Something You Should Know - How to Optimize Your Brain Chemistry & What Would You Do With More Money?
Episode Date: January 27, 2025Traffic accidents are an inevitable part of life. However, there are a few simple things you can do to improve your chances of NOT getting in an accident. Listen as I offer several proven strategies ...that will keep you and your car safer in traffic. https://www.edmunds.com/car-reviews/top-10/top-10-editors-tips-to-prevent-a-car-accident.html Serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin and endorphins are 4 brain chemicals that can make you happy or make you miserable. And there are ways to regulate these brain chemicals by making changes in the way you live your life. That is according to neuroscientist TJ Power who is co-founder of Neurify, an organization providing scientifically backed teachings to enhance mental health. TJ is also author of the book, The Dose Effect (https://amzn.to/3E42cDr). You will be fascinated to hear how these chemicals work in your brain and control your thoughts and feelings. We all have our own thoughts about money and what it represents. As a result, some people are cautious with their money while others are less so. Some people think of money as evil others think money will bring happiness. You individual attitudes about money come from somewhere and they can have a big impact on your financial success. Here to help you understand more about your relationship with money is Vicky Reynal. She is a financial psychotherapist in private practice who has been featured in the Financial Times, Good Housekeeping, and Women’s Health. She is also author of the book Money on Your Mind: The Unconscious Beliefs That Sabotage Your Financial Well-Being—and How to Break Free (https://amzn.to/4gbitDX). It is very hard to keep track of more than 3 things at once. It just is. It is a limitation of the human brain. Listen as I reveal why this is important and the interesting ways we cope with it. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/571010 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey Spotify, this is Javi. My biggest passion is music, and it's not just sounds and instruments.
It's more than that to me. It's a world full of harmonies with chillers. From streaming
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Today on Something You Should Know, how to dramatically improve your chances of not getting
into a car accident. Then brain hormones, brain
chemicals, there are four of them that really impact your quality of life. Ask
yourself, do you feel like your attention span is really strong? Do you feel very
consistently motivated? Do you have great relationships? If any of the answers that
you're not thriving, the brain chemistry is your answer and pursuing a life where
you intentionally boost these is going to lead you towards a life where you feel exceptionally good a lot of the time.
Also, why it's almost impossible to keep track of more than three things at a time
and a different way to look at your financial life and well-being.
I always invite people to be curious about what they imagine more money will get them.
The other way in which I ask the question is when they say,
I don't have enough, I ask, well, enough for what?
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Hi, welcome, and thank you for making Something You Should Know part of your day today.
I want to start by talking about a subject that people don't really like talking about,
and that is car accidents.
Because it seems that car accidents are a very common problem in the United States. part of your day today. I want to start by talking about a subject that people don't
really like talking about, and that is car accidents.
Because it seems that if you drive long enough,
sooner or later, you will find yourself in a car accident.
Hopefully not a serious one.
But there are some things you can
do to stack the odds in your favor
that you will not get in a car accident.
These suggestions come from the editors of Edmunds.com.
First of all, avoid the fast lane, because that's where most crashes occur.
If you're in the middle lane or the right lane, you have more escape routes to get out
of the way of trouble.
Scan ahead.
Don't just watch the car in front of you.
Watch the car in front of you, watch the car in front of it.
If you are looking further ahead, you'll have more time to react if something goes wrong.
Watch for blind spots. Don't trust your mirrors exclusively.
Actually look to the left or right before changing lanes.
Drive with your hands at 9 and 3 o'clock, not 10 and 2.
This gives you the best chance to maneuver quickly
to get out of the way.
Judge a driver by his car.
If a car has a lot of body damage or dirty windows,
assume you have a lousy driver driving it and steer clear.
And if you can, don't drive at night.
In addition to you being tired and fatigued, so are other drivers.
And it is at nighttime when drunk drivers are out in force.
And that is something you should know.
Let's talk about hormones, brain chemicals.
Specifically four of them.
Serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin, and endorphins.
There's a lot worth knowing and understanding about these things because
your behavior can impact the levels of these hormones in your body, and the levels of these
hormones can impact so much of your life. Here to help us understand how this all works is TJ Power.
He is a neuroscientist and speaker and author of a book called The Dose Effect.
Hey TJ, welcome to something you should know.
Mike, thanks for having me.
So first of all, I guess what we should do is explain, have you explained what these
four chemicals, serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin and endorphins are and what they do?
These chemicals evolve within the human brain over our hundreds of thousands of years of
evolution and each of them has a specific function.
Dopamine basically drives all our motivation, oxytocin connects us together, serotonin lifts
our mood and our energy levels and then endorphins can de-stress our brain.
Well, those sound like good things to have.
Yeah, I mean, they're good things to have.
And these chemicals were once thriving
when we were living in a more ancestor-type lifestyle
of waking up, living outdoors, loads of light,
hunting, hard physical work, natural food.
They were really designed for that experience of life.
And a lot of us are experiencing low levels
of these chemicals in the modern world, and that's And a lot of us are experiencing low levels of these chemicals
in the modern world.
And that's causing a lot of the mental difficulties
we struggle with.
So what determines those levels of chemicals
in my brain of those four things?
Is it hereditary?
Is it set?
Or is it lifestyle?
And how I live can affect them up or down or what?
Yeah, so there is a genetic component
to how much your brain will produce of each of these chemicals. Each chemical has
what we call a baseline. So you'd have for example your dopamine baseline which
is in any given moment how much dopamine can your brain generate. However, in our
modern world, behavior itself can have a massive impact on each of these
chemicals. Say for example with dopamine, if you were
sitting doing nothing, your dopamine would stay at a pretty stagnant level. If you
pulled out your phone and opened a social media feed and started watching videos,
your dopamine would rise very very rapidly. That for example is an example of quick dopamine.
Then we'd also have other examples of things like slow dopamine which you would get from say
cleaning your home for 30 minutes. That would be slow dopamine. So there's different behaviors
that will impact these chemicals. And when you do those behaviors, whether it's video games,
or you're cleaning your house, you impact the levels of dopamine in your system. How much do
you impact them? And how long does that impact last?
So we're in direct control of where these chemicals are at with each of the behaviors
we have. If you take oxytocin, for example, that second chemical, whenever you come in physical
contact with a human, so if you hug your kids or your partner, for example, immediately in that
moment, oxytocin begins to increase, creates feelings of love and connection
and safety in your body.
Serotonin, something like when you eat natural foods,
fruits, meats, veg, these kinds of foods,
serotonin increases, and there's a good lasting impact
of that benefit.
You'll have an hour or so, a few hours,
where the chemical will rise.
If you then went through a prolonged period
where you weren't stimulating the chemical,
it'd begin to fall back to baseline.
then went through a prolonged period where you weren't stimulating the chemical, it began to fall back to baseline.
But is the idea that you would want to deliberately impact these levels or is the idea to just
lead a healthy life and these things take care of themselves?
If I was chatting with a hunter-gatherer, they would have to not even think at all about
whether these chemicals were high.
And it's really important to consider this hunter- hunter gatherer idea because for 99.9% of human history, that's what our brain did.
It's a very small percentage of time that we've all sat inside and played on computers and phones.
And if you looked at their lifestyle, the chemicals were always thriving.
They'd never have to intentionally make sure they boosted them.
The modern lifestyle where we wake up, we spend all of our time inside pretty
much, we spend a lot of time isolated, our diets can be quite poor, we're very sedentary, that
lifestyle is leading us to now have to become much more conscious of how are we intentionally
boosting these chemicals. As you said, if you live a healthy lifestyle, you are going to be doing a
lot of actions that can boost them, but you still may be missing some key components. Someone might
be really good with their exercise and food and them, but you still may be missing some key components. Someone might be really good with their exercise and food
and sleep, but they might also be spending five hours a day
scrolling social media.
So they, for example, could also take some action
towards boosting them.
So what are the benefits?
I mean, this seems a little obvious,
but what are the benefits of doing this or even worrying
about this rather than just trying to lead a healthy life.
I mean, what's the benefit of really focusing in on this
and saying, let's raise these levels?
I would ask yourself the question,
do you feel like you're really thriving
as a human being right now?
Like, do you feel like your attention span is really strong?
Do you feel very consistently motivated throughout the day?
Do you have great relationships? Do you have great relationships?
Do you have great sleep?
Do you have good energy levels, a really positive mood?
And if any of those questions are,
nah, sometimes I feel really low in motivation
and my concentration isn't as good as it used to be,
and I do have trouble in my relationships
or I do feel tired quite often.
If any of the answers are you're not thriving,
the brain chemistry is your answer to that question.
And pursuing a life where you intentionally boost these is going to lead you towards a life
where you feel exceptionally good a lot of the time.
How much can you stimulate them and how do you know if you're doing it?
Do you do these things and all of a sudden you go, wow, my serotonin must be just raging.
Yeah, that's a good question.
It's becoming really familiar with what each chemical would feel like.
So if I ask you the question, what is an activity or task that you've done in the last week
that's made you feel really satisfied?
Is there any activity that comes to mind that created the emotion of satisfaction for you?
Well, exercise does that for me.
Yeah.
So you've got like a good feeling of satisfaction for you. Well, exercise does that for me. Yeah, so you've got like a good feeling of satisfaction.
So that if you felt satisfaction,
that means dopamine increased and that's a good win.
Some people might get satisfaction from art,
they might get it from cleaning,
they might get it from sport,
they might get it from whatever it may be.
So dopamine would be you feel satisfied.
And if you just look at the other side of dopamine,
what we call quick dopamine,
when you scroll your phone or you drink alcohol
or you eat sugar,
it doesn't actually create a feeling of satisfaction.
It creates a feeling of, I really want more,
which is the part of the difficulty with dopamine.
With oxytocin, if you had a moment
where you felt loads of love in your body,
like a real peace, content, loving feeling
as a result of like a relationship moment
with a kid or a family member, that would mean oxytocin was up.
If your mood just felt quite like happy and light and positive that would be serotonin and then the endorphins is a very
powerful euphoric feeling which can come from real hardcore exercise. So if you, for example, might've heard of runners high, where someone runs for a prolonged
period of time and gets a very euphoric, almost drug-like experience from it, that would be
endorphins.
You've got satisfaction, love, positive mood or proper euphoria.
Well, can we run through the four and just like an example of what you could do to increase
them, given that you identify as having maybe low levels
of any one of them?
Yeah, so with the dopamine,
I would say if I could pick two things
that would be really powerful for your dopamine levels,
one would be what we call phone fasting,
fasting being the term of taking a prolonged break
from something.
We would really recommend phone fasting
for the first 30 minutes of your day when you wake up. We would really recommend phone fasting for the first
30 minutes of your day when you wake up. I run a research lab called Dose Lab and we see in our
research that that's insanely beneficial for the brain. So you phone fast for 30 minutes in the
morning and 60 minutes in the evening. And that means physical separation from your phone where
you don't see it once for those periods. The other thing for dopamine that's amazing is what we call
flow state,
which is where you get into a really deep state of concentration on a task.
If I was to ask you the question, like, have you done a task recently, maybe a working task, maybe a task in your home that's really deeply focused your brain?
Yeah, well, my work deeply focuses my brain.
So, yeah.
And is there any one aspect of the work that you find the most enjoyment in?
You get the most into focus?
Well, I like this part.
I like talking to people.
Yeah, the podcast.
Yeah.
So this, for example, may be your flow state, which is podcasting.
And that would make sense if that's your career.
That would make sense that a podcast would be your flow state.
And everyone has something that is their flow state, something they intrinsically are good at,
and their brain really likes to focus on. When we focus for longer than 15 to 20 minutes on just one
thing. So that would mean like, just like right now, you and I aren't also going on our iMessage
or our email or something that would take us out of flow state. Oxytocin, physical touch is a really
good one, whether that's romantic physical touch
or friends and family,
increasing the quantity of interaction with humans
and also pets.
So that's hugging humans, interacting and cuddling pets
is really good for oxytocin.
The other one for oxytocin is really thinking about
how often you make a contribution to somebody else's life.
We've all had that experience of doing something kind for someone and then thinking,
oh, I feel quite good now that I've helped that person out with whatever it may be or made someone dinner
or picked someone up from somewhere or whatever it might be.
Oxytocin is driving you to contribute.
So you've got touch and contribution.
Serotonin.
Natural environments, absolutely unreal.
There's this incredible researcher called King Lee in Japan who's done this whole research
into forest bathing and what we call serum serotonin levels.
When humans are in forests, you build tons and tons of serotonin.
If you can ever get into a forest, that would be awesome.
The other one for serotonin is your food.
If you can eat single ingredient foods, meaning steak, chicken, fish, eggs, yogurt,
fruits, nuts, anything that just came from the jungle basically and has been here for
hundreds of thousands of years as opposed to ultra processed foods, that'd be great.
So nature and gut health. And then the final one, endorphins, either exercising hard like
you mentioned earlier or singing music out loud. Those are two methods that are really good.
Oh, not my singing.
It doesn't matter whether it's good or bad quality.
I'm sure there's been a time in your life, maybe you're at like a bar or something
and you're drinking and you had a good sing and you probably felt quite good when you were doing it.
We're talking about four brain chemicals that make a huge difference in your life.
And my guest is TJ Power.
He's author of a book called The Dose Effect.
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So TJ, I like what you said a moment ago. I like hearing about those four brain chemicals.
What I'm wondering is, is there a flip side to this? Are there things we're doing that
are actually suppressing those hormones that we need to stop doing as opposed to just finding
things that will increase them? suppressing those hormones that we need to stop doing as opposed to just finding
things that will increase them.
For sure.
And this is where this is the most important factor.
So it's good we've come to this idea for all of humanity's evolution.
Dopamine was the primary chemical we were in the pursuit of, because we
would get dopamine hits off the main things that we're keeping us alive.
So if we successfully stumbled across some fruit
or if we caught an animal or if we built shelter
or if we started a fire, these things that were essential
for our survival that were a lot of effort to attain
would create dopamine in our brain,
they create satisfaction and they would help humanity
survive without dopamine in the human brain,
there would be no humans. It drove us to do all these actions.
In the modern world, maybe about 500 to 1,000 years ago,
we figured out how to hack dopamine for the first time
with things like alcohol and tobacco.
Those are the first sort of things
that could create a very rapid stimulation of dopamine
in an unnatural way.
These were concepts that weren't from the natural world.
They were modern creations, especially as we began to harness them and chemical-fy them
more and more.
And then we began inventing more stuff, pornography.
We also invented social media, which is huge.
And these kinds of things over-stimulate dopamine.
They create this rapid increase in the chemical.
And because of that rapid increase, we effectively burn out the dopamine engine.
If you got in a manual car and you didn't put it into gear and then you just rev the
engine every day, eventually you'd burn that engine out and it would break.
That's exactly what we're doing with the overstimulation of dopamine through things like social media
or alcohol or sugar or pornography.
That's then causing what we call low dopamine levels.
And if ever in your life, you're in a state
where you feel kind of apathetic,
can't be bothered to do anything,
that you might be sitting on the sofa
scrolling your phone for a while.
And then even the thought of getting up and going
and making your dinner feels like effort,
that's because your dopamine level is low.
And likely because of one of the things you just described.
Yeah, often nowadays, the phone is like the primary factor.
And as we've seen the phone grow in popularity
and how much humans spend their time on it,
how every generation, whether it's young teenagers
that people worry about or when I was in the coffee shop earlier,
I saw a couple that must be in their 70s
that didn't say a word to each other for 20 minutes
whilst they both rolled their
Phones the phone is disrupting all generations in humanity because of the way which it stimulates our dopamine
We're so hooked on interacting with it. Well, this is this is so interesting and you know, we've all heard those stories or you know
You know laughter is good for you and raises hormone levels or listening to music
or what about those things?
Yeah, laughter is magic.
Laughter actually really is great for our endorphin system,
especially if you really laugh.
Like if you're really finding something funny
and almost it's like hurting your stomach level funny,
that's magic for endorphins,
which provides an amazing de-stressing effect on our brain. It calms
our brain a lot. Music as well. Music is really powerful. As
long as you're not changing song very regularly. In the modern
world, people are like clicking next song every like 20 seconds.
So it's not as calming for the brain, but especially back in
the day of cassette players and putting the, I don't know what
it's called when you put like a't even know what it's called,
when you put like a disc on there
and it's like a nice proper old method of listening to music.
That sort of stuff would have been great for the brand.
So all of that stuff helps if you,
but is there a formula to it
or it's just the more you do, the better it is?
Or, I mean, can you ever do too much of this or what?
It's very rare to do too much of it. I mean you could choose to only do one of the if you fell in love with someone and you decided you're just gonna lie in bed and sleep together for 10 hours
a day every single day you would certainly get a lot of oxytocin but the other chemicals would begin
to reduce because you'd stop working and getting dopamine from hard work and start going outside
and getting serotonin and so on.
So you technically could, but it's unlikely
in the modern world that you're gonna overdo
one of these chemicals.
The vast majority of the challenge we're facing
is that we're completely hooked on dopamine.
So we're spending a lot of our time
centering our life around,
when am I gonna be on my phone?
When am I gonna watch Netflix? When am I gonna have my be on my phone? When am I going to watch Netflix?
When am I going to have my next drink of alcohol?
When am I going to have my next sugary meal?
Not only is that overstimulating dopamine, it's creating a life where the
prioritization of really close, intimate relationships and hiking outside in
nature and listening to music and singing songs and these key actions humans need.
They're going lower on the prioritization list than the dopamine that we're seeking for.
So that's kind of the main challenge occurring.
But that seems almost like an addiction
that's gonna be really hard to stop.
If you're craving Netflix and getting on your phone
and eating a sugary meal, I mean, those things,
those are things that are hard to resist
if you've developed a habit or a liking towards them.
100%. It is hard to break these addictions.
This whole framework, I've not built this as just a neuroscientist that I think,
oh, everyone should be healthy.
I was in an extremely unhealthy lifestyle with alcohol and partying and pornography and social media.
I just grew up as a teenager. That's what everyone around me was doing.
And I thought, well, that's the life you live.
Then I went to really study this and got deep into the research behind it.
And I was like, wow, I'm completely breaking my brain chemistry.
And that's no wonder that I'm there for overthinking things and struggling with my mood and sometimes feeling depressed and so on. And I thought it was just because of the life events I was going through this
grief that I was going through. I came to discover that these addictions like needed
to be broken and they can be broken, but it's just like, how much do you want to feel good?
You have to start asking yourself that question. Like I made that decision in my life that
I was like, but you really want to feel good. I want to energetically feel good.
I want to be able to like exercise regularly.
I want to feel confident.
I want to be able to really nail my career
and build an awesome career.
And some of the addictions have to be sacrificed
in order to attain a life that you really love.
Seems like most of them would have to be sacrificed.
Depending on the intensity of the addiction.
For me, with alcohol, for
example, like I'd loved drinking alcohol too much for alcohol to remain a key
part of my life.
So I had to let go of alcohol.
If you were someone that worked all week and had a great week and then on a Friday
night had a glass of red wine, then that's fine.
That's not going to do any damage to your experience of life.
It might enhance your experience of life.
Why do you have that glass of red wine.
If you're someone that really over consumes different things,
it would be important to step away from them.
So obviously there's a lot to consider in what you've said,
but if you had to boil it down,
like what is the biggest challenge that people face
as it relates to these four brain chemicals and
improving them as best we can? I hold the perspective that the phone is the most
significant challenge facing our world today and that varies across generations
how much people believe that is the case. The only real evidence I would suggest
it really is the case is that mental health has rapidly, rapidly changed since phones became massive, specifically smartphones and social media.
We always had the alcohol and the cigarettes and the pornography, but we didn't have the
phone.
And I think every single human in the world could benefit so much from waking up and not
having their phone in their bedroom, not having it charging in their bedroom, waking up, going to the bathroom,
splashing cold water on their face, brushing their teeth,
maybe having their shower if you have a shower
in the morning, and getting your day going,
creating momentum for your day
before you see a single notification from the phone.
We've done this process, as I say,
with over 50,000 people, and it's ridiculous
what happens to things like depression and our anxiety, how motivated someone becomes
just by simply not going onto that device when you wake up.
This certainly sounds like if addressed
could really solve a lot of problems for a lot of people.
I appreciate you explaining all this.
TJ Power has been my guest.
He's a neuroscientist, international speaker.
And the name of his book is The Dose Effect. And there's a link to that book in the show notes. TJ, this was very informative. And I appreciate you spending the time with us.
I like those questions, man. I do lots of podcasts, and they were really cool. They were fun.
Hi, I'm Laura Cathcart Robbins, and I am the host and creator of the podcast, Only One In The Room.
Every week, my co-host Scott Slaughter and I invite you to join us and lose yourself in someone's only one story. The Only One In The Room has a wide variety of guests, from prisoners to abuse
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Ladies and gentlemen.
What are you doing?
What do you mean?
I'm making it simple.
I'm making the promo.
Just keep it simple.
Just say, hey, we're the Braav bros,
two guys that talk about Bravo. Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls,
we're the Brav Bros. No! Dude, stop with the voice. Just keep it simple. I've seen
promos on TV, dude. This is how you get the fans engaged. This is how you get
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Good job.
Do you have an attitude towards money?
In your eyes, is money good?
Do you handle it well?
Do you tend to spend more than you should?
Do you really understand how much money you make and how you spend it?
Well, let's take a look at your approach to money and your attitudes towards it with Vicki Reinal.
She is a financial psychotherapist in private practice.
She's been featured in the Financial Times, Good Housekeeping, The Telegraph, and Women's Health,
and she's author of a book called Money on Your Mind,
the unconscious beliefs that sabotage your financial well-being and how to break free.
Hi, Vicki, welcome. Good to have you on Something You Should Know.
Thank you. Thank you for having me.
So where do we get our attitudes towards money,
and everybody seems to have a certain
relationship with money? Where does it come from? And why does it seem so problematic much of the
time? Well, in my experience, our attitude towards money is shaped throughout our life, sometimes
starting quite early. And what I found working as a financial psychotherapist is that when people
get stuck in behaviors that are unhelpful financially and they kind of know what they
should be doing differently, but they can't change it, it's because there's unconscious
feelings that are getting in the way. And those feelings could be related to early experiences,
some that are not even money related, that have nothing to do with the money lessons
they learned growing up, but actually have more to do
with other experiences of attaching to others
or past trauma and all sorts of different experiences
that I'm happy to give you examples of.
Yeah, I think examples would help here.
Yeah, so for example, I've seen overspending being linked to a desire to fit in, maybe
a desire to fit in that was rooted in experiences feeling like the odd one out in school or
maybe experiences of being bullied.
There's other spending behaviors like, well, a difficulty with spending money that could be linked to not feeling
worthy, worthy of the good things that money can buy. And that low sense of worth could be rooted
in experiences with our early caregivers. So how, whether we felt good enough in our family growing up. And even more extreme financial behaviors like stealing,
for example, could be rooted in an early abandonment
where we felt kind of deprived of something growing up.
And as adults, we're trying to claim it back
and that manifests itself through money.
So do people generally have a money personality?
We hear about some people are spenders,
some people are savers, some people are,
are there some general buckets that people fall into?
I think there might be areas of financial life
that people might struggle with more or less,
but sometimes even if somebody, let's say, tends to be quite reasonable when
it comes to money and spending and saving, there could be pockets of their behavior that
is unusual or different.
And that's where I would draw their attention to, you know, why is it that even though you're
generally, I don't know, a generous person, why is it that you sometimes become really
withholding with money with that particular friend or with that particular group of friends?
And I think sometimes even spotting the inconsistencies in our money behavior can give
us a lot of information about what could be going on emotionally for us in that particular
situation or in that particular relationship.
Do you find, and well, maybe people come to you
because they're having a problem,
so your answer might be a little skewed,
but do you think people know when there's a problem,
or do they think it's the result of outside forces
and that's why things aren't going their way with money,
but that it's not their fault.
Well, more often than not,
people tend to blame themselves when it comes to money.
I find, even though I know that the group of people
that I see come to me because they think they are the problem,
I think the issue of shame around money is quite universal.
Most people I meet, even outside the consulting
room, feel they should be better with money than they are. Even people who might work in the
financial services industry might confess to me that actually when it comes to my personal finances,
it's a bit of a mess and I wish I could be better at this or better at that. And there's generally
this kind of this sense that it's almost, you know, an innate skill that we should all be good at
for some reason, even though the reality is that most of us weren't really taught much about money
growing up from our parents and it wasn't taught in most schools. And so why should we be better
with money? And I think there is, that fuels a certain sense of shame
about it.
And the fact that it's a taboo and people don't talk about it,
I think fuels that sense of embarrassment and shame.
When people say, I wish I was better with money,
what does that mean?
My sense is it means that they wish they had saved more,
they invested more, save for retirement,
that kind of thing, as opposed to spend. But is that your experience?
I think that's a fantastic question. And actually, I always turn it back to the client. I always say,
well, what does that mean? And even when people set resolutions for the new year, and they say, well, next year, I want to
be better with money. Well, that's too broad. We need to understand what is it that you feel
you're struggling with. And it could be, as you pointed out, a whole set of reasons why they feel
that way. Some people are very bad with their spending, with their budgeting, they might be very impulsive and that's probably
the most common money problem you'll see out there. But you know it can be a difficulty
enjoying money and a difficulty saving or investing. I think there is a lot of
not knowing when it comes to investing. You know people are not very educated about
not knowing when it comes to investing. People are not very educated about investing,
and so they avoid it, and they don't do enough of it.
They put it away, they procrastinate it,
and it never gets done, and it kind of lurks
in the back of their minds
as something they should be doing more of.
But it's kind of the fear of not knowing
and of making mistakes that stops them
from engaging with it. So they just tend to ignore it, just kind of put fear of not knowing enough, making mistakes that stops them from engaging with it.
So, they just tend to ignore it, just kind of put their head in the sand and just let
money do whatever it does.
Well, you know, avoidance and vagueness, I find, are two very common defenses, psychological
defenses that people use when it comes to money. So either they don't look at it, you know, there's plenty of people who will not open bills and really not attend to financial matters until it's absolutely necessary.
And vagueness, you know, this, this, oh, I need to be better, you know, I should save more. Well, as long as we keep it vague, then we're setting
ourselves up for more vagueness and failure and self-sabotage. But the moment we set a
goal that is very kind of measurable and concrete, that's when our sense of agency becomes more
engaged and awakens. And it's very different to say,
I want to save 50 pounds every week next year
than to say I want to be better with money.
It seems, maybe it's just my experience,
but from what I can tell from other people as well,
that money becomes a problem
when you think you don't have enough of it.
Nobody comes to you and says, Vicki, I've got so much money. I don't know what to do. I've just,
it's usually a lack of money that causes problems.
Well, you'll be surprised. I have had people with a too much money problem as well and I'm happy to go into that but the the most common you're right is the lack of and I always invite people to be
curious about what they imagine more money will get them. The other way in
which I ask the question is when they say you know there I don't have enough I
ask well enough for what and I think the point here is
that money can be a very powerful symbol and it represents different things to different people.
And so for some people more money will buy them more credibility in their family. They will
finally be taken more seriously by others. For other people,
it's about acceptance and fitting in. If they have enough money, they can spend on the right
things and then they'll fit in with their group of friends. And yet for others, it's about worth.
They've equated financial worth to self worth in their minds.
And so they'll feel better about themselves
if their net value is higher.
And so I think sometimes it's unearthing
those sometimes unconscious symbolic equations
that people can then question them and say,
well, is it true that people will find me more lovable
if I'm richer or am I attaching something unrealistic to money?
A common one, Mike, is especially in families, somebody who grew up in a family where there
was scarcity, the belief that money will fix all the problems, it will resolve the conflict in the
family, it will make everybody get along, you know, everything
will be fine if there's more money. And actually, you know,
I've seen the other end of it, you know, I've seen people come
to me having become very wealthy. And and saying, well,
you know, it didn't fix everything.
Why am I still unhappy?
Why are we still all arguing?
So I want to hear about the people who come to you
because they have too much money,
because they're welcome to send me some if that's the problem.
But what is it?
What's the problem of having too much money?
I've seen it manifest in different ways.
So one example comes to mind.
It was a man, let's call him Robert, who came to see me
because he had a $2 million problem.
And it turns out that because he owned shares in a company
that got bought at a very good price,
suddenly he became a millionaire.
And this man looked so upset.
And I started asking him,
well, what is so distressing about this?
And there were all these fears attached to being wealthy.
First of all, he had grown up in a modest family
and the way in which wealthy people were talked about
attached certain judgment on them.
So you know, wealthy people can be corrupt, can be greedy, can this and that.
Secondly, there was a fear that money would spoil the children.
You know, he had two children and he was concerned that if they found out that the family was now
wealthy, they would lose drive and motivation and drop out of school and whatnot.
There was also a fear that money would bring conflict in his relationship.
How would he and his wife navigate all these financial decisions that they both felt a bit out of
their depth with. And finally, the fear of envy. Would his friends stop talking to him
if he starts telling them about his luxurious holidays and things that he could now afford
and they couldn't? And so you can see how there's
a whole range of fears that got attached to wealth. And that's not uncommon, actually,
to attach kind of a shame to wealth, particularly if we grew up in an environment
that condemned the pursuit of wealth in some way. So given that everybody has their own money deal, their own money issues, their own money
concerns, it's hard to have a blanket advice.
But how do you, well, is there a blanket advice?
I mean, how do you approach this?
I mean, my blanket advice is always to be curious, be curious about what it is that
is driving your financial choices. If for example
you find yourself regularly overspending, be curious about when do you do that? You know,
is it for example on a Sunday that you tend to go online and do all this spontaneous shopping?
and do all this spontaneous shopping. Well, what is it that you're feeling on Sundays?
Is it loneliness?
Is it boredom?
Is it sadness?
And are there other ways in which you could be addressing
those feelings rather than overspending?
Or maybe you overspend on your children
and that's where you really go overboard
and then you're filled with regret and guilt afterwards.
Well be curious about that. What is it about wanting to give to your children? Where is that coming from?
Is it coming from an experience maybe of having parents who weren't very generous with you or maybe couldn't be generous because
they didn't have the means to.
And so now you're trying to kind of vicariously live through them and give them all the experiences
you didn't have.
But is that what's best for them?
And so I think curiosity is the key to all of this.
But because a lot of the money behaviors that I see trace back to
quite painful emotional experiences it's important to do that self-exploration without judgment.
So saying things like I'm bad with money, I'm terrible with money, that's not going to get you very far. Better approach is to investigate what that means, you know, that sense that you're bad
with it.
Well, what is it that you'd you wish you could be better at?
Let's say it's investing.
Well, why do you think you're not good with investing?
I don't understand enough about it.
Well, could you learn more about it?
Where could you find the information?
And you see that the moment you become,
you have a kinder inner dialogue with yourself
and a curious one,
you can begin to find the answers to those questions.
One very common problem it seems people have,
because you hear it talked about frequently,
is people's inability to
live within their means. That they overspend, they put things on credit
cards, they don't really have a good sense of what they can and cannot afford,
and that lands them in trouble. Is that a fair assessment? Yes, I would say so.
And so what's the advice to that? What do you, if people are doing that,
do you think most people know that's what's going on
or are they just scratching their head going,
I don't know where all the money's going?
Sometimes they don't know where it's going
and that's kind of a, again, that vagueness defense,
it's they don't want to know where it's going.
They don't want to open their statements and look at it so because it would be uncomfortable to face the reality of what they're doing and the consequences of what they're doing.
But the reason why people might end up.
bit messy with their spending are very broad. In some cases, it's a practical reason. They haven't gone through their numbers to see what they can afford to spend every month. They haven't
done kind of a basic budget that tells them that you have X amount of dollars every month that you
can spend on discretionary items and on going out and so on. So they actually don't, haven't done the
maths to know what is within their means. But most often there is something that is
driving that choice of spending and it could be that they're, maybe it's a personality
thing, they might be an impulsive person who struggles to sit with their feelings,
sit with any discomfort and anytime they feel anything negative they act on it.
And some people choose substances, other people choose shopping.
The famous retail therapy, right? You do it because it makes you feel better
and there is a neurological
process that makes you want to go back for more and you can become quite hooked on that habit of
addressing feelings through spending. In other cases, there's more deep-seated reasons. I mean,
I had a client who shopped and in particular bought luxury handbags.
And when we started to explore what is it about these luxury items that,
you know, it was actually a sense that because there were quality products
that lasted long, they would stay.
And this particular woman had a history of being abandoned by her father when she
was little. And she said to me, you know, things stay, people leave you. And so it was
actually a very painful place within her that was driving the spending and it had nothing
to do with, you know, doing a budget or not being impulsive. So the key there was to try
and find a healthier way
to relate with her father that didn't involve
this whole financial self-sabotage.
So you've already answered this question
as we've discussed throughout this conversation,
but let me ask it directly.
I already think I know the answer,
but if someone comes to you,
even before you
know what the problem is, what's the advice?
My sense is your advice is going to be, well, first,
start being curious.
But is that it?
Or is there more to it?
Or is that not it?
Or what?
Before they even come to me, I would say,
educate yourself about money. Because a lot of money problems have to do with financial literacy or illiteracy in this case.
So people feel anxious about money and about 50% of the population in most countries and the US it is above 50, feel anxious about money.
And the more we know about money, studies have shown,
the less anxious we are about it.
So the first step is know more about finances
because that's going to avoid a lot of money mistakes.
One of the statistics that has shocked me
is that in the US, one in three teens
doesn't know the difference between a credit card and a debit card. And that's really important to
know if you're going to start your financial life on a good footing trying to avoid credit card debt,
right? Yeah, absolutely. That's a pretty alarming statistic that that many people don't know the
difference between a
Debit card and a credit card. Well, all of what you've talked about is really enlightening. I've been speaking with Vicki Reynolds
She is a financial psychotherapist and author of the book
Money on your mind the unconscious beliefs that sabotage your financial well-being and how to break free
There's a link to her book at Amazon in the show notes,
and I appreciate you coming on and talking about all this.
This was great. Thanks, Vicki.
Thank you very much.
Did you know that it is basically impossible
to keep track of more than three items at the same time
unless all those items are the same color.
So for example, when you watch a football game,
the common color of the uniforms allows you
to overcome that limitation
because everybody's wearing the same color,
so you see the team as a single set.
Team sports would be incredibly difficult to watch
if everybody on the
team didn't wear the same color. According to a study at Johns Hopkins
University, the ability to only keep track of three items at a time is a
fundamental limitation of the human brain. Almost everyone has it and the
only way to override that limitation is with color coding.
This principle will work in other areas of life.
For example, if you wanted to take seven kids to the zoo by yourself,
it would be tough to keep track of all of them,
but if they all wore the same color shirt, it would be a lot easier.
In general, if you want to keep track of multiple things or people,
make them all the same
color.
And that is something you should know.
If you enjoyed this episode, it would really help us if you would tell someone you know
about it.
Share the link.
Let them listen to it.
It helps grow our audience and we would really appreciate that.
I'm Mike Carruthers.
Thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know.
Hi, I'm Sara Gabrielli and I've traveled to every single lesbian bar in the country
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When you went to Brady's Bar, you knew you were safe.
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