On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 4 Lessons I Will Be Taking With Me Into 2024 & How You Can Implement Them
Episode Date: December 29, 2023As we approach the close of 2024, this episode is not just about reflecting on the lessons learned; it's about sharing the transformative insights that will illuminate our path forward. Jay poses a qu...estion that resonates deeply: How many of us stress about our well-being? From health and meditation to daily journals and affirmations, the pursuit of self-improvement often brings with it a surge of stress. Jay challenges you to explore the idea of stress as a spectrum, a nuanced scale rather than a binary state. This concept is monumental and understanding stress can be a game changer for you this coming year. In this episode, Jay unpacks the idea that sometimes the goal of wanting to be better and do better puts us under greater pressure. Let Jay guide you as he explains positive stress, distress and the lessons he learned this year that are meant to be carried forward and put into practice. It's not just about learning; it's about application, about making these lessons a living, breathing part of our lives. This episode is your go to to close off the year and prepare yourself for a beautiful journey in 2024. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty In this episode you’ll learn: Differentiating positive stress and distress Finding your center Top stressful events for adults Knowing when to be hard on yourself and when to let go What we discuss: 00:00 Intro 03:02 The Big Lesson I Am Taking Into 2024 03:34 #1 Understanding Stress As A Spectrum 04:49 The Positive Side Of Stress 10:30 Living In Distress 17:09 #2 Finding Your Center 20:28: #3 Being More Compassionate And Understanding Of How Others Deal With Stress 21:25 The Ultimate Gamechanger See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Cheryl McCollum, host of the Colkays Podcast, Zone 7.
Join us every Wednesday to your cases
like the Long Island serial killer.
You show like genuine interest and you can't fake it,
but these guys can see like right through to your soul.
So you have to be like prepared.
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Mental Health is now talked about more than ever, which is awesome.
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And then in the morning we do the same thing,
your brain has no ramp up here.
Your brain basically has no start-up mode.
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We are pressurizing our minds today
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Hey everyone, welcome back to on purpose, the number one health podcast in the world, thanks to
each and every one of you who come back every week to listen, learn and grow.
Now considering this is our last episode of 2023, I can't believe I'm saying that.
It's incredible how fast this year is gone.
I am wishing and hoping that you have had a fulfilling and phenomenal year and despite
the challenges and setbacks that you've been
able to navigate and find your way through that change. At the same time, I'm sitting
here recording this, wanting to share with you just how grateful I am that you've allowed
me to join you on walks, that you've allowed me to join you while you cook that you've
allowed me to join you in the gym.
I love seeing your stories.
I love reading your reviews and I want to thank you for making us one of the top five
podcasts in the world globally on Spotify and one of the top 10 on Apple. I want to encourage you to follow, like, subscribe
on the app, share the podcast. It means the world to me. You did that, share that news,
and thank you so much for believing in on purpose, for believing in me, trusting me,
and I promise to continue to try and serve you to the best of my ability and I'm so excited for 2024.
The growth this year has been phenomenal and it's all thanks to you.
Now I want to share with you the key lessons that I'm taking with me into 2024.
Often at this time of year I'll say, well here are my big lessons of 2023.
This is what I learned and I did an episode like that on my birthday
on the 6th of September. But today I wanted to approach it differently. I wanted to share with you
lessons that I'm taking with me, that I'm taking forward, that I believe are going to help me in
the future. Really, that's the point of a lesson, right? The point of a lesson isn't, I learned that
great. Thank you so much. Now let's learn a new lesson.
The point of a lesson is, now that I've learned it,
I'm actually going to put it into practice.
I'm actually going to utilize it in the following year.
So I want to dive straight in.
And this thing I think is going to resonate with a lot of you
and it's why it's my big lesson
that I want to take into the new year.
It's this idea of
well, let me let me ask you a question. How many of you stress about your health or being healthy?
How many of you stress about meditation? How many of you stress about making sure you don't
miss a day in your journal. How many of you stress
to make sure that you read your affirmations out in the morning? How many of you stress
that you're not getting to the gym enough or you'll get enough or whatever else it may
be? How many of you stress about well-being? What I've realized is that in this world
of wanting to be better, do better, grow more, learn more,
which by the way, it's beautiful.
It's a great way to live.
I found that often in that journey,
we start experiencing more stress.
We start putting ourselves under greater pressure and stress.
And we have to really understand stress as a spectrum.
This is something that I'm taking into 2024.
It's huge.
I want you to write it down right now.
Take a screenshot.
I want you to explain this to a friend.
So I was learning about this idea of how it can be helpful
to look at stress as a scale, as a spectrum,
rather than I am stressed or I'm not stressed.
Really, there's actually a scale.
At one end, there's U-stress, spelt EU-ST-R-E-S-S U-stress, and at the other end, there's distress.
Now let me explain these and define these for you. When you look at the word you stress,
what it means is a positive form of stress,
having a beneficial effect on health, motivation,
performance, and emotional wellbeing, right?
During positive stress, you stress,
such as working hard at work for a promotion or feeling like you've
got the reward of a vacation, feel good chemicals called endorphins are released.
Now, I don't think we talk about this a lot.
What we talk about is that the other end of the spectrum, which is distress and the definition
of distress, or the meaning of distress is great pain, anxiety
or sorrow, acute physical or mental suffering, affliction, trouble, etc., etc.
Now I think what we're used to experiencing and what we're used to referencing when we
talk about stress is this idea of distress.
So, you stress helps you break through
from your comfort zone, it helps you take on new challenges,
it helps you find motivation.
Whereas distress is the stress that makes you feel
overwhelmed, it's what affects your mood.
It's that negative type of stress
that affects your sleep.
It's almost like when
you're stressing about sleeping well, or you're stressing about the fact that you're stressed
when you're not sleeping well. And that perpetuates itself. So I want to look at stress as a spectrum
and the lesson I'm taking through is I need to make sure which level of stress I'm
putting myself under.
This is about the stress you control, the stress you allow yourself to experience.
Are you putting you stress onto yourself or are you putting yourself in positions of
distress?
Are you putting stress on yourself to feel better, to encourage yourself, to motivate
yourself, to move yourself, or are you putting
stress on yourself being critical of yourself saying you're not getting enough done, you're
too far behind, right? You haven't done enough this year. It's really, really interesting
to me because research suggests that chronic stress contributes to high blood pressure,
promotes the formation of artery clogging deposits and causes brain changes
that may contribute to anxiety, depression and addiction.
And more preliminary research suggests that chronic stress may also contribute to obesity
both through direct mechanisms causing people to eat more or indirectly decreasing sleep
and exercise.
Now, I know you're listening to me already, going, Jay, this is stressing me out. How many of you are listening right now? And the reason
I exposed you to that definition is because we're used to hearing something like that and
putting ourselves under distress. So we hear that and our response is, Oh crap, oh my
God, I'm not sleeping enough, I'm not exercising enough, I'm not, not, not, not, not, right?
Whereas you stress is actually saying, well, when I work out, when I push myself to work out,
I actually feel better afterwards.
You know what, when I actually sleep earlier,
I know that I'll be happier tomorrow.
You're allowing yourself to recognize
that success follows your stress, right?
You have an understanding that when I do something
that stressful, it leads to me being successful.
And when I say successful,
I don't mean materially or financially.
I'm talking about the fact that you see
an intrinsic reward in why you sleep early,
in why you exercise.
So it's now not, well, I don't sleep early enough,
I don't work out enough, I don't eat
healthy enough.
It's actually saying, well, when I eat healthy, I feel better, my gut feels better, my digestion
is better, I feel more energized.
I really want you to take this deeply on board because I think so many of us are living in spaces of distress and not recognizing just how tiresome it can
be to keep stressing yourself out. We keep letting stress get the better of us or stress gets
the best of us because we put ourselves under distress. And I've realized whether it's
my work goals, my financial goals, my spiritual
goals, my emotional goals, I have recognized that putting myself under distress only makes
me less productive, less effective and less impactful. How many times this year, be honest
with me? How many times this year? Did you put yourself under too much stress? Raise your
hands, nod your heads. How many times this year be honest with me?
Did you not allow yourself the
Benefit of the doubt. How many times did you not cut yourself some slack?
How many times did you make yourself feel worse?
What I've found is that guilt blocks growth
What I've found is that guilt blocks growth. Guilt does not lead to growth.
Guilt blocks growth.
You may have that instant response if I want to be better.
Notice how that's a positive statement versus I'm not good enough.
Notice how you're saying the same thing but you're not.
Right? Look at that sentence.
I want to be better.
I am going to be better versus I'm not good enough.
How do you think your mind and your body react to those statements?
When you look at the common internal causes of stress, there's a natural pessimism, a
negative outlook on life.
Hence the statement, I'm not good enough.
What you'll realize is that we're all living in one of these two modalities.
We're either living in new stress or distress, right? So if you're in distress, you're saying,
I'm not good enough. I'm going to be negative about stuff. If you're living in new stress, you're saying,
you know what, I'm going to use stress to motivate me. I recognize the value of it. Another common
internal cause of stress is the inability to accept uncertainty. Now
here's what we do. When we put ourselves in distress, we're basically saying there should
have been a certain result. There should have been a defined conclusive result. And without
a defined conclusive result, we're like, well, we must be failures. We must be wrong. I'm Cheryl McCollum, host of the
Col. K's podcast, zone seven.
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Let's see if Qi's spuzz will fly or if these singles will be sent back to the dating apps.
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Another common internal cause is rigid thinking, a lack of flexibility. This one's really,
really interesting to me because often we think that rigid routines and patterns are good
for us. And by the way, they are good for us. Having a morning routine is fantastic. But if you stress that you missed a day
of your morning routine,
or maybe you stress because you missed
a aspect of your morning routine, right?
You're doing the whole thing.
You're meditating, you're working out,
you're journaling, and then one day you missed journaling.
All of a sudden, you're throwing it all out, you're saying,
Oh gosh, like just messed up. One day you got called into work early. One day you had
to stay up late for work. One day and all of a sudden you're going, God, I just wanted
to be able to stick to my program. I don't have any flexibility, right? That actually causes
more stress. Also having this belief that I have to do the same exact thing every day,
which by the way isn't realistic. I want to ask you, what activity could you say you have done
every day of your life forever without fail? It's probably breathing, brushing your teeth,
and showering. And even that third one for some of you may be questionable, right? But hopefully we brush our teeth every day, we breathe of course every day,
and we shower every day. Those are three things that you can say, yes, I've done those three things
pretty much every day of my life. Beyond that, what else? Eating of course, drinking water,
of course, the obvious things. But beyond that, if you took away the basic necessities, sleeping,
if you took away the basic necessities, what could you say you've done every single day of your life?
It's very hard.
And so when we get into these rigid routines and patterns and we say to ourselves, for
the rest of my life, I'm going to do this every day.
Every single day, I have to do this because if I don't do this, I'm not going to feel
good.
I'm not going to feel at my best if I don't do this.
Notice how different that is to a mindset of saying
I feel better when I do this versus I'm not going to feel at my best if I don't do this. That's distress.
You stresses I always feel better when I do this. I'm
Happy when I do this. I get to do this. Notice how rigid thinking
actually just compounds stress.
So I'm not saying don't have rigid patterns.
I'm saying have a different relationship with your rigid patterns.
Have a different relationship with him wanting routine.
It's not a must.
It's not a, I have to.
It's not a, if I don't, it's a, I get to, it's a, this makes me better.
It's a, imagine what's possible, right?
As soon as you see that rigid thinking
and lack of flexibility, leading to negative self-talk,
start to become really mindful.
Another common internal cause of stress
is unrealistic expectations or perfectionism.
Now, people often look at perfectionism
as something just strive for. It almost makes you feel like you care more. Right? I've often had
people say to me, well, Jay, if you don't believe in perfectionism, does that mean you don't care?
And what I've realized is actually caring too much can make what I'm creating
worse. It can actually make me more anxious. It can actually make me
less able to do the thing.
I'll give you an example even with on purpose. If I'm extra stressed about a guest I'm about to have
on, I actually believe I have a worse conversation. I feel that I have better conversations when I've
prepared enough but not over-prepared. And that's the word I want to share with you. I want you to
look at your life as how can you prepare
but not over prepare. How can you create but not over create? How can you think but not
over think? Notice how it's when we add the word over over think over compensate, right?
Over prepare. That's when we're like, well, that's a bit over the top, right? That's
the feeling. So when it comes to deepening,
developing a healthier relationship
with our perfectionist mindset,
I'm not saying, see, this is what we do as humans.
We oscillate between two extremes.
We go, oh, well, I wasn't perfectionist.
Now I'm just gonna do whatever comes out.
I'm just gonna be quick.
And by the way, that is the process
to get back to the middle.
So if you meet a friend,
or if you find yourself
oscillating between two different extremes,
chances are you're actually trying to find your middle.
You're actually trying to find your center,
and finding your center is a beautiful thing.
So I'll give an example.
If you're someone who was a people pleaser, and now you're saying really eye boundaries. And often when we see our
friends do this, we go, oh, God, they're like overcompensating, but no, we almost have
to do that in the beginning. If you as someone as a perfectionist, you might just need to
fail every day, right? You might just need to fail every day. You might need to take
on a mini thing every day that allows you to break through that
desire to be perfect and make everything add up and make everything stack up. Notice
how we have to almost move from one extreme to the other to find ourselves in the middle.
In order to develop a healthy relationship with anything in the world, we have to find
our center. We have to find the middle. But in order to find the middle,
we often have to swing from left to right a few times. And as we swing more and more,
we start to settle in the middle. I want you to ask yourself with stress. How many of you
go through this with stress where you stress yourself out and then you take it really easy.
And then when you take it really easy,
you're like, oh no, I'm taking it too easy on myself
or I need to stress myself out again.
That's where we're living our unhealthy relationship
with anything in the world.
Even with our partners, it's like I see my partner every day,
I don't need to see my partner all year, right?
It's that middle path, it's that middle ground
the Buddha used to talk about, finding your center.
This has been a big, big lesson
I'm taking into next year of finding my center with everything I do, trying not to be an
extremist, but trying to find my center. But actually, I take that back using being an extremist
to find my center, not avoiding being an extremist. And by the way, when I say extremist, I mean
the idea of I'm being really healthy, I'm being really unhealthy, I may have to use that in order to find the middle.
And by the way, if I judge myself for saying, Oh my gosh, I've been too stressed out recently,
well, I'm not pushing myself enough recently, that is that process of finding your center,
find your center. Now, I wanted to raise this because I think a lot of us don't recognize something about
how all of us are experiencing lots of different stress.
And I wanted to raise this because there are 10 stressful life events.
According to a study, they found that these are the top stressful life events for adults.
Number one, death of a spouse.
Naturally, going through the death of a spouse can be one of the most stressful events
of your life.
It affects children.
If you have them, it affects a relationship you've developed.
It reflects a sense of identity.
It impacts your ability to think about your future.
There's so much that is affected by that.
If you've been through that this year, I want to send my prayers and love to you,
but I please, please, please, I want you to give yourself some grace.
Number two on the list is divorce.
I feel like divorce has become so common these days that we've become somewhat desensitized
to it.
We just assume that if someone's divorced, it's like, yeah, you know, if people get divorced
get on with it.
And it's like, I've interviewed people on the podcast this year about going through
divorces and how difficult and challenging it is.
Right. and how difficult and challenging it is. It's so challenging, emotionally, mentally, spiritually,
from a family point of view.
Another one that's on this list is death of a close family member.
Of course, so many people went through this during COVID,
and of course, this is a regular occurrence
for so many of us around the world.
And what I find is that we have this get up and go attitude where we almost
want to walk it off, shake it off, right? So I get up the next day and move on. And often we even
put on a brave face. We have to put on a brave face for family members, for children, for friends,
whatever it may be. And it's not that easy. Next on the list is injury or illness.
Natural for that to be there.
Next is marriage.
Marriage is one of the most stressful life events.
Moving in with someone is one of the most stressful life events.
But we underplay these things.
And we say, what's wrong with me?
What am I doing wrong?
Why is everyone else getting it right?
I'm sharing all of these with you to help you realize
that if you've been going through stress this year,
it's natural, it's normal.
And I don't want you to look at it as a weakness.
I don't want you to think of it as,
I'm so weak, I'm so lost, right?
The next one is job loss.
Of course, make sense and then retirement as well.
Maybe you have a family member, a parent,
going through retirement. And maybe they've been acting a bit different. I'm also showing these because I want
you to be more compassionate to other people. This is a big lesson I'm always taking into 2024.
Is this idea of recognizing how different people deal with stress, noticing how unique and
personal your relationship with stress is and how unique everyone personal your relationship with stress is and how unique
everyone else's relationship with stress is.
I was talking to someone the other day and they were talking to me about how one of their
family members is struggling with their health and the other family member is in denial.
And I was saying that well, their sense of denial is coming from a sense of fear and care. It's not coming from a place of hatred or disregard or the negligence.
It's actually coming from a place that they're so worried or scared to accept the truth.
And we don't often think about it like that, right?
This idea of we're so scared of people the way they deal with stress.
So let's move towards you stress.
Now a couple of things that have really helped me in my journey with stress is, first of
all, making a list of all the core triggers that I regularly experience of stress.
A lot of people think that avoiding stress or not thinking about it makes it better, but
actually exploring it and getting to know it better is actually what makes all the difference.
So when I'm not feeling stressed, I'll make a list of what are the things that regularly
stress me out.
It could be a person, it could be a place, it could be a project.
Now I'll create a response that's going to help me deal with that, right?
I'm going to create a plan to help me deal with that. So let's say I get stressed
when I'm invited to a social event. Okay, great. What am I going to do in order to make that
social event more meaningful, more purposeful, more thoughtful, more valuable? And I'm going
to seek one person in the networking space to make sure I connect deeply. And I'm going to practice
breath work before I leave. Am I going to make sure that I've thought about my outfit
two weeks in advance, not two hours in advance?
What can I do to support myself
in the common occurrences of that situation?
I find preparing for stress when you're not stressed
is much better than trying to solve stress when you are stressed.
A lot of us wait to beress to have to solve it.
The second thing that's made a huge difference in my life,
a big, big, big difference,
is not sleeping with my phone near my bed.
This has been a game changer.
I know I've said it before, but I'm saying it again.
Stop sleeping with your phone near your bed.
In 2024, leave that phone in another room,
get a real alarm clock,
allow yourself to wake up without your phone
and sleep without your phone,
because guess what, we're also squirreling
just before we go to bed.
So not only do we get to bed 30 minutes later,
we're also going to bed with all of those ideas.
And then in the morning, we do the same thing.
Your brain has no ramp up period.
Your brain basically has no start-up mode.
It has to go from zero to 60 miles per hour in three seconds like a sports car, a supercar.
And it's not trained to do that.
We are pressurizing our minds today to process as much as 74 gigabytes a day.
And ultimately, what I'm really sharing here is this idea of knowing when
to be harder on yourself and when to let go. This is wisdom, knowing when to push yourself and
when to hold back. And here's what I'll say to you, if you can push yourself positively towards the goal you love with motivation. That's brilliant. If you're starting
to push yourself at a negativity, condescending language, negative self-talk, that's when
you need to hold back.
I want to thank you so much for listening to today's episode. I hope that stress and
your relationship with stress is deeply improved in 2024.
Everything we share here is to help you positively work on yourself, not negatively hold
yourself back.
I promise you that 2024 or on purpose is going to be an even more phenomenal year.
I want to thank you for following, for subscribing, for leaving a review,
I promise you, there are so many exciting guests, so many more solos. Thank you for trusting me.
I am wishing you an amazing end to 2023 and I'm praying, meditating and wishing for you to have an
abundant, joyful and phenomenal 2024.
Challenges will come, but we'll navigate those together.
Stress is welcome, but we'll navigate those together.
Know that I'm here to help you be directed, guided,
and find that inner voice within.
And I'll always be here on on purpose.
Every Monday and Friday, I'm so grateful to those of you who listen to us every day.
Appreciate it deeply, sending you so much love to you and your family and your loved ones
from my heart to theirs.
Thank you so much, signing off and see you in 2024. This episode is brought to you by Masterclass.
And I've got some exciting news.
This month, my Masterclass on Navigating Change is live on the Masterclass platform.
Go to masterclass.com forward slash navigate change to tune in now.
I'm Cheryl McCollum, host of the Colk case podcast zone seven.
Join us every Wednesday to your cases like the Long Island serial killer.
You show like genuine interest and you can't fake it, but
these guys can see like right through to your soul.
So you have to be like
prepared. If you don't know your stuff, they're going to just call you out.
Listen to Zone 7 with Cheryl McCollum on the I Heart Radio app Apple podcast or wherever
you get your podcast.
The Street Stoic podcast is back. We are combining hip hop lyrics and quotes from some of the
greatest to ever grace a microphone.
It's a line from Lauren Hill and she says, don't be a hard rock when you really are
again.
Along with ancient wisdom from some of the greatest philosophers of all time.
Seneca, right?
And he says, your mind will take shape of what you frequently hold in thought.
For the human spirit is colored by such impression.
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