On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 7 Tips to Interact with Toxic Family Members During The Holidays (Pre- Party Practice)

Episode Date: December 8, 2023

How can you prevent toxic conversations? How can you prevent someone from triggering a negative response out of you? As we step into the holiday season, potentially tricky conversations during family ...gatherings can happen. We've all been there, dealing with relatives where the connection isn't as smooth as we'd like, and the conversations can be a bit of a challenge.  Before you switch into the festive gatherings, a bit of pre-party practice could be your secret weapon. And there is power in being the bigger person—leading with empathy and understanding.  In this episode, you’ll learn: The best practices for a restful sleep How to improve your sleeping habits How to change your body clock Let's make this holiday season one filled with warmth, understanding, and, of course, lots of love.  With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 02:00 The Sense of Discomfort Around Family 04:10 #1 Pre-Party Practice You Need Before the Holidays 10:03 #2: Prepare for the Questions Often Asked  12:14 #3: Family Gatherings are Rarely the Place to Fix Things Out 18:10 #4: Select Your Allies and Communicate with Them Beforehand 20:04 #5: Alter the Direction of the Evening by Showing Affection 23:07 #6: It’s Okay to Vent Afterwards 26:15 #7: Don’t Let Anyone Get Under Your Skin 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/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The One You Feed explores how to build a fulfilling life admits the challenges we face. We share manageable steps to living with more joy and less fear through guidance on emotional resilience, transformational habits, and personal growth. I'm your host, Eric Zimmer, and I speak with experts ranging from psychologists to spiritual teachers offering powerful lessons to apply daily. Create the life you want now. Listen to the one you feed on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. What do a flirtatious gambling double agent in World War
Starting point is 00:00:35 II, an opera singer who burned down an honorary to kidnap her lover? And a pirate queen who walked free with all of her spoils, haven't comment. They're all real women who were left out of your history books. You can hear these stories and more on the Womanica podcast. Check it out on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen. The children who need the most love, often ask for for it in the most unloving ways. What I find is that people who usually stare up trouble or have this toxic nature are
Starting point is 00:01:12 often people who feel unloved or unheard or unseen themselves. Usually their comments about other people are a way of getting attention, a way of feeling superior or a way of getting attention, a way of feeling superior, or a way of feeling interesting. Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose, the number one mental health podcast in the world. Thanks to each and every one of you that come back every week to listen, learn and grow. one of you that come back every week to listen, learn and grow. It has been an incredible 2023.
Starting point is 00:01:54 I want to thank you all for posting how on purpose is your most listened to podcast this year, or even if it's second or third or fourth on your list, I love you. I appreciate you. I genuinely, I'm so grateful for your love and support and we're only getting started. We're only getting better. I want to make sure that you've subscribed to the podcast, make sure that you've left a review. All of this helps podcasts and also means you'll never miss an episode. They did an iOS update recently and it meant that your podcast app is not downloading the latest podcast immediately. So a lot of people were asking me, Jay, wait a minute, have you not uploaded a new podcast? No, we're uploading two new podcasts every single week, Monday and Friday, every Monday
Starting point is 00:02:36 you're going to get a guest, every Friday you're going to get me. And I don't want you to miss out. And of course, we have over four and a half years of episodes for you to listen to, which means you could listen to an episode of on purpose every day if that's what you want. Now, this episode is extremely timely, and I'm doing it because whenever I'm traveling, whenever I'm meeting lots of you,
Starting point is 00:02:59 one of the biggest questions I get is, Jay, how do I deal with my family? My family creates so much toxicity in my life, my family creates so much negativity in my life. If that sounds like you, this episode is for you. Now this isn't to say you don't love your family. The people that are saying this love their families. It's not that there is something hugely abusive that's happening,
Starting point is 00:03:27 but there is a sense of discomfort, there's a sense of stress, there's a sense of pressure. This isn't just about general holiday pressure, this is about pressure from specific people, you know you're going to have to spend time with. And that's why it gets particularly amplified during the holiday season because you almost have no way out. Maybe Christmas dinner is already set, maybe new as Eve is already set. All of these things can lead to a lot of stress and pressure. A lot of that stress and pressure comes in the build up, right? There's a lot of worry and anxiety that just kicks in in the build up even before you've got to the day, what to speak of the day itself. So I hope that the next few tips that I'm going to share with you are going to help you
Starting point is 00:04:18 lower that stress, deal with that anxiety better and learn how to navigate those situations. And I want to start off by sharing this. Think back to when you used to go clubbing, and you were thinking, Jay, I still go clubbing. Got it, understood. I used to go clubbing. But I remember when I used to,
Starting point is 00:04:41 we would always do pre-drinks, right, whether it was in someone's college dorm room, whether it was someone's apartment, whether it was outside the club, right? Whatever was possible with our budget at the time. But there was always this idea of pre-drinks. And the idea of pre-drinks is it would get you in the zone, you'd get to hang out with everyone, it would be a more casual atmosphere, but it prepared you for the night. It prepared the tone, it prepared your mindset.
Starting point is 00:05:08 Not even if you saw it that way, but that was the point of it. So, what we need during the holidays is a pre-party practice. Instead of a pre-party drink session, we need a pre-party practice. If you've got a party to go to, if you've got an event to go to,
Starting point is 00:05:24 if you've got your family a party to go to, if you've got an event to go to, if you've got your family's home to go to, you need to create a practice or a ritual that gets you in the right mindset. Now, for some of you, it could be breath work. This is a big one for me. I find that when I'm anxious, my breath is what gets out of control. Now, if you've read things like a monk or heard things like a monk, you'll know this example, but it's something that's worth repeating. When I first saw a young monk teaching other younger monks on their first day of school, when I asked him what he was teaching them, he said he was teaching them how to breathe.
Starting point is 00:06:01 This obviously blew my mind because it was a 10-year-old monk telling me this. And I said to him, why do you teach them how to breathe. This obviously blew my mind because it was a 10-year-old monk telling me this. And I said to him, why do you teach them how to breathe? And he said, well, what did you learn at school? And I was like, I think I learned one, two, three, and ABC. And he said, well, we teach them how to breathe because the only thing that stays with you from the moment you're born, to the moment you die, is your breath. And he said, what changes when you're happy, your breath, what changes when you're sad, your breath, what changes when you're elated, your breath, and what changes when you're exhausted, your breath,
Starting point is 00:06:40 your breath is intertwined with every emotion in your life. So if you learn how to navigate your breath, you can navigate life. Now this has had such a profound impact on me ever since I heard it, because I started to recognize how all of my emotions had a different breath pattern. It's even why we use the language like,
Starting point is 00:07:03 you take my breath away, or that was breath taking, right? Or let me catch a breath. I'm out of breath, right? Breath is reconnected to all of those emotions. So you may find that in the build up to going out, you start breathing shallower and you start breathing quicker.
Starting point is 00:07:22 Now when that starts to happen, it's natural to panic. Maybe you experience sweat. Maybe you need to talk to your partner or a loved one that's going to the event and you're just pouring out and struggling and stressing about it all. I've found that a pre-party practice of breath work can be huge. So what you want to practice is this. You want to breathe in for account of four and you want to practice is this, you want to breathe in for a count of four and you want to exhale for a count of more than four. You want your exhale to be longer than your inhale and that will slow your heart rate down. If you repeat that 10 times, you will feel your breath get deeper and you will feel your heart rate get slower as well. Try that out before as a pre-party practice.
Starting point is 00:08:08 Now, another one of your pre-party practices, maybe for you, what really helps, is listening to a song that puts you in a good mood. You're gonna get your dance on, right? Everyone's been doing the David Beckham challenge, you're probably seeing me and my wife do it, and I failed to get out to dance,
Starting point is 00:08:23 but maybe you're gonna get your partner, maybe you're gonna dance, maybe you're probably seeing me and my wife do it and I failed to get out of dance, but maybe you're going to get your partner, maybe you're going to dance, maybe you're going to move. That can really get you in the right zone to put yourself in the minds of, I'm going to have fun tonight. I think there's two types of mindsets before you go somewhere. It's like I'm either going to try to not have a bad time or I'm going to make sure it's a good time. And I think that often what we end up settling for is, I hope it's a good time. Now there's a big difference between, I'm going to make
Starting point is 00:08:53 it a good time, I hope it's a good time or I'm going to avoid a bad time. Right? They're very different mindsets. Let's walk down each of those. So the idea of, God, I hope it's not as bad as I think it's going to be. The challenge with that is you are still leaving the success of the evening up to other people. So the idea of, I hope it's not as bad as I think it's going to be, you're hoping, hoping means you're helpless in how it's going to go. You're saying you don't have any impact or any control or any skew or steer as to how this evening can go. You have surrendered yourself powerless and now you're walking into a space allowing for it to be what it's going to be. That doesn't work. We've all tried that before.
Starting point is 00:09:39 The other way to do it is say, I hope it's going to be good. Now you're doing the opposite. At least you've added a positive twist to it, but again, you're still hoping, you're still allowing the circumstances and whatever happens in the environment to define how you feel. And the third is, I'm going to make today a great night. I'm going to make sure I have fun. I'm going to create opportunities for connection and fun. And this mindset, what it does is it takes your power back.
Starting point is 00:10:09 Notice how this isn't positive thinking. This isn't fooling yourself. It's not tricking yourself. It's actually coming at it from the point of view of saying, you know what? I know myself. I understand myself. I accept that there are things tonight that are not going to be easy, but I still know how to have a good time. You're reclaiming your power, you're reclaiming your focus,
Starting point is 00:10:33 and you're reclaiming your strength, and that's exactly what we need to do in these scenarios. Now, having done that, so you've got a pre-party practice, right? First of all, could be refining your intention or your mindset as we just did. It could be doing the breath work practice. It could be dancing, putting on a song you love, setting yourself up. So what you want to do is make sure that in your schedule, you have a pre-party practice set up for you to do it. Sounds crazy, but I promise you will help you so much.
Starting point is 00:11:03 It could even be rehearsing your answers to the questions that you know you're going to get asked. So you know that annoying person in your family is going to say, when are you getting married? Or are you dating anyone yet? Right? The relationship questions are often the hardest ones. Maybe you've just been through a breakup. Maybe you had a great relationship that didn't quite work out. Maybe you took someone over last year, and this year you're not with them anymore. Maybe you're with someone,
Starting point is 00:11:30 but you're not ready to get married. Maybe you don't want to get married. Maybe you don't want to have kids. Whatever it may be, you know what those questions are going to be. Having rehearsed answers, practiced answers, allows you to set yourself up to win. So often what I'll do is before an event,
Starting point is 00:11:46 I'll write down the questions are most likely to get asked, almost like a FAQ's, right? Frequently asked questions like on a website. Write out your FAQs and then write out your answers practiced so that when the question is asked, which it inevitably will, you're not surprised by it. I think this is something that a lot of people
Starting point is 00:12:07 make a mistake about. What we're doing is we're standing there the whole time hoping, don't ask me that question. Don't ask me that question. If he asked me that question, I'm gonna flip out, or if they go there, I'm gonna lose it, they are gonna go there. They are going to go there.
Starting point is 00:12:21 This is all about resetting expectations, right? They are going to go there. They are going to go there. This is all about resetting expectations, right? They are going to go there. They are going to be annoying. They are going to be frustrating. They are going to be inappropriate. It will happen. And therefore, you being prepared is far better than you setting yourself up for failure.
Starting point is 00:12:40 And that's often what we do is we set ourselves up for failure because we hope and wish in weight rather than predict plan and prepare. We don't want to hope, wish in weight and worry. That leads to worrying, not only in the build up, but even on the evening. Whereas if we're prepared, predictive and planned, we're now ready to answer those questions. So make sure you write down the FAQs. Oh, did you not get promoted this year?
Starting point is 00:13:10 Whatever it is, right? Write down those predictive questions and have your answers ready. Now point number three is often, if it's been bubbling especially, right? Like I know someone who's telling me that whenever they get asked about, you know, why they're not dating yet, it really gets under their skin because the truth is the reason why it
Starting point is 00:13:32 triggers us is because we're struggling with it. Right, if you're not struggling with something and someone criticizes you, it usually doesn't trigger you. Right? If you don't care about how you dress and someone comments on what you're wearing, you won't care. But if you do care about the fact that you've been how you dress and someone comments on what you're wearing, you won't care. But if you do care about the fact that you've been struggling in dating and someone says something, it triggers you much worse. Right? It's natural. And they were saying to me that whenever they got asked this question, it really irks them. And they just want this person to understand that
Starting point is 00:14:00 it's inappropriate to ask that. Now, I agree that people ask and say things that I wish they didn't say. And I agree that often it is malicious. It's not like it's something you just have to let go of. But what I've discovered is that family gatherings are rarely the place to fix or fight things out, right? It's rarely the place that you're going to have a healthy debate and a discussion
Starting point is 00:14:29 that leads to a resolution. Because emotions are high for everyone. Everyone is worrying about what everyone else is thinking of them. And often the person who tries to solve the problem ends up looking like the problem. Have you ever experienced that before where you're the one trying to solve the problem? But you end up looking like the problem. Have you ever experienced that before where you're the one trying to solve the problem,
Starting point is 00:14:46 but you end up looking like the problem, and now everyone thinks that you ruined Christmas, right? Like that, and that isn't true. It's not right, but it is human psychology, because everyone feels like they're on display, they're trying to have a good time. The person who gets triggered, even if it's truly valid,
Starting point is 00:15:02 isn't going to be seen as the person who's fixing. isn't going to be seen as the person who's fixing. They're going to be seen as the person who's fighting it out. And so what I often find is that in this scenario, if you can remind yourself, hey, if I want to fix this, I need to approach it at a different time. If I want to fight it out,
Starting point is 00:15:21 I need to approach it at a different time. It's not always the right time to fix something, and it's not always the right time to fight it out, I need to approach it at a different time. It's not always the right time to fix something and it's not always the right time to fight something. And fixing and fighting about something is far more about timing than we give it credit for. We don't lose fights because we're bad at fighting. We often lose fights because we get our timing wrong. Right? It's not that you're bad at fighting, it's that you're bad at timing. It's not that you're bad at fixing, it's that you're bad at timing. And I find this over and over and over again, where we don't time conversations effectively. Think about this in general in life, right? Like,
Starting point is 00:16:03 someone walks through the door, you say something to them immediately. You wake up in the morning, someone says something to you immediately. Most of our conversations that are uncomfortable are had at the wrong time. And if you can get the timing right, which isn't the holiday dinner, which isn't the holiday event,
Starting point is 00:16:20 chances are you may be able to get to some resolution. So don't try and fix it and fight it out at a time when it's not the right time. And I'm repeating this because I know you're going to need to hear me in your head when you're in that moment because guess what, when you're valid, when you know that it's right for you to raise this and push this and make something known and you're also thinking, well, everyone just needs to realize this person's wrong. And you think, this is it, this is my moment, right? We've all been there. And by the way, I've been there too.
Starting point is 00:16:50 I've made this mistake many times. This segment about connectivity is brought to you by AT&T. AT&T believes connecting changes everything. Do you struggle to connect with others? Sometimes past experiences like feeling left out, tough times or messy relationships can make us throw up these walls we might not even notice. And guess what? These walls end up isolating us from the very people we want close. Especially now with everyone working from different places and all over the map,
Starting point is 00:17:21 staying close to others matters more than ever. It's not just about casual interaction, it's about fostering a sense of belonging, empathy, and shared understanding in a world that's increasingly interconnected yet emotionally distant. Staying connected especially when miles apart has become more accessible than ever. Here are some ways to keep those meaningful connections alive, no matter the distance. Number 1 Video Conferencing Apps like FaceTime, WhatsApp, Zoom, and Skype are your portal to a more connected world. From daily catch-ups with loved ones, to brainstorming sessions with colleagues, these moments
Starting point is 00:17:56 bridge that physical gap and remind us that we're not alone. 2. Hosting Virtual Events Ever thought about live streaming special events like birthdays, anniversaries, or even weddings, it's all possible with the use of video platforms. But it's not just about the big moments, plan a virtual hangout with friends for a book club session, or maybe doing an online games night. It's like bringing the fun right into your living room, no matter where everyone actually is. 3. Create a Netflix Party Movie nights with friends and family take on a whole new vibe
Starting point is 00:18:27 with Netflix party. Sync up your shows and chat away in a group chat while watching together. It's like having a cozy movie night, but with everyone sprawled across different couches. Number four, seek support online. Feeling down or anxious, you're not alone. Online therapy is a powerful resource to lean on
Starting point is 00:18:44 when things get tough. Connecting with an online therapist can offer that support and guidance you need even when physical closeness isn't an option. I hope these tools can help you build meaningful connections with the people around you and decrease any sense or feeling of isolation. This has been brought to you by AT&T. AT&T believes connecting inspires, unites, heals and helps us grow. Connecting changes how we live our lives for the better. Number four, really important. Make someone else aware who can have your back. I think in these moments where you're not going to defend yourself or fight it or fix it out. It's great to have someone else who has your back and
Starting point is 00:19:25 nicks is it. So if you've told a family member or a friend and said, look, I really don't appreciate being asked these questions. When someone asks me and I, you see me get a bit uncomfortable and, you know, it's hard for me to just let it slide. Do you mind just stepping in and say, Hey, yeah, you know, like they're doing great at work right now. Well, you know, actually things are going great. Like, you know, let's talk about this and they can change the topic. So they're also not ruining the vibe, but they can step in and help you. And I think we often are scared to ask for help. And then afterwards we'll look at someone and say, well, why didn't you say anything?
Starting point is 00:19:57 And they'll say, well, I didn't know you wanted me to run to your defense. I didn't want to feel like you needed support, right? So that idea of why, you know, we don't ask for help. and then afterwards we will be like, well, why didn't you help me and the person says well? I didn't know you needed it. So selecting your allies, right? Selecting your allies and communicating with them beforehand. This is a strategy that's often used in business meetings where if you're presenting a new idea or you know you're going to have to respond to an idea, you've already got everyone's buying in the room
Starting point is 00:20:31 so that when you present it or when you respond, people are already on side. And often in our families, we don't realize how much people need to know this and how much people need to be aware. So feel free to speak to a couple of people and say, look, I find this really uncomfortable and I'm not asking you to save the day. I'm not asking you to interject and create a scene either, but I'd love for you to help me to just redirect the conversation, right?
Starting point is 00:20:54 This can be a huge, huge win for you and it makes it easier on the other person as well because they kind of get the message through other people. Now, the next one I'm going to share with you may be a slightly risky strategy, but it's something that's worth considering. It's inspired by this beautiful quote from Russell Barkley where he said that the children who need the most love often ask for it in the most unloving ways. What I find is that people who usually stare up trouble or have this toxic nature in a setting are often people who feel unloved or unheard or unseen themselves. And usually their comments about other people are a way of getting attention, a way of feeling superior,
Starting point is 00:21:45 or a way of feeling interesting. And while our job is not to think that's okay or condone it, we can look at that and recognize that this person is feeling unvalidated, this person is feeling unimportant, and this person is probably feeling insignificant and we see this again and again and again and what's really interesting about this is I've often seen that if I can be thoughtfully genuinely loving towards this individual then there may be an opportunity.
Starting point is 00:22:26 That's if I have the ability to do that, you may say, you have no ability to do that, totally respect it. But if I can, if I can, I have found that it can actually be revolutionary for my relationship with them. So I try my best in every scenario that I'm in to say, okay, how do I demonstrate love and affection to this person in a genuine way, not in a fake way, not as a technique? Maybe I'm going to compliment something they're wearing. Maybe I'm going to congratulate them on the news that I heard about them. Maybe I'm going to ask them
Starting point is 00:23:03 a question that's open and then acknowledge the greatness or something good about what they've done, right? And what that does is it gives that person an opportunity. Now, if you do this with an expectation that, oh, this person's now going to be nice to me, that's going to set you up for failure because they may not. But what it does is it sets them up with an opportunity to show you that they may not feel that way anymore, that they may not. But what it does is it sets them up with an opportunity to show you that they may not feel that way anymore, that they may have not changed, but you may set them off on a different track. And I'm not saying that you have the power to do this, and that you can do it, and all that kind of stuff. But it's worth a shot. It's worth the
Starting point is 00:23:42 opportunity to compliment them, congratulate them, connect with them on something, give it an opportunity. I know some of you think, you've already tried this before and they still the same person, I get it, totally fair. But give it a go. Give it a go because you might proactively be able to alter the direction of the evening
Starting point is 00:24:02 simply by showing them some affection in a genuine way, not as a technique. Hi, I'm Danny Shapiro, host of the Hit Podcast Family Secrets. What happens when the person you idolize, the person you think you know best, turns out to be someone else entirely. And in a world where everyone is trying to fix themselves, fix their minds, fix their bodies, what does it look like when we settle into the reality
Starting point is 00:24:27 of what it might mean to be unfixed? And what if you were kidnapped by your own grandparents and left with an endless well of mysteries about yourself and those around you? These are just a few extraordinary puzzles we'll be exploring in our ninth season of Family Secrets. With over 32 million downloads and nearly 100 unique stories in our feed, we continue to be
Starting point is 00:24:51 in awe of our guests whose stories of courage and tenacity about breaking through the walls of secrecy never fail to amaze. I hope you'll join me and my astonishing guests for this new season of Family Secrets on the i iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you'll get your podcasts. Craig Ferguson, the Grand Master, the architect of wisdom, Maharishi of Murth, goes in search of joy. I'm here to help. You'll be speaking with actors, doctors, comedians, and scientists, artists, and athletes, and people of faith in search of
Starting point is 00:25:25 extreme happiness. The United States of America are cram champions of the world. At last, a podcast on a mission, a podcast that wonders what is joy. Is it love, religion, drugs, success, money, revenge? Is it a surge of chemicals or a deeper awakening? Can it be nurtured, cultivated and refined? Find out, as Craig Ferguson explores the countless ways people find joy.
Starting point is 00:25:51 The celebrations that dances the science, poetry, laughter, and music of joy. Don't miss it. Joy with Craig Ferguson. Here it is, on the I-Hart Radio App Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Now, a couple more tips that I want to share with you.
Starting point is 00:26:11 This one is really important. It's okay to vent afterwards. If you had a painful night, people weren't loving, you know, people said things they shouldn't have said. Someone commented about something that really rubbed you the wrong way. It's so okay to vent afterwards. I think a lot of us also guilt ourselves. We go, I should be grateful for family
Starting point is 00:26:30 and I should be grateful for everything around me. And I think this is kind of where the gratitude movement can go wrong, where we go, well, I just have to be grateful for everything don't I, because I had Christmas dinner and I could be with my family. I should be grateful for that, shouldn't I? And I think so many of us get trapped in this false sense of gratitude I'm still in it and I could be with my family. I should be grateful for that, shouldn't I? And I think so many of us get trapped
Starting point is 00:26:45 in this false sense of gratitude where we're not acknowledging how we genuinely feel. If you need to vent, if you need to talk about it, if you need to let it out, be grateful for the fact that you have a friend or a family member to do that with, but don't use gratitude as a way to suppress your feelings. Don't use gratitude as a way to put your emotions aside and gloss over them.
Starting point is 00:27:07 Because what happens is when we do that, that's when we erupt. So most of the time when we erupt in a family dinner or a meeting is because we've been trying to convince ourselves like, I should be grateful, I should be thankful, I should be okay, okay, I should be fine. And it's almost like you're trying to put a lid on something, but it keeps popping off. Right, you're trying to put the lid, you're trying to hold it down so bad, but it's just trying to get out. So some of you may be able to genuinely be like, no, I am grateful and I can let this go,
Starting point is 00:27:33 but for some of you who it's been repetitive for, who it's continued to kind of build up for, that may be challenging, that may be difficult. And so I want you to give yourself the space to vent afterwards. Now a few things that are important. You want to pick someone that's loyal and private. You don't want to speak to someone who you know is going to go and tell that person or go and stir and create more issues. We've all been there with family as well. Find the person that you're thinking, okay, I can trust this person. they're not going to go and tell anyone else. Second of all, you want to find someone who is wanting to support you both when you're in the space and outside
Starting point is 00:28:14 of the space, because you need someone who themselves recognizes that it's a challenge, right? You don't want it to be someone who's trying to walk you out of it, talk you out of it, especially if it's got really really bad. And the other thing I say, the reason why I say, then afterwards, is because often what we do is we vent before. So we'll say things like, oh my God, this person, they're always like this, they're like that. And now what we've done is we've convinced ourselves that it's war. Then when we go in there, we're already on the defensive. That's not necessarily preparation.
Starting point is 00:28:45 It can actually be putting ourselves in a position of weakness, whereas when we then afterwards we get a sense of like, well, how did it go? Let's actually review it. And maybe it wasn't as bad as we thought. Maybe we've made it worse in our mind. And there's a famous quote from Seneca who said, we suffer twice once in imagination and once in reality, right? We suffer twice, we suffer in the buildup,
Starting point is 00:29:09 and then we suffer at the time. And that shift of mindset that I was talking about earlier can actually shift how we deal with it. Now, number seven, really important. And mirror some of what we've said. But when you're not trying to fix it and fight it out, often you find that that person is so set on bringing up a trigger topic, right?
Starting point is 00:29:30 How many times have you felt this? Where they're just obsessed to find a way to get under your skin? And what's really interesting is that in that time, we know that we don't want to let them get under our skin, but we do. And we're actually giving them the satisfaction of doing it. If someone's trying to get under your skin and you don't let them get under it, what do
Starting point is 00:29:51 you think annoys them more, right? Whether they succeeded or whether they didn't succeed. And I think for so many of us, we allow someone the joy of having got under our skin. And so use that competitive experience and say, you know what, I'm not going to let having God under our skin. And so use that competitive spirit and say, you know what, I'm not going to let them get under my skin. I'm better than that. I'm stronger than that. I don't need to let that happen. And there's no need for me to let it get that far.
Starting point is 00:30:17 And allowing yourself to use that competitive mindset to say, you know what, I'm not going to let them do it. And that's going to be an achievement for me. Sometimes we have to set a goal of not being triggered because we're using that desire of saying, I'm not gonna get triggered because I don't want them to get the satisfaction. I don't want them to trigger me
Starting point is 00:30:34 and then get that as well, right? So that's a great way to think about how to address it differently. I wanna thank you so much for listening to today and I really hope that you give it an opportunity to try some of these principles, to try some of these out in practice. Remember, the first thing I want you to check out is building a pre-party practice.
Starting point is 00:30:58 The second thing is resetting your expectations. The third is don't try to fix it or fight it out. Remember, it's not that you're a bad fighter or a bad fixer. You're bad at timing and make someone else aware who can have your back. That's a really, really powerful point. Make sure you give it an opportunity to compliment them, congratulate them, connect with them over something, surprising. You may not even realize that you have something in common, something you can talk about. Maybe it's sports, maybe it's something that someone in the family is going through. Maybe there's something you can connect with them on that isn't triggering.
Starting point is 00:31:32 And finally, make sure that you give yourself space to vent and make sure that you're avoiding those trigger topics or changing them up. Thank you so much for listening to today. I hope this helps you. I hope it helps your family. I know that some of these ideas you'll be like, I've thought about that. I've struggled, but sometimes we just need another reminder. I hope that this has been that reassuring reminder. I want you to have the best time during the holidays. I want you to have really beautiful moments and making great memories. I'll speak to you all very, very soon. I'll see you you all very very soon. I'll see you all very very soon. Thanks for tuning in again. Thank you for posting how much you've been listening to on purpose.
Starting point is 00:32:11 I'm so so deeply grateful and I will see you all very very soon. Thank you so much everyone. Regardless of the progress you've made in life, I believe we could all benefit from wisdom on handling common problems, making life seem more manageable, now more than ever. I'm Eric Zimmer, host of the One-Dee Feed Podcast, where I interview thought-provoking guests who offer practical wisdom that you can use to create the life you want. 25 years ago, I was homeless and addicted to heroin. I've made my way through addiction recovery, learned to navigate my clinical depression, and figured out how to build a fulfilling life. The one you feed has over 30 million downloads and was named one of the best podcasts by Apple
Starting point is 00:33:00 podcasts. Oprah Magazine named this is one of 22 podcasts to help you live your best life. You always have the chance to begin again and feed the best of yourself. The trap is the person often thinks they'll act once they feel better. It's actually the other way around. I have had over 500 conversations with world-renowned experts and yet I'm still striving to be better. Join me on this journey. Listen to the one you feed on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcasts. On his new podcast, six degrees with Kevin Bacon, join Kevin for inspiring conversations
Starting point is 00:33:36 with his friends and fellow celebrities who are working to make a difference in the world, like actor Mark Ruffalo. You know, I found myself moving up state in the middle of this fracking fight, you know, and I'm trying to raise kids there and, you know, my neighbors like willing to poison my water. Listen to 6 degrees with Kevin Bacon on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. you

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