On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 3 Reasons You Are Stuck in Your Comfort Zone and 4 Steps to Break Out
Episode Date: March 18, 2022Do you want to meditate daily with me? Go to go.calm.com/onpurpose to get 40% off a Calm Premium Membership. Experience the Daily Jay. Only on CalmHaving a space where you feel comfortable to work on ...your tasks and be productive in your goals, and a safe space for you to be yourself is something we all want for ourselves. But this comfort zone doesn’t offer much room for growth and that is because the repetitive tasks that we do daily to remain productive doesn’t lead to new discoveries, challenges, and creativity. It’s just repetitive and nothing new happens. Growth becomes stagnant.In this episode of On Purpose, Jay Shetty shares with us what keeps us in our comfort zones and what can we do to reinvent ourselves, create new paths, and open new possibilities for personal growth.Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/ Key Takeaways:00:00 Intro00:43 How hard can it be to get out of your comfort zone?03:20 Let’s talk about being anxiety neutral07:39 Using a limited set of behaviors to deliver a steady level of performance14:27 The four types of risk takers17:07 Two ways to get out of your comfort zone21:46 The five stages of growthLike this show? Please leave us a review here - even one sentence helps! Post a screenshot of you listening on Instagram & tag us so we can thank you personally!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jay Shetty and on my podcast on purpose, I've had the honor to sit down with some of the most incredible hearts and minds on the planet.
Oprah, Kobe Bryant, Kevin Hart, Louis Hamilton, and many, many more.
On this podcast, you get to hear the raw real-life stories behind their journeys and the tools they used, the books they read, and the people that made a difference in their lives so that they can make a difference in hours.
Listen to on purpose with Jay Shetty on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Join the journey soon.
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The overbearing Mollylly coddling of ourselves
creates fragility.
It creates weakness, not strength,
so that when a storm comes and we have to hold our own
and we have to find a way to get the nourishment
and the nutrition we need to stay strong and stay standing,
we don't know how to look for it
because we've never been able to look for it before.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose, the number one health podcast in the world.
Thanks to each and every single one of you.
They come back every week to listen, learn and grow.
And today's episode is all about growth.
How many of you, and be honest with yourself?
How many of you have spent the majority of your time in your comfort zone?
How many of you know how hard it is to get out of your comfort zone?
And how many of you, even when you try, even when you push your limits, even when you
make that opportunity, you put your best foot forward, you still feel completely trapped
by your comfort zone. That's what I find so fascinating about
comfort zones is often we don't even know we're inside one. We don't even know that we have
one. We just assume that this is what life is. This is how it works. This is how it goes. Not recognizing that we are being contained. We are being trapped.
We are being restricted and limited by our mindsets, our beliefs, our actions, our behaviors.
And so much of this limits what's possible in our lives. Now, I was reading an incredible study
about how Judith Bardwick came up
with the phrase comfort zone.
And this is how she described what a comfort zone is.
And this is without a doubt the best definition
I've heard of a comfort zone.
And you can even make a note of this.
The comfort zone is a behavioural state within which a person operates in first an anxiety
neutral condition.
A comfort zone is a state where a person operates in an anxiety neutral condition. A comfort zone is a state where a person operates in an anxiety-neutral condition.
The second is using a limited set of behaviors to deliver a steady level of performance, and
the third usually without a sense of risk. So let's look at that definition and apply it to our
lives. Are we constantly trying to be in an anxiety-neutral condition? Are we
constantly trying to deliver a steady level of performance? And are we usually
avoiding risk? So let's talk about being anxiety neutral.
It's important today we all deal with so much anxiety in our lives that we tried to
create a life where we have very little anxiety. And I'm sure you can all agree and you've
all had the experience of just thinking I have too much anxiety, I have overwhelming anxiety,
I am beyond my capacity and my ability to deal with anxiety.
And when we feel that way, we all know that it reduces our ability to perform,
we know that it makes us less focused, we know that we feel more distracted, we
know that we don't feel happy or joyful when we are burdened with that much anxiety.
We all know that because we've experienced it. We've all been at that end when anxiety
is creeping up on us and it's on our case and we can tell that this isn't going to benefit us.
Now there's something fascinating there. That's one extreme. The other extreme is where
we are anxiety neutral, where we have no anxiety. We're trying to create this life where we
limit anxiety completely. And what Dodson's law, Yoke's and Dodson, what
they found was that that actually creates boredom. It creates lethity. And maybe you've noticed
this that when you have no anxiety, often we create drama. Or maybe you've noticed people in your life that they have to create
drama because we need some anxiety. We need a certain amount of anxiety that sparks action,
that sparks change, that leads to creativity. And that's what Yerke's in Dodson's law talks about where we need an optimal level of
anxiety.
Too much is overwhelming and too little creates lethargy or complacency or boredom or in
some cases makes us move towards drama.
It's fascinating, isn't it?
It's fascinating how this works. And it's
incredible how we allow ourselves to be completely restricted and limited
because we believe that anxiety is negative. We believe that anxiety is bad.
And that's because the anxiety that we've been dealing with has been the unhealthy
drama-filled anxiety, rather than the anxiety that can be
positive nerves. The anxiety that can be, oh yeah, I feel
a sense of activation or acceleration that I want to get out
of this zone. So the reason I'm breaking down the part of
the definition that's anxiety neutral is that
often wanting to be anxiety neutral is not the answer, but it's often the first step.
If you're at an overwhelming state of anxiety, coming back to anxiety neutral is healthy
and then shifting into optimal anxiety is a pathway that we can take.
Now how do we do that? When you're
experiencing high levels of anxiety, you may practice more mindfulness. You may
practice more breath work. You may meditate with me on the COM app for my daily
J series. You may start putting into practice workout routines that really
lowers your anxiety. And then how do you invite that optimal healthy
anxiety into your life?
What do you do?
Well, you experiment.
You try new things.
You take a new course.
You create a new opportunity.
You do something you've never done before.
You add very intentionally
anxiety that you know is healthy.
That's the difference between anxiety that is optimal
and anxiety that decreases our performance,
is that anxiety can be intentionally invited
rather than unintentionally interrupting your life
when you just end up creating drama
rather than creating direction.
The other part of the definition that Judith
Bardwick gave of the comfort zone is using a limited set of
behaviors to deliver a steady level of performance. Now, what I find
truly interesting about that section is that we often think that
if we're able to do the same level of performance
every day, then that creates reliability and stability and security.
And that may be true, but we never get to experience whether our performance could increase,
our joy could increase, our learning could increase.
And when we say we want a limited set of behaviors,
we're basically saying I'm happy with the skills I have.
It's why so many people, after graduating from college,
never ever tried to learn a new skill.
And what does that do? It sets us back in life
because as we grow, we're required to grow new skills,
as we grow older, as we experience
new things in life, we're required to develop new skills.
How many new life experiences have you had?
This is something that Sedat or Buddha before he became the Buddha experienced.
For those of you that don't know, his father tried to keep him inside the
kingdom, trapped in his comfort zone, to not experience anything uncomfortable. His
father didn't want him to experience the pains of life because he was scared of how it
would affect his son. When his son escaped to experience life, he saw people that were unwell and he noticed that people got sick.
He met people in old age and he realized people got old. He was only ever surrounded by youth.
And then he saw someone die And he realized that people died. He wasn't aware of that.
He was so overprotected and kept so distant from old age, disease and death that he grew
up believing that they didn't exist.
And his father thought that this would strengthen him and protect him.
What's really fascinating though is that when we protect ourselves from experiencing any sort of pain
We actually make ourselves more fragile
It's a paradox you think that if you protect someone for pain
They get stronger actually if you protect someone from pain. They get weaker. They get more fragile
Because they don't know
how to deal with it when it inevitably will arise in their life.
There's a beautiful story of two families that live next door to each other.
One of the families tended perfectly to the plants in their garden.
They perfectly measured the amount of water, they perfectly managed
the sunlight, they perfectly took care of the soil, everything was done with extreme accuracy.
The other family, they cared, they were loving, they were kind to their plants, but they
weren't always completely accurate, they didn't always get it perfectly right. And often their plants didn't look as healthy as the next door neighbors.
One day there was a storm.
The storm was horrific.
Everyone had to stay indoors for days.
And neither of the families could tend to their plants.
A few days after the storm was over,
both these families came out of their homes to see their plants. A few days after the storm was over, both these families came out of
their homes to see their gardens destroyed. But there was one thing fascinating. The family that
tended perfectly and accurately to their garden, their plants, were completely demolished.
Their plants had not survived.
Now the family that was loving and kind and tried their best,
but were not always perfect or completely accurate,
some of their plants had survived.
Some of their plants had made it through the horrific storm.
The other family was completely bemused.
How is this even possible?
How does that even happen?
How does that happen?
The lesson is really interesting that the overbearing molly coddling of ourselves creates
fragility.
It creates weakness, not strength, so that when a storm comes and we have to hold
our own and we have to find a way to get the nourishment and the nutrition we need to
stay strong and stay standing, we don't know how to look for it because we've never
been able to look for it before. Whereas those plans that had to look for some of their
own nourishment, they had to look for some of their own stability all the way.
They were able to act on that muscle. When we rely on a limited set of behaviors to deliver
a steady level of performance, we set ourselves up for failure because chances are that we're
going to have a life experience that surprises us. We're going to have something now. This
doesn't apply to how we deal with others.
It applies how we deal with ourselves.
Are we setting ourselves up to be fragile by over protecting ourselves from certain types
of pain?
Now I'm not saying we invite pain.
I'm not saying we choose pain.
I'm not saying to put ourselves into pain or put others into pain.
What I'm saying is,
where are we staying in our comfort zone, which is restricting us from growth?
Where are we staying limited in our comfort zone that is blocking us from achieving our potential?
Where are you so trapped in your comfort zone? Because you're scared.
And that's fair, I understand.
I know what that feels like.
I was scared once upon a time that I wasn't an entrepreneur.
I stayed in the comfort zone of being an employee
and I would always repeat the words, I'm not an entrepreneur.
Today, I can't imagine being anything but one.
Now, I'm not saying that you have to be an entrepreneur.
What I'm saying is that so many of the titles, so many of the statuses, so many of the
roles we take on in life are limited.
They're limited by our current perception of ourselves.
by our current perception of ourselves, and our current perception could be trapped by our comfort zone.
Hi, I'm David Eagleman.
I have a new podcast called Inner Cosmos on I Heart.
I'm a neuroscientist and an author at Stanford University,
and I've spent my career exploring the three-pound universe in our heads.
On my new podcast, I'm going to explore the relationship between our brains and our experiences
by tackling unusual questions so we can better understand our lives and our realities.
Like, does time really run in slow motion when you're in a car accident?
Or can we create new senses for
humans? Or what does dreaming have to do with the rotation of the planet? So join
me weekly to uncover how your brain steers your behavior, your perception, and your
reality. Listen to Intercosmos with David Eagleman on the iHeartRadio app
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
A good way to learn about a place is to talk to the people that live there.
There's just this sexy vibe and Montreal, this pulse, this energy.
What was meant is seen as a very snotty city. People call it Bose-Angelists.
New Orleans is a town that never forgets its pay.
A great way to get to know a place is to get invited to a dinner party.
Hi, I'm Brendan Francis Newton and not lost as my new travel podcast where a friend
and I go places, see the sights, and try to finagle our way into a dinner party.
We're kind of trying to get invited to a dinner party.
It doesn't always work out.
I would love that but I have like a Cholala
who is aggressive towards strangers.
I love the dogs.
We learn about the places we're visiting, yes,
but we also learn about ourselves.
I don't spend as much time thinking about
how I'm gonna die alone when I'm traveling,
but I get to travel with someone I love.
Oh, see, I love you too.
And also, we get to eat as much.
I'm very sincere.
I love you too. My life's a lot of therapy goes behind that. You're so white, I love you too. And also, we get to eat as much. Very sincere. I love you too.
My life's a lot of therapy goes behind that.
You're so white, I love it.
Listen to Not Lost on the iHeart Radio app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jay Shetty and on my podcast on purpose,
I've had the honor to sit down
with some of the most incredible
hearts and minds on the planet.
Oprah,
everything that has happened to you
can also be a strength builder for you if
you allow it.
Kobe Bryant.
The results don't really matter.
It's the figuring out that matters.
Kevin Haw.
It's not about us as a generation at this point.
It's about us trying our best to create change.
Luminous Hamilton.
That's for me being, taking that moment for yourself each day, being kind to yourself, because I think for a long time I wasn't kind to myself. And many, Lewis Hamilton. That's for me been taking that moment for yourself each day, being kind to yourself,
because I think for a long time
I wasn't kind to myself.
And many, many more.
If you're attached to knowing,
you don't have a capacity to learn.
On this podcast, you get to hear the raw, real-life stories
behind their journeys and the tools they used,
the books they read, and the people that made a difference
in their lives so that they can make a difference in hours. Listen to on-purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcast. Join the journey soon. And the final part of the definition is usually without a sense of
risk. Now risk is a really fascinating subject. There are four types of risk takers. The first
is the conservative risk taker who doesn't take many risks as we're saying someone who stays
in their comfort zone, casual risk takers. They just take risks. They hear that NFTs are
a thing or let's throw some money at it. Cryptos are a thing or let's throw some money at it. Cryptos are thing, all right, let's throw some money at it. And casual risk takers often don't get the rewards
because it's so casual in intention and in planning
that they're really relying on luck
and they can often have low luck.
Now, beyond that, a calculated risk takers,
these are people that do all the data,
they do all the analysis, they do all the calculations, and they're very aware of how they take risk. This requires
deep research and deep knowledge. And finally, you have conscious risk takers. Conscious risk
takers are people who apply both intuition and data. They take some inspiration and they add insight.
They look at the stats and they look at the patterns.
Now the interesting thing here is that the conscious risk
taker is not better than the conservative risk taker.
The point is that it's a journey that we all must go on
as far as we want to go.
And taking bigger risks doesn't make you more bold,
it doesn't make you more courageous,
it doesn't make you more strong or powerful,
it could be stupidity to be honest,
it could be ego based.
But we have to develop a little bit
of being a bit more pro-risk
because of the growth that is possible
when we are able to do that.
So I've defined for you how our comfort zone restricts us and how we stay
limited by that. And there's a brilliant diagram called leaving the comfort zone.
This is a famous diagram. And it's been out there on many different sites and
places. I believe the original source may be from a psychology study.
And it talks about how there are four zones.
It's the journey we have to take from the comfort zone,
to the fear zone, to the learning zone, to the growth zone.
So a lot of people say, oh yeah, we'll just jump from the comfort zone,
to the growth zone, start growing. That doesn't really happen. That sounds like a big decision, a big difference,
and it doesn't sound realistic. So there are two ways of starting this journey. One is to move
step by step by expanding our comfort zone. And the other is to deep dive immersively in being out of our comfort zone.
Often what we do is we don't take the little steps,
but we jump in the deep end alone, but it's both of the approaches.
It's the little step mixed with the big immersive experience that makes the difference.
So in this diagram, the comfort zone is a place
where we feel safe, we feel secure, we feel stability, we feel control. And that's why you often
hear the idea that if you're not failing, if you're not making mistakes, I believe it was Albert
Einstein who said, you're not trying anything new. If you're trying something new, if you're trying
to grow, if you're trying to do something different, there will always be failure in your life.
If you're experiencing failure, it's because you're trying something that's never been
done before. If you're experiencing rejection, it's because you're trying something that
is new for you. When I find that there's inconsistency or there's disconnection or things
are hard to explain, I get excited about it. Because I remind me and my team were doing
something different,
we're trying something that hasn't been done before. This is normal. We should expect this.
It would be, it would be surprising if everything actually went smoothly. If everything went
smoothly, it means we're not doing anything incredible. We're not trying anything new. We're not
trying to do anything magnanimous. So the fear zone, as described in this diagram, is a place where we find excuses
and we're affected by the people's opinions. How many of us don't try anything new because
we're scared of what will people say? We're scared of what will people think. Let's really
talk about this. I remember being really scared of this. and I've now realized that what people think and what people say
Have genuinely no impact on the quality of my life
We live so much for perception and reputation
That we give up purpose and what's truly rewarding
The question you have to ask yourself is what's more important to me?
my passion or my perception? What's more
important to me, my purpose or my perception? What's more important to me, my potential
or my perception? What's more important to me, the reward or the reputation?
What's more important to me?
Respecting myself or others respecting me?
What's more important to me?
The realizations and the reflections are gained or the reputation I hope to maintain?
Think about that deeply.
Which one is going to satisfy you most in the long run?
Which one is truly going to bring you a center of joy?
It's the answers to those questions that help us get out of living in the world of excuses
and being affected by other people's opinions. The learning zone, as described in this diagram,
is dealing with challenges, acquiring new skills.
And I find this to be the place
where we need to spend most of our time.
I wanna share with you the biggest news of the year.
How many of you want to meditate?
I can see your heads nodding, I can see
you raising your hands, I can see you saying, yes, Jay, I really want to learn to meditate.
How many of you would like to learn to meditate with me every single day?
Now I already know what the answer is because I know how many messages, DMs, reviews,
notes that I get saying, Jay, I'd love to meditate with you.
Last year, we took meditation to Instagram,
and I meditated for around 40 days live
and 20 million of you tuned in.
Now, I am taking that same focus, that same presence,
to calm.
I've partnered up with calm to release a new series
called The Daily J, where you can
meditate with me every single day for seven minutes to make it a real habit.
I would love for you to come and join me and take part in building a really powerful
meditation practice and guess what, we're going to do it together.
Head over right now to calm.com forward slash J to get 40% off a
premium membership that's calm.com forward slash J. I did a podcast a few years ago where I
talked about the five stages of growth. Learn, experiment, perform, struggle, thrive.
That's the journey of learning.
We think we should already know we should have it figured out.
Maybe you want to get into NFTs, maybe you want to get into crypto,
maybe you want to get into social media, maybe you want to do a podcast.
And we think we should just know how to do it.
Or if we just start and we feel passionate about it, it will work.
That doesn't work.
That truly doesn't work.
What works is following this five step system.
Let me first learn about the industry.
Let me read books about the industry.
Let me listen to podcasts about the industry.
Let me listen to the experts.
Let me do a course from the industry.
That's learning, learning means diving deeply
into getting good industry based knowledge.
The next step is, let me experiment with what I learned.
Okay, well, Jade said that,
let me experiment with that.
Let me try that out.
Let me actually apply that.
Let me put that into practice and see what I learned.
So now I'm not just saying,
oh yeah, I did that course, I know how to do it.
No, let me actually apply.
Let me practically put that into my reality.
Oh, I learned that I should record a podcast in that way.
Okay, let me do that.
Oh, I learned that I should post it
at that time on social media.
Let me put that.
Okay, I learned that I should be part of Discord.
Okay, let me do that.
Let's actually test an experiment.
And in testing and experimenting,
there will be lots of false starts.
There will be lots of mistakes.
So we start with mini tests and mini experiments. And those mini tests and mini experiments give us confidence, they
give us learning, we're allowing ourselves to fail. When do we allow ourselves to fail?
That is getting out of our comfort zone. We have to allow ourselves to make mistakes. I
allow myself daily, weekly, to make mistakes. I'm okay now with making mistakes because that's
the only way I'll grow. We all know this. It's so well-known, the analogy of when you're
learning to walk, you have no idea how many times you fell down. But you got back up and
you walked today without falling down, hopefully regularly, right? But imagine you just said,
no, no, no, if I don't walk this time,
I'm not getting up again.
If it doesn't work this time, I quit.
We'd still be crawling as adults.
We don't wanna be crawling as adults.
Think about that for a moment.
The next stage is perform.
Once you experiment, you get into a cycle of consistency, you perform, you deliver,
you're in the zone now. And of course, you have struggle. You struggle at every step, but
struggle definitely comes at this step because now you have to innovate, now you have to create,
now you have to pivot. Performance requires pivoting, it requires adapting. Then you get to thrive.
requires pivoting, it requires adapting. Then you get to thrive.
You finally thrive.
But the problem is we want to go from,
I like this to, I want to win at this.
I like this to, I want to be the best at this.
I enjoy this, it should work.
We skip every single step that is in this journey
to actually get to thrive,
to actually get to the space where we win.
So how do you get out of your comfort zone this week? I want you to start really small.
One thing maybe, take a new journey to work this week. Try a new path, try a new road.
Just take a new journey to work.
Another way to get out of your comfort zone
is working a different environment this week.
You may hate it at first, but give it a go.
Another way to get out of your comfort zone
is have a cold shower in the morning.
Give it a go.
And then you may take on a new project to work.
You may take on a new responsibility.
You may take on a new project to work, you may take on a new responsibility, you may take on a new
course or a new program. What is it that you can do to start small and then accelerate? I really hope
that this encourages you and helps you navigate what it means to get out of your comfort zone. I
appreciate you tuning in and being a part of this community.
I wanted to take these last few minutes to read some of my favorite reviews that I've seen
about on purpose.
As always, please leave your name because I want to read your name out.
This is Keana.
I've been listening to Jay for about a year now and reading his book Think Like A Monk.
I'm on a healing journey and wanting to find more peace within as well as live a life
of mindfulness. This podcast has been more than insightful. I often listen and discuss
what I've learned with friends and even share the podcast with friends and family.
It has helped me enjoy being in the present as well, as being mindful with my choice throughout
my day to day. I will continue to tune in and apply the knowledge to my everyday life, Keana, that brings joy.
Thank you so, so much. I'm so grateful to read that.
Okay, looking for more names, everyone. This is Jen. The timing of when you started your podcast
was truly perfect. It came at a time of so much turmoil and pressure in the world.
I had to readjust my spiritual journey last year and God has honored my spiritual reach out
in so many ways, including your podcast.
I found so much great advice in your episodes and I'm abundantly
grateful for your life.
I've started considering signing up for genius as well to grow
even more towards my life purpose.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
10.
I love that.
Okay.
I'm going to read one more.
I love how long these are and how beautiful
these are. They're truly incredible. I'm going to read one without a name because I just
want to. Jay, I cannot even tell you how many different podcasts I've gone through.
On purpose is the only podcast I've been listening to from the beginning and stayed subscribed
to. Your content is so original and refreshing. It makes me excited to jump out of bed every
Monday and Friday morning.
It starts and ends my work week in the best way.
Thank you for keeping us entertained and educated.
You've made the podcast world a different place.
Thank you for leaving your podcast.
We're nearly at 17,500 podcasts.
By the end of this year, we want to reach 20,000.
Please, please, please come and help us.
Thank you for listening.
I'll see you next week.
What if you could tell the whole truth about your life including all those tender invisible things we don't usually talk about?
I'm Megan Devine. Post to the podcast. It's okay that you're not okay.
Look everyone's at least a little bit not okay these days. And all those things we don't usually talk about, maybe we should.
This season I'm joined by stellar guests like Abbermote, Rachel Cargol and so many more.
It's okay that you're not okay.
New episodes each and every Monday, available on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you listen
to podcasts.
I'm Yvonne Gloria.
And I'm Maite Gomes-Rajon. I'm Eva Longoria and I'm Mike DeGolmester Cohen.
We're so excited to introduce you to our new podcast,
Hungry for History!
On every episode, we're exploring some of our favorite dishes,
ingredients, beverages from our Mexican culture.
We'll share personal memories and family stories,
decode culinary customs, and even provide a recipe or two
for you to try at home.
Listen to Hungry for History on the I Heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Debbie Brown, host of the Deeply Well Podcast, where we hold conscious conversations
with leaders and radical healers and wellness, around topics that are meant to expand and support you on your well-being journey.
Deeply well is your soft place to land, to work on yourself without judgment, to heal, to learn, to grow, to become who you deserve to be.
Deeply well with Debbie Brown is available now on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. Namaste.
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Namaste.