Good Life Project - 3 Surprising Ways to Make Peace With Your Anxious Mind | Spotlight Convo
Episode Date: June 30, 2025Three leading experts reveal how to transform anxiety from an enemy into an unexpected ally.Dr. Jud Brewer shares neuroscience-backed techniques to break free from worry loops, Dr. Wendy Suzuki (autho...r of Good Anxiety) shows how anxiety can fuel creativity and resilience, and Emiliya Zhivotovskaya introduces her groundbreaking Mind Over Chatter framework for turning mental chatter into a tool for growth and greater awareness.Episode TranscriptYou can find Dr. Jud at: Website | Instagram | Unwinding Anxiety App | Listen to Our Full-Length Convo with JudYou can find Dr. Wendy at: Website | Instagram | Listen to Our Full-Length Convo with WendyYou can find Emiliya at: Website | Instagram | Mind Over Chatter Course | Listen to Our Full-Length Convo with EmiliyaCheck out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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So what if the very thing keeping you up at night, those racing thoughts, constant worries,
spiraling fears, could become your greatest ally?
Nearly everyone experiences anxiety today.
It's become a shared language over time.
But what most people don't realize is that hidden within this challenging emotion lies
an unexpected gift.
The potential for deeper awareness, heightened creativity, and profound
human connection if we understand how to decode what anxiety is telling us and transform it
into energy, ease, and fuel for impact and growth.
Today's guests share three fascinating perspectives on transforming our relationship with anxiety
and mental chatter.
Dr. Judd Brewer, neuroscientist and addiction psychiatrist at Brown University, reveals how understanding your brain's habit loops can help you break
free from anxiety's grip. Dr. Wendy Suzuki, professor of neuroscience at NYU and author
of Good Anxiety, shares surprising research showing how anxiety can actually become a
catalyst for positive change. And Emilio Givotovskaya, CEO of the Flourishing
Center and creator
of the Mind Over Chatter approach, introduces a practical framework for turning five different
types of mental chatter into tools for growth. And together, they reveal something remarkable,
uncomfortable as it can feel. Anxiety isn't something to eliminate or endure. When we
learn to work with it skillfully, it can actually become a pathway to greater
resilience, creativity, and aliveness. You'll discover simple, science-backed techniques
to calm your racing mind, powerful reframes that transform worry into wisdom, and practical
tools to make peace with your mental chatter. So excited to share this Spotlight Conversation
with you. I'm Jonathan Fields Fields and this is Good Life Project.
So our first guest is Dr. Judd Brewer, a New York Times bestselling author of Unwinding Anxiety,
Neuroscientist, Addiction Psychiatrist, and a thought leader in the field of habit change
and the science of self-mastery. He has developed and tested some really novel mindfulness programs
for habit change, including treatments for smoking, emotional eating, and yes, anxiety.
And Judge groundbreaking work uses the latest neuroscience to help people break free from
anxiety. And his wisdom has been pretty life changing for a lot of people. I know it'll
inspire you. I mean, what if you could rewrite your relationship with anxiety? What if instead of feeling trapped in worry loops, you could meet each moment with
openness and curiosity? Judd will reveal some practical tools to help make this vision a reality.
So here's Judd. Your topic is a topic of interest. It has been for a long time and for anyone that
has not been touched by some form of anxiety,
I think, you know, the last couple of years have made it a relatively universal experience.
I'm curious from your lens, how have you seen like the depth and the scope of anxiety change over
these last two or three years? Yeah, I'm just thinking about that for anyone who hasn't been
touched and I was just thinking, find me that person. Who is that? Yeah, it's just seeing the rapid increase in anxiety, societally,
it's just like this unfortunate naturalistic experiment. To me as a neuroscientist, my
brain says, oh wow, I wonder how this is going to go. This was two years ago. And then started
thinking about the brains don't like uncertainty and
where there's a lot of uncertainty and cetera.
And then the prediction says, wow, things are going to spike and then things
spiked and then things kept going.
And then where these, with these multiple rounds of uncertainty, just
with the pandemic first round, then we get Delta, then we get Omicron, you know,
and it just keeps coming in economic schools. And so it's like we've hit these
multiple rounds of uncertainty to the point where not only has anxiety gone nuts, but
I've also seen where people are getting this, I don't know if this is the perfect term,
but this is how I think of it is learned helplessness. A lot of people are just like, I give up, my brain is fried, just too much anxiety.
Yeah, I guess here's what's spinning in my head. If in before times, anxiety was a pretty universal
experience, but not entirely universal. And now basically, like you can't talk to anybody who
doesn't say, I'm living with some level of this thing. Does that in any way, shape or form,
does the normalization of an experience
that would normally be really difficult to deal with,
does the fact that we're all in it together
in any way change the way that we experience anxiety
potentially for the better?
Yes, two things come to mind.
One is any time we can work together
against a common threat or enemy, let's say, it's always better.
We really, truly as humans are better together.
And the other piece that comes of that is just even knowing that we're not alone.
There's a single condition that we all have.
It's called the human condition.
And there are variations on that human condition.
And we all share in condition and we all share in
stress, we all share in anxiety and so just knowing that we're all together in
this can be the beginning of the healing there and then also when we can relate
to each other it's easier to empathize and bring compassion in when somebody is
really struggling with anxiety and we know that place, it just opens our
hearts a little bit where even non-verbally, it's, oh yeah, I've been there. I know what
you mean. And that too can be part of the process of healing.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. So we've used the word anxiety a whole bunch, literally
in the first 60 seconds of our conversation. I think it makes sense also to really certainly dive into what are we actually talking about
when we're talking about anxiety?
There's a definition I think that works relatively well, this feeling of nervousness or unease
about an uncertain event or something in the future basically. I think of it, another way
to think of it is fear of the future and the reason I like that definition is
As I was doing research for my own one anxiety book
I was really looking into like why do we have anxiety because it's our brains are set up for
Immediate threat basically our brains are set up to eat and not be eaten, right?
And so we're set up to remember where food is
We're set up to remember where danger is, we're set up to remember where danger is
so that we can find the food and go back to it
and we can remember where the danger is
and not go back to it.
So this big question is like, why,
where did anxiety come from?
And the best that I can gather is that,
think of this survival part of our brain,
help fear, very helpful survival mechanism. We learn,
don't go back there, but then also more recently our brains have evolved to plan for the future.
So we've got the present moment, is there danger? No. Okay, now I can plan for the future.
And planning for the future is also helpful. But when you mix those two together, fear of the future
not so helpful.
And so that planning part of our brain actually can start to spin out, especially the more
uncertainty there is.
Our brain spins out in what-if scenarios, and those what-if scenarios make us more and
more freaked out, ironically making our thinking and planning part of the brain go offline.
And when I think of anxiety as fear of the future, it's these
two helpful survival mechanisms, fear and planning, that kind of get mixed together.
And it's not like peanut butter and jelly. Peanut butter and jelly, generally good together.
This is, I don't know what the analogy would be, but mixing something that you would never
eat with peanut butter and tasting it and saying, yep, I would never mix that with peanut
butter. That's a bad idea. Our brains just haven't figured that out. And it turns out that anxiety
is driven like any other habit. And so you say spinning. So for any habit to form, we
need three elements, a trigger, a behavior, and a result. So just as an example, we talked
about survival, right? You see the food, there's a trigger, you eat the food, there's the behavior,
and then your stomach sends this dopamine signal to your brain that says remember what you ate
and where you found it. So that's the general process for habit formation. With anxiety,
the feeling of anxiety can trigger the mental behavior of worrying. I'm going to say that
again because that's hard for some people to, you know, I never thought about it that way.
The physical feeling of anxiety, that feeling of nervousness people to, you know, I never thought about it that way. The physical feeling of anxiety,
that feeling of nervousness or that feeling of worry
can actually trigger the mental behavior of worrying.
And that worrying is where we start to spin
because we can't predict,
we're not very good at predicting the future.
And the more we spin, the more we spin out
because we start to think, oh, this could be really bad,
or here's another thing I didn't think about.
And then our brains just get way out of control
to the point where we didn't even get into panic,
this wildly unthinking behavior,
which is that far end of the spectrum of anxiety.
Yes, what you're saying is absolutely true,
and it's interesting you mentioned the word spinning
because that's exactly how these habit loops form.
So worry gives us the brain reward of feeling like we're in control or at least
that we're doing something. I can't do anything about this but at least I can worry. We're
occupying our mind and that is rewarding enough that it feeds back so that the next time we're
anxious it says, hey, why don't you worry again?
You write about and you speak about and this is baked into your technology. This is like
the notion of three elements of awareness, curiosity, and compassion. I want to talk about each
one of those. Awareness, sort of like the starting point of what?
Great question. So I would say certainly awareness is an endowed characteristic that we all have.
We can be aware or we could not be aware for a mind if we're lost in a story. So I would
say awareness of everything, right? The more aware we are
of our experience, the more helpful it can be for helping us live a healthy, happy life.
So let's drill down on that because that sounds vague. In particular, when it comes to things
like anxiety or things that are causing our suffering, like you were saying, there's a
lot of suffering in the world today. If you look at the Buddhist psychology, they talk about cause and effect. That's the essence of karma, basically,
is cause and effect. If you frame that in terms of modern psychology, it's positive and negative
reinforcement are another way that they're described is reward-based learning. And that,
it's described that way for a reason. If a behavior is rewarding, we're going to keep doing it. If it's not rewarding, we're going to stop doing it.
And so here with awareness, what I would say is,
it's helpful to drill down on awareness
of the results of our behaviors.
If we can see what the result of worrying is,
then it helps us become disenchanted with it.
If we can see if we're a jerk to somebody,
if we can see what the result of that is,
instead of just yelling at somebody on the internet
and then turning our computer off or our phone
and ignoring it, but really if we did that face to face,
we get to see the results of that,
and just the results can help us start to change
our behavior and become disenchanted with being a jerk.
If we can see the results of being kind,
having kindness bestowed upon us,
we can start to see the joy that comes with that.
So I would say awareness of cause and effect,
or basically awareness of the results of our behavior
if we're looking specifically at behavior change,
habit change, or anxiety.
But in general, awareness is good.
Looking both ways before crossing the street, or anxiety. But in general, awareness is good. Looking both
ways before crossing the street, very helpful. I think of this as, can we bring
awareness in any moment and be curious, right? Curiosity is that attitude and
quality of mindfulness. And so there can actually be some joy and some reward
that comes just from the noticing. And it gives us an opportunity to inject some curiosity.
And curiosity itself, I think of it as a superpower because curiosity feels great.
And that drops us into this space of, as you described, curiosity where now we can
inquire into it a little bit. Under that context, you also, you write about, and I know it's part
of your work, this acronym that I again was familiar with originally
from a Buddhist teacher, Tara Brock,
and it's a short hand, the acronym is RAIN, R-A-I-N.
So it was interesting to see you bringing it in
the context in a very specific way in the work you're doing.
Walk us through what those letters stand for
and how it actually really plays into the curiosity
and reinterpreting process.
Yes. So first off, a shout out to Tara because she makes these practices so accessible for so
many people. She is certainly adding light into the world in a much needed way. So this RAIN
practice is this acronym. I think it was actually Michelle McDonald who had first come up with it
and then Tara has done a great job of helping people learn about it. R stands for recognized. We're lost. We
can't, we're not aware. So the first step is that moment of recognition like we've
been talking about. Gold star. I'm aware. And it could be a craving, it could be
worry, it could be anything, right? Whatever we're lost in, we're aware. The
second step that A stands for allowing or accepting where if we notice something
and we're like, oh, my mind wandered, we want to push it away, we don't want to face it,
we run away or we push it away.
What we resist persists, right?
So here instead of pushing something away, we invite it in.
Oh, here it is.
Can I just allow it to be here as compared to pushing it away?
Already there's less energy needed, right?
Because we're not resisting.
That I stands for investigate, and this is where curiosity comes in.
So if we recognize, let's use craving as an example, I have craving for food.
Recognize that craving, allow, okay, here's this craving instead of saying I want to ignore
it, get rid of this.
Oh, what does this craving feel like in my body?
That I stands for that investigation
where we're starting to get curious about what that craving feels like in our
body. And then N originally talked about non-identification where we're seeing
that it is not me, like a thought, I have a thought it's not me. That can be
challenging for people who are first learning these practices. I brought this
together with a practice from a Burmese teacher, Masi Saida was the first
one that popularized this noting practice where you basically note physical sensations,
thoughts, sounds, smells, tastes, you just basically note whatever's in your experience.
And that noting practice is a really helpful way to help us gain perspective.
In physics, they call this observer effect.
When you're observing something,
you're likely to affect the result.
And in psychology, I think the same is true.
When we observe a thought, we're less likely
to be identified with that thought.
So the N happened to be the same N,
so I was like, okay, great, let's use noting
instead of non-identification,
so we can really keep it on the pragmatic level.
And so somebody has a craving, they can note.
What does that craving feel like?
Is it tightness?
Is it tension?
Is it burning?
Is it heat?
And note, note.
And as somebody notes, and they're having that perspective,
they're less identified with it,
and they can notice, oh, this can come and go,
and I don't have to act on it, because it is not me,
it is just physical sensations.
And the more they inject the curiosity that I put into the practice, the more you're going
to be like, huh, what's going to come next?
Oh, what's next?
This compared to, oh no, this craving, when's it going to go away?
So that's what the RAIN practice is for.
And again, we use it as a core practice in all of our digital therapeutics.
In our Eat Right Now program, we got these gangbuster results,
40% reduction in craving related eating. And that RAIN practice is really a critical piece
of that.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense to me. And it's interesting reframing the sort of the
non-attachment versus noting. It's almost again, it's creating this kind of similar
goal but or similar sort of like state but maybe more accessible language to different
people. The last piece, the third element is for you and you referenced it earlier as kindness.
I've seen you describe it as compassion or self-compassion. We're not talking about being
kind to other people when you're anxious. Not necessarily a bad thing of course. It's about ourselves.
Yes, absolutely. So think of a habit loop around anxiety. Anxiety triggers worry,
which then makes us feel like we're doing something.
Control feeds back to anxiety.
Shame, for example, or self-judgment.
We have a thought that could trigger us to judge ourselves
or feel bad about ourselves.
Shame is about, I'm a bad person.
And then that shame can often, the reward there,
because it's not very rewarding if you just look at it.
Doesn't look very pleasant to be in the shame spiral.
But it again makes us feel like we're in control.
I can beat myself up over who I am or what I did.
Guilt is about what I did, shame is about who I am.
We can beat ourselves up over those things
and it makes us, that self-flagellation,
ironically can feel better
because we're doing something active
as compared to not doing anything.
And that's because we just don't know anything better.
We don't know what else we could do.
So here, those all share the characteristic
of this contracted quality.
Think of we're feeling shame, we feel this closed down,
contractedness is whether we're beating ourselves up or not.
Same is true for anxiety.
We feel cold and contracted.
Same is true for craving. We feel cold and contracted. Same is true for craving.
We feel contracted.
And that restlessness that unnerdilize all of them
drives us to do something.
Whether it's to worry more or beat ourselves up
or feel shame.
So here we can just compare what is shame
or self judgment feel like
compared to being kind to ourselves.
And this isn't about roses and scented candles
and unicorns, this is simply about thinking
about the last time somebody was kind to us.
What did that feel like?
Oh, for me it feels a lot better
than somebody yelling at me.
And then we can think about times
when we've been kind to ourselves.
When have I truly, think of a time,
we've all had moments where we've been kind to ourselves.
For a lot of people it's foreign because they're so used to being in this other loop. But then we can just compare
what does it feel like to feel shame or to be stuck in a shame spiral as compared to
being kind to ourselves.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense to me. I want to zoom the lens out a little. We've been
talking a lot about generalized anxiety, which we're all experiencing for a lot of different reasons. One of the other
sources of anxiety for a lot of people is moment or event based. And the thing that
I think, whether it's test anxiety, interview anxiety, it's around a very particular thing
where they're anticipating how it's going to go and they're freaking out. Maybe let's
take like just as an example, test anxiety.
Test anxiety, sure.
Walk me through the process of like how this unfolds
in the context of trying to step into a better place
around that.
Yes, so with test anxiety for example,
and I'll just say if it's been a while since somebody's
taken a test, it could be they have to give a presentation
at work or there's some event that's about to come up.
So we use test anxiety as an example.
So what can happen is that we have this thought,
it's about the future.
Oh, I have to take this test in the future.
How am I gonna do?
Do I study well enough?
Are there gonna be trick questions?
Am I gonna be up for it?
So those thoughts, there's the trigger,
they trigger us to worry.
We start worrying, oh no, how am I gonna do?
Ironically, worrying doesn't help us study for our tests
because we close down, we're not open.
When you think of fixed versus growth mindset,
growth mindset is where we can learn.
So when we're worrying about the test,
we're not actually in a good place
to be studying for the test, ironically.
So that worrying can be that habitual behavior
that then our brain has somehow lodged in there
or habituated to and said, yeah, worry about the test.
And it could be a number of reasons,
whether it's that correlation that we talked about earlier
where I worried and then I did okay on the test,
so I assume that I need to worry for the test or whatnot.
So the first step here is just map that habit loop out.
We actually have a habit mapper that's free,
anybody can download and print it out, it's mapmyhabit.com.
But basically what I do with my patients in my clinic or anybody that just wants to learn
how their mind works is I say start by mapping it out.
So if you have test anxiety, map it out.
What's the trigger?
What's the behavior, mental or physical, and what's the result of that?
The second step, very simple, also includes awareness, right?
Because you have to be aware to map it out.
You also have to be aware of the result of the behavior, right? We talked about cause and effect.
We talked about reward-based learning. So what is my brain thinking is rewarding
for this? So if it's worrying about a test, I would ask somebody not to think
about it, but to really feel into their body. Because our feeling bodies are much
stronger than our thinking brains. That's really where behavior is driven. So it's like, what do you get from worrying?
Is it helping you study for the test?
Is it helping you retain information?
Generally, the answer is no.
But just seeing that it's not rewarding is that critical step for helping us to become
disenchanted with the behavior.
And so instead of telling ourselves that we shouldn't worry and then beating ourselves
up over the fact that we can't stop ourselves from worrying, we can actually go to the source
where our brain is. And our brain, if it sees very clearly that
something is not rewarding, it's going to become less likely to do it in the future. And that's
where the process of change happens. Now we can accelerate that process when in this third step,
I think of it as finding that bigger, better offer. So our brains are relative, so they'll
look for relative rewards.
Is this rewarding? More rewarding than something else. And so if we can start to see that worry
is not rewarding, that reward value drops, it opens up the space to find something that's
more rewarding, that bigger, better offer. And here we can ask ourselves, what happens
if I just bring curiosity in instead of worrying? Oh, can I get curious
about those thoughts, those worry thoughts, and does it help me notice the thoughts and
not get stuck in them? And does it also help condition me to be curious and learn the material
for the test? Instead of going, oh no, I have to study for this test. Oh, what's this material?
Oh, is it? And see where we can find the natural curiosity to... it's not that we're gonna be curious about every single
subject matter that we're ever gonna be tested on,
but it can certainly go a long way in helping us start to at least have that mindset, that curious mindset.
So that's the three-step process. Map up the habit loop.
Awareness requires awareness. Ask ourselves, what am I getting from this? Also requires awareness.
And then ask ourselves, is that awareness,
that curious awareness itself, even more rewarding
than getting stuck in a habit loop of worry?
I guess part of my curiosity is, do you
find that people are really capable of doing this
to and for themselves?
Or do you need someone else to help you through?
Or some other technology, which I guess
is part of what you've been building.
Yes.
So if somebody just listened to this conversation and said, and then they're freaking
out before a big presentation and they've not employed any of this stuff, it's not like
they can just flip a switch and suddenly they said to be curious. Okay, go. Because their
brain is going to be freaking out and they're not going to be in a place where they can
practice it. So here, this is, I'm as a practitioner of medicine, I want to figure out what are the
systematic ways that we can help as many people as possible to learn how to be aware, basically.
Because this is all about awareness and curiosity and kindness.
And so we started developing these digital therapeutics.
And what we found so far is that, again, it goes back to these short moments many times.
Can we give people bite-sized training, like 10 minutes a day, systematically for over
the course?
And we have the core trainings for each of these apps is about 30 days, but then we have
these theme weeks where they can build them over and then go back.
So we've set up the context for people to do the learning in a self-paced manner.
And I find our data, our gangbusters, I never thought they would work this well.
If you look at the studies, they work pretty darn well.
If you look at the process, if I'm trying to learn something, I want to be able to do
it at my own pace, little bits at a time, and be able to practice it over and over.
So we've tried to set that framework up so people can do that.
Now that's just one way to do it.
Also, I think that like you're talking about,
having somebody help you with it can be very helpful.
Yeah, and what you're describing also
really takes us back to the beginning of our conversation
around the normalizing effect.
If you're experiencing something that's causing
some level of suffering or distress,
and then you start to realize that,
oh, A, I'm not alone, actually in this context,
B, I'm in the vast majority, I'm not the weirdo,
I'm not broken, this is a part of the human condition
that we're all experiencing together.
And that alone has gotta just be,
like change the nature and the quality
of what you're going through,
and then you add to it process and tools
and ways to actually collectively integrate
the experience differently.
Yeah, super powerful and sensible.
And I love the fact that fundamentally,
we're talking about these interesting ideas
and we're talking about peer-reviewed research
and we're talking about technology.
And we're also talking about things that people
have been doing for thousands and thousands of years
that have worked and made them feel better.
And it's just about making them accessible
to a broader audience.
And for the rationally brain people who need to know,
prove to me that this works, here you go.
Yeah, here it is.
It's like these ideas actually work.
Yeah, they're super cool.
Feels like a good place for us to come full circle as well.
I always wrap these conversations with the same question,
so I'll pose it to you.
Sitting here in this container of Good Life Project,
if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
Yeah, curiosity, kindness, rinse and repeat.
That's what comes up.
Love it, thank you.
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
So our next guest is Dr. Wendy Suzuki,
a professor of neuroscience and psychology at NYU.
She's a leading researcher on brain plasticity and memory,
who's now revealing the unexpected upsides of anxiety
in her book, Good Anxiety.
And she makes a surprising claim.
This emotion we desperately want to avoid
can transform into a superpower.
And she shares the science behind reframing anxiety
along with simple accessible tools
to shift
it from enemy to ally.
So through inspiring stories and a whole bunch of practical advice, she guides us to the
sweet spot where just enough anxiety unlocks creativity, productivity, compassion, and
more.
Here's Wendy.
You've had this really fascinating focus on anxiety and what happens in the brain, how
that affects us.
And you make a really provocative claim also
in your recent book, Good Anxiety,
which is that this thing that something like 90%
of people experience and want nothing
but to never experience it at all can in fact
explore differently, be turned into something
of a superpower.
Now I wanna dive into that, but before we get there,
let's just actually talk about the word anxiety to something of a superpower. Now, I wanna dive into that, but before we get there,
let's just actually talk about the word anxiety
and the phenomenon of anxiety,
because I think there's a lot of ambiguity around it.
So when we're talking about anxiety,
what are we actually talking about?
Yeah, so here's something that's really
a huge take-home message,
that the emotion of anxiety is not a disease.
It is a normal human emotion.
Every single human experiences emotion.
I don't know how many people have come up to me and said, oh, I have anxiety.
I have it.
Oh no.
Well, that just means you're human.
And the premise that the book starts with is that evolutionarily, the emotion, the normal
human emotion of anxiety and that underlying physiological stress response that comes with
it, you know what it feels like, sweaty palms, butterflies in your stomach, heightened heart
rate, sweats all over, that evolved to protect us from danger. Okay? Oh, that sounds good. I want to be protected
from danger. And so how did it work? Well, it was obvious 2.5 million years ago when a new mom was
walking around with a little baby trying to gather food and she hears the crack of a twig. And that
could be the difference between life and death, the crack of a twig.
What is that? Is that a raccoon or is that a big mountain lion? And so her body, physiologically,
like our bodies, got her ready to either fight the bad animal or run away. And that is why
we are here today. People can usually say, okay, I get that. That sounds good. I buy that. But still,
I'm not feeling protected one itsy bitsy little bit from my anxiety. And the answer is, no,
we're not. Very few of us are because the volume of our anxiety is turned up way high. So we're not
quite at that. It's actually quite a razor's edge at the level of anxiety where you can get
the positive energy, where you can get that protection. And so the big part of the book,
Good Anxiety, is about providing science-based approaches to turn the volume down, not to get
rid of it. Again, it's normal human emotion, but to start to turn it down and we can start from there.
But then your invitation is to say,
but two things, one, anxiety experienced at a certain level
actually comes with a myriad of benefits
and then how do we get to that place
where like at a certain level,
where we actually can experience those benefits?
So I wanna dive into what some of those benefits are right now because I think a lot
of people listening to this are probably saying, I cannot imagine how you could tell me this
thing that I like, all I want to do is not feel it actually has a whole bunch of benefits.
Yeah.
Well, let's explore some of these.
One of the things that you talk about is anxiety.
One of the benefits is actually increased motivation.
How does this work?
Yeah. The word that I like to use for this particular
superpower of gift of anxiety is productivity. I love using that word because usually people
think, oh, anxiety just shut me down. I can't, you know, I'm done for for the rest of the day.
But it comes from the idea that the anxiety that we've been talking about since the beginning of
this podcast is really a form of energy.
It's a form of activation energy because, again, remember, evolutionarily, it's getting
you ready to do something.
You're going to fight the line.
You're going to run away.
That is energy.
It's cognitive energy.
It's physical energy.
It's like, oh, well, that could be.
I could kind of start to see how that could be good.
So here is how the superpower productivity works.
So this uses a very, very common form of anxiety
that most of us have, which is the what if list.
It strikes us at different parts of the day
and for different projects, like,
oh, what if I didn't send that email
and it wasn't written in the right way,
or I didn't send it to the right person, or all what ifs it happens to hit me still to this day right
before I'm going to try and go to sleep and sleep is coming and bing, oh God, I just remember
all the what ifs.
And so here is, and that is our anxiety rearing its head.
So here is how to transform that.
For me the next morning, I don't do it at night
because I still try and fall asleep, but the next morning,
I can still remember all those things that woke me up for that moment.
Each one of those, I write those down.
Note, none of them are about watching Netflix or similar things.
They're all about important things that you need to or you want to do.
And after each one of those what ifs that you
write down, you put an action on it. You do something about it. You ask somebody, you reread
your email, you rewrite your email, you ask five people to rewrite it for you. You put an action
on it. I must give credit where credit is due. This gift came from a lawyer that I met at a
birthday party who, when told that I met at a birthday party who,
when told that I was writing a book on anxiety, she said, oh, I'm a high-paid lawyer that I am,
New York City lawyer, because of my anxiety. And this is the approach that she told me about. And
I've since hired her, actually, because she is a great lawyer. And I've given her credit for,
you know, you created the first superpower that I always tell everybody
because it's so easy to grasp.
And literally everybody out there,
your call to action is do this anxiety hack today.
Turn your what if list into a to-do list, do it,
and see what that does for both the feeling of anxiety,
because it should go down,
putting an action on those worries rather than just sitting there.
It's like, Oh God, what's going to happen, but doing something for it helps relieve that anxiety.
And I find it so powerful. It's doable. It's understandable. And so, um,
I'm glad you started with that one. Yeah. I mean, it's interesting to me also the way that you sort
of like, it's almost like the alchemy part here, I mean, it's interesting to me also, the way that you sort of like,
it's almost like the alchemy part here.
You know, like you're transmitting anxiety
into actually output, right?
Yes.
But it also like occurs to me as you're saying this,
you know, that anxiety is largely,
it's an anticipatory experience.
I think this negative thing might happen.
Yes.
And by doing it, you effectively take yourself
out of the future tense and put you into the present moment
where you're actually just doing,
you're making the thing that you're concerned happen,
or at least you're testing your hypothesis in real time.
Exactly, yes.
And once you can respond to actually like fact and doing,
it makes it harder than spin about the future
because now you have sort of like your current experience
to counterbalance it.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, it absolutely does.
Although now as a administrator and dean at NYU,
I think of all of our students who are just putting
in their application now, they did that,
but there's this waiting period.
Now, what is the to do to do for that?
There isn't a lot of action that you can do.
And that's where you can go back and do the approaches, exercise.
Ten minutes of walking will decrease your anxiety levels.
Did you know that?
That is my biggest tip of anti-anxiety tools.
Ten minutes of walking, you don't even have to change into your sneakers.
Just walk with whatever shoes you have on.
That will turn it down.
And remind yourself once you've turned the anxiety down, that anxiety comes from this
wonderful desire that you students are having out there to further your education.
That is a great desire to have, and it's coming from a positive,
generative place. And so I'm sorry, I can't alleviate all of your students, you
know, worry until you get that decision letter. But there are still lots of
things that you can do to make that gap between submission and receiving of that
news a little bit easier to live through.
Yeah, love that.
It's sort of what you described, it feels like a combination of exercise and a little
bit of cognitive behavioral therapy, reframing, mixed in like all as a blended experience.
One of the other benefits that you talk about is increased creativity.
And again, this feels so counterintuitive to me.
And I'm wondering as I'm thinking about
some of the other benefits,
and I wanna talk to you about some of them as well,
part of the counterintuitive part is that
when we are at a state of maximum anxiety,
none of this feels accessible to us.
But it sounds like what you're saying is
if we use some of these other tools that you talk about,
we can sort of down-regulate the level of anxiety
to this more manageable level.
And once we're at that space,
where we're not on complete overwhelm,
that is sort of like this, there's like a sweet spot
where there's a lot of benefit that comes from it.
So before we even get into creativity,
is that assumption right?
Yes, you hit it on the head.
It's exactly right.
There is this combo of learning how to turn it down, being able to step back a little
bit.
And that is a really important key.
Creativity, and it is counterintuitive because anxiety kind of nixes usual creativity.
Flow is gone.
Sorry, no flow, no creativity for you. But again, if you
have some of these techniques, and here's the other thing that people don't realize,
there's like, oh God, what anxiety is going to come at me today? Well, I think you can
predict 80 to 95% of your anxiety because, you know, our lives are not that uncertain. We
know this person gives us anxiety. We know
that situation gives us anxiety. They've given us anxiety for years or at least several times
before. So we can predict what that is. And so in a moment where you're not in heightened
anxiety, here's where it becomes a wonderful tool to test your creativity. This just comes from, you know, typical approaches to diffusing difficult situations.
Are there more than one way to approach this person or interact with this person that always
gives you anxiety?
I mean, ugh, the name of the person will spark anxiety.
Well, are there other approaches?
Maybe you approach them with
another person. You put a third person in there to help buffer that. Maybe you prep that conversation
in a different way. Maybe you get a lot of information about that person's opinion so that
more difficult kind of confrontations are minimized because you know much more and you hadn't bothered
to, you know, some meeting or encounter before, you know, a hundred different ways. And so you
start to get good at, oh, actually, maybe there are 10 different ways that I'm not doing to do this.
And you start to go through it. And then you start to learn what works better, what works worse.
Maybe you'll find one that works worse. That happens sometimes too,
but then you know you never to do that.
But you start to get this more systematic approach
to your own anxiety,
coming back to this concept of self experimentation.
And what are you doing?
You are being very creative in coming up with different,
that is very hard to do because we are creatures of habit.
We go into these situations.
I think of conversations with parents, our longest relationship, except for the relationship with
ourselves. And, oh, I'm always the little 13-year-old girl when I go in the conversation
with my mom. I don't know what's going on. Well, maybe I come to that conversation as a 50-something
year old adult and see what would I say if this
wasn't my mother, but it was just another person that I'm having conversation with.
That is a creative kind of exercise that everybody can do.
But guess what?
It helps our situations of anxiety and the more you do it, the better you get at it.
Ten minutes of walking immediately after will decrease your levels of anxiety.
So you might have five anxiety provoking things.
Got it.
And I would recommend that you walk for 10 minutes five times before those anxiety provoking
things or right after those anxiety provoking things to decrease that anxiety level.
But everybody just wants to know how little exercise they need to do to get any of these
benefits.
So finally, I have this answer. So it's not 10 minutes a day to solve all your problems. It is 10 minutes has been shown to
turn that volume down. So use that in your life because it's doable. You don't have to go to the
gym and dress up in spandex. So that is the take home that people should have. And the other thing
is breath work, meditation, very, very helpful immediately.
I mean, here are two things I've just told you.
They're both free and they both have immediate benefits.
And both of them, you can find over a hundred free videos
on YouTube to give you an example of,
well, you don't need an example of how to walk,
but breath work would benefit from a little bit of guidance
and there's so many to choose from.
So that's why I start with those two.
And I love that.
I love the fact that it's really widely accessible
to a lot of people.
And even if you have mobility challenges,
we all actually have to breathe all day every day
to sustain ourselves.
So in some way, shape or form,
it is an extraordinary level of accessibility.
The one other thing I want to ask you about
before we come full circle is in terms of,
again, under the category of things that let us
just kind of get to more of a manageable state
is the notion of altruism playing
into your experience of anxiety.
Yeah, that is my favorite superpower
that comes from anxiety.
I call it the superpower of empathy. And I
really kind of came about and discovered this superpower thinking about my own, as
we've been discussing, my own old anxiety of social anxiety. And this form of
social anxiety that I think about still a lot is the social anxiety of
raising your hand in the classroom and asking a question.
And I had years and years of anxiety,
oh, I wanted to ask a question,
but maybe if I say something stupid,
everybody will think I'm stupid.
Everybody thinks that.
And so it took me many years to realize that
everybody thinks that and I should just ask the question.
But now I'm at the front of the classroom.
And I realized that those years and years and years of struggle and
dealing with that gave me a superpower of teaching, classroom. And I realized that those years and years and years of struggle and, you know,
dealing with that gave me a superpower of teaching, which is I know there's 10 times
as many questions out there than are actually people raising their hands. And so I really
try and go out there and answer questions and get them to ask me things, you know, one
on one rather than in front of the classroom. And I realized that my own anxiety,
social anxiety for asking questions
became a superpower of empathy.
Now that's just not for me,
it's for every single person,
because what you can do,
and this is your second call to action here,
is to think about your most common form of anxiety.
You know what it feels like,
you know what it looks like, you know the situations where it comes up. And likely so many of the other people are having
that same form of anxiety, even though their mask is saying, hey, I'm cool. No problem.
Well, if you notice that and you notice somebody's mask crack, all you have to do is reach out and
say a kind word. And I love this one because it is a superpower of empathy
and the act of compassion that comes from your own,
your own deep understanding of your own anxiety.
And I love it because I can't think of anything
that our world needs more today than higher levels of empathy,
both for ourselves and for others.
Hmm, I love that. It feels like a good place for us to come full circle. So in this container of
good life project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
Love yourself, love your life, and love others.
Hmm, thank you. And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
Our final guest is Amelia Zhivotovskaya, CEO and founder of The Flourishing Center, a New
York City based B Corp dedicated to increasing flourishing worldwide.
Amelia brings a unique blend of academic rigor and practical application to the science of
thriving.
I mean, what if you could transform your overthinking from an endless loop of worry
into a powerful tool for growth and clarity?
Most of us experience the weight of mental chatter daily,
that constant stream of worry and second guessing
that can feel impossible to quiet.
Well, today, Amelia shares her mind over chatter approach
that has helped thousands transform their relationship
with anxiety and mental chatter into pathways for growth. Here's Amelia. You have this sort of taxonomy of chatter
where you look at it and you say well it's not all just one thing but there
are these five different types. So I think it would be helpful to maybe walk
through the five different types and just so we can have a sense for what
these are and how to distinguish them. Then maybe
we'll talk about some of the tools that would be relevant for each. So maybe we'll go one at a time
defining and describing what each of these different types of overthinking, chatter,
rumination are. Yeah, absolutely. And I should say that the way that this model got created is that
we're looking at the five types of chatter that need changing.
These are the five types of overthinking and ruminating or the types of thoughts that people
could have that if you don't learn how to navigate these types, they're going to be
more problematic.
There are some types of thoughts that we have that are just factual thoughts like I'm hungry,
I have to pee, how much time is left in this podcast,
what do I need to go do next? You don't need to train yourself because those types of thoughts,
even if you're having them at the very least, all they'll do is stop you from being mindful.
Then there's sort of dreaming thoughts like, oh, where could we go for vacation this year? Or
I've heard that Bali's, you know, beautiful this time of year, all
of that type of chatter, it's just thoughts about the future. It's sort of innocent. In
fact, it's great to daydream and get creative and think that. So those kinds of thoughts
are fine. Again, the worst that they'll do is stop you from being in the present moment,
just being really aware of what you have right now. Empty mind, blank mind. But the five
types of chatter,
these are chatter that we want to be able
to learn to work with
because they can lead to weighing you down, stressing you,
or some of them could put you,
if you don't learn to challenge them,
at risk for depression or at risk for anxiety.
And if you look at what are the highest maladies
that people struggle with nowadays, it's some
aspect of generalized anxiety disorder or some aspect of depression or the two going
together.
We could actually help quite a lot of people navigate these two major ailments that they're
experiencing by teaching them this chatter.
So I call it the mind over chatter approach and we start with the idea of worry chatter,
judgment chatter, regret chatter, mindset chatter
and motivation chatter.
So worry chatter is any time your mind
has thoughts about the future
that have a flavor of protection or fear.
So it could be worry chatter, it could be anxiety chatter.
And what's great about this approach and actually training it as a system is if
you can hear the beginning of what your mind is saying or what you're ruminating
or overthinking about when you can catch that beginning part, you can know which
chatter to apply to it or which way of reframing it so.
Where each other is anything that starts with what if it's anything going into the future so what if i don't get this job what if i make a fool of myself what if they think that i don't have what it takes what if they call me out on it what if they don't listen to me what if i do get it.
have what it takes? What if they call me out on it? What if they don't listen to me? What if I do get it? So it's any time that we're having that thought of what if something bad is going to happen,
or it's anything future-oriented. It could also be like, I'm going to mess this up. I'm going to,
I will, I'll end up, I'll never. Any of these future-oriented thoughts. And the key about
mind over worry chatter is that we
want to first start by having compassion for our mind as to why it's doing this
in the first place. The only reason you're worrying is because there is the
thought of a potential threat which is not very likely when your brain is
trying to protect you from it. So the way to work with worry chatter is always
first to say thank you brain. I
know you're trying to protect me and work with the worry and in order to work with the
worry we have different processes but I'll give you some shortcuts to it. The first one
that you can use is understanding that the things that you're worried about we're not
actually worried about. You're not worried that something will happen to your health.
You're not worried that you will lose your home or your job or your
freedom or all these other things. We're worried that these things would happen
and that they would crush us. They would stop us from being able to move forward.
You know, what if I make a mistake? You're not actually afraid of whatever that
mistake is. You're afraid that you'll make this mistake and you will not be able to recover from it.
So teaching people to work with their worry, we work with helping them understand that
they have handled it.
The top back sentences to, well, what if this happens and what if that happens?
The short key is that you say to yourself, I've handled it before and I'll handle it
again.
Or you catch yourself going to those worst case scenarios
and sometimes we take a process
where we actually let the brain go worst case scenario
and you just go, okay, and then what happens?
And then what happens?
And then what happens?
And actually get all those catastrophizing thoughts out.
And then go to the unrealistically best case scenario.
So what if the positive opposite happened? So it goes from I'm looking for a job
Haven't been able to find a job
I nail my ideal job right out the gate and then you go down this
unrealistically best case scenario so that you can get to what's most likely going to happen because in that place of worry
We're not able to problem-solve. So it's really important to be able to peel them apart. And as you said earlier, Jonathan, you're like, why don't we just do away with this?
Why don't we just stop? Well, there's nothing like telling a high level worrier that they
shouldn't worry. When you tell them that they shouldn't worry, they just worry more that you're
not worried as much as they are, they worry for you that you're not worrying enough. And so they
just dig their heels even more into their need for worry.
So rather than working with the worry, we want to understand that the worry was just
there to get your attention so that you could work with the chatter, so that you could problem
solve, so that if these God forbid things can happen, that you have a plan.
So okay, thank you, Brain, for telling me about these worst case scenario,
things that can happen.
I believe I will handle them.
So let me take a look at them.
What if this happens?
Can I actually plan for this thing?
No, I can't.
There's only so much I can plan
for something that might happen 10 years out into the future
of what if something happens to me in retirement
and I don't have enough money for retirement?
What can I do about it today
is how we work with worry chatter.
And all those future thoughts can all be handled
very much in the same way, so that you're able to reframe it,
catch yourself going, what if this happens?
What if that happens?
And you can say, if it happens, I will handle it.
Or you take the thought and you digest it.
You write it down and you go, okay,
can I actually do something about this in this moment? If so, great. What can I do to prevent it from happening? But
it's like with the banana peel. The banana is the thing you want to eat. The
peel is the worry. And most people don't understand that they can separate the
feeling of worry, the heartbeat, the ruminating from the actual problem
solving. So that problem solving is what you want to do,
but if you just stay in the worry and the ruminating about it, you're not going to be
able to problem solve as effectively. And that makes a lot of sense to me. Let's
walk through the other four. Great. So from worry chatter,
we can go to motivation chatter. Motivation chatter, and I might've said this in a different
order, but let's just don't go to motivation chatter. So motivation chatter is anytime that your
mind is weighing you down with I have to do this, I need to do this, I should do
this, and one would think that this is just perfectly innocent, just having the
thought I need to do this, I have to do this, but what it turns into is too much
of that chatter makes you feel like you have the weight
of the world on your shoulder.
You feel burdened by everything you have to do and you need to do.
And one of our core needs as human beings is for agency and autonomy.
So we don't realize that every single time we're thinking like, I need to pick my kids
up from school and I have to make dinner and I need to call this person back and I have to do this.
That if it's just like gee I have to do this it would be fine but most people when it's
ruminating and their mind is just going it's on a set cycle and I don't do enough and I
should be doing more.
So the reason we're having that chatter of you should do this you need to do this you
have to do this don't forget you have to do this, don't forget, you have to do this,
is because your brain is trying to motivate you
to take action.
But what often happens is it doesn't motivate you,
it just makes you feel like you are overburdened
or you do eventually do it.
But when it's overthinking and ruminating about it,
it's just an overkill.
It's like, I wrote down, I wrote this down on my to-do list.
I will get to it eventually. I don't need to think about it. It's a misuse of
energy to keep letting my brain ruminate about it. And so there's a quick
turnaround for this. The first is just to remove the burden and reclaim agency. You
don't have to pick your children up from school. You want to pick your kids up
from school because you don't want them stranded your children up from school. You want to pick your kids up from school
because you don't want them stranded at school by themselves.
You don't have to do the laundry.
You choose to do the laundry
because you would prefer to wear clean underwear.
You don't have to return your email.
You want to return your email
because you'd like to get back to people
that are waiting for you.
You don't even have to pay your bills.
Really, you don't have to pay bills. And I would imagine that you would like to keep
your Wi Fi in your heat and your house and all these other things. But even that it's
like you don't actually have to without the control over the motivation chatter. It just
starts to feel heavy and you just feel burdened by everything by the world by this world you've
created. Even when it's a really good things like I have all of these things that I want to do
they're all so good but they're not actually motivating you to take action
because there's just too many of them so with that one the quick one is you go
from I have to I need to or I should to I want to or I get to or I need to, or I should, to, I want to, or I get to, or I choose to.
Or you can take that choose to to, I choose to blank because blank.
I don't have to go to work.
I choose to go to work because I like collecting a paycheck.
I don't have to go to the gym.
I want to go to the gym.
But sometimes you don't want to go to the gym.
And then you could just say, I want to want to go to the gym but sometimes you don't want to go to the gym and then you could just say i want to want to go to the gym but even i want to want is better than i have to say this is one of the ways that in our mind we don't even realize it we we zapper selves of our power
we zapper selves of our agency because of the way in which are we're overthinking things, where the only reason your brain is staying
into the first place is because it wants to motivate you
to go to the gym because it's good for you,
pick up your kids.
So motivation chatter, catching it and then replacing it.
I get to, you don't have to make dinner,
you get to make dinner.
The little shifts like that can take something from it
feeling like a burden and you can't turn your chatter off,
can't turn your mind off, just going, going to,
feeling grateful for the thing that you get to do.
And this you can not just introduce to yourself,
but it's really helpful to introduce your family
to this idea or your colleagues to this idea.
My team says this to me all the time, I'll be on a meeting and they'll say, okay, I have to go teach class right now. And they'll say,
do you have to or do you get to? And I'll be like, you're right. I get to go teach class right now.
Because no, really I do. I'm so honored. That's the thing when they say it, it's like, yeah,
I do. I get to. I'm grateful that I get to, but so often we forget that, right?
And so that's motivation chatter.
Got it, no, I love that reframe also.
What I love about these interventions too is
the interventions themselves are not heavy.
It's like they're not adding burden or complexity,
they're straightforward, they're simple,
it's just a matter of getting into the practice
of noticing and then using them on a regular basis. We talked about motivation,
we talked about worry. Let's walk through the other three.
Yeah. So the next one that's good to know about is mindset chatter. And the reason I call this
mindset chatter is it's intimately tied to the idea of fixed and growth mindset. And we know that
research shows that people who hold more of a growth mindset are more successful, they're better able to handle stress,
persist in the face of setbacks.
Growth mindset is something that's really essential
for resilience.
And this is when you hear your brain say things
that start with, I can't, or I don't.
I don't know how to do that.
I can't do that.
I don't have what it takes for that.
And again, that might actually be accurate in that moment. But there's a deflated feeling when we just say I can't or I don't. And if it's just like,
oh, yeah, I know, I can't do that tomorrow. I'm not free at that time.
That's fine. But what we're talking about is the one that actually ties into a
mindset like, I don't have what it takes to do this. If we add the word yet, That's fine. But what we're talking about is the one that actually ties into a mindset. Like,
I don't have what it takes to do this. If we add the word yet to the end of it, like, I can't speak on learning to speak Hebrew, I can't speak fluent Hebrew yet. I can't bake a cake from scratch yet.
from scratch yet. I don't know how to launch online marketing ads
from scratch yet.
I don't know how to drive a car yet.
Any of these things that we can,
by adding the word yet to it,
it's just a simple one where we can start
to catch mind chatter.
It's always really good for kids.
Like, I can't do this.
I can't do this math problem. To help them hold a growth mindset, we could Like, I can't do this. I can't do this math problem.
To help them hold a growth mindset, we could say,
you can't do it yet.
And what that conveys is that change is possible.
So just in the same way that autonomy and agency
is really important for motivation for human basic needs,
the belief that things can change,
a sense of optimism for the future is also really important
So you had to be strategic around where you need this
But it's just if you can catch where you start saying yourself
I don't do this well enough or I can't do this. It's same to I'm not that kind of person
I'm not someone who can do that. I'm not like that person
Those are the types of thoughts that have this underlying mindset that may be more of a fixed mindset around. I'm not smart enough,
or I can't do those things. And so just adding that yet at the end of it is a simple mindset
chatter hack that takes something that would otherwise be a period. I don't know how to
do this period. And it just makes it a comma. I don't know how to do this, period." And
it just makes it a comma. It just opens up the keeps ourselves open to change as possible.
Change is always happening. And that's an important way to deal with that type of chatter,
to get it to stop, to get it to stop from it ruminating.
That makes a lot of sense to me also because what you're talking about is acknowledging
the reality of your current moment.
It puts you into this possibility mode rather than this shut down mode, and it acknowledges
your reality rather than asking you to step into something that you know in your heart
is not true and just try and repeat it enough times so that you fake your way into making
it a truth which you will
always know is actually not true. And that creates that cognitive dissonance, which just
you kind of know it's not right. I love that simplicity. Talk to me about the final two
types and how we handle them.
Yeah. And just to layer onto that, what you just said is you're in doing that, in staying
solution-focused and actually generating ideas around what you do, you're actually
using the chatter and the thoughts for what they're trying to get you to do.
But without knowing how to, they're just on loop.
It's like they're on loop to try to get you to take them and do something with them, but
you don't know how to take them down from the cloud and do something with them, so they
just keep going.
Whereas when you catch it, you start to become creative.
Okay, well, what can I do about it?
It opens up problem solving.
And at the end of the day, that's what you want.
You want that problem solving.
So the next one you actually just mentioned, it then becomes an identity.
And when it becomes an identity, that identity, whether it be positive or
negative becomes some aspect of a judgment.
So the next type of chatter is judgment chatter. Whether the judgment is positive or negative,
it can still be a judgment. And so what is that form? What form does that take? This is chatter
that starts with I'm so I always I'm she's a he's a, she thinks. It's any time that we are judging ourselves,
judging others, or judging the situation.
And that type of chatter, judgment chatter,
requires us to take our brain to court
because when we can take on a positive identity
that serves us, like I am am hardworking I figure things out.
So in that case that's great you're hardworking you don't need to challenge that but I'm not good enough.
Is the kind of thought where I am and then fill in the blank oh let me catch that well how do I handle that how do I get myself to stop thinking that you can just say stop it stop it, stop it, what's wrong with you, you shouldn't think that.
Well, all that does is just makes you
ignore it for a little bit until you're trying
to fall asleep at night and then pop,
all the thoughts keep going again.
But instead we actually wanna zap it,
we actually wanna transmute it,
and that's what the TalkPacks do.
And so we begin to say, okay, if my brain wants
to judge myself, others or the situation, I need to say, where is
the evidence?
Where is the evidence?
What does it mean to be not good enough?
We literally want to take our brain to court.
So if you walked into a court of law and you were the defendant on a case and they said,
you know, you stole the money, the judge would say, prove it.
Where is the evidence?
You don't just get away with these accusations.
You have to back them up with evidence.
So we start to look for evidence for or evidence against it.
So actually be taking your brain really seriously, starting to ask it, can I know that to be
certain?
Where is that evidence?
And then you can talk back to it.
You literally can say, that's not true because, or another way of seeing that is is so when I was healing for my eating disorder, I would catch my brain saying things
like you're so fat, you're so ugly, you're so gross, you're so this and I would say,
okay, that's not true. Or another way of seeing that is I'm not feeling so great in my body
right now, but I'm not these things. And so the talk backs, I'm not smart enough
or they think, right?
They think I'm an idiot.
Well, can I know that to be certain?
Can I actually know what they are thinking?
No, actually I can't.
And so it's like, basically you're saying to your brain,
I'm not gonna let you get away with that.
And that process can just start with catching it
anytime you hear there, I'm he thinks she thinks
this is, you know, then you can catch it. And you could say, can
I know that to be certain? Or where is the evidence for that?
And you start to challenge your brain. And then we start to
choose a better feeling thought choose a more useful thought,
a thought that's not constantly looping and reframing that perspective.
Yeah. I love the idea of taking it to court. That makes so much sense to me,
which brings us to the final one, the final of the five.
This final one, I think is actually the crux of what you were asking about, about overthinking,
actually the crux of what you're asking about about overthinking because this is regret chatter. So a lot of overthinking is actually regret
chatter. This is when you just can't let it go and the actual regret is
I could have, I should have, what if I had and so it's the shoulda, coulda, woulda
and what is it about? It is a part of you that's still trying
to get your attention to say you might've made a mistake.
And what it's putting you through is a replay of,
well, what if you made a mistake?
What if you made a mistake?
What if you made a mistake?
But it just sounds like different things, you know?
I shouldn't have written that
or how are they gonna receive that?
So this is regret chatter.
And the talk back to regret chatter is really
coming to peace with your past. It's an element of self
forgiveness. So the talk back to it is I can't change the past
actually saying, thank you, brain. I hear you saying that I
should have said this differently, but I can't change
the past. Here's what I will do moving forward."
Because the regret chatter is trying to get your attention so that next time you don't do
the same thing or you don't do it similarly. And so being able to say,
thank you, the past is history. The best thing I can do for myself is hold on to the lesson and
let the rest go. So even saying, what's the lesson, what can I do?
It can also sound like I wish I hadn't
or I can't believe I.
Those are places that if you hear the beginnings
of those sentences, it's very likely
that you're gonna be on a loop.
I can't believe I did this, I'm such an idiot.
So there you have regret chatter, judgment chatter.
What if they all think I'm a complete bozo?
Worry chatter, right?
But you can start to catch them altogether,
but they start to now be familiar.
And now they're just parts of you coming together,
feeling bad over things that right now you can't change.
But what you do have control over is,
can you learn the lessons and can you let go of the rest?
So a lot of regret chatter is being at peace with your past.
A lot of it is about forgiveness.
One of my favorite definitions of forgiveness is letting go
of hope for a different past.
Right.
The past is over.
It's already done.
Hoping that the past could be different.
Isn't going to really help you catchinging the chatter and saying thank you brain,
somehow flagellating myself about this
and hitting and beating myself up over it,
making myself hurt through my stress or feeling bad
isn't helping me.
It's not gonna help me prevent this
from happening in the future.
What can I do differently?
So I should have, I could have,
what if I had, I wish I had have I could have what if I had I wish I had it
I can't believe I that's all a form of of regret chatter and talking back to it
by coming to peace with it. That is done and I can't do anything about it but I
can take the lessons and in doing that I embrace more of that growth mindset that
learner path thinking all of which will make you more
resilient, but without the ability to catch the thought, pull it down from the cloud, be like,
uh, I'm going to dissect you. I'm going to talk back to you. Then it feels like it just,
these thoughts are all swirling around and they seem like they just happen without you being able
to do anything about it, but actually learning how to talk back to them in real time, what it does is it just shuts them up, especially
when you take your brain to court. It's like, all right, I guess I can't get away with
calling you a bozo anymore or an idiot. And hence, it might show up in another form and
then you'll say thank you and you quiet it down. And over time, it does shift the relationship
to thoughts. Yeah, that makes so much sense.
I mean, the five different types and the interventions that are appropriate for each.
But I do want to circle back to one phrase that you just said, which is sort of like
catch it and pull it down from the cloud.
Because it seems like that's sort of the meta skill that binds all of them.
Like before you can actually say, oh, which of the five is
this and then how do I talk back to it? How do I bring it to court? What is the appropriate
response? You've got to first have the ability to say, oh, this is happening. Let me pull
it down so I can actually see what's happening and then figure out what's appropriate. Is
that right?
Absolutely. The starting place for all of this, the capacity to have your mind be controlling
the chatter is to be able to be aware of your thinking. And this is actually one of the
things that makes humans the unique animals in the whole animal kingdom is that we have
metacognition. We have the capacity to time travel in a way that other animals don't.
We can think about the past, we can be thinking about the future.
So you could be walking down the street and one would think that you are actually there
now, but it's only your body that's there now.
Your mind has time traveled into the past or into the future.
And the capacity to catch your thinking and to actually think about thinking that is that metacognition
that makes us uniquely human.
So that's why I call this the most empowering, the most important skill that we all have
the capacity to master.
We're just not being taught it.
And many practices such as meditation and mindfulness prepare you to be able to slow
down your thoughts and to create the space to actually be the witness and hear them and so that's why meditation does make
you a Jedi of your mind so that you can start to hear those things and then
being proactive with them sometimes just catching the thought and writing down
the thought that you're having it also is enough to make it go away what I'm
then giving you is like icing on the cake because
then you just like karate chop it up and it just no longer exists. But a lot of people find relief
from the overthinking and from the ruminating just by writing it out, just by getting it out
of their mind. And in many ways, that's literally what we're talking about with these thoughts are
just there trying to get you to pay attention. Don't forget, don't forget, you might mess up. Don't forget, people might judge you. Don't forget,
you might be ostracized, whatever that might be. And so when you write it down, you're like,
Okay, I got the memo. I'm not going to forget. But you turn off the alarm. Otherwise, it's just that
beeping going on in the back. And it depletes you and it takes away from you being
your fully vibrant self or as happy or as excited or as energized as you could be because literally
your brain can weigh you down and it can also tire you out. And how do you make it stop? You make it
stop by catching it, writing it down, working with it. And then if you want, you can then re upload them back to the cloud changed
with these new talk back sentences.
I get to do my work.
I get to figure this out.
The most likely outcome is we would be okay and we'd figure it out, but then you
put it back in the cloud and you're being conscious of creating your reality,
conscious of the thoughts that you want to be thinking and how you want to show up in the world.
So if anyone wants to learn more about this mind over chatter approach and how to work
with thoughts and get a few more skills, there's other types of chatter that can also be considered.
I call it sneaky chatter that you want to be aware of.
I have a full course that I would love to gift to the Good Life Project community. It's usually a $120 course, but if you go to
theflourishingcenter.com forward slash good life you can get free access to the
Mind Over Chatter course which will walk you through the whole process from start
to finish and has a bonus section on different types of sneaky thoughts that
we didn't get a chance to cover today.
So helpful.
I'm gonna start trying to really actively
practice these things myself.
It feels like a good place for us to come full circle
in our conversation as well.
So in this container of Good Life Project,
if I offer up the phrase to live a good life,
what comes up?
To live a good life means to live a life of alignment of who you are and what you
feel like you've been put here to do, surrounded by people that you love, that make you feel like
you belong and that you matter, and with the vital health to be able to execute on that aligned purpose of what you've been put here to do
and to enjoy it with the people that matter most.
Thank you.
Thanks for the question. I love that.
So thanks so much to today's guests for this Spotlight Conversation.
Three just powerful approaches to transforming your relationship with anxiety.
Understanding worry loops, reframing
anxiety as a potential superpower, and working skillfully with mental chatter.
These conversations reveal that anxiety isn't something to simply endure or accept, it's
an invitation to greater awareness, creativity, and connection.
And if you loved this episode, be sure to catch the full conversation with today's
guests.
You can find a link to each of those episodes in the show notes.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers Lindsay Fox and me,
Jonathan Fields. Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez, Christopher Carter crafted our theme music,
and of course if you haven't already done so please go ahead and follow Good Life Project in
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Jonathan Fields signing off for Good Life Project.