Something You Should Know - How to Say No Without Guilt & The Secrets to Satisfaction - SYSK Choice
Episode Date: June 14, 2025Where is the best place to take a nap? Anyone who has napped in a hammock knows how great it can be. This episode begins by explaining why naps are better in a hammock and why your next nap should be... in one. https://www.livescience.com/14680-hammock-rocking-improves-sleep.html It can be hard to say no. After all, you don’t want to let people down or have them think you are not a team player. But think about all the times you have said yes and wish you hadn’t. If you find saying no to be hard, you will be interested in some interesting research that says HOW you do it is what really matters. You can say no to almost anybody and people will generally accept it. Here to explain how you can say no and feel good about it is Professor Vanessa Patrick from the University of Houston and author of the book The Power of Saying No: The New Science of How to Say No That Puts You in Charge of Your Life (https://amzn.to/3MUs6KE). There is a lot of emphasis today on finding happiness. Yet about 40% of people say they are unhappy. Perhaps chasing happiness is the wrong goal. After all, no one is happy all the time. Happiness comes and goes. Maybe instead of a happy life we should be seeking a life of satisfaction. Here to reveal the important distinction between happiness and satisfaction and why a satisfied life is a better goal is Dr Jennifer Guttman. She is psychologist in private practice and author of the book Beyond Happiness: The 6 Secrets of Life Satisfaction (https://amzn.to/43mzyoB). We all know that maintaining eye contact is important when talking with someone. Listen as I discuss how one simple eye contact technique triggers just the right hormones that will make you more intriguing to the person you are looking at. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/26704066 PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! MINT MOBILE: Get your summer savings and shop premium wireless plans at https://MintMobile.com/something ! FACTOR: Factor meals arrive fresh and ready to eat, perfect for your summer lifestyle! Get 50% off at https://FactorMeals.com/something50off ROCKET MONEY: Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster! Go to https://RocketMoney.com/SOMETHING QUINCE: Stick to the staples that last, with elevated essentials from Quince! Go to https://Quince.com/sysk for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns! INDEED: Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING right now! DELL: Introducing the new Dell AI PC . It’s not just an AI computer, it’s a computer built for AI to help do your busywork for you! Get a new Dell AI PC at https://Dell.com/ai-pc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know, there's a particular way to take a nap that will make
it much more satisfying.
Then, how to say no and stop saying yes to people when you don't want to.
Because when you say yes to one thing, you are saying no to something else.
So what my research focuses on is how to develop the super skill of saying no in a way
that is persuasive and yet maintains the relationship with the other person.
Also a simple strategy to use eye contact to improve any relationship and
happiness. There's a problem with seeking happiness yet everyone wants to be happy.
It's literally written into the Declaration of Independence
that we have a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
But happiness is an emotion. It comes and goes.
It's not meant to be long-lasting. It never was.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Something you should know. Fascinating intel. The world's top experts.
And practical advice you can use in your life.
Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Hi, welcome. It's been a busy week around here.
My eldest son, Owen, graduated high school.
My younger son, Angelo, off to camp for the week.
And my sister, Sally, visiting from out of town.
So there's been a lot going on here, and I haven't gotten the usual amount of sleep.
And if that ever happens to you and you want to catch up on some sleep,
here's some advice. Find a hammock.
Researchers found that you'll actually drift off to sleep faster and sleep
sounder in a hammock.
It's the swaying action.
It turns out that adults can benefit from that rocking motion just as much as
babies do.
Researchers say that rocking or swaying actually affects our brain waves while we drift off
to sleep, and it enhances the initial light sleep phase known as N1 and the next deeper
phase of sleep, N2.
The volunteer nappers in this study experienced a more satisfying sleep and greater mental
refreshment after a snooze and a hammock.
And that is something you should know.
I'll bet there have been plenty of times in your life when you said yes to someone and wish you'd said no.
But after all, you want to be helpful. You don't want to disappoint people. It can be hard to say no. Still, I suspect most of us wish we were better at saying no, and there's a lot of evidence that
being able to say no can result in some real benefits to you. So, here to help you get better
at saying no when you really want to say no is award-winning professor and researcher Vanessa
Patrick. She's been studying the science of saying no,
and she's about to reveal some surprising secrets
about the power of no.
Vanessa is author of the book, The Power of Saying No,
The New Science of How to Say No
that puts you in charge of your life.
Hi Vanessa, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thank you, Mike, I'm delighted to be here.
So as simple a question as this sounds,
what is it about no that is such a big deal?
If somebody asks you to do something
and you don't want to do it or you can't do it
or it would be a real hassle to do it,
why don't we just say no and get on with it?
So saying no is really hard for a lot of people.
It is fraught with anxiety
and conflict and people are really stressed about saying no to ask that come their way.
And I think it boils down to the fact that saying no is a socially dispreferred response.
And what I mean by that is that when people ask you something or invite
you to go somewhere or request something of you, they essentially expect a yes. And saying
no goes against that expectation. And we as human beings struggle with dealing with going
against people's expectations. We want to conform. We want to be nice. And so in many ways, saying no is
tough because we have to go against what
the other person expects from us.
It isn't just the thing we're saying no to, though, right?
We're afraid of the repercussions.
In my research, I found that there are two key reasons
why people struggle with saying no.
One is that they are deeply concerned about the fact
that their relationship with the other person
will suffer as a result.
And the second is they wanna be seen in a positive light.
So they want their reputation to be intact.
And saying no in a way that is not effective
can in fact damage your reputation
and hurt your relationship with the other person.
So what my research focuses on is how to develop the super skill of saying no
in a way that is persuasive and yet maintains the relationship with the other person.
So let's talk about those two things that you just mentioned because people fear
about those two things that you just mentioned, because people fear that their relationship will suffer
and they fear their reputation might suffer.
Typically, does it in most cases, or typically does it not?
Are we fearing something that almost never happens,
or are we fearing something that actually does happen?
I always like to ask people to think about
the last time they asked someone for something.
And when you get a no from somebody,
chances are you just go to the next person on your list.
You don't really think about it that much.
So, you know, sometimes we exaggerate the extent
to which that this is damaging
to your relationship and reputation.
But given that these are real concerns,
my research on empowered refusal accommodates those concerns
by giving people the tools and the skills
to navigate these relational concerns
of reputational concerns.
So I suspect those skills are very important
because how you present your no is going to have
an impact either for good or for worse. So let's talk about those skills.
Yes. So saying no, it's important to say no in a way that communicates a strong and empowered stance regarding why you are saying no.
And so it's about looking inwards
and looking at your identity and using words
that communicate your empowered refusal response.
So for example, when we say words like, I don't, I never,
I always,
they are strong and empowered words,
and they reflect conviction and determination.
When we use words like that,
we come across as much more persuasive
and we don't get pushback from the asker.
Instead, we get compliance.
So let's imagine that we want to say no to a phone call
that someone wants to have with us at 7.30 p.m.
If we respond saying,
I'm really sorry, I can't talk at 7.30 p.m.,
we sound disempowered and somewhat wishy-washy.
On the other hand, if you use the words,
I don't take calls between 6 and 9 p.m.
because that's family time,
people respond to that refusal in a very different manner.
Often, I think when people say no and feel this obligation to say yes,
but even when they finally do say no, they feel so guilty for saying no
that they mash it all up with apologies and things that sound, as you say, very weak and wishy-washy rather than,
here's my stance, and be proud of it.
Yes, and for your audience who's really
interested in surprising and interesting insights,
this simple switch in terms from saying, I can't to I don't
can make a world of difference.
What about though, when you don't have a standing rule that you don't take calls between this
time and this time, you just don't want to talk to that person then.
It's just a one time, I'm too tired, it's that person, it isn't my standing rule, it's
just I don't want to talk to them.
Exactly.
And that boils down to one of the competencies,
which is self-awareness.
Knowing what your preferences are,
what your priorities are, where your beliefs lie,
where your values lie, is super important
for framing that refusal response.
And if it is valid to you,
then it is a valid reason not to oblige the other person.
After all, a request is just a request.
It is not a requirement.
So if you really don't feel like talking to that person,
regardless of the time, you don't have to.
You had said earlier that one of the reasons
people don't say no is
because they're afraid their reputation will suffer as a result of that but when
I think about the people who say no I respect them. I mean it seems that in
some ways I even admire that they have these boundaries so that in fact saying
no may actually enhance your reputation, not hurt it.
You're so right.
You're absolutely right.
When you say no to the things that don't matter and say yes to the things that do, you do
come across as much more in control, in the driver's seat of your own life.
And we do admire those sort of people who seem to know what they want and say no to everything else.
So if you're one of those people who has trouble saying no and has always had trouble saying no,
how do you even become start to become one of those people who is comfortable with it? How do
you develop the skills and what are the skills? I have identified three competencies that help you master the art of empowered refusal.
And ART is the acronym that I've developed, A-R-T, awareness, rules, not decisions, and
totality of self. And so these three competencies are the ingredients,
if you will, to say a more effective no.
So the first competency is awareness.
This deepened self-awareness helps us stiffed
between the good-for-me activities
from the not-good-for-me activities
and help us decide more effectively
what to say yes to and what to say no to. And once we have this deepened self-awareness,
we can then create simple rules, what I call personal policies that help guide our actions
and decisions so that when we are faced with an ask that we want to say no to, we are more
equipped with where we stand in these matters.
When we lean on these personal policies that we have established to say no, we give voice
to our values and we come across then with much greater conviction and much more determination. When you say develop self-awareness,
explain what you mean, how do you do that?
So understanding, for example,
how you want to spend your time,
what you like and what you don't like.
Some people are not aware where they stand
on certain matters.
Knowing where you stand helps you recognize a situation and understand the
trade-offs. Because when you say yes to one thing, you are saying no to something else.
And so you should be very clear that what you are saying yes to matters and is not coming in the way
of you living your best possible life. We're talking about how to say no and not feel so bad for doing it.
My guest is Professor Vanessa Patrick.
She's author of the book, The Power of Saying No.
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Why are you walking so close behind me?
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your family can choose the episode that's the right level of scary for you.
Tune in to Grim, Grimmer, Grimist and our new season available now. So Vanessa, you
said that people need to be self-aware, but I think people believe they are self-aware,
that they know where they stand on issues.
Don't you?
So many, many times you do have a sense of where you stand,
but very often in my research I find people greatly conflicted
because they are worried about how it would
look and how other people would view that. Whereas my research suggests that we really
need to focus on ourselves and our priorities. I also provide a framework to help people decipher the ask.
So let's say you do not have a strong stance on a matter
and you don't know whether you should say yes or no.
It's a cost benefit framework that helps you decide
how to decipher the ask and shape your decision to say yes
or your decision to say no.
Can you give me an example?
Sure.
One type of ask is something that's
pretty straightforward and easy.
And I call them the pass the salt asks.
In those type of asks, they are pretty easy for you to do.
So it's not very high cost for you.
But it's hugely beneficial for the other person.
So the other person, it could be a game changer.
So it's like passing the salt.
The salt shaker is sitting in front of you.
Someone at the table says, could you pass the salt?
And you just pass the salt to them.
For you, it was super easy.
For the other person, you know,
you transform their meal to make it better.
So an example of pasta salt asks,
as a professor myself, I very often get asked to write recommendation letters.
I have a system in place for writing recommendation letters. So they're pretty,
it's a pretty straightforward ask for me. I know how long it takes. I know, I know the students,
so it's not very hard. But for a student, it is a game changer.
It could really determine whether they get into the college of their choice,
or get into a job that they need.
And so for me, the Pass the Salt asks are a yes,
because it's high benefit to the other person and relatively low cost to me.
There are asks which are very high cost to me and possibly not very great benefit to
the other person or even if it is beneficial to the other person, I'm not the only one
who can do it.
In those cases, you are probably better off saying no and spending your time doing something that's
more meaningful and more purpose driven.
Well, I love what you said about, you know, I could do it, but I'm not the only one who
could do it because so often we think that when people ask us for something like we're
the go-to person, we could really, we're the one that they're really counting on.
Well, we may, we may have been fourth or fifth on the list ourselves
that other people have already said no.
But we think that if we say no, their whole world will collapse.
Yes, that is such a useful insight
to remember that we are not indispensable.
And I often say to myself, the graveyards
are full of indispensable people.
If you're not the only person who can do this particular task
and you're really being pressed to do it,
then consider the fact that there
is somebody else out there who can do it as well.
And those are tasks you should certainly
think about saying no to.
I would imagine it would help if you're not somebody who
does this well or easily to practice on little things
before you practice on the big things.
It's really important to practice,
because the skill set is something
that you have to develop over time.
Even I, honestly, spend a lot of time thinking about how best
and how most precisely to deliver a refusal response.
So I might know that I wanna say no,
but I always buy time from the asker
to be able to craft the no in a way that's more effective.
And you also said something that's kind of interesting too
is that you may not have
strong feelings one way or the other.
So in those cases, how do you decide?
I mean, I could do it.
It's not a big deal, but I'd kind of really rather not.
But you know, what do I do?
As soon as you say no, chances are the person just goes to the next person on their list.
So it's not such a big deal.
The other thing to think about is all the things you could be doing instead of this particular task that you really did not want to do. There are so many ways you could spend your time in that are
more meaningful and much more purpose driven. And so recognizing that just filling our calendar
with tasks that are not aligned to our own priorities
and preferences are not a good way to spend one's time.
So one of the tools that I provide in the book
is something called personal policies,
which is setting up these rules about what you care about
and the areas that you do want to invest in
and making sure that you invest in those areas.
So for example, we can audit anyone's calendar
and look at in your calendar, in your week,
does that calendar look like the calendar that you want to see?
Is it aligned with what you most care about?
And if your calendar is filled with material that are filled with appointments that have
nothing to do with what you're interested in or what you're good at or what you want
to bring to the table as a human being, then you need to rethink your priorities and develop some personal policies
and some rules around how you want to spend your time and energy.
There are times though, where somebody needs a favor, somebody needs you to do something
or wants you to do something.
And it might put you out, it might be disruptive,
but it would be a really good thing to do.
It's what a friend does, you know, drive me to the airport.
Well, he could take an Uber,
but then he might miss his plane,
and you know, but I don't really have time,
but I could make the time.
Those kind of things, I think people struggle with.
Yes, there are some asks which are called heroes journey asks.
And heroes journey asks are asks that are very hard for you to perform.
They are effortful, time consuming,
but they benefit the other person immensely.
And so if you can undertake those heroes journeys asks,
you have to recognize that you are taking on something
that's going to be inconveniencing, but that it benefits the other person.
When you're weighing the cost and the benefit, you make that decision.
But making that decision with clarity and with intention is better than falling into the trap of making a decision on the fly.
If you think about it and decide, you know, this is how I do want to spend my time.
This is a favor that's worth responding to say no, people will stop asking so much.
If you're the go-to person because you'll do anything for anybody, then everybody's going to come. Yes. In fact, there is research on that.
And the research really shows that there is a gender
difference that comes into play.
Women are much more likely to struggle with saying no,
but they are also more likely to be asked to take on tasks
which researchers call non-promotable tasks. So tasks in workplaces
that have nothing to do with your actual job, but someone needs to do it, women are more
likely to be asked to take on those tasks. In fact, 44% more likely to be asked to take on non-promotable tasks. And 76% more likely to say yes to those non-promotable tasks
compared to men who would say yes only 51% of the time.
One of the things that you mentioned
that you write about in your book
that I found really interesting, and this
is particularly valuable when you're dealing
with really pushy people,
is that you're 34 times more likely to say yes to an ask
in person versus an email or a text or maybe even a phone call
that if you want to say no, trying to do it not face to face is pretty important.
And also it's not just what you're being asked to do,
it's also who's doing the ask,
and you're more likely to say yes to some people
and say no to others, right?
So the people who are the easiest to say no to
are the people who are close to us
and with whom we have more secure relationships, so close friends and family.
If we say no to them, we are not concerned that our relationship will suffer or that
our reputations are at risk.
The other group of people that we can comfortably say no to are strangers who we will never
encounter again. The large majority of people, however,
unfortunately for us, fall into the bucket of acquaintances.
People with whom we have weak social ties
and who we do want to impress
and who we do want to have relationships with
or positive relationships with.
Those are the people we struggle to say no to the
most because we do worry about that relationship and that reputation.
Well, I think you've empowered people to say no and not feel so bad about it, that
saying no can be a good thing. I've been talking with Professor Vanessa Patrick from the University
of Houston. She's author of the book, The Power of Saying No, the new science of how to say no that
puts you in charge of your life.
And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Thanks, Vanessa.
I really, really enjoyed the conversation.
That's quite a compliment.
Thank you, Mike.
I appreciate it.
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You often hear people say they just want to be happy. You often hear people say they just want to be happy, that a happy life
is a good life. The problem that brings up is that happiness is really just a
fleeting emotion. You can be happy one minute and not happy the next. Your life
can't be happy all the time. In fact, 40% of people worldwide
say they are not happy. And the reason is, happiness is not sustainable. It's an emotion,
not a state of being. What people likely mean when they say they want to lead a happy life
is they want a life of satisfaction. You can lead a satisfied life. Doesn't mean you'll
be happy all the time, but overall life satisfaction? That sounds pretty good. And here to
explain more about the difference between happiness and satisfaction is
Dr. Jennifer Gutman. She is a psychologist in private practice and
author of a book called Beyond Happiness, The Six Secrets of Life Satisfaction. Hi
Jennifer, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thank you so much for having me, Mike.
So I get the sense that what you call a life of satisfaction, other people call happiness.
It's just a semantic thing that happiness may not be the word you would use, but the
goal is the same.
And if you're seeking a life of happiness, aren't you still on the right path?
I think that it's always been that people are searching for happiness. I mean, it's literally
written into the Declaration of Independence that we have a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness. But happiness is an emotion. It comes and goes. It's not meant to be long lasting. It never was.
So I think that it's always sent a confusing message
to our brains, which is why it's not surprising
that now there's hundreds of influencers
and there's podcasts and there's books
all about targeting happiness,
except that it's not meant to be an emotion that you can sustain.
Something that is sustainable is satisfaction, but people aren't targeting that because it's
not as sexy.
So I don't know that it's any harder to be satisfied.
It's that we're focusing on the wrong thing.
So if happiness is this fleeting emotion, then what is specifically, what is satisfaction?
Satisfaction is, if you think about it,
it's like contentment or feeling at peace with yourself,
how you feel at the end of a really productive day.
Whereas happiness is how you feel when you see a child smile
or you get a compliment or
You get a really nice text from somebody that's unexpected or you see a puppy playing I mean though that's how you feel, you know, that's what you get a fleeting sense of joy or exuberance
That's happiness but satisfied is a much more sustaining feeling of of contentment
Well, you just said that, you know,
it's that feeling you get after
at the end of a very productive day.
But if you're truly satisfied,
how do you feel at the end
of the inevitable really crappy day?
Or do you feel different than people
that aren't satisfied,
because you're gonna have those days?
We all have so many different emotions.
We have happiness as an emotion like every other emotion.
We can feel sad, we can feel happy, we can feel despairing,
we can feel hopeless, resentful.
Happy is just one of the many emotions we can feel.
So sure, we can have a bad day and feel sad,
but that sadness comes and goes.
And people don't necessarily question that.
They may be frustrated that they had a sad day
But they're not going around wondering why they're failing at sadness, but people feel like they're failing at happiness
So even if you are satisfied with your life that doesn't mean you know preclude you from having a sad day or frustrating
Day, it just means that you would overall have the resilience to bounce back from a sad day,
knowing that that doesn't mean that you have
a hundred sad days ahead of you.
It means that you can bounce back and know that maybe
tomorrow or the next day is gonna be a better day.
And is that the secret then,
to knowing that things will get better
as opposed to living in a state of sadness and despair.
Is despair like the opposite of satisfaction?
Perfectly said.
Oh, thanks. So what is despair? Is it hopelessness? Is it, and is that part of the problem?
Yes. I mean, I believe that it is. I believe when you look at resilience, what I say,
what I believe is that when you master all the techniques
that I talk about in terms of the building
blocks of satisfaction, you develop resilience.
And it's a belief in your ability
to bounce back from adversity with a renewed sense
of strength, positivity, hope, and
purpose. And that is the things that combat a sense of existential
despair so that you go back into the next day with a belief in all of your
ability to tackle the next problem as opposed to going into the next day
feeling like, oh my gosh, today's going to be equally bad or worse
than yesterday.
Which is very hard to do sometimes.
And I know you have these techniques
to help people overcome this.
So explain some of the techniques.
Sure.
One of my techniques is avoiding assumptions.
And assumptions is what we think that we should be feeling, let's say happiness, or what we
think that people are going to say or do.
Let's take for a minute what you were saying about despair.
I would say, okay, what's your assumption based on?
Where's the evidence that that feeling of despair is going to last and last and last?
In the past when you felt like that because you must feel this because in the past, of
course, despair is an emotion.
You must have felt despairing before.
Has it lasted for the length of time that you're presuming it's going to last for or
have you been able to bounce back from it?
Where's the evidence that it's going to continue to last or has something
happened to pull you out of it? And do you have enough evidence to present to a
jury of your peers that this is this feeling this emotion is never going to
stop? Because emotions do come and go. They are all all of them are not
long-lasting
Including that feeling that you're so low that it feels like you're not going to come back up
That's what I talked to people about challenging those assumptions at that negativity bias that
we're in a place that we can't pull ourselves out of and
Then another one of my techniques which would be decision-making. What decision am I going to make today to change today in a positive direction so that
maybe today we'll write the course, put it back on a course that makes me feel like I have a little bit more autonomy or a little bit more
of an empowered feeling about my life so that I can start to pull myself back onto the track.
In the quest to lead a satisfied life, as you call it, and I'm sure some people are very
content and satisfied, but I know that it also seems human nature to
worry about the future, to not be satisfied, to expect something bad to happen that you need
to prepare for because it's human nature. That's exactly right. And that is because we are preset as mammals to have a negativity bias.
We believe that we're looking for danger around every corner and that something is going to
happen.
So we look for the possibility that something is not going to turn out right, which is why
we anticipate bad things happening instead of good things happening.
But the awareness of our predisposition
to a negativity bias can help us not
be as afraid of the fact that it's going to happen.
We can tell ourselves, OK, it's likely
that I'm going to think this is going to turn out
more worse than it may.
And I need to remind myself,
if I was going to have a column of positives and negatives
that last time there were more positives,
even though my brain keeps pulling me back
to the negatives.
I have a lot of clients that have a ton of negative,
you know, anticipation and assumptions before
they do things, and I'll have them make three columns before they go out.
I'll have them write a column to indicate on a scale of one to 10, how do you feel before
you go in terms of dread or anticipatory anxiety.
Then while you're out during the event, what's your dread during on a scale
of 1 to 10?
And then after you leave when you're walking home or going home on a scale of 1 to 10,
what's your dread then?
Because how you reflect on the event can also be, you can also have a negativity bias if
you let too much time elapse before you
engage in this rating scale and all of them are so surprised because the
Anticipatory anxiety rating is really high if they think that 10 or 8 it's gonna be terrible
During is usually really low and if they score themselves right after about whether they had a good time, it's also really low. But if they wait two or three days to score on reflection,
their rating starts to go up again
that they remember not having as good a time as they actually
did.
So how do you know, though, that this is cumulative?
And by that, I mean that because it seems very effortful every time you do something to have to make a list and make columns and
Maybe it helps that instance
But how where's the evidence that that if you do it enough that you get to this sustained life?
satisfaction that you talk about as opposed to it just helps in this one situation because I
Can do I can look back and
realize that most times things worked out but it doesn't really seem like it
helps the next time I it's hard to pull that evidence and put it up front when
you're facing another thing and and and I love this idea of the sustained life
satisfaction just seems so hard to accumulate
all of this stuff together and get that.
So there is so much research
that we can actually change the neural pathways
in our brains with practice.
The neural pathways in our brains
in the neural circuitry is like,
it changes and adapts like every
muscle in our bodies and I'm not promising a quick fix but I am promising
that if you put effort into what I'm suggesting then it does change the
neural circuitry in your brain. I have this client who did what I had suggested
with the three columns he doesn't need to do the three columns anymore
We were just talking the other day about an event and he was saying it's so funny
Because I know that in the past I would have thought I don't want to go to such and such an event
But I know that's only coming from a place of negativity
Not because I'm actually not going to have fun at the event.
And he was able to do that without any columns
or without thinking about it.
It was just because he had practiced enough times
going through this exercise.
Like any kind of exercise for any part of our bodies,
the more that you practice, your brain does learn.
And I think it's important to remember
that your brain is listening to everything that you
say to yourself all of the time.
If you talk negatively to yourself,
your brain is listening.
If you talk in a different way to yourself,
your brain is also listening.
And when you think about how tough we are on ourselves,
how we say things to ourselves that aren't very nice,
that we'd never say to somebody else, it's taking a toll.
We are extremely hard on ourselves.
I believe that we have very critical inner monologues
running most of the time.
And I think that it's important
that we stop the critical inner monologuing
and try to transfer the critical inner monologuing and try to
you know
Transfer that critical inner coach to a compassionate coach because the critical inner coaches that we have are ineffective
And if we could change them to more compassionate coaches that would be much more effective in terms of
You know becoming more satisfied in your
life.
And you're right, we don't talk to ourselves the way we would talk to our children or the
way that we would talk to our friends.
We talk to ourselves much more critically.
And we're not doing ourselves any favors by talking to ourselves like that.
Because in the same way that we don't talk to people in our lives like that, because we know if we talk to them like that,
there's no way if they were on a baseball field
and we talked like that to them,
that they would hit a home run
because they'd be so rattled by how
we were talking to them.
Why would we expect that if we were talking
to ourselves like that,
that we'd be making any home runs in life,
talking to ourselves so critically?
I love that.
That's so true. That's so critically. I love that.
That's so true.
That's so true.
But it seems hard to do.
I mean, it's hard to catch yourself
because it's such a constant flow of self-criticism
to actually stop it.
I mean, again, it's like a very effortful thing
that you have to, hey, wait, I'm talking that way to myself.
Now I should stop doing that.
You are absolutely right.
What I am asking of people is to change the way
that they think, to change the way
that they talk to themselves.
And I'm saying that if you're motivated, you can do it.
I mean, I live my brand.
I started out as somebody that was
an extremely critical thinker about herself. I was extremely anxious. I was extremely shy.
And I turned around the way that I think based on using these techniques on myself. And people laugh because they think
I'm the most extroverted person now
and I'm not afraid of anything.
I mean, all of that is not true.
It's just that if you use these techniques enough
on yourself, then it has long lasting
and actually amazing impact.
And I've seen that.
I just find it so interesting that for,
I think for most people, if you look back over your life,
a lot of things have a tendency to work out,
but we don't look to the future that way.
We don't take that evidence that things
pretty much worked out in the past,
and they'll probably work out in the future.
Not everything, but a lot of things.
That's exactly right.
I mean, some of my favorite conversations with clients is saying to them,
how do you know that they'll say something, they'll tell me a story,
we'll be talking about it and we'll be filled with assumptions
and it's making them so anxious and it's it it makes me you know it's
heartbreaking to listen to it really is for me and then i'll say but how do you know that
and they'll be they'll say what do you mean and i'm like there's so many places where i want to
know how do you know that that's what's going to happen how do you know that's what's going to be
just because you think it doesn't make it so and
Can you come up with evidence for me that all of those fears that you have are actually going to come true or have any of them ever come true and
It changes the dialogue so much when people are actually
Forced to meditate on whether these fears have ever actually come
true or just because they're thinking these things, it's sending them down a rabbit hole
of potential fears.
All of what you're talking about has very little to do with happiness the way people
talk about happiness.
It isn't happiness.
It is, as you say, it's life satisfaction.
People say all the time, are you happy? And are you happy? It doesn't make sense because
are you happy is a momentary feeling. You can only ask somebody if they're happy right after something would have happened that they're happy about and
if you ask somebody that and they and
They think that they're failing at being happy all the time that it sends their brain
Which is always listening into a really confused place if we can change the vernacular
For everybody to are you satisfied, are you content?
That would be an amazing start to maybe turning around some of this existential despair,
as you said, that we're experiencing in this country that has led to
so much of this increases in depression
that we're experiencing in this country to such a wide degree.
But when people say, for example,
I just want to be happy, what they really mean
is I want to be satisfied.
And so maybe they're using the wrong word in your view,
but the goal's the same, right?
Right, but they may already be on the road to that.
And they, when they say, I want to be happy,
if you pause and point out to them,
but you did have moments of happiness,
which is all happiness can be, it's fleeting.
You already have the thing that exists
when it comes to the word happy.
Like you had that already.
So now you need to focus on are you as satisfied
as you can be because the fleeting aspects of happiness
you probably did have this week in the same way
that you probably did have fleeting moments of sadness
and every other emotion that human beings are capable of
over the past week.
So if that's what you've already have, focus more on whether you're as satisfied as you
can be now, whether you can have more moments of fleeting happiness that are outside of
your control.
Well, but it does seem though that there are some people who do have that or they at least
give off that sense that they're satisfied.
My grandmother was someone like that.
She always seemed very content in her life,
even though she lost her husband early.
And I mean, there were plenty of bumps in the road,
but she had something that I always envied
because she seemed content.
She just seemed content.
Yes, but that's exactly what she probably was.
That's the goal, right? She seemed content. Yes, but that's exactly what she probably was. That's the goal, right?
She seemed content in her life.
It's not that you're saying that she seemed happy all the time.
She seemed content all the time.
And whether she was or whether she wasn't, I don't know.
But that would be the goal.
She was giving off a vibe of contentment as opposed to what people are aiming
for today based on social media where people see somebody looking fabulous and happy and then think
that should be the sustaining emotion as opposed to whatever peacefulness your grandmother was
giving off which felt like some kind of groundedness of stability
that probably was very common to you.
And whether she felt like that her whole life
or she felt like that during the latter part of her life,
I don't know, but it may be that she came to that
with hard work over the course of her life.
And I'm gonna guess that she did come to that feeling
with hard work over the course of her life. Well that the distinction you make between happiness and satisfaction is something I haven't really thought much about but
It's a very different and very liberating way to think that can change the path of your life
Dr. Jennifer Gutman has been my guest
She is a psychologist in private practice and the name of her book is Beyond Happiness,
The Six Secrets of Life Satisfaction.
And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
I appreciate you coming on.
Thanks Jennifer.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for having me.
If your relationship could use a boost, a little look can go a long way.
It's all about eye contact.
Direct eye contact usually lasts about two seconds.
And doubling that time sends a powerful signal to your partner.
When you are newly attracted to someone, you tend to stare a little longer and say more
with your eyes.
Once the curiosity is gone, most of us lose the impulse to prolong that eye contact, but
gazing directly into someone's eyes for longer than two seconds will be noticed by both of
you.
It triggers that curiosity and stimulates oxytocin, the bonding hormone.
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From the podcast that brought you to each of the last lesbian bars in the country and
back in time through the sapphic history that shaped them, comes a brand new season
of cruising beyond the bars.
This is your host, Sara Gabrielli,
and I've spent the past year interviewing
history-making lesbians and queer folks
about all kinds of queer spaces,
from bookstores to farms to line dancing and much more.
For 11 years, every night women slept illegally on the common.
We would move down to the West Indies
to form a lesbian nation.
Meg Christen coined the phrase women's music,
but she would have liked to say it was lesbian music.
And that's kind of the origins of the Convihugur collective.
You can listen to Cruising on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
New episodes air every other Tuesday starting February 4th.