And I don't know how to use any of the functionality
on the app, which is fine.
I just have to be able to get mute off
so I can talk and put mute back on.
So no one has to listen to me when I'm not talking.
I've mastered it. Well, I don't know if I've mastered it, but I'm getting decent at that which is good and
And I'm not I'm really not kidding and so we're in this room and I guess someone brought a woman up on stage
Which is you know figuratively, but then once that person's brought up on stage
They can talk nobody else can talk if you're not brought up on stage
So the woman gets brought up on stage. She doesn't know by who it has to be me, Alex, or the moderator
that does it. We have the Eva Green button in front of you. It means you have the power to
pull people up. I don't know how to pull people up. So, it wasn't me, but it was either Alex,
or the moderator. Anyhow, someone then puts the woman back to the audience. And I didn't
even know you could do that, PS. So, that just shows how much I know about clubhouse and nothing. And the woman proceeds to go to my Instagram DM and send me a note that says,
I was in your room and Alex pulled me up on stage and you pushed me back down to audience and I
can't believe you would not be inclusive. Why would you be hateful and do something
the woman attacked me?
And guess what, it wasn't me that did it.
I don't even know how to do it.
I didn't know you could put people back down
to the audience.
I don't want to, I don't want to moderate.
I'm just there to answer the questions and peace out.
I'm done, right?
So that's why we had a moderator there
is so that we don't have to do things like that.
So I don't know, this woman was crystal clear that it was me.
So I literally, she was so sure it was me in attacking me that I had to look at my phone,
go into Clubhouse and see if I even knew what she was talking about and I didn't.
And so I took a minute and here's what I'm going to share with everyone during this awful
time that we're in this pandemic where some people appear to be doing great and they're
going out like life is normal. And then there's people who are struggling and lost their jobs and there's people who like me
are stuck in an apartment with a child in zoom school which is tough. Everyone's got different
challenges and struggles but life certainly isn't what it used to be right now. We're in this
temporary period where it's tougher and a lot of people are dying and sick and there's just so much stress in the world that didn't exist, you know, a year and a half ago.
And while we were all optimistic that 2021 was going to be a better year and the vaccine is coming, it just doesn't seem to be changing the way that we thought it would or headcooked, right? I'm still super hopeful for this year and super hopeful we start having live events again
and travel safe and you know kids are in school and playing sports and life is good. But we don't
really know when that's going to be. So what I want to share is I knew that lady must be struggling
because why would she so certainly attack me in such an aggressive manner when it wasn't me that did the things
she was thinking about.
So I didn't do anything for a minute, even though I was super frustrated.
I was like, who the heck is this lady?
And why is she being mean to me?
I haven't do anything.
And I, of course, I thought, oh, she's going to feel like an idiot when I tell her it wasn't
me, but I just decided to wait and not respond.
And that's a really good solution. Do you know,
pause, do nothing, go for a run, regroup, work on something else, and calm yourself down. And I did
eventually. But I also took a screenshot of the nasty note. She sent me and I sent it to the
moderator and Alex. And I said, guys, I didn't do this. So I don't know who did, but you need to know
there's someone very angry.
And it turns out it was Alex that brought her up and our moderator put her back down
because she thought she was brought up in error.
It was completely innocent.
And so Alex reached out to the woman and just said, Hey, I want to let you know.
You sent a note to Heather saying that she did this.
She didn't.
And we would never intentionally pull some and then kick somebody out. It's not
who we are or how we would run any event. So, you know, I just want to let you know that wasn't
the case. So I responded to the woman and I just said, I wanted to let you know I did not
do what you thought I had done. It seems like you're confused and in full transparency,
I don't even know how to do what you were insinuating
I had done.
I feel lucky that I can get the mic off of me in any given night or situation for me.
That's all the functionality I need.
And for me, that's for the win.
Best of luck on your future rooms.
Hope they go well.
See, you know, something super, I didn't even address how mean she was to me.
I just thought, you know what, keep it moving.
This lady is someone I don't even know. And obviously she's struggling. And she sent me back a really nice apology and
that she felt very badly about, you know, what she had said. And, you know, it was just better left
that way. So the only point I wanted to make about that story is just that we never know what other
people are dealing with. I mean, we truly don't know. And that's why I'm so glad to have our guest here this week
because he's gonna address some of the things
that we all can do to lower stress
and talk about the impact stress
is having in our entire world right now,
which let me tell you, cut to this.
It's not pretty, but you're gonna have some great tools
to handle it and manage yourself
and your own stress better.
After you meet my next guest,
and I can't wait? I'm super excited.
So, hold tight.
I'll be right back.
We have different guests each week.
We're going to go on the trip.
Helplessly.
Hi, and welcome back.
I'm so excited.
We have the best guest today for you.
You're going to get some major knowledge.
So get your pens out.
We've got Dr. Ethan Cross here.
He's an award-winning professor
and one of the world's leading experts on controlling
the conscious mind.
Specifically, he studies how a person's internal dialogue impacts their health, performance,
decisions, and their relationships.
His findings can be found in his new book, Chatter, The Voice in Our Head, Why It Matters
and How to Harnus it.
So nice to have you here, Ethan.
Thank you for being with us.
So great to be here. I've been looking forward to this conversation all day. Thank you, Heather.
I really am looking forward to this. Okay, so super interesting is I was going through a lot of your
videos. And I saw a talk where you were sharing with an audience, one of the ways you torture these students
that you bring in to do a study to assess behavior
and to put them in stressful situations,
please share with us this crazy study
that you did with some of the students.
You know, we tend not to use a word torture,
but I can see why you didn't have that descriptor.
So in my lab, we study how people can control their emotions
if they want to control them.
And to study that, you often have to activate certain intents
usually negative emotions.
And so the most powerful tool we have at our disposal
for doing that in the lab is to have people give speeches
in front of evaluators,
speeches on topics that they haven't practiced for.
And so this is a really, really stressful kind of task.
And the way it works is you bring people into the lab
and you tell them, you know,
thanks for coming in for the study.
Today we're gonna ask you to give up a speech
and why you're ideally qualified to land your dream job
and you don't should talk about your strengths
and your weaknesses and ways that you talk about your strengths and your weaknesses
and ways that you've overcome your weaknesses
and ways that perfectly position you for this opportunity.
And then we give them like three minutes
to prepare the speech.
They can't take any notes.
They have no computer.
And so it really gets people agitated.
And that's what we do in the name of science
because we then test predictions
about different tools that people can use
to control
themselves and perform more optimally under stress.
That does sound very stressful and I happen to be a keynote speaker, but even just the way
you described it, right, with no ability to practice, not be able to get centered and get
in your zone and do whatever routine you might have, it's really disarming.
So I so feel for these students, but one of the things that was really surprising,
I went to school for psychology,
I had a shrink my whole life.
So I've done tons of personal development
and recognizing the importance of,
you know, positive internal dialogue
and reinforcing positives in life,
whether it be through gratitude
or, you know, whatever your practice is,
what was so interesting to me that I had never heard before
was your reframe in this study in particular,
instead of using first person and distancing yourself.
Can you talk to us a little bit about how that works?
Yeah, so one of the things that we know
from lots of research, and I think this will also ring true
to many people's experience listening, is that we're often much better
at advising other people on their problems
and we are advising ourselves.
So when I give talks to audiences, I'll often ask,
by a shill of hands, have you ever been in a situation
where a friend or a loved one comes to you with a problem?
They're ruminating, they're experiencing anxiety
or what I call the chatter, their mind's spinning,
they don't know what to do, they present the problem to you, and it's pretty easy for you to coach
them through the situation. And consistently, every hand in the audience goes out.
If it's not happening to us, it's easier for us to be objective, to use our mind, to come up
with a solution. And what we've learned is that language provides us with a tool to help us think about ourselves like
we're someone else with a little bit of psychological space or distance as we
call it. And the way you do it is you use your name to work through a problem.
So when I'm when I'm really stressed before I have to do something rather than
saying, oh my god, what am I going to do? I talk to myself like I'm coaching my
buddy. All right, Ethan, what are you going to do about this? Now, of course I do that silently not out loud. That's an important caveat.
But the idea here is that most of the time that we use names, we use a name when we think about and when we refer to another person.
So when you use it your own name to think about yourself, it's almost like a psychological jujitsu technique, right?
You're shifting your
perspective, you're using these words to change what you're thinking about yourself. And
we find that that makes it easier for people to work through problematic experiences in ways
that are healthy.
So, if you are, and we'll use the example of speaking just because I found that so powerful,
so you're going into speech, you're getting very nervous, and you're starting to think about everything that can potentially go wrong, which by the way I've done this many times myself.
I hope I don't fall walking out, you know, to the main stage. So the right way to handle it or a tool that you would have available to handle it would be to say, okay, Heather, you're not going to fall on the floor. How are you gonna go ahead and knock the speech out?
Or do you start saying positive things?
How exactly do you do it?
You're coaching yourself through it.
So a great example of this is an interview
that Jennifer Lawrence was giving
with the New York Times a couple of years ago
and the reporter for the Times
started asking her hard-hitting questions.
And at one point, it was getting pretty intense.
She stopped and she said,
okay, Jennifer, get your act together. It's essentially she's talking to herself like, this is what
she would say to her friend and you started doing it too. Okay, Heather, here's what you're going to do.
You're walking yourself through the problem and it's not importantly this kind of frantic, oh my god,
what if this happens? I'm going to screw up, I'm going to screw up, instead it's very challenge oriented. It's like, okay, I can manage this situation. Here's,
here's what you're going to do. I think it's important to emphasize that in our studies,
like when we look at what people, we find that when you use your name or this what we call
distance self-talk, it really changes your internal monologue. It shifts you from being in threat mode. I can't do it to challenge mode.
All right, you can manage this. You've done a bunch of these keynotes before. You could do it again.
But it's not always cupcakes and hot chocolate, the equivalent in terms of the content of it.
It's not always this positive sunshine and everything's going to be just fine. It's
sometimes that we find that it can be kind of stern. Like, I know for myself when I do this,
and I do use this tool before giving talks and other stressful circumstances.
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Like what he would say, all right, you're going to do this.
Get your act together and it could be stern.
So it's not necessarily always this positive. It's more
challenge. You can manage a situation. The difference between thinking about a situation
as a threat, something I can't do, and a challenge, something I can do is powerful. And
distant self-talk using your name helps you think more in challenge-oriented terms.
I love that simple shift, that makes a lot of sense.
So what about when there's issues that you can't control?
Because I still feel like going into a keynote,
I'm in charge of pretty much most everything
that's going to happen over the next hour.
What living in a pandemic is such the opposite situation,
I feel like I'm not in charge of anything.
And when you don't have control and you're also not
certain of things, those are two ingredients
that really fuel chatter.
So chatter refers to getting stuck.
You're very narrowly focused on the awfulness of what you're experiencing, which I think many
of us are right now with COVID, right?
Like, objectively, what we're dealing with right now is pretty crappy.
We don't have controllers not much we can do about it.
And when you tunnel vision in on that,
when you get really immersed,
that can get us stuck in these thoughts spirals
in chatter, which can have lots of negative consequences.
And so what do you do there?
Well, there are tools that I think are useful
for breaking us out of that tunnel vision
for zooming out and adopting a broader perspective.
One tool that I rely on is something
called temporal distancing, fancy phrase for what you might think of as mental time travel. So
I'll often think about how I'm going to feel nine or 12 months from now when we're all vaccinated
and we're back to traveling. When I do that, when I jump in the mental time travel machine to the future? What that does is it makes
it clear that when I'm experiencing right now, as awful as it is, and to be clear, it's awful,
it's temporary. It will eventually pass. I'm getting the bigger picture, and that gives me hope,
and we know that hope is a powerful bomb for chatter, right, when our minds are running wild. That can be really helpful.
I also sometimes go back in time.
I think about the pandemic of 1918,
which was arguably worse than what we're dealing with right now.
Hard to believe that, right?
But, but, right, you know, it's like,
and these are pretty bad times.
I was like, think about 1918, we didn't have Zoom, right?
We didn't have take out delivery and all of the features.
I don't know, man, that would be a blessing
because I'm done with Zoom and takeout and delivery
is way too frequent over here,
so I might have to challenge that, but go ahead.
There are some drawbacks to takeout delivery.
I mean, this Zoom session for me is from the neck up,
problematic, but.
You're a new both. session for me is from the neck up, problematic. So, but I mean things where things are really
bad back then and guess what? We got through it and we thrived after the roaring 20s like
and we will get through this. So, these are small shifts that broaden our perspective,
break us out of the cycle of getting stuck,
thinking about how awful things are, the rumination about it, which can be really helpful for people
when they're managing uncertain and uncontrollable stressors.
So, I'm a little confused because I know that part of chatter can be, and especially for myself,
is focusing on when I'm just in my head alone somewhere,
things that happen in the past that I'm upset, decisions I made that I'm upset about and
obsessing over those, and or fast forwarding ahead and hope, you know, did I make the right decision
on this now? Is this going to pan out in the future and obsessing over that? So how do we know when
to leverage that to work for us versus when it's working against us?
The mental time travel piece. I think the idea is, so first of all, this mental time travel
or temporal distancing, this is just one example of many science-based tools that exist for helping
us deal with chatter. So that's number one. Number two, let's say you are fixated on how awful this podcast interview went
with this guy from Michigan like terrible.
And you're spinning over it over and over.
Yes, that is about the past, but you can still travel like further into the past and think
about, well, I've had other difficult interviews before.
And guess what?
Wasn't as bad as I thought
in a blu-over or you can think about how you're going to feel about this experience that you're
worried about right now, a week for now, when it's over and it fades. And so even if your
even if your chatter is coming from something in the past or the future, you can still go back
further in time to make it clear that what you're experiencing chatter about
is not the focus, is not the center of your world and it will eventually end.
When we're consumed with something, it's like that is the only thing we can think about.
So I often ask people, like, if you ever had an experience reading a book,
reading a couple of pages when you're ruminating or anxious about something,
and you read five pages, and you can't,
you get to the end, you don't remember anything
that you've ever read.
Has that ever happened?
Yes, absolutely.
Pretty common, right?
So it's all consuming.
And the idea is how do we break you out
of that all consuming mode?
And so going further back or forward
or backwards can be a tool
for that. I know that you are a father as I am a mother and having kids in Zoom schools
been really, really hard not only on us, of course, but, you know, on the kids and the isolation
that they're dealing with. What are some of the tactics that you deploy with your children
to help them through this tough time?
I do do a version of the distance self-talk that we talked about.
We've done some research on how you can do that with kids and there's something called the Batman
Effect, where you ask your kids to essentially pretend they're a superhero. So Batman or Wonder Woman
or the Explorer choose your kids favorite hero. And one of the things that that does is so the next one Danny, my
youngest daughter struggling, I might state, all right, pretend you're wondering, what
wonder woman do right now call yourself actually wonder woman, right? Like pretend you're
her. That gives her a little bit of psychological. It lets her step back. It's not, it's not happening
to her. It's happening to wonder woman. What do we know about superheroes? They don't let things get them down. They're invincible, right? Yeah. They're invincible, right? And so,
so that's one tool that I'll use with them. I'll also, in the book chat, I talk about like different
categories of tools or ways that we can try to break out a chat ourselves with small shifts and how
we think like we talked about, but there are also ways of harnessing our relationships with other people, so people can help us by talking to the right kinds
of people who help us broaden our perspective. So I'll often do that with them when they're
really upset about really important stuff, whether they're sister, got a slightly larger
dessert, this is the end of the world, right? Or who gets to choose the movie?
You know, I'll try to broaden their perspective.
Guys, listen, you guys have dessert.
Lots of people don't.
Or, you know, we're lucky that, like that's a shift.
It breaks it out of this tunnel vision.
That can be helpful.
I'll also do things like, I'll try to use the world around us.
That's another category of tools, the environment,
provides us with tools for managing our chatter
and actually mother nature.
Interestingly, exposure to green spaces
can be really helpful for rejuvenating us
when we find ourselves really stressed.
And so we'll go for walks, not as much right now in Michigan
because it's terribly cold as you might remember
when you lived here, Heather.
So there's a variety of tools that I'll try to use with them. And one thing that I believe very strongly in is that there are no single tools that
are magic pills, right? Different tools work for different people in different situation,
different combinations of tools, I think, work best. You might think of this as what's a
chatterfiding cocktail that works best for you, the unique blend of tools. And so I'll do lots of things with them
in the same way that I'll do lots of things with myself.
So when you were describing that the situation
with your kids, it reminded me so bizarre,
just popped right into my head during this pandemic.
You know, while we're under this pressure,
one day my son and I, we live in an apartment building,
we went down to the floor to get our car
and my SUV was gone. And I just lost. I started crying. I said, Oh my gosh, our car's been
stolen. I started flipping out. And my son looked at me and he said, Mom, there is a porch
on either side of our car. No one would steal a BMW SUV, something's wrong. And so he snapped, he gave me the
perspective, which I couldn't get in that moment. I stopped. I said, come with me. I walked
over to the elevator and I realized we were on the wrong floor. And it was so, it was
one of those moments of like with the dessert where someone had to say, excuse me, pick your
head up here and immediately snap me out of that negative chatter that obviously everything
had just gone wrong. Yeah, your son is like, is a great chatter advisor. That's a great
intuition he had. And it actually, it raises, I think, a very important point that I talk
about in the book, which is other people are in a unique position to help us when we're
dealing with chatter, but they can also actually harm us. So you have to find the right people to talk to, and not everyone will do.
So there are some people who I love dearly, and I'm pretty sure they love me.
I don't go to them when I have chatter, because I know that the talking with them is not
going to help me feel better.
It'll actually make me feel worse.
And so I think it's really important to think about, well, what makes another person a good chatter advisor, someone who really helps
you? And their science, you know, that illuminates the way here. And so what you ideally want
is someone who you can find to talk to, you can share what you're feeling, you can express
your emotions. Very important to have someone who shows empathy and you know cares enough about you to
actually listen, but just listening to you talk, that's not enough. Like if you come to me, Heather,
and you're like, you know, you just want to unload your emotions about something that had that
happened, and you start talking to me, and I'm listening attentively, you're going to feel much
closer and connected to me. So our friendship will be stronger. And that feels good. But that's not
alone going to help you work through the problem. Because what you additionally need is the person
you're talking to to help break you out of your fuck, help you broaden your perspective. So,
hey, well, let's think about it this way. Or that happened to me. And here's how I dealt with it.
So talking to you to try to help you reframe your experience.
And so those are the two qualities
that you want to look for in another person.
Someone who is empathic, let's you talk a little bit,
but that can help you shift your perspective.
And not everyone does that.
Oh, definitely not everyone does that.
And like you said, they can still love you and care about you,
but those are not the go-to people
when your chatter is running wild in your mind.
That's right. And it can cause some serious problems, like there's large bodies of research
which show that when you get stuck doing what what researchers call co-rumination, so we just
get stuck in like a vent session, what happened to you? I can't believe it. What did you say? And he did what? I'm back and forth, back and forth. That predicts things like anxiety, depression over time. And so it really, it makes
us closer. We feel really close together. And that actually motivates us to keep doing this.
But it doesn't make our problems any better. It can make them worse. So other people can be
a real asset or vulnerability
when it comes to chatter. That's got to be scary for people. I just thought to myself,
if someone's in a marriage where someone likes to feed off of negativity or they have a relationship
with a child or someone where they're living in closed quarters during a pandemic with that person,
they've got to be really vulnerable. Yeah, I think they are. And popular culture actually doesn't
often help here because we're often told
Just find someone to talk to like you know, especially now during the pandemic, right?
Like we hear so much about
Physical diss social distancing like we need to connect with other people. Yes, we need to connect
But there are also ways to connect right. It's not a haphazard
Talking about anything that's gonna to make us do better.
And I think in many cases, I've seen people just revving themselves up, like, you know, to go back
to the kids at home situation, like, it's not easy, right? I mean, you know, normally, like,
you don't know what kinds of persuasion and negotiation I had to do with my kids before this
and negotiation I had to do with my kids before this call
to make sure that they weren't sitting at my feet during this whole thing,
because that's all they wanna do is be here
while I'm doing my work.
And so like this is taxing, and it's very easy,
I think to slide into just, you know,
let me tell you how awful it is
and keep going, going, going.
So just to be clear with everyone, talking about our emotions is a good thing,
the ability to express those feelings. We don't want to stop doing that.
What we don't want to have happen though is having us slide into this
vent session where that's all we do without trying to step back,
see the bigger picture. You know what, we're all safe. Everyone here has been doing okay.
We're going to get the vaccine. Like, know what, we're all safe. Everyone here has been doing okay.
We're gonna get the vaccine.
Like, that's what we want.
So bigger picture perspective and sort of like a whiteboard
session where we're brainstorming solutions
and ways to move forward.
Yeah, coupled with the emotional stuff,
we don't wanna be like cold, robotic.
Let me tell you how to think about this, right?
Like, that's not fun.
That's not human.
We want to engage meaningfully with the person, but hey, let's try to work through this problem
rather than just get stuck because guess what? It doesn't feel good to experience chatter, right?
Like, so people often ask me, how do you know if you're experiencing chatter in these negative
thought loops? And my response is you usually know it when you're experiencing it because it's awful.
And so we don't want to persist in that state.
Do you think there's something to be said for the discipline of not allowing yourself
to indulge in that?
Is that something fair to say?
I think that's easier said than done.
I think it's very easy for us to, what chatter is, is problem solving gone awry, right?
Like when bad things happen, we tend to focus inward
to find solutions to our problem so we can move on.
It's a very natural adaptive response.
That ability makes us human,
and it's what distinguishes us from every other species,
our ability to use our mind to solve problems in language.
But when emotions are involved, we often, against our best intentions, just slide into that tunnel
vision zoomed in mode where we get stuck, like a gerbil on an exercise wheel.
We don't get anywhere.
If you can avoid doing that, great.
That would be fantastic.
And I think it's something to certainly aspire to, but I wouldn't get too down on yourself
if you find yourself slipping into chatter
because it's a very human experience.
And the good news is that there are lots of things
you can do if you find yourself going down the rabbit hole.
And so...
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Part of the reason I wrote the book was to talk about what those things are.
So this morning oddly enough, I typically think think that I trained and worked myself to a point
where I don't go down the chatter hole too often, although, you know, it is a global pandemic,
so it does happen. But this morning, oddly enough, obviously, I knew I was going to be speaking
with you. I was looking for an old video from five years ago that I wanted to post on social
today. And so I started scrolling through my downloads on,
through the years on my computer.
And as I started doing that, I started freaking out at,
oh my gosh, look how much work I done.
Look at, I've done all this and I'm not where I wanna be at.
My mind, I had zero control.
And I got into this horrible loop of, oh my gosh,
maybe I'm never actually gonna achieve the goals that I think I thought I was on the right path and my gosh, maybe I'm never actually going to
achieve the goals that I think I thought I was on the right path.
And I don't think I'm on the right path anymore.
It was this huge shift for, it took me nowhere good.
And luckily I was able to distract myself.
I had meetings set up that were, and I wasn't doing it by design, which I know is one
of your strategies.
I was doing it by schedule, right, that I had a schedule I had meetings I had to be on, which completely took me away from that. And now here I am
reflecting on it. I really haven't thought about it since then. So clearly your power of distraction
does work. Yeah, so distraction can be a good short-term fix, right? Like when we're, when we are going
down the rabbit hole, diverting our attention away from the problem. You have to find something that's truly distracting.
Sometimes you want to distract by watching a TV show,
reading a book, and it doesn't engage you enough.
But if you have to do something like your meetings,
that can be very good.
As long as you then come back to the problem after,
assuming it still bothers you to not let it continue to bother you.
If the problem is significant enough, like, let's say you're in a relationship, assuming it still bothers you to not let it continue to bother you.
If the problem is significant enough, let's say you're in a relationship and you get rejected.
This is one of the canonical, really intense chatter-provoking experiences.
All right, you get dumped and you don't want to think about it.
So you go to a party, you hang out with friends.
You feel better when you're distracting.
But then when you come home and you're reminded, oh, I was dumped, the chatter
returns.
And so that's the trick is, if it's a significant problem where it's going to come back,
then you want to also layer in some of those like, you know, there are more people out what
are plenty of fish in the sea.
Plenty of fish in the sea.
Right.
That's the perspective broadener, right? Like,
nothing that that's going to necessarily work for everyone, but that's a tool, that's a way of
getting distance from the experience. So it sounds like your little chatter hiccup this morning
wasn't so severe, thankfully. Well, well, hope so. I've been on back-to-back meetings. So to your
point, I've been distracted all day long. Right. You have an at-time.
I haven't had time.
And it's really interesting that we're talking about this.
I'm thinking about it now in my mind.
What's going to happen at 5.30 tonight
when I really am done with meetings, right?
And it's just time to make dinner and be with my son.
Will I just go watch Netflix?
You know, like all these things start popping
into my mind because I really don't want to deal with it.
But you know, the point I was making was around goals. And I know you talk a lot about the importance of goals. In this situation,
I was questioning my goals, how do goals benefit you and help stop chatter?
So, you know, the lab I run is called like the emotion and self-control lab. And you think,
what is self-control? Well, self-control is two key ingredients. Motivation, which I think of as goals,
and then abilities, skills.
So if you want something to happen in your life,
you want to orient change the way you think
or feel their behavior in a particular way,
you need a, you need to have a goal,
like you need to be driven to do it,
and then you also have to have the ability,
the tools you need to make those goals happen. If you just have a goal, I want to do it, and then you also have to have the ability, the tools you need to make those goals happen.
If you just have a goal, I want to be happier, but you don't have the skills to do that,
it's not going to work.
On the other hand, you can have all the skills you want, but if you don't have the motivation
to use those skills, you're not going to do it, right?
So you really need goals, motivation, and tools.
Now, I think in the case of chatter, what we have going for us is that it's so
aversive, it is often so painful to get stuck in those negative thought loops,
that most people are in fact motivated to find ways to not experience it.
I mean, we've actually done research.
It is painful in an emotional sense,
and sometimes even physical,
when you're really struggling with a problem over and over.
So people tend to have the goal to want to reduce the chatter,
but they don't always have the tools that they need to do it.
And oftentimes the things we think are gonna be helpful,
turns out they're not, like just venting our emotions. That doesn't work. Or just trying harder to work through the problem doesn't
often work. It just makes it worse. And so that's why I think the science can be really useful
because what science has been doing, scientists have been doing for a while, is trying to figure out
really precisely. So what are the different tools that exist for helping us manage this state?
So you can achieve those goals that you have.
What role does genetics play, environment play? What are the key pieces as to why some people might have more chatter than others?
So there are lots of question marks there. So we know that genes are involved. We know environments are involved.
We also know that, and we didn't know this,
say probably a decade ago, that genes and environment actually come together interestingly enough.
So, certain kinds of environmental experiences that we have can turn on certain genes and
turn off other genes. And that's called gene expression. And that's in part how like experiences of chronic stress,
that partly explains how they can get under the skin
to influence your physical health.
Because when you're experiencing chronic stress,
let's say you're living in an environment
that's threatening, like really scary
of a neighborhood or a war torn environment,
that can have like a effect of like turning on genes
and involved in
inflammation and turning off genes that are involved in fighting viruses. And so really amazing
work coming out that's beginning to illuminate how genes and environment come together to predispose
us to experience more and less chatter. But we don't have great answers yet about exactly how
that happens. It's a very
active area of work. The one thing we do know about background is that women tend to be
more vulnerable to chatter than men. We don't yet know why, but it is true. But, and I think
this is a really important, but they benefit equally from the tools. So men and women
benefit the same from the tools that exist from managing chatter. And so, although there's a little bit of a higher level of chatter for women compared
to men, they're no more vulnerable in the sense of they can make use of the tools well.
And so your experiences in your lab are that women, even though they are more vulnerable,
they're bouncing back just as well as men do when they are given the right tools.
Exactly. That's good news. That's good news, but what's not good news is yet again,
women are at the disadvantage. And the other point that you made that really hit me hard is
people who are in challenging economic situations are in really tough spots because
how do you get out of that? All I could think to myself was the projects, right? And if someone's
living in that environment,
not only do they not have the means to escape it,
they might not have access to knowledge or to the tools
that they would need to help themselves.
I think you're absolutely right.
And I think that's one of the reasons why it's so important
to be having conversations like this,
to be disseminating what we know about these tools,
to give people the
opportunity to use them to try them out to see if they can help them. I think
we have a responsibility to do that. So that's in part why I'm excited to chat
with you and others about the stuff. Is that why you wrote the book? In part, you
know, part of the reason for writing the book was I had been teaching a class
at Michigan on a lot of these ideas for for several years.
And the last time I taught the class in the final session of class one of the students
asked me why are we learning about this now? And I was like, what do you mean? And they've
then went on, well, you know, we've learned that these these different tools for managing ourselves
help us perform better, help us have better relationships and make us healthier.
Why didn't anyone teach us about this stuff earlier,
like in middle school or high school?
And I didn't have a good answer to that question.
And so, you know, what I did was,
I basically did the, you know,
the kind of standard professor deflection technique.
So it's a good idea.
What does everyone else think about that?
You know, I threw it back to the class,
but it bothered me.
I didn't like not having an answer.
And the more I thought about it,
the more I couldn't come up with a good explanation.
We learn in school, for example, about things that someone
has thinks is important for children to know about.
So I remember learning a lot about the digestive system
and peristalsis.
Like how does food get from one end to the other?
Like interesting, but do I use that information
on a daily basis?
I do not.
Now, you know, what are we talking about?
We're talking about the science of the mind,
how your emotions work, how you can control them.
Like this is information that would seem to me
to be enormously relevant
to students and adults' lives. And so why aren't we teaching kids about this stuff?
It's like, you know, we teach them math, how to compute a percentage. That's a skill that comes
in handy. I think controlling your emotions is the ability to do so might come in handy later
on in life. And so out of that experience came two efforts actually. The first is I started a project in which I worked with some colleagues with
teacher and teachers to basically create a curriculum for middle and high school kids that
teaches them about this science. And we're currently evaluating this curriculum to see
what effect it has on students' lives. And then the other, the other outgrowth of that experience was this book
to share the science of what we know about, how to manage our inner voice and chatter with everyone
else. So that's why I wrote the book. I'm so proud of you that you saw a problem and didn't just
teach or deflect, but you went in and jumped in and created this curriculum. That is so exciting.
I want my child to get access to it. That's major work.
You can just feel your passion for it and it's so great to see people living their purpose
and passion. I'm so excited for you, Ethan. Where does everyone find out about you? Where can they
get chatter? What else do they need to know? Well, you can get chatter from any bookstore. It's
available now. You can learn more about me or the book by going to ethincross.com. It's cross with a K, K R O S S. And that'll give you plenty more
information than you would ever even want about the book of me.
You're gonna want the information, you're gonna want the book, and I'm gonna put
all the links in the show notes so everyone can head down there, click, check it out.
This book is a must buy. Thank you so much for your time today, Ethan.
I really appreciate you.
Thanks for having so much fun.
We'll be right back.
I ask you to try to find your passion.
Hi and welcome back.
Okay, we've got some questions here.
I want to jump into, hey Heather,
this is from a LinkedIn DM.
How do you find your speaking teaching experiences
for Harvard now?
Do you find the students to be otherworldly intelligent
with a unique presence?
Or do you find the students to be a lot like us?
I super appreciate a curious question like this
because I wondered that too, right?
So here's what I know.
Well, first of all, I don't know if you know this,
but about a year and a half ago,
I was invited by my friend John Westman to be a guest teacher for one class at Harvard.
So anytime you do something for the first time, it's super scary.
You don't know what you're walking into.
That's how I felt going in.
I thought, oh my gosh, am I going to be able to connect with these people?
What am I going to think about them?
What are they going to think about me?
After having that first experience, I noticed these people are, listen, they got into
Harvard. They're super smart, right? Very articulate. They use vocabulary that I might not use
at a regular basis. However, everything, I shouldn't say everything. A lot of what they were
talking about was from textbooks, from reading, from analyzing data and not from experiences.
And so that was the biggest takeaway I had a year and a half ago.
It was, wow, they're really textbook smart,
but not they don't have a lot of experience like I do.
So we are understandings, even of the same topics,
were very, very different.
Fast forward to this year now that I have a weekly class,
and I'll tell you, it's interesting. It's the same thing that I have a weekly class and I'll tell you it's interesting.
It's the same thing that I observed the first time, right?
Some of the people are so super smart.
Some people seem more relatable to me, but there is a gap on experience.
They defer to the textbooks.
And gosh, there's a lot of them.
If you could see my living room table right now, there's, I have so many books to read
for Harvard.
It's ridiculous. And they're all over the table. Clearly, I am not excited about reading them.
It's all books on sales. So it's funny to me. I don't need to read them. I understand the
principles in ways other people don't because I've been implementing them for 46 years, right?
However, it is a good point because last week there was a topic we were covering
from one of the books and it was one of these very directive. You have feel felt found. I believe
that was it. My memory serves me correctly. And it's all about the style of that you want the person
to, you want to say, I feel and then parading back whatever it is, you felt, and here's what I found, essentially
something like that. Well, I don't, that's not how I operate in sales. The way that I operate
is I have an understanding through my experiences of what works in certain situations, environments,
and with certain people. My goal is always to access as much information as I can, first and foremost.
And then I want to be present present and I wanna help solve problems.
I wanna help people, right?
So I don't get into these like feel felt found routines.
I understand where that would be helpful
if you were new to sales and you were trying
to lean on something like as a crutch,
but that's not my style.
And so we did a bunch of breakout groups
where we let the students try their hand at a feel felt found in real time role playing, which is a great exercise.
You know, when you're teaching something to let people role play.
And then I said, well, guys, I want to try to do it because it's going to be really hard for me because I'm not scripted.
So for the students, it was much easier for them to follow the script because that's what they find themselves doing.
So they felt very comfortable with that. I have never followed a script in sales.
I've never been studying sales at a college. It was always in real life, right?
So I just figured it out through trial and error.
And so I forced myself to try because it was super uncomfortable.
And of course, I did not do it correctly. However, at the end, it was super funny. One of the students said, Heather, that wasn't feel felt found, but that was so much
better than what anybody else did. And I highlighted that, that I said, guys, that's because I
didn't do it scripted. And you guys were all doing it scripted. So as much as this is
a great tool and crutch to lean on and one way of doing it don't only defer to it, right?
Just like I wanted to challenge myself to try the field felt found way. I didn't succeed at it,
but you know, because in the end I just knew there was a better way in my mind to do it. That wasn't
the lecture for the day, but I did want to share that the students at Harvard are people who want to learn. And while they're very well equipped
and very educated in textbook learnings,
and they have huge vocabularies and do incredibly well,
academically in school and on testings,
they seem to have a lot of opportunity
to learn more about role-playing and real-life experience
and leaning on and feeling confident
in things because you've done it so much so many times.
So I guess that's the best way I could say yes.
There are some people that definitely seem hyper-intellectual, which I am not and I don't
see myself that way.
So there's some people I relate to more than others, but at the end we're all the same.
We all want to learn, we all want to get better.
And I feel super grateful for the opportunity to be on faculty at Harvard and be there and
share my insights with them. It's super cool. Actually this week we don't have school this week,
this Monday, and so instead I'm leading a small group from our class on a social media exercise
to help them learn to leverage social media for business,
which I've only really been figuring out over the last three years.
So it's crazy. Bottom line is this, people are way more like
than you think, number one, and number two, always step into what's uncomfortable for you.
That's the only way you're ever going to grow, myself included.
Okay, next question. Hey, I was hoping you could share some advice
on how to best promote my new career position on LinkedIn to gain the most views and engagement,
any specific cash tags. I find that funny. Here's why. It's not that simple. The best way for you to
get views, and I'm just going to cut to the chase, show up as the real you, tell your real stories.
That's what makes you unique and different. Share your teaching, share your learning, share your fail, share your wins, share it all. The more you can show up as
the real authentic version of you consistently, that's the keyword. You have to be consistent.
You can't post once a week and hope that you're dropping a hashtag on there's going to
have a post go viral. It's not a spoiler alert. That doesn't work. Wish it did. But no, you know,
Gary Ve challenged me in November 2019 to 10X what I was doing on LinkedIn.
He said that I wasn't posting enough. And gosh, she was right. He gave me advice. I implemented it even though it's hard and a lot of work. I 10X my content.
My views went from, I think in 2019, I had 8 million views on LinkedIn and it went to I think 30 million in 2020 a year
with nothing going on. But the reason why is I just was able to reach more people. So number
one, show up daily, post consistently, and show up at least one time a day, show the real
you different parts of you, maybe part of your family life, maybe part of your business
life, maybe part as you teaching other people, what, you know, maybe part of you sharing what you're learning, maybe part of you running
a contest and, you know, giving your services away for free, maybe part of you sharing
your testimonials or your work, there's so much you can do. And of course, leverage hashtags
that are relevant to the conversation that you're having, but don't think dropping just
one given hashtag is going to make a post go viral. It doesn't, it won't, you have to
test different things and then look at the. It doesn't, it won't, you have to test different things
and then look at the data, data doesn't lie.
Constantly go back to the data
and see what's working for your feed.
And what's not?
Okay, last question for today.
Okay, hey, I've got a question for you.
My apologies if this is too forward,
but if you have a few minutes,
okay, can you help me?
I lost my job with a company, part of a restructure.
And while I've been assured there is a place for me, I don't know that I believe this, the entire process has forced me
to reflect on different opportunities. Yes, good. I truly believe this was meant to happen,
and I'm at a crossroads. I'm trying to evaluate my upside and the amount of risk. Oh gosh, that's
a tough one. I would really appreciate and value your judgment and advice. I believe I'm destined for
something great. That's your answer then right there. Hello, mic drop moment. I understand you're
likely busy, but I figured I'd reach out anyway. As the great Wayne Kretsky said, you miss 100%
of the shots you don't take. Let me know your thoughts. Absolutely. Okay. And then so I respond to
him, oh my gosh, totally gonna answer this on the show. Great, I look forward to tuning in. I wanna make sure you understand what I'm weighing out here.
A sales director position for the company that just laid him off versus a big leap of
faith to do something drastic and bold and become a motivational speaker.
Hard part is I am the breadwinner for my family and this is a huge risk.
So I'm thinking maybe I hedge both while
exploring both. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Okay, so here's the thing. Here's my best advice as
as someone who's responsible for providing for a family. In a perfect world, if you didn't have a
family, of course, you're going to tell that company to f off, piece out, see it later. You're just
going to go roll the dice on you and be scrappy and make it work until you can.
And yes, that's what you should do. However, you have a mortgage to pay for schools, to pay for
food to pay for, and we're in a global pandemic. So, as much as I hate to do this, I have to give you
the best advice possible. You are not gonna become wealthy in the next few months and in the speaking business. So you can't, in my opinion, this is my opinion,
you should do you, but you need to pursue that job
as the sales director at the big company
that you've been going through the restructure with.
Advocate for it, push the component,
go back and listen to the Alch's Carter episode with me
and really go for more and push your boundaries
to get as much comp as you can,
because the more comp you get,
the more savings you have,
the more runway you're building for yourself
so that you can be building this other business.
Now, don't get down, because here's the thing.
We have a goal and a vision for your future,
and that's of your speaking company,
and you working for yourself,
and you not having to rely on a company
or some manager to
direct your income or potential or fire you or whatever, right? So we've got this vision
write it down what you're gonna do and let's give us a timeline. Now at nights on the weekends you
gotta start hustling and you gotta let your family know. Guys here's what I need. You know here's
my situation I'm going to work for myself and it's going to happen and it might not be happening in 2021
But for sure it's happening in 2022 and here's what that looks like. I've got to work
You know dad's got to go into the office at night and on the weekends and I need your support and understanding because this is going to make me happier
It's going to provide all of us more autonomy flexibility and I'm really passionate about it
And I've got to connect to my passion
and do good work in the world
that I feel good about that's more than a paycheck,
and I want to have the ability to drive
where I go not have someone else
be directing and driving my life in my career.
So I would have that conversation,
and then I would start taking steps
anytime you can speak immediately, take it.
And I don't care if it's paid or not paid, that's irrelevant.
You just want to start getting footage of you on stages, even if it's virtual.
That's fine because people are asking for virtual footage now, recording yourself on Zoom.
That's so easy, and you can do that, and you need to start doing it.
So you want to offer your services, even if it's at work, and you're leading a sales meeting,
recorded.
See what lands with people.
Start testing different material and keep a word
off on, here's what's working, here's what's not working.
I even do that today, right?
I've been speaking for 25 years and I'm constantly
updating, wow, this is landing really well with people
right now.
We're going through a different time,
a transitional time, and things are going to hit differently.
See what resonates with people, see what messages you get
after and incorporate the wins into your talks and the things that
don't seem to land get rid of them.
It's a constant evolution.
Constantly you're getting better.
The more stages you take, the more you speak, the more clips you get, share them on social
media.
Start using the hashtag keynotes speaker.
As long as your company is not going to have a problem with it, the company I used to
work for did.
Actually, they did not want me promoting myself, but most companies won't have a problem with that,
because what you're actually doing is allowing the world and business community to get to know you,
and you're pulling talent towards you. It's a really great way to recruit talent towards you,
recruit business opportunities to you, and put your best put forward in a forward-facing world
that you want to be leading in. So start building that business now, start today,
write it down, share it with your family,
and take that sales director job knowing
that that is funding your future company,
that you are working on, that you are hustling for,
and you are taking action against today.
That is definitely the best advice I can give you.
Best of luck with it.
Don't stop, don't give up, hold that vision, and work towards the outcome that you know is possible for you, I can give you. Best of luck with it. Don't stop, don't give up.
Hold that vision and work towards the outcome
that you know is possible for you.
And it will be.
So I hope you guys love the show today.
I really do.
I'm super proud of it.
And if you can please subscribe to the show,
rate and review the show, please.
And then promote it on social media,
holy cow means the world to me.
Whenever you do, I will always share,
just tag me in the post,
and I will always share what you posted,
and reshare it, and thank you,
and I'm super appreciative.
No one succeeds alone,
and I totally need your help.
So, appreciate you, and until next week,
I'll be here creating confidence,
and I know you will too.
I decided to change that tiny amount,
and the one below, I couldn have been more excited for what you're
getting here and start learning and growing.
And inevitably something will happen.
No one succeeds alone.
You don't stop to look around once in a while.
You can miss it.
I'm on this journey with me.
I hope you're enjoying this episode so far.
I'm Jennifer Cohen, host the top ranking business and entrepreneur podcast,
Habits and Hustle, apart the YAP media network, the number one business
and self-improvement podcast network.
So, most people live the life they get and not the life they want.
And I'm here to change all that.
My goal with each episode is to give you
the habits and hustle tips you need
to show up to your life better, bigger, and bolder.
Tune in now, and I'll not only help you answer the questions
like what do you want most in life
and why don't you have it,
but we'll also help you make it a reality.
I also picked the brains of top thought leaders
on how they've gone to the top and the advice they have to help you make it a reality. I also picked the brains of top thought leaders on how they've gone to the top,
and the advice they have to help you get there too.
Head over to Happets and Hustle.
Once you've done listening to this episode,
and get one step closer to boldness,
one episode at a time.
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