Mantra with Jemma Sbeg - I Am Allowed to Not Have All the Answers
Episode Date: November 3, 2025This week's mantra is: "I Am Allowed to Not Have All the Answers." In a world that often pressures us to be constantly "on" and have every solution at our fingertips, it's easy to feel inadequate when... we encounter uncertainty. But true wisdom often lies in the humility of not knowing everything and trusting the process of discovery. In this episode of Mantra, we'll explore how to release the burden of needing to be omniscient, embrace curiosity, and find peace in the unfolding journey. Allowing yourself to not have all the answers isn't a sign of weakness; it's a profound act of self-compassion that opens doors to new learning and growth. This Mantra will help you ease the pressure, lean into the unknown, and trust that clarity will come in its own time.Mantra is an OpenMind Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to OpenMind+ on Apple Podcasts. Don’t miss out on all things Mantra! Instagram: @mantraopenmind | @OpenMindStudios TikTok: @OpenMind Facebook: @0penmindstudios X: @OpenMindStudios YouTube: @OpenMind_Studios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is Open Mind.
Welcome to a brand new week.
Here is your mantra.
I am allowed to not have all the answers.
I'm Gemma Spagg and every Monday I give you a simple but powerful phrase to consider and bring into your life a philosophy to guide you.
guide you in the week ahead and hopefully even beyond. In each episode, I unpack what our mantra
really means, how it has shown up in my own life, and how you can bring it into yours with
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Okay, let's get right into it. It is time for this week's mantra. I am allowed to not have all the answers.
What we're really talking about today is uncertainty, right? It's uncertainty.
being okay with uncertainty, being okay with unknown outcomes, being okay with fear, and having
the compassion and the trust in ourselves that we will make it through, even if we don't have
certainty about what exactly we will be facing. Let's begin this mantra with just a really
basic explanation as to why we as a species, you and I, seem to be so paralyzed by uncertainty.
perhaps more than anything else. In fact, I think that it is basically like the root ingredient,
the root of many, many fears, our fear of sickness or illness, our fear of death, our fear of the
future, of honestly most things, we can really trace it back to just being uncertain about
how things are going to turn out for us. Uncertainty really frightens us because, you know,
from an evolutionary perspective, the unknown has always carried more potential
threat. Our brains are wired to prioritize survival, which means they are constantly scanning
for danger. When something is uncertain or unpredictable, our amygdala, which is the brain's fear
center, interprets it as a possible threat. And this activates our fight or flight response,
flooding our bodies with stress hormones, things like cortisol, things like adrenaline,
that's what gives you that like kind of tense edge, even if there is no real danger.
the absence of clarity in itself feels unsafe. And so uncertainty becomes something to avoid
or, in most circumstances, to attempt to control. You know, the thing I always say to people
who really struggle with a fear of uncertainty is it's actually your brain trying to do something
right. It's your brain trying to do the right thing. And we can commend our brain for that
and thank our brain for that and still obviously realize that it's not entirely helpful. But it's actually
not a sign that things are going wrong. Psychologically, uncertainty, yes, it challenges our
survival instincts. It also challenges our deep emotional and psychological and kind of spiritual
need for control and stability. Another thing about us as humans, we love a pattern. We love
predictability because this allows us to conserve mental energy. When we know what's coming,
our brain can kind of create a blueprint or a map of how to act, and that reduces our
cognitive load, leaving more time for other activities that allow us to kind of emotionally,
physically, creatively flourish. Uncertainty, though, erases that map. There is no blueprint,
living us with too many possible outcomes to process and for our brain to kind of place.
And so the stress compounds, it gets louder than anxiety and fear takes its place. And then
I feel like it gets to this turning point where just,
just like everything breaks loose and you feel very, very confused.
This is why psychologists talk about this thing known as the intolerance of uncertainty,
which is this exact feeling, the discomfort we feel when we cannot predict or plan counter
to what our brains really desire.
Something to note, some people actually feel it more often than others,
perhaps due to activity in the amygdala, which may be why you relate more to this desire.
for knowledge and for knowing than someone else in your life. Because it's not just about knowing
what will happen. It's about wanting to feel powerful and wanting to be able to prepare. It's
much deeper than just, I want to know. Finally, I think that uncertainty strikes at our sense of
identity and meaning. Existential psychology highlights that, you know, much of our anxiety at its
core actually stems from some of those ultimate unknowns, you know, death, freedom, isolation,
meaninglessness. When faced with uncertainty, whether in relationships, careers, health, life,
we are reminded of how fragile and uncontrollable a lot of our life can be. And this awareness,
I've experienced it, I'm sure you have too. It naturally unsettles us because it shakes our
narrative of stability and purpose. Doesn't mean that purpose and meaning doesn't exist.
It just means that we can't really find the answer right now.
What I found is that, you know, actually leaning into uncertainty and being like, okay, yeah, maybe I don't know everything really actually helps with this.
Let me explain this a little bit further. I love this one image I have seen a couple of times of someone being like, oh my God, I can't control everything and that being framed in a really negative way.
And then there's another person in the image that's like, oh, I can't control everything.
and that's like such a freeing realisation for them.
It's really a matter of perspective.
I think instead of seeing this as a failure of agency
or that us humans are powerless or whatever,
it becomes like a recognition that actually life was never meant
to be fully controlled in the first place.
Like that's actually not what we want to do.
And having that understanding allows us to really tap out of that exhausting narrative,
we fall into sometimes that, you know, if we just tried hard enough, if we just thought about
this long enough, we could predict everything, we could get all the answers, we could control it
all. I'm going to be the one to tell you this. It's just never going to happen. And I'm saying
this as someone who used to be obsessed with like knowing the future, knowing what was going to
happen. You just can't. And that's either terrifying or incredibly freeing. And when you reframe it as
something that is freeing and that allows you to just relax a little bit, you focus more on what
you have right now, what you're grateful for, what you can think and feel and what is real in this
moment. If you want an even deeper explanation for this, psychologically, this taps into what we
call cognitive re-appraisal. And this is our ability to reinterpret a situation in a way that
reduces stress and opens up new possibilities. By reframing uncertainty as an opportunity rather
than as a threat, we release ourselves from again the exhausting and the ultimately impossible
task of micromanaging every outcome. And just think about how much time you get back as part of that
deal. Like how much time you have to just actually enjoy your life. You know, when we give
ourselves permission to live in uncertainty when we say this uncertainty is no more or less
safe than certainty, something really interesting happens. I think we step into the present
moment more fully and we see the need for answers as the illusion that it is. The pressure to
solve or predict everything in advance often pulls us away from the here and now into this
like blurry, gray, cloudy potential future, whereas when we slow down, everything becomes a
lot more clear. We quiet a lot of that mental noise and we also like let in room and space for
curiosity, for patience, for even really incredible human emotions like wonder and awe. It also
stops that anxious cycle that I'm sure we're very familiar with of what if. That what if spiral that our
brain is so good at spinning. What if the worst case scenario does happen? I need to be prepared,
not realizing that, you know, you probably never will be. That doesn't mean you won't survive.
What if it all goes wrong? How do you know it won't all go right? What if they don't like me?
What if this one person I'm with isn't the one in five years? What if I've made the wrong choice?
What if this is the worst decision ever? You know what I always like to say to people about uncertainty?
I like to say that uncertainty loses its power when you realize that not knowing the outcome
actually has no correlation to the outcome being bad.
The feeling of uncertainty and the outcome are actually mutually exclusive.
They are entirely separate.
They are not talking to each other.
Your uncertainty doesn't know anything more than you do.
For all the scenarios it's cooking up and serving you,
it literally has no more information than you as a conscious being do. It cannot predict the
future. I think when we also live with uncertainty and we make it part of our day-to-day lives,
it strength and self-trust. Yes, you might not be able to predict the outcome. You might not know
what's coming, but you can trust that you will be okay because you are capable, you are flexible,
you are adaptable. And this is, I think, the most liberating part of this. I also think that this is the
space where we're able to really examine the counterbalance to uncertainty, which to me is
curiosity. Curiosity at its core transforms uncertainty from something that is, again, threatening
into something that's kind of entertaining, kind of engaging in a sense. Instead of like rushing to
resolve the unknown, curiosity, it invites you to just like sit with it, to like look at it like
it like it's a shell on the beach or a beautiful piece of scenery and just to explore it piece by piece
without demanding immediate closure.
Maybe just maybe, like I said, you are excited by it.
You're excited by the possibility of the positive outcomes that are to come.
Psychologists describe this as it's very aptly named as the curiosity mindset,
and this is our willingness to replace judgment with inquiry,
where anxiety might ask you to predict what goes wrong,
curiosity asks you to think about what you could learn and what you could discover
and what could go right.
It's a subtle shift, but the subtle shift changes not just our emotional response,
but our physiological, biological response as well.
Rather than triggering fear and then, of course, avoidance,
curiosity activates the brain's reward system, releasing dopamine,
releasing a cocktail of other neurotransmitters,
and motivating us to seek out new information in a much lighter way.
And so the same spaces, the same scenarios that once,
felt threatening actually become real fertile ground for growth.
When we step back from the pressure to know it all,
a lot more is actually seemingly revealed to us.
We open space for deeper reflection, for patience,
I think also a better understanding of life as it unfolds
because we actually get to be there in those moments.
So I'm going to share how I've tried to apply this in my own life
and some further kind of musings about uncertainty right after this quick break, so stay with us.
Welcome back. Now that we've looked at the meaning behind today's mantra, I am allowed to not have
all the answers. It is time, of course, to get personal with you all and just share some of my own
deeper insights and reflections about this phrase. I think especially in your 20s and I talk about
our 20s a lot. If you are in a period of rapid transformation and growth, if you are
experiencing a bit of a quarter-life crisis or a mid-life crisis or a crisis of faith, a crisis
in general, things are rapidly changing and falling apart. Not having all the answers is probably
going to feel a lot more threatening and scary in those moments. And it may be actually
contributing to the problem just as much as the actual real present stuff that is currently
occurring in your life. I think personally everyone goes through a chapter and has to go through a
chapter of just completely not knowing what's next. It's a ride of passage for a lot of us. And I remember
my own time, or I think maybe I should even say times when this has happened. And even times that
were like actually great were still kind of scary because they were unknown. When I was traveling
alone, right after graduation, when I quit my job, when I was living alone, right after a breakup,
right after the end of a relationship, I knew I needed to leave. I still felt this like real
sense of panic. And even at more severe moments of this, sometimes we do need everything to fall
apart to be allowed to add back in what we want. Not having all the answers, I think means
kind of having the opportunity to create the answers or to create the future and the life that
you want more directly. This is the importance of having a bit of a dark night of the
soul, as they call it. I want to introduce you to this idea. You maybe have already heard of it
before a little bit of a refresh. The phrase, Dark Night of the Soul, originally comes from
this 16th century mystic, St. John of the Cross, who used it to describe a period of real
profound spiritual desolation and uncertainty that he believed a lot of people had to go through,
if not all of us. In modern psychology and in self-growth language, it has come to really
represent those times in your life, spiritual or non-spiritually related, when everything just feels
like so stripped to its bare bones, when you have no answers, when what once brought you
meaning and stability or direction no longer does. In those moments, yes, we are totally afraid
because the old maps that we were used to no longer work. We feel like we are in uncharted
territory. Let's be clear, this state is incredibly painful and destabilizing at times.
It also carries really incredible powerful seeds of deep transformation because it forces us to
confront who we are without the usual anchors of identity of relationships, of success of
maybe some of the things that we've used as a crutch for a little bit too long.
What makes the dark night of the soul important is that it interrupts autopilot living.
most of us construct routines, beliefs, narratives that give life a sense of order, even if they don't
fully align with who we are becoming. And those are the things we have the answers for. But when those
structures collapse, when we don't have the answers through heartbreak, career shifts, grief,
even the disorientating joy of freedom, we are kind of left with nothing to hide behind. It's this
limital space, right? The threshold between what was and what will be and as uncomfortable as it
is, as much as it strips away certainty, it is again a rare opportunity for honest self-reflection
and reorientation. From a psychological perspective, these periods, they are particularly
transformative because they break down ego attachments. You know, we're forced to let go of the
things that actually no longer served us. Carl Jung, for example, he's another famous thinker. He really
believed that suffering and disorientation were actually essential as well for
individuation. The process of becoming one's fullest self is sometimes stripping yourself
back to the most basic parts about who you are, not having the answers and then adding things
back in. I think ultimately the dark night of the soul teaches us that, again, uncertainty can
actually be rather beautiful. If we had all the answers, we'd never be surprised. We'd never
grow, we'd never be challenged, we'd never discover the amazing stuff that awaits us after the
uncertainty. So as for feeling empowered in this feeling and in this moment and needing to have
all the answers, I do have a couple small exercises that you can try today that can kind of
increase your exposure to this feeling. And the first is, again, to expose yourself to small
unknowns. Pick a low stakes area of your life and deliberately don't seek certainty.
For me, this is going to sound super strange.
I always have to read the end of movies before I watch them.
Don't know why, but I realize that that is probably me grasping and looking for certainty
when I don't actually need it.
I can just enjoy the movie.
So I've been trying to do that less.
For you, that might mean sending a message without rereading it 10 times.
Not checking the weather before you leave the house.
Not looking at the menu before you get to the restaurant.
These are really basic things.
You're not going to be hurt by not doing these things.
This uses exposure therapy principles, though.
By repeatedly facing small doses of what you fear, in this case uncertainty,
your brain does actually learn it is not as dangerous as it thinks.
Another amazing cognitive restructuring tool is called probability thinking.
So instead of demanding a definite outcome,
so for example, this job interview will go terribly and feeling safe even though it's a negative outcome,
practice assigning probabilities to multiple possible outcomes.
So being like, you know, if there's like a 40% chance, it goes really, really well,
20% chance, it goes kind of okay, 30% chance it's neutral, 10% chance, it's hard.
Research shows that this actually, this small thing, reduces black and white thinking,
engages our curiosity, engages the prefrontal cortex, which can make
and is involved in more active decision-making, that calms the amygdala.
It's not about knowing the answer.
Again, that's not what we're asking for here.
It's about learning to live in the ranges.
I also really like to remind myself of how many people I admire,
who at some stage in their life had absolutely no idea
that this amazing and remarkable life was being built for them
and which they were building, right?
There were so many people who I admire who at some stage
didn't know if things worked out fine and didn't have all the answers. And it's worked out
amazing for them. And I admire their lives. And so I have to understand that if I want a
life like that, just as they went through periods of uncertainty, I must also do that. And that
vicarious learning, or maybe we call it vicarious projecting, is really, really personally helpful
for me. Okay. We've unpacked what it really means still at ourselves, not have all the answers,
what it means to live in uncertainty.
Now it is time to put that perspective into practice.
When we come back, I'm going to share some journal prompts.
I'm going to share our deep thought of the day and a little bit more.
So stick around.
We'll be right back after this short break.
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Welcome back, my lovely listeners.
Let's take a few minutes to talk again about this week's mantra.
I'm allowed to not have all the answers and to just kind of bring it into everyday life,
starting with our deep thought of the day, which comes from another deep thinker,
like our third or fourth that we've mentioned in this episode, Socrates.
This is the quote of the day.
The more I learn, the more I realize how much I don't know.
I love this quote because I think it invites intellectual humility.
It shows that we are limited, but in those unknowns, there is a lot of surprise and a lot more that opens up for us.
Realizing how much you don't know means that you have done something that very few humans will never do,
which is move beyond the illusion of certainty that often actually comes with ignorance.
Psychologists sometimes call this the Dunning Kruger effect.
when people know very little, they often overestimate their ability and they overestimate their
knowledge. This actually doesn't help them, but the more you genuinely learn, the more you are
curious, the more aware you actually become of the complexity of the world, and that awareness
is actually a sign of maturity and depth. It's also really freeing this quote because it really
points to this impossible pressure to know it all. Knowledge is endless. No one actually not
the answers to anything. Like, you cannot expect to master what a lot of people have never
been able to. And you can see that as the ultimate challenge, and you can see it as a wall that
you want to push against, or you can just see yourself as a lifelong learner, someone who is
not here to be an expert, but who was just to like enjoy and experience life in the moment.
Now, I'd like to guide you guys through a few journal prompts to get to this in an even
deeper way. And again, if journaling isn't your thing, if you don't have one nearby, if you're in
the car, wherever, that's totally okay. Just take this moment just to reflect. Just think about your
answers to these prompts or save them for later. Firstly, how do you usually respond when you don't
know what to do or you don't know the answers? Do you hide it? Do you admit it or do you push through
anyway. Next, where in your life do you currently feel the most pressure to have everything
figured out? How is that maybe holding you back? And finally, as a continuation of that question,
how could allowing yourself to not have all the answers actually create more space for
curiosity and possibility in your life? Now that we've made that space to reflect, let's give
your mind a moment just to rest and maybe think on those prompts a little bit further.
In just a second, you'll hear a music track.
I just encourage you to take this opportunity to process this week's reflections in whatever
way it feels right to you, no pressure, no expectations.
And if this is something you don't connect with, that's also okay.
Just skip ahead about 30 seconds.
As you settle in, just keep our mantra in mind.
I'm allowed to not have all the answers.
As the music plays, just let this mantra shape your thoughts.
Take some time to just connect with whatever it's bringing up for you.
beautiful. I'm so glad that we had that moment just to reset and ground ourselves before we
wrap up this episode. As we wrap up this episode, I do want to share a few final thoughts
about this mantra. I want to let you guys know that this is something that I have struggled with. I've struggled
with this in so many different forms. I think because I'm someone who maybe just innately
believes that if I think about things harder, if I analyze them further, I can get to the
bottom of it. Maybe because in a lot of other areas of my life, I have been able to find answers
through mulling things over more, or maybe through not acting and thinking that that in itself
was an answer. I can tell you now it has been a lot more freeing to just be okay with not knowing.
and it doesn't mean that I'm lost.
It doesn't mean that you're lost.
And it certainly doesn't mean that what's coming isn't going to be fantastic.
You've got to remember, as much as your brain wants to predict the worst case scenario,
often the best case scenario is actually what really occurs.
Or a neutral scenario.
So all this fear that you are placing in the unknown,
you would have so much more time and energy if you turned it into curiosity
and also just into an appreciation of the present and what is known right now.
It's not a weakness.
This space is inviting you to be patient, to trust yourself,
and to see where you are going to grow when you just let yourself bathe and lean into uncertainty.
Thank you for joining Mantra, an exclusive Open Mind original powered by Pave Studios.
At Open Mind, we really value your support, so please share your thoughts on social media
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I'll share another mantra with you next Monday.
Until then, keep showing up for yourself and your journey.
I'm Gemma Spag. See you next week.
Mantra is hosted by me, Gemma Spag, and is an Open Mind original powered by Pave Studios.
This episode was brought to life by the incredible Mantra team.
Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Stacey Warren Kerr, Sarah Camp, Jen Passavoy, and Paul Lieberskin.
Thank you for listening.
Villagers, I'm hosting a Nothing Much Happens live virtual event on Wednesday, November 19th.
I'll share three handpicked bedtime stories, including one you've never heard on the podcast,
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Get your tickets now at pave. live so you don't miss out.
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