The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - World Leading Therapist: 3 Simple Steps To Remove Your Negative Thoughts: Marisa Peer
Episode Date: June 23, 2022Marisa Peer is a world-leading therapist who specialises in helping people discover their best self, who doubles as a speaker, therapy trainer, and multiple best-selling author of You Are Enough, Tell... Yourself a Better Lie and Ultimate Confidence. Marissa has worked with thousands of people to help them overcome trauma in their lives, sometimes trauma they didn’t even know they had. According to her revolutionary theory, it’s only when people look into their own lives that they can find what’s holding them back in the outside world. So, look within you. With Marissa we can go on a journey to retell and remould the story we tell ourselves about our own lives and our own journey. With persistence and perseverance, we can begin to tell ourselves a better lie. Follow Marisa: Twitter - https://twitter.com/MarisaPeer Marisa’s book - https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09PRMSBGV/ Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. I've been a therapist for
35 years. I worked with millionaires and movie stars, and I realized they have the same problem.
I just didn't feel enough.
Britain's number one hypnotherapist.
The founder of Rapid Transformation Therapy.
Best-selling author.
Marissa Peer.
People who are depressed have a very interesting belief.
One is, there's no cure, you know, it's genetic.
And even if there was, it wouldn't work for me.
Can you change that belief very quickly?
Yeah, but you have to take a look at where did this happen?
How does one go about identifying which of these stories are the root cause?
Well, I think the first thing is...
You must have also faced some pretty heartbreaking cases.
Tell me about one that comes to mind when I say that.
I think my saddest case was a boy at 14
whose father was hitting him with a belt.
Nobody needs that.
Oh, just excuse me for one minute.
Nice.
It's no one's job to make you feel good.
It's your job.
And if you give someone the job of making you feel good,
then guess what?
You give them the job of making you feel bad. If what you give them the job of making you feel bad.
If you can give yourself the certainty you're looking for
instead of looking for it somewhere else
the shift isn't subtle, it's profound.
So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett
and this is the Diary of a CEO USA edition.
I hope nobody's listening
but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
Marissa, first and foremost, thank you for being here. As you will know, I'm a big fan of your
work. I included much of sort of something really pertinent that you'd said in my book as well. And I think that's how we kind of became connected.
You spend so long helping other people and understanding them.
I wanted to start today by understanding you a little bit.
Okay.
I want to go right back.
I know that, so I did a little bit of childhood psychology as well.
And this is why your work is particularly resonant with me.
But take me back to your childhood.
I read this quote you'd said, which I thought might be a good stage setter, which was, when I was growing up, I struggled with
the belief that I wasn't enough. This belief followed me through my teens and right into my
20s. Yes, certainly did. So who was that child? Well, you know, I had an interesting childhood.
Later, someone in therapy said, My God, your childhood sounded absolutely crazy. But it wasn't crazy, but it was interesting. I had a very beautiful mother
who was deeply, deeply unfulfilled. Beauty meant, gave her nothing. She wasn't a woman who could
stay at home and be a mother. I had a father who was deeply, deeply intellectual. He was a head
teacher and he loved his career. it was interesting watching this stranger my father
loved his career he helped kids every day he gave my gave himself to my mother was totally
unfulfilled always ill a little bit hysterical and I watched that and I remember thinking you
know what you have to have a great job you've got to get a job that's compelling and engrossing
because it
protects you from the pain. It wasn't if there's pain, it was there's going to be pain. My parents
relationship was a car crash, but if you've got an amazing career, then you'll be okay. So I always
wanted something engrossing and fulfilling, but my father was very interested in other people's
children because they were easier to work with than his own. So it was certainly an interesting life, but I don't regret any of it because it gave me the ambition to also
think, wow, you can help people. My father used to always say helping people is what life is all
about because it was for him. He wasn't very good at helping my poor mother, but that's okay.
So it was, but there were lots of elements of my life that were strange. So for
instance, I felt different. I was the head teacher's daughter and I went to his school.
And I realized later that is the bane of people's lives to be different because we're all hardwired
from birth to find connection and avoid rejection. When you feel different, then that can be really, really strange.
But it made me understand human psychology very early on,
what it's like to be different, what it's like to not fit in,
what it's like when it looks perfect on the outside,
but it's not really like that on the inside.
So it stood me in very good stead.
I think my childhood was the perfect background to be a therapist.
And where did you, in hindsight, pick up the belief that you weren't enough?
Yeah, you know, I remember being in my father's school and he actually was my history teacher.
He wrote in my history book, I think I was 11, I remember it to this day. He said,
oh, this is amazing work. I had no idea you were intelligent. And I think he wrote that to please
me, but I was not pleased. I remember
thinking, well, my father doesn't even know who I am. And so the not enoughness came from living
with a father who was invested in other people's children, living with a mother who was always in
hospital, living with a brother who was very clever and went to private, both my sister and
brother went to private school and I didn't because I wasn't the smart one.
And my sister was the cute little, beautiful little baby.
My brother was the first born smart boy.
And I just felt like this thing,
this kind of freak, if you like, in the middle.
But now I'm glad about that
because he gave me that understanding.
But I did have one thing.
I had a grandmother who really believed in me, thought I
was a genius. And I remember thinking then, that's actually all you need, one person. When I became a
therapist, I'd work with a lot of, I always called them the lost boys, like 15 year old kids who were
so angry. And they say, no one believes in you. I said, but that's not true. I believe in you.
And you can believe in you. That's already two people. And I've always
believed that if you have one person to believe in you, your life can be amazing. So I always had
my grandmother, she lived 300 miles away, but she really believed in me. And at that age, what did
you want to do with your life? Did you have a hypothesis or a vision? So I wanted to be an
artist. I was very good at art. My daughter's now an amazing artist, but I wanted to be an artist. I was very good at art. My daughter's now an amazing
artist, but I wanted to be an artist. And my parents were like, no, no, no, you can't be an
artist. You can't go to art school. That's just for druggies and dropouts. I still love illustrating.
And I was always writing stories, which is quite funny now because I wrote stories. My mother kept
them all. They were always about dysfunctional families and unhappy families. And that was so
interesting that I wrote that. And now, of course, I wrote that book. It's all about the stories of
unhappy people. So I always thought I'd be an artist. And my father said, you should be a
teacher like me. That would be amazing for you. So I went to teacher training college. You know,
I'd love to be a teacher. But then I realized that I didn't want to be a teacher after all. So I left that and went off to work for Jane Fonda here in LA,
which was much more fun. And I loved that. I went fully into the diet, weight loss, fitness industry.
But even then I realized how abusive that industry is, how cruel it is to people,
how it tells them that your worth is entirely judged
on the number on the scales or the number on the tape measure.
And I saw working for Jane that, you know, anorexia and bulimia
and mental illnesses, body dysmorphia is a mental illness.
And they were trying to cure it with aerobics
and living on
protein shakes and diet soups and so I came across this wonderful guy called Gil Boyne who was a
hypnotist and I trained with him and thought well this is amazing I've got all these people I'm
teaching aerobics in the 80s it was a huge thing every day and my class is war to war with anorexics bulimics body dysmorphics exercise
compulsives orthorexics which is people who only eat clean organic food and I thought well I don't
even have to advertise for clients and I didn't and so then I had this amazing life teaching for
Jane during the day seeing clients in the evening but then I got so busy I had to actually stop working for her
because I just couldn't cope with the um amount of clients that were coming through my door because
I found something that really fixed eating disorders and that was such an amazing thing
and you meet Gil Boyne when you Gil Boyne isn't it yeah Gil Boyne when you got to LA yeah and
you talk about this individual being a
really pivotal yeah he was a hypnotherapist yeah he was and what was it about him and what he taught
you that stayed with you you know Gil was one of the people I love the most he broke all the rules
he swore like a trooper he banged his fist on the table but he was deeply deeply religious believed
that God worked through him he was just such a fascinating character because he was a street fighter from Philadelphia
who worked with Sylvester Stallone and hypnotized him to write Rocky
and realized he was onto something and then developed this amazing school teaching hypnotherapists.
And he so believed in it that he would guarantee that if he trained
you and somebody sued you, he would turn up in court and defend you and pay all the costs, which
stands to phenomenal belief. So I trained with him. And then I became a hypnotherapist and I
loved it. And then over time, he did ask me once if I wanted to, as he got older and retired,
run his business. But then I'd found my own method,
my own technique. I always think that when you train to be a therapist, any kind of therapist,
no matter how amazing your teacher is, and I now teach amazing therapists, but you have another
teacher, every client you see will teach you something profound and amazing. So then my own
clients became my teachers and taught me so much.
And they'd come back, you know, that one thing you did, that changed my life.
That one thing you said, oh, my God, that was a game changer.
So I started to collate the one thing, which is different, of course, for every client.
They never all said the same thing.
And then collating the one thing that gave them a stunning turnaround,
I then created my own method, which I called rapid transformational therapy.
People say, but that's not right.
The words therapy and rapid don't go together.
Why?
Well, it has to be long and painful.
Who said that?
If I turned up, I did turn up at ER once, I broke my arm.
And they didn't say, well, we got to build a relationship of trust to heal you. I didn't go to my dentist and say, you know,
I've got an infection here. They went, well, we need the trust, you see. And I always thought
people in pain, emotional pain is no different to physical pain. If I've got a headache or a broken arm I've got irritable bowel or blushing I can't find love or I stutter
that's really painful and I thought that therapy should be like going to the emergency room
that we should offer immediate help so much of the um the underlying thesis about you know in
your new book and I guess behind your rapid transformational
therapy is this idea that there's stories that are within us that are from our childhood or
whatever and they are sometimes and often very stubborn stories so imagine as you've said the
reason why people think it's hard for it to be rapid or quick is because those stories are so
deeply ingrained and stubborn and etched into us. And we make someone else's story our story.
My mum always wanted a boy.
I was the fourth girl.
My dad wanted me to go into the family law firm,
but I wasn't smart.
And so I see two things a lot.
Someone else's story.
My mum said, don't even trust your own shadow.
But that's not your story. That's someone else's story. My mom said, don't even trust your own shadow. But that's not your story.
That's someone else's story.
So the first problem is that we make somebody else's story.
My teacher said I'd never amount to anything.
That's not your story.
My teacher said that to me, but that wasn't my story.
But the second thing that's even more painful
are the lies we tell ourselves. And
the biggest lie is I'm not enough. I'm not lovable. I don't matter. And what happens with
small children as they come into the world, they don't actually have a lot of needs. They need to
feel safe, loved, significant. They need to feel they matter. But when you're a small child, if
your parents cannot meet those needs because they're. But when you're a small child, if your parents
cannot meet those needs because they're alcoholics, they're mentally ill, they're doing three jobs,
they're a single parent, they're stressed or whatever it is, the child never stops loving
them and they immediately stop loving themselves. If only I was better, my mom wouldn't be crying.
If only I was good, my dad wouldn't shout. If only I was something, my mom wouldn't be crying. If only I was good, my dad wouldn't
shout. If only I was something, my dad would see me at the weekends. And once they buy into that,
oh, it's my fault, that becomes a lifelong sentence. But it's very easy to unpick that
by saying to ourselves, look, you know, you're looking at this through the filter of a five-year-old.
One of my clients told me that she was walking with her mother in Ireland and her father's friend
came and he said, it's a disgrace that you haven't given your husband a son. He'll never be a man,
you know, because he doesn't have a son. What a strange thing for him to say. But this little girl
heard that and thought, oh, I should have been a boy.
I've caused both my parents this tremendous grief.
And then she became very masculine.
She worked as a fire officer.
In fact, she was head of a fire crew.
And she wouldn't wear makeup.
She wouldn't let her husband put up a shelf.
She had very short hair.
And that was okay, except she said, I feel very conflicted
because I just can't be the person I want to be.
And I feel I've got to do everything perfectly.
And my husband and I have so many arguments
that I want to drive the car.
I'll carry everything.
And just going back to remember that scene
was a real aha moment.
Oh, I heard something at five. Your husband will never be a man because he hasn't
got a son. That last charge would have been a son. But you see, she interpreted it with the
mind of a five-year-old. At 35, take a look again and maybe understand that you were meant to be a
girl. Your father was thrilled to be a girl. even if you wanted a boy somebody wanted you to
be a girl so we see things with a filter of a child he's been on the planet for four years what
do they know I'm not good enough I'm not lovable I was a disappointment so looking at again as an
adult you get the chance to say oh I see I believed something then that felt true but it wasn't true
can that change in beliefs be rapid though so say in that case that can be really rapid yeah
I don't know if you read the case about Ryan the alcoholic whose father rejected him because he was
gay and he always felt so sad he attracted men that were abusive to him.
And when I had him have an imaginary conversation with his dad,
he said, I feel inadequate.
When I had a gay son, I just felt more inadequate.
It's not you, it's me.
He began to realize that he wasn't a broken person at all,
but he'd had broken parenting.
And I think I said that to him,
Ryan, you're not broken, but he'd had broken parenting. And I think I said that to him, Ryan, you're not broken,
but your parenting was broken. You're not flawed, but you had flawed parenting,
but there's a huge difference. You are not flawed. But your parents who were young and his mother got
pregnant, they weren't suited. You had a flawed upbringing, but there's a huge difference. And
then he was able to make his peace with that and stop drinking completely. He's never had a drink since. So if you think therapy is long,
it can be like that. If you can look at a scene and reframe it and go, oh, I thought that,
but that wasn't even true. Then it becomes a game changer and it can take 21 days for the magic can take 21 seconds if you can look at
something oh i see i thought that but actually that was an incorrect thought and i can go back
and correct an incorrect thought if at the um the crux of our lives and our behavior exists these
like fundamental self stories we've told ourselves about ourselves, about who we are and about where we are significance in the world, etc. How does one go about even identifying unless they
have wonderful therapist? How do they go about identifying which of these stories are the root
cause of the symptoms they're seeing in their lives, whether it's addiction, depression, anxiety,
whatever it might be? Well, I think the first thing is, you know, just start to observe your thoughts.
Do you have those what I call limiting thoughts?
I'm not enough.
Who's going to want me?
I'm not lovable.
No one cares about me.
And think about the thoughts and then ask yourself a question.
Where did this thought come from?
No baby is going to go, don't look at me.
I'm naked.
I've got no teeth.
I've got milk sores.
I've got these triple knees here and I'm not enough. So what happened to that belief? Well, someone chipped
away at it, a parent, a relative, a teacher, somebody. And because children are so suggestible,
it's very easy to make them think they're not enough. But can you change that belief very
quickly? Yeah. But you have to take a look at
where did this happen? You know, I never say, well, what's wrong with you? I say, what happened
to you? They go, well, I was a perfectly normal weight until I was 11. And then what happened?
Well, I went to school, I got bullied. People started to make really weird sexual comments
about my body and I just got fatter and fatter. And then they never did that again. So now we see,
oh, so somehow what was happening had a role and a function. And every thought you think
isn't a thought, it's a blueprint that your mind, body and psyche work to make real.
I think if you take a thought, you know, for me, I was always late as a kid for everything. I missed the bus to school every day.
And as an adult, I was always late.
If I had 10 hours to get somewhere, I'd be like, I missed planes, I missed appointments.
And one day I suddenly realized that when I was a kid and I missed the bus to school,
my father, I'd have to walk home, he'd be furious.
He wouldn't even speak, but he'd get out the car and drive me in silence to my school's three-mile drive.
I never missed the bus coming home, by the way.
Then I thought, oh, of course I did that for attention.
But my father is now deeply proud of me, and even if he wasn't,
I don't need that attention.
And it just stopped like that,
because I suddenly saw the role of it, the job, the function.
And many times if you can just ask yourself,
if this headache or this blushing or this asthma
or this feeling had a job or was trying to help me,
what would it do?
And it's really amazing the answers that come up.
Is that why you say,
when you think about the sort of the core principle of
rtt it says don't just treat the behavior treat the purpose the behavior always treat the purpose
you see if someone what does that mean how do i make well let's imagine that you you binge on
cakes or you're the kind of person when something goes wrong you you you eat pizza or cake or
something and most of us go tell you what's wrong with that but i would say hey what's right's right with it? You're an alcoholic. Tell me what's good about that. What do you mean? Well, you keep going
back to it. And they go, actually, now you mention it. It does give me comfort. I can always depend
on drink. It takes away the pain. I get comfortably numb. I can come home and just block out or I can come home and eat five donuts and then I just go
into this kind of soporific place. And so I don't treat the symptom, which is I'm eating cakes every
day or drinking alcohol or binging on Netflix. I'm using drugs. I treat what I call what lies
beneath. Why are you doing that? What does it give you?
When did you start that? Why do you think it helps you? I worked with someone who was a chronic
alcoholic. When I talked to him, he said, you know, I never saw my dad. At 16, he took me to the pub
and he got me drunk and he went, you're a man now. And he began to take me to the pub every weekend.
And I thought, well, this is great. My dad likes me because I'm a man.
And they had a very bonding time over beer. And then the dad died and he continued drinking beer
because he believed that he was bonding with his father, even though he was dead.
And so what was right about drinking beer, it has a memory. That's how my dad bonded with me in the pub with his mates getting drunk.
And so when you see, oh, so the role of the drinking was to keep a memory going.
Yeah, but you can remember your dad.
He doesn't live in a pint of beer.
You can think of all the things you did do together and you don't need to drink.
And so it's coming to the realization that something that we hate,
if something you hate keeps coming back, I keep dieting, I always gain the weight back. I've been to rehab eight times, but I still keep drinking. You got to stop treating the drinking and treat the cause of the drinking, the role of the drinking, the benefit of the drinking, the purpose of the drinking the benefit of the drinking the purpose of the drinking and when you do that and get it right you can change it forever like with ryan who's never had a drink since he realized
that he felt worthless because his father rejected him because he was gay and it starts with that
awareness that you described yeah and which is i i think is such a difficult thing for some people
for many reasons i think some people live in this kind of self-defense state
where they didn't, they,
the awareness is too uncomfortable for them to even contemplate.
You know, I'm sure you've seen this in your practice,
but either people don't want to come,
but when they're there,
they don't want to go to certain places
in terms of they don't want to reveal certain things.
They'd rather just ignore opening that box box and live in you know a state
of i don't know bliss naive bliss ignorance is bliss i mean this there's a story in there of a
girl called terry who lost two babies died one at birth one at a few weeks and her two existed and
one had a congenital heart defect and the first first thing she said was, don't take me back. I don't want to revisit that pain.
And I said, okay, I won't.
I promise I won't.
So while my job is to take people back,
I call it being a good detective.
Someone's turned up and said, well, I don't know why I keep sabotaging.
I have no idea.
I guess I'm just messed up because I sabotage every relationship.
Every job I get, I procrastinate and I always get fired.
I don't know why.
So I've shut myself away and I don't even want to look at that.
But you can still go back and find it out because, in fact, Terry had a very functional heart.
All it knew how to do was keep repairing itself.
And she had a massive breakthrough just in a half an hour conversation because she understood that being numb,
it's like you can't not feel,
but she was living in a world of not feeling
and it was exhausting.
So I always think what I do wears three different hats.
The first hat is Michael being a good detective.
You're an investigator.
You never say what's wrong.
You say, what's wrong. You say
what happened? Why do you feel like that? Why do you want to change? What would it look like to
change? I often say to people straight away, tell me about your family. I've got three sisters. Are
they all great? It's just me. Or they might get, oh, they're all messed up. And then you know
straight away that something's gone very wrong with his parenting or something's just gone wrong with this child.
So when you put your investigator hat on, you know, a detective will lay out images
and look at them and go, look at that scene, that scene, that scene, that scene,
and they work out what happened by looking at information.
And a good RTT therapist is the same.
We gather information.
You have lots of aha moments, lots of ear prick up moments,
lots of things that come up that you think,
oh yeah, I'm going to go here, I'm going to go there.
And after you've done the investigating
and found out usually in minutes
why that person is the way they are,
you then switch to almost being like a dentist,
extracting all that toxic stuff, removing it,
and finally become like a coder.
It's like someone who's upgrading someone's software
and you code in and wire in and fire in totally different beliefs.
But the skill is doing it all at the same time.
Many people go to therapy and just talk about what's wrong with me,
what's wrong with me, I don't know, maybe I can find out and others go and maybe just do
suggestion therapy, but let's give you a different belief. But in fact, you have to do all three
seamlessly together because that's the perfect recipe for change. I understand, I can let that
understanding go. And at the same time,
I'm going to put in something completely different. You know, the with all these, a lot of the sort of
mental health disorders, you know, depression, anxiety, etc. There's been a lot said about the
recent and the just apparent increase in the amount of people reporting to have these illnesses.
Do you believe that there
has been an increase? And if so, what do you think has been the cause? Yeah, I would say there's
definitely an increase in depression. You know, I've found in my experience, it's only my experience
that the major cause of depression are a couple of things. One are harsh, hurtful, critical words
that we say to ourselves on a regular basis. That is guaranteed
to make you depressed. The second is being disconnected. And we have an epidemic of
disconnection because everyone is on their phone and their screen. We work from home in COVID. Some
of us are still doing that. We go to the store and we do a self-checkout. We go to the bank and
we check out with a machine. So we are becoming disconnected.
And human beings are wired for connection, not disconnection.
And the other thing I find is a massive cause of depression
is failing to follow your heart's desire,
doing something because, well, the family expect it,
the pay is good, it's a solid job.
So those three things, I think,
are the massive cause of depression.
On that first point about people
telling themselves negative stories,
we'll all know people that are very self-disparaging.
Is that, and it's interesting because,
I mean, I don't know what that originates from,
but I know so many people
that are incredibly self-disparaging.
The first thing they'll say to you is,
oh, I'm sorry, I look bad today.
I know.
I messed that up.
I'm just a mess.
I always fail.
I'm so sorry.
They look in the mirror and they go,
oh my God, look at me.
Or they go, I'm going to do this, but it won't work.
Where it comes from, funnily enough,
is our tribal need.
You know, we're still inside tribal people
and we need to connect with a group and
so bragging I'm better than you I'm smarter than you I got more than you is disconnecting
and so people learn to connect by not having that tall poppy center we have to be the same
you know children at school bond by being the same and I I found many clients, you know, my parents were rich or dirt poor.
I was the only kid with glasses and I felt different like being the head teacher's daughter.
So it comes from there. So it's a strange thing that a few hundred years ago, a few hundred years
ago and beyond, being negative actually saved your life, looking for danger, looking for snakes,
looking for lions, looking for lions,
looking for weird people.
You might do it because they believe it protects them from hurt and pain.
If they reject themselves first.
Yeah, if they reject themselves first.
No one's ever going to like me.
See, I knew it.
And now it doesn't hurt, but it really hurts.
And so our job is to show people that no happiness is there.
You might as well expect the best.
You know, Muhammad Ali said,
I told myself I was the greatest before I even was.
And then something amazing happened.
I became the greatest.
He could have said, I'm not much good me.
I'm useless, really.
It's all a fluke.
But he said, I am the greatest long before he was.
And that was so good for him
because people think of him as
undefeated which isn't true but that's the idea of him because he told himself a better lie
and if we could only all do that our lives would be so much better mostly because the mind doesn't
know or care of what you're telling it is true or false or good or bad. It just lets it all in.
It's like, as you say, you said, you know, thoughts are actually blueprints.
And I was thinking about them as like they are code going into a sat-nav.
Yeah, exactly.
If I tell myself I'm beautiful and I'm going to be successful,
I'm going to get married, then my mind and my being will take me in that direction.
Maybe even subconsciously, my actions will take me in that direction maybe even subconsciously my actions
will further me in that direction i will say yes to things that are conducive with that outcome
um and it really goes to show it doesn't it the power of um yeah as you say the limiting beliefs
we tell ourselves because we all say them i've gone through my life telling myself that i'm
really unorganized i know because i went because i grew up in a really unorganized home where my parents were never there, so everything was just a mess.
Yeah, and I'm not wanted or I don't matter.
You know, I was working with a kid a couple of years ago
who was in the Chelsea junior team, Chelsea Football Club.
And every day they're coached,
you've got a 2% chance of getting into the main team,
playing for Chelsea, just 2%.
You've got to shape up.
But you see, most kids when when they hear that, think,
oh, I got a 98% chance of failing here.
2%? It's tiny.
I said, listen, you've just got to say, I'm in the 2%.
Someone else told me that their doctor said,
you have a 20% chance of surviving cancer.
That's great. I'll go in. I'm in the 20%.
I'm in that 20%.
You might think that's foolish,
but when you set your mind to something
and look at being in the percentage that makes it,
actually your mind and body start to work at a level
that make you stay in that percentage.
Usually the opposite,
while I'm in the percentage of failures,
the same thing happens.
Your mind and body work to make you stay in that percentage
because the strongest force in humans
is that we act in a way that totally matches
how we define ourselves.
When you say I'm a loser, I'm a hot mess,
I'm a train wreck, everything I touch doesn't work.
If only we knew how we are making those thoughts real
and how our mind's job is to actually start making
our thoughts real we'd probably stop them but but it's not i guess it's not so easy just to make
someone an optimist no that's true if we think about the pessimists in our lives and i've i mean
i've got friends that are pessimistic about they it just seems to be their default and no matter i mean
none of us in our friendship group of therapists but the efforts we've gone to to try and make
this individual not pessimistic in every situation have never ever worked i'm thinking about a friend
i have back home who always and used to work for me who always defaults to just pessimism and
everything's going wrong and whatever and i you know yeah but then you have to ask them what if you said to them the same thing i say to alcoholics
what's good about it they'd say i'm never disappointed what's good about your pessimism
yeah what's good about it if i said to my mother what's good about being a hypochondriac she'd say
well i get lots of attention i love being in hospital everyone's so worried about me people
come to visit me
so you have to ask what's good about being a pessimistic and he'll say
I don't let people down people don't expect anything of me and so it's that expectation
yeah and it's a little bit more than the thought because if you imagine a snack I have to use my
fingers to explain it that's the thought thought. And thought always comes first.
And then you think a thought.
When you think a thought, you then feel a feeling.
And then the feeling dictates how you act.
So imagine you thought a thought, which is I'm not enough.
The biggest cause of issues in the Western world is this not enoughness.
If I thought I'm not enough and I went straight to the next ladder, the next stage, how would I feel if I thought I'm not enough?
I'd feel sad, dejected, demoralized, maybe angry, maybe resentful, maybe bitter.
So I've thought a thought.
I got some feelings that come with thinking the thought.
But then what actions come from thinking that thought and feeling those feelings?
Often no actions.
I don't take risks. I don't ask people out ask for promotion I'm actually angry and defensive so now I've got
actions and behaviors I'm angry I'm defensive I'm reclusive I'm a loser I don't bother and then we
justify it by going back because I'm not enough but if you switch that to I am enough and just
took out the not okay if I thought I'm enough if I said it even switch that to I am enough and just took out the not and go,
okay, if I thought I'm enough, if I said it, even if I didn't believe it,
but said it, said it, said it, what would I feel?
Well, I might feel optimistic.
I might feel confident.
I might feel reassured.
I might feel hopeful.
I might feel excited.
And then what thought actions would I have?
Well, I would take some risks.
I'd ask people out. I'd ask take some risks. I'd ask people out.
I'd ask for that promotion.
I'd follow my dreams.
I'd behave differently.
And I justify, again, it's like a loop,
thought, feeling, action, behavior, thought.
So although it sounds very Pollyanna,
oh, you're just thinking great thoughts.
It's much more than that.
Because when you think a thought, you feel a feeling,
and then you act on that thought and feeling and you behave in a way that's linked to that thought
and feeling and a lot of things. So let's change the behavior. Stop drinking, stop smoking,
stop sabotaging, stop procrastinating, stop acting out. But the behavior is the last thing to change.
You have to go back and change the thought first
and then it's easy does the thought or like the underlying belief come from some kind of
subjective evidence or experience we've had in our life i always i always think about all my
beliefs and i always think that they are all based on some whether right or wrong whether true or
false evidence so you know i struggled with relationships I've talked about
that a lot on this podcast but I struggled with relationships and that meant that I was avoidant
even if I was attracted to someone even if I pursued someone the minute they asked to commit
to me I would dissuade them I would tell them all the reasons why we should not be together
and I and I look back and my childhood and really the evidence that was at the center of my belief
was watching my parents screaming at each other every day,
really awfully.
And this belief that my dad was in prison,
that I always had.
And I was always trying to bail him out of prison from my mum screaming at him.
So the way that I viewed it was,
once I became aware of this faulty evidence
I had in my life from my childhood,
honestly, from writing and doing this podcast,
it finally dawned on me where I'd learned what love was
and how identical the feeling I felt about being
imprisoned was similar to the seven six-year-old Steve looking at his dad being screamed at so for
me what I thought happened was I became aware and then the awareness of it allowed me to not
the trigger which would be someone asking me to be in a relationship with them no longer held
enough power over me which allowed me to get into relationship to rewrite new evidence because really you stopped
thinking the thought that a relationship is a prison that's what it really goes back to you
began to understand that you weren't born with that thought you acquired it and anything you
require you can release so you worked out oh i've been seeing this with the filter of a six-year-old. A six-year-old filter says a relationship is like prison, especially for a man. But then you
realized you weren't six. And there's lots of other evidence that says that's not true.
And you changed your thought. You see, when you question a belief, you don't believe it. That's
why in religion, you may not question the priest or the abbot or the imam. You're not allowed to do that because we understand when you question a belief, you begin to doubt it.
That's why people who are deeply religious never question it. I know God exists. How do you know?
I just know. When you question a belief, like when you see your children, my little girl saying,
Mommy, but how does Father Christmas get down there? How does the reindeer get down the chimney?
They're that big and the chimney's that big
and how can you get all around the world in one night?
And no, they're beginning to doubt,
which is a great thing.
So if you question a belief, you introduce doubt
and that's what a great therapist does.
It says, really?
Are you always a failure?
Were you really meant to be an accountant to please your dad? Is
that why you're here on the planet? Do you really think that everything you touch fails? Do you
really believe there's no one in the world that can love you? So when you start getting able to
question beliefs, you open up a little glimmer of, oh, right. Yeah, that doesn't have to be true.
And it doesn't have to be true for me. And that's why
it's important, which you did so eloquently. You looked at the belief of a six-year-old and thought,
but that's not me. One of the things I talk about in the book a lot is having clients say,
that's not me because, and they have to justify why that isn't them. Oh, that kid that wore
secondhand clothes and mom was never there. That isn't me. I've got
a wardrobe full of clothes. I don't have to do that anymore. But, you know, we play the only
part we've ever known. And then we make that part our own. And we don't even know that there's many
other parts we could take on if we wanted to. Even those beliefs, that imprisonment belief that I had,
that relationships were prison,
I felt it, the power of that belief deteriorate over time.
Good.
But I still believe that it's there somewhere.
And that kind of makes me wonder
if those very sort of deeply held childhood beliefs
ever really completely vanish
or if they are still
capable of being triggered so for example if if i was in a relationship now and my girlfriend
started say shouting at me in the same way my dad shouted at my mom i could very well see myself
just getting up and leaving not shouting back just getting up and leaving trying to like flee
flee the jail and i just wonder with these you know even with your
the clients that you have and the patients you see whether they really ever fully overcome
i think a lot of them do i think it's a work in progress it's about you look to that little boy
who said relationships are prison and you realize that was a statement that for you is a statement
of truth it wasn't a question it was a statement and then what is a statement of truth. It wasn't a question. It was a statement.
And then what you have to do is start making a different statement. The mind learns by repetition.
Relationships are wonderful. People say to me, marriage is such hard work. I'm like,
I don't think so. I found it hard being single. I got the flu. I've got to get out of bed,
go to the pharmacist myself, make myself some soup in a marriage in a relationship someone else to
say I'll get that I'll do that let me do that so you question the belief that you have but then
you have to also change it and you have to keep repeating the changes you know I worked with
somebody once who said I have no coping skills my mother was hypersensitive to light and noise. I couldn't
open a packet of potato chips without her going mental. We never went to the cinema or the swimming
pool or the beach. She didn't like light. She didn't like noise. She didn't like people.
And then she said, and I have no coping skills. And I made her say, I want you to say I have
phenomenal coping skills. And so she had to say that every day. She didn't believe it, but she said, you know, it's amazing. I say that every day and I've become
this person who feels she can cope with anything. So you have to look at your question, your
statement and just change it. I don't matter. I matter. I'm insignificant. I'm significant. I'm
not lovable. I am lovable. I'm not enough. I've always been
enough. And if every person in the world could wake up and just say, I matter, I'm significant,
I'm enough, and I'm lovable, that would change. I know that to be true because I've got many
anti-bullying programs in schools all over. And they all say the same thing. All the kids say
that every time enough, they've made a little plaque for their desk. And bullying has almost disappeared in this school just from those simple statements, because
bullies don't feel enough. It isn't enough to work with a bullied child. You must work with
a kid who's doing the bullying. What's going on with them? Nobody says, oh, my life is so great,
so wonderful. Who can I bully today? I'm having a great time. I think I'll go off and troll somebody.
So we know that the not enoughness
is the core of so many of our beliefs.
But since the mind doesn't know or care what you're saying,
if you switch I'm not enough to I am enough,
the shift isn't subtle, it's profound.
Just the subtlety of words.
You seem to assert that it makes a tremendous difference.
Just one word that we use.
Just one word.
Because we go through our lives saying things.
So we go through our lives.
I'll say like, you know, I'm not organized
or I'll say, I can't do that.
You know, and a lot of the time,
the truth is I probably could.
But if we're in this culture of just the flippancy of words
where we say, oh, I can't, that's not me.
I'm not that person, I am this.
These kind of like binary definitive statements.
Are they dangerous?
Yeah, when you say something, they go, not bad, I'm all right.
How was your weekend? Not bad.
So they're really minimizing anything that's good.
And I think you have to
turn it right up. But often the one word, many years ago, one of my clients said, I wish you'd
see my mother. She has a hell of a life with my dad. He hits her, he's aggressive, but she's very
invested in, you know, the front of a marriage. So in came the sweet little old lady. And she kept
talking about her husband saying he's a good husband. I said, but he's not a good husband, darling. He's a good provider. I want you to switch the word
husband to provider because he hits you. He's abusive. He diminishes you. That's not a good
husband, but he is a good provider. I know that's important. You've got a nice home,
three kids, you went all left. So she began to say he's a good provider. She said, you know,
it's amazing. I went home within three months. I divorced him because I thought, oh, well, I don't need to be with a provider.
I've already got this house.
I've got my pension.
So for her that one word,
he's only been a good provider in my entire marriage.
He's actually hurt me a lot.
Do I need him to provide?
I've got a pension.
I've got a house.
I've got friends.
I've got my children.
He can't provide anything I can't provide myself.
He's not a
good husband at all. And so for her, just taking off the blinkers and having someone tell her the
truth, that's not love. Isn't that crazy? Love doesn't hurt like that. We will say, oh, my
boyfriend loves me so much he hits me. That's not love. You may believe it's love, it's passion. It's not love. My dad hits me because I don't behave.
That's not love.
And often you have to educate people in a very nice way
and change one word, I'm useless.
No, you're smart.
I don't matter, you matter a great deal.
And going back again to all these teenage kids
who say no one loves me.
I don't matter.
I go, look,
if your life was a clock, you're talking about the first five minutes of the clock. The first
five minutes is horrible, but you've got the whole rest of the clock to have an amazing life. You
know, this is your life today, but it's not your life. Your life today is you're being bullied at
school. Your parents don't seem to care and no one's there. And that's
horrible for you. But, and that is your life, but it's not your life. Your life's going to be
amazing. And then you have to help them stand up to bullies and believe they matter and not
tolerate it. But it all starts again. You know, there's a great song called It Started With A
Kiss, but nothing starts. It starts with a thought about a kiss.
Everything goes back to a thought.
And if you can keep peeling back to the thought, like your thought, marriage is prison,
then you think, but I have the power to change that thought at any stage, no matter how long down the line it is.
If you change the thought, you change everything because the law of control begins with thoughts. You can't control the weather or the traffic. You can't even control your body or you'd never get a cold,
but you can always control your thoughts. And when you control your thoughts,
it changes your whole life. And I know it sounds easy or simple, but that's because it is simple.
You know, I've been doing this five-day challenge in schools and it's called the I can't to I can
and it's just five days where every day these children go from I can't to I can
they have an imaginary cheerleader that does somersaults and bangs cymbals and cheers them on
and they've all said it's made such a difference because they realize they can that when you say
I can't what if nobody likes you what if I, what if nobody likes me? What if I fail?
What if I get it wrong?
Well, you might, but you also might get it right.
And if you get it wrong, you've learned something.
You know, if you never make a mistake,
you've never made anything.
Because the only way you can learn
is often by getting it wrong.
You think, oh, I tried that.
I didn't like it.
I never want to do that again.
Being a therapist and speaking to a wide variety of people,
you must have also faced some pretty heartbreaking outcomes and cases.
Tell me about one that comes to mind when I say that.
I think my saddest case was a boy of 14.
His father was very physical with him, but he lived with a mother.
And he didn't have any skills to handle that so he became very violent at school and was being expelled and when I saw him I said
darling your dad's not allowed to put his hands on you you know that he said but I can't I said
but you can stop him you have to so we practiced rehearsing a lot that he would say to his dad you
may not put your hands on me.
And then I said, I think you have to not see him for a little while. And then the mother said,
but he needs a dad. I said, well, not like that. That's hitting him with a belt. Nobody needs that.
And he does need a dad, but he needs a dad that respects him. So we had to all have this little family conversation that they were going to go home and ring him and say, I can't see you until you get help. And the father was so childish. He smashed up his Xbox and dumped it in the
garden, but he didn't see me stood his ground. And then the father wanted to see him. And I said,
you know, every time you must say to me, you cannot put your hands. I mean, if you do,
I can't stop you. When I leave, I will call the police because I got to get you some help.
You can't be like this.
And actually, it was amazing.
I did feel sorry for that kid because the father was so dismissive.
But eventually, the father realized that the only way you could see him was to stop being violent because I had to give this little boy the power.
You're only 14, but you're smarter than your dad.
You're more educated than your dad. You're more educated than your dad.
You're more grown up than your dad is a child.
And you have to be the man here and say,
I won't let you hit me because it's damaging for you as well as me.
And often with kids, it's giving them a voice,
giving them the power to say no.
When someone is abusing them, molesting them,
taking their lunch money, you know,
and that's often the case.
So many kids just don't have the power to say no.
Because when they say, don't you say no to me.
When people say to me, my kid's so annoying.
I said, that's how they learn.
I mean, my kid argued with me all the time.
And I always think I'm secretly rather pleased that she could stand up for herself and defend herself
and wasn't a yes person.
And we forget when we won't let our kids have a say,
they go under the word and they don't know how to have a say
and that's a terrible injustice for them.
I was reading in your book about children
and just more broadly about the the um some of the
mistakes parents make when they're raising children and one of them as you kind of cited
earlier was about um telling them not to feel things right so if they fall over don't cry don't
cry be a big boy stop being a baby that's definitely what I had planned to do with my kids
yeah tell me why I'm wrong yeah you know I I said to my little girl don't don't be a baby. That's definitely what I had planned to do with my kids. Yeah. Tell me why I'm wrong.
Yeah. You know, I said to my little girl, don't, don't be afraid. She goes, mommy, I am a baby.
And I thought, my God, she's so smart. She is a baby because she was my teacher. And then I remember to say to when she hurt her leg, oh, that really hurt, didn't it? Ouch, that hurt.
Yes, mommy, it hurt, but then she'd be okay. But when you said, don't cry, you're a big girl now.
That didn't hurt.
Stop making a fuss.
What you're saying is don't feel your feelings.
Swallow them, push them down, pretend you're okay.
Put on a happy face.
And then people walk through the world and say,
well, I can't tell anyone what I'm feeling
because we've trained them in the same way
we train kids to finish everything on their plate.
One of the best gifts you can give your children is letting them feel, you know, that hurt.
You're a great kid, but today you're being really mean to us.
What's going on?
And they'll say, you said she was my favorite.
Years ago, I took my little daughter.
We were lambing.
And she pushed my nephew, pushed him off a haystack.
And my brother was very cross.
I said, why did you do that? And she said said you said he was your favorite I said no said he was my favorite
nephew you're my favorite you'll always be my favorite he's my favorite nephew and you cannot
do that and you have to go and apologize and she did but I was really quite pleased that I was able
to say what just happened then you can't always do that. Sometimes you have to intervene,
but good kids do bad things.
Smart kids do stupid things.
And rather than saying you're so annoying or naughty or bad,
you say, what's going on?
Why did you just do that?
And they'll tell you something that you would never expect.
And then they feel safe sharing what's going on.
Children need you to be their safe place.
They need to come to you and say, hey, my friend's taking drugs.
My daughter goes, mum, my friend's brother, we went out,
and he's much bigger, and he was stealing all these baseball hats
and he made me wear one.
I didn't want to wear one.
I said, oh, that's your feelings telling you it's wrong.
You must always listen to those feelings and when that happens again you must say my I don't feel I can wear that baseball hat and so I was very pleased that she'd come in and tell
me stuff about drugs and sex and shoplifting and some of the stuff your eyes literally pop out on
stalks but you have to not judge your kids.
It's very easy to say, not so easy to do.
But you just have to take a deep breath,
even if it's not the time, and ask them, what's going on?
There's something that I sort of garnered from all of that,
which I think is really applicable to business and generally like leadership and I guess friendship as well,
which is typically we come with answers and we come with statements whereas the the approach you seem
to take even with your your daughter there is much more question centric it's asking questions
and being kind of removed from having a bias or presumption so and I was thinking about that from
a leadership perspective if you when there's an issue in your business with with an employee or something instead of coming with statements and presumptions
it's probably wiser to come with a question at first yeah what's going on i was i said that to
my pa the other day and i just am overwhelmed by something in my personal life so when you can say
something you know what's going on or yeah it's it's easier you know I was meeting my daughter in London recently I hadn't
seen her for ages I was so excited she turned up at this restaurant she was in a really bad mood
and I said do you want to and I don't like that do you want to go no I hate that and and I I felt
like saying you know what I'm just going to go home I don't know why I've come here but I just
said well anything you know I don't like anything here and then I said well let's order a coffee so
she and then she and then she said mommy I'm so glad that you understand me because it's not you I've had a
big fight with someone and I'm in such a bad temper and I was just being really defensive and
I felt great too because I learned to not think oh how dare she talk to me like that I might as
well go home I thought oh something's going on with her why don't I just sit here drink my own
coffee and just wait for her to work it out?
So if you can sit with someone and not judge them and say,
I mean, everything obviously shouldn't want it,
but I just left that,
then usually they'll tell you what's wrong,
but you can't interrogate people.
And sometimes you just have to give them
a little while to come around.
But I think when you stop judging people, which isn't always easy,
it may be when you have a workforce that mess up or are super defensive,
you try a little tenderness because you get much better results.
My husband and I have this great thing where I say,
oh, what's the story you're telling yourself? One day we were driving in the car
and I think I was driving and he was on his phone. I was talking, he wasn't listening. I talked
again. I went, oh, I'm telling myself a story here that you're not interested in anything I
have to say. And he went, oh, that's really funny because I'm telling myself a story that you're
annoying me because I've just got a message from our accountant
saying our account's been hacked
and I'm feeling really panicky
and I'm looking at this message and you're, yep, yep, yep.
So we both said, I'm telling myself a story
that you're not allowing me space
to read this very important message.
Now my story is you're not listening,
but I told that on a podcast and this girl wrote
and she said, well,
he was wrong. He was definitely having an affair because banks don't like to say you've been hacked.
In fact, it was our accountant that sent him a text saying you've been hacked. But that was so funny because there was a third story in there, someone else's story, which was, oh, he's definitely
cheating on you because. And so I thought that was so funny.
That didn't upset me because we all tell ourselves the story.
You don't love me anymore.
You forgot my birthday.
You don't give me the attention you used to.
You're not interested in me.
The significant shift there as well is responsibility.
Yeah. Because you're even in the car example.
Like it sounds like a conversation I had with my girlfriend recently
where I was
trying to do something and she tries telling me something.
I'm going through a crisis on my phone and I'm telling myself that she doesn't
understand my world and she's telling herself that I never listened to her.
She's talking,
saying important things.
Thankfully,
because I'm in a slightly more mature phase of my life,
we're able to have the conversation
as you've described where i'd say this is how i felt and i was telling myself this yeah you know
but a lot of people don't do that blame is much feels much easier and it takes a certain type of
maturity in person to even be able to take responsibility in the first place i tend to
believe that people who are, who have,
I don't know if this is accurate, it's just a belief I have,
but that have like lower self-esteem are less capable
of allowing themselves to look in the mirror
and take responsibility for things.
Yeah.
They are the most like protective of...
Yeah, they're much more adept at blaming, refusing to budge
because they believe that if you're right, they're wrong. It is easy
to be defensive and blaming and never admit you're wrong because we think being wrong means that
we're weak. You know, it's why men will never say I'm lost because if you're a hunter, you are
useless to the tribe. If you say I'm lost, I don't even know how to find my way back.
And so it's the, it's the fear of being wrong.
And, but I had to get around to say, listen, here's the truth. You're flawed. I'm flawed.
The best we can ever be in the world is two flawed people having a flawed relationship.
I call it being flawsome. So if you can decide, Hey, I like being flawed. You know,
I tell all my clients, the unhappiest people I've ever worked with without a shadow of a doubt are the ones who try to be perfect. And they're always the loneliest too,
because they can never say they're wrong. It's always your fault. You did it. You made them.
But if you can't be wrong, you're going to be alone because the basis of all friendship is,
we choose people who share our vulnerabilities. If you haven't got
any, then you also won't have any friends. So it is a defensive mechanism to never admit you're
wrong. And it can be very hard to say, you know, I was wrong. Better to say I made a mistake. I
messed up. I didn't handle that very well. I saw my husband's daughter once say, you know, I messed
up. I thought I was so proud of her. I messed up. I didn't handle myself well at all.
Really sorry.
But you go up in someone's estimation when you can do that.
We all know when Bill Clinton apologized,
people liked him more.
They didn't like him less because he said,
I didn't do anything wrong.
Yeah.
So the fear of being wrong creates a lot of problems,
especially in teenagers, until we can say, look,
even in the Bible it says to err is human, to forgive is divine.
I always think to err is human, but it feels divine.
So we have to not punish people for making mistakes,
especially our own kids or parents.
Say, look, yeah, you did mess up, but it's okay.
I'm glad you recognize that.
And I felt like this when it all comes back again
to can you communicate and you have healthy self-esteem because people with healthy steam
will say I was wrong I made a mistake that was my error people with low self-esteem said no it was
your fault it was all your fault.
So true. And I think that point about how you go up in people's self-esteem when you take responsibility is so unbelievably true. Because that's what it means. Responsibility means an
ability to respond. That's what it is. It's an ability to respond. And we want to have an ability
to respond better. It's incredibly trust building as well well isn't it when when you know that someone is able to say like i'm responsible for that or i made a mistake here yeah it kind of
allows you to understand that they are self-analytical and that they can um they can be
left to yeah assess themselves and also so many people just want to be heard when they go to their
mother and say you know you really hurt me.
They go, well, what about my life?
You know, you had a, and then they don't feel heard.
So when your kid or your husband or your wife comes in or your friend and says, you really hurt me when you forgot my birth.
They all forgot how important that was or canceled the last minute.
You have to say, oh, yeah, I hear that.
I'm really sorry. I hope even if you think they're being ridiculous,
you still have to say, I hear that that hurt you.
And I'm sorry that hurt you.
Because being heard is so important to us.
When we feel heard, we feel valuable
and we feel significant.
You know, again, our needs are to feel significant
and worthy and enough.
So if you can hear someone, you make them feel significant and worthy and enough.
And if you don't hear them and go, oh, you're just being overdramatic, you're overreacting, not that again.
Why don't you just get over yourself?
Then you don't feel significant, you don't feel worthy, and you don't feel heard.
So we want to have higher self-esteem.
And if you can tell people, oh, yeah, I can hear how I upset you.
I really feel bad about that.
You're growing their significance.
And then when you can feel hurt, you feel more significant too.
So it's such a gift to give someone just hearing them.
And even if it doesn't make sense to you still saying, yeah, I get it that you feel like that.
I'm really sorry.
In your book, when you're going through the case study of Joe, I believe it was,
you talk a lot about food and diet.
We all have the belief, and even I do, and I work out every day,
pretty much every day, about six days a week.
And even I know who I want to be in terms of my diet.
I know that I want to lose fat.
I know that I want to not eat the Pringles.
I'm very clear on this. I think about it a lot i want to not eat the pringles i'm very clear on
this i think about it a lot but i still eat the pringles and i still have the chocolate and i
still don't seem to be able to live in accordance with what i know or at least what i say um i want
to do and also as you've articulately said we all know what good food and bad food is,
but we still continue to make the wrong choices.
But from an evolutionary point of view,
sugar is a good food.
You know, if you were living thousands of years ago and you're out on the prairie,
if you found honey or fruit,
it was probably going to be very safe
and had a lot of fructose and it would keep going.
If you found some lettuce, that wouldn't be the same and bitter stuff was wanting to poison you so we actually are hard
wired to prefer sugar because it gives us a lot of nutrient a lot of calories a lot of energy
for something small whereas something else wouldn't do that and our primitive brain still
believes that we'll run out of sugar which is why no one says, I've got that lettuce in the fridge calling my name,
but that Ben and Jerry's, that cake, those cookies,
I keep going back for more.
And so it's very hard to fight your primitive wiring.
You are hardwired to remember where sugar is and finish it.
You're hardwired to eat food when you see it
because if the hunters came home with some fish
and you said, I don't really fancy fish,
two days later, you would be kicking yourself
because you should have eaten it when it was in front of you.
We're wired to be scared of hunger.
If you're scared of hunger, you can't be rational.
Also wired to go for fat, you know.
So Pringles and potato chips are the new cigarettes because we love the fat,
we love the crunch because we have stress receptors here that love biting and crunching.
And so everything we think was wrong about food is actually from our minds, but no, it's right,
you should eat when you see food, you should load up on calorific food because we lived in a feast and famine for years. But if you can
understand it, you can change it. And the whole diet industry is based on absolute abuse and
self-hatred. You know, we talk about punishing those pounds, doing a punishing workout, living
on a shake diet or powdered soup diet that just tastes disgusting. We go to groups where we get weighed and shamed in front of people.
We talk about food as sins and we've had a naughty day
or I've been good, been so good I haven't eaten,
now I've been really bad, I ate a cookie.
And that is why to me you feel like a massive, massive failure.
Even you saying, you know, I shouldn't eat the Pringles,
I shouldn't eat the chocolate.
You know, the way you eat is only down to the pictures you make in your head.
If the picture's right, you eat.
It's why vegans can't eat meat because the picture is wrong.
Jewish people can't eat pork because the picture is wrong.
So if you want to succeed, you've got to maybe set fire to some Pringles
or do something
make some glue with jelly sweets and then when you make the picture different you'll never want
to eat it again but you can't succeed at that by beating yourself up that's so very true the thing
that stopped me drinking coke was watching a clip that someone had shared and it they just boiled
coke and they showed the residue that was left behind and it they just boiled coke and they showed the residue that was
left behind and it looked like oil yeah and this picture i have in my head now is that if i drink
coke i'm putting this gloopy black oil in my yeah and i'm scared of that the way you feel about
everything everything is down to only two things the pictures you make in your head
and the words you say to yourself and I think I've now
trained 13,000 therapists in RTT all over the world and they all say you know that that's such
a condensing therapy into a moment the way you feel is down to the pictures you make and the
words you can say which you are free to change I can't get on a plane it's killing it's dangerous
well actually the most dangerous part is the
cab ride to the airport. It's a state of mind. They feel free. And so if you can just look at
every time you think of something or feel something, think, what are the pictures and
words? What am I saying? And if you can change them, it changes everything. And of course,
they are your words and pictures. I'm going on a date.
I might be rejected.
But I could be with someone amazing who just thinks I'm the most amazing thing.
I'm going to this.
I could fail.
But I could also get this amazing job of my dreams.
We've all been told that human beings are very complicated and that the mind is very
complex.
And it isn't.
It's very simple.
You only have to know three things about your mind.
One is
the way you feel about anything is down to the pictures you make in your head and the words you
say. The second is that your mind is hardwired to keep returning to what's familiar while running
away from what's unfamiliar, which, and that's true, but you can make anything. You can put a
bit of silicone on your finger and shove it in your eye every day and it becomes so familiar. But at first using lenses is very unfamiliar. But the most important thing
about the mind is that it does what it thinks you want. And you've got to sit down and think,
you know, but what do I want? I want attention. So I've got a nervous twitch. I want attention.
I'm getting all these illnesses. Oh, I see. I should have said I
want positive attention for being really smart or really kind or really evolved. So
really, you don't need to study in human. You need to know those three things. And if you know them
and apply them, you can make sense of your life and everyone else's lives, but also you can make your life so much better by thinking,
I can change the pictures.
I can take sugar out of my coffee and make it familiar very quickly.
And if I tell my mind like a spy school what I really, really, really want,
but I'm very clear, you know, I want more money.
Well, what's that, 10 bucks?
I want passionate relationship. For, what's that? 10 bucks. I want passionate relationship.
For how long? A week. So if you just keep always going back to those three things and looking at
them, you can have whatever you want. Once you can look at those three things and make them work for
you and not against you. When I talked about the Pringles there, you talked about the kind of
this initial
stage being that acceptance of understanding that this is my hard wiring um and this is you know
I'm not I'm not a bad human in fact I am a human you're doing what nature wants you to do actually
yeah and that that acceptance is um you talk about it when you talk about Terry in your book
when you're talking about dealing with hard feelings, this AAA sort of process.
Can you give me a little bit of illumination on that?
Yeah, I love AAA.
I invented that.
A lot of things I invent is,
first of all, makes it easy for me.
But when I'm teaching therapists,
it's easy for them to think AAA,
what does that mean?
It means be aware of what you're feeling.
So this is a formula,
almost a three-step process for dealing with hard feelings
so any hard feelings or indeed any feelings then you have to be hard um be aware of what you're
feeling and accept it that's the second people think what am i feeling i'm feeling jealous i
shouldn't feel jealous i need to eat a cake i'm feeling a feeling in my stomach the seat of all
emotions and i shouldn't really feel that feeling. Let me eat it, drink it,
smoke it, shop it, Netflix it. But when you say I'm going to be aware, I'm aware that I'm feeling
incredibly jealous of someone else whose book is selling more than mine. Oh, I feel really jealous
about that. Now I've got to accept it. Yeah, I'm feeling a little envious, but you know what?
My book's doing good. Not as good as theirs, but I've got to accept it.
Then I've got to articulate it.
I've got to say out loud,
I'm feeling really a little envious about that Paul McKenna.
He's got so much bigger numbers.
But you know, Paul deserves it.
He's worked really hard.
He's not me.
I'm not him.
Our books are different.
And if you can just do that triple A,
always start with the awareness. What am I
feeling? People say, oh, you shouldn't feel that. And you go, well, but my feelings are the most
real thing I have. How can I not feel it? I was having a conversation. I said, well,
you shouldn't feel that. I'm like, shouldn't feel it? The feelings are real. I can't not feel it.
It's like saying you shouldn't be diabetic. So first of all, I'm feeling it.
And you can't tell me I can't feel it because I'm feeling it.
So I'm aware I'm feeling it.
And I'm going to accept that I'm feeling it.
And then I'm going to articulate right now I'm feeling this rage towards my boss
who's taken my idea and passed it.
And I'm feeling this rage towards my sister or my partner
because they're not listening to me.
So I'm aware, I accept, I articulate.
But if you do those three, it goes away
because feelings are like children going,
hey, notice me.
And if you don't notice them,
they regroup and become stronger.
When you eat your feelings, shop your feelings,
Netflix or drink or drug your feelings,
they don't go away. They regroup and come back. But when you feel them, when you are aware of them
and you accept them and you articulate them, they actually go away really quickly. So many people
come in and say, I just feel so angry, so sad, so frustrated, so disappointed.
Well, okay, let's feel that right now and let's say it out loud and then it will go away.
And if only we all knew that, it makes such a difference to our life.
You see it in men, don't you?
Men express themselves the least and kill themselves the most.
Yeah, the highest suicide rate in the world is young men.
And actually, someone has always made them wrong.
It's always someone has made them wrong before they take that action.
Someone has made them wrong.
Wrong, yeah.
Someone has made them wrong.
Someone else has been right and they feel very wrong.
They've been dumped.
They've been rejected.
They failed at some exam.
They've been humiliated.
They feel wrong.
But yeah, but they don't feel that they're allowed
to have those feelings. You know, men don't cry. You're running like a girl. Stop being a big girl's
blouse. We have all these expressions for men, man up. And all they say is don't feel. And that's
killing people, not feeling. It's, you know, we've got people,
a glut of people taking antidepressants to be numb because they don't want to feel. And yet
your feelings are the most real thing you have. And they will do you an immense favor if you
tune into them. Sometimes you think, you know, what am I feeling? Actually, I'm feeling really
nervous. I'm about to give a speech and I'm feeling kind of nervous
what can I do well I can remember that I always feel like that before a speech but I always do
them and in five minutes it will all pass it will be gone and I'm just talking myself into it instead
of talking myself out of it so I'm going to accept I feel nervous I'm aware of it and I'm going to
say oh yeah here's that old nervous feeling again. Actually it's adrenaline,
it's excitement. And I always get this and it's always gone. You can always talk yourself into
something or out of it. Talk yourself out of the negative into the positive ones. It will change
your entire life. Incredibly, incredibly inspiring. And I relate to a lot of that um we have a um
we have a closing tradition on this podcast okay where the previous guest writes a question for
the next guest okay how cool so the previous guest has written you a question they didn't
know who they were writing it for okay um i won't tell you who they are okay you're gonna have to
riddle this one a little bit but the question is are you experienced question mark if so what did you learn and then they've done an asterisk at
the bottom that says in the jimmy hendrix sense oh i love jimmy hendrix are you experienced yeah
i am experienced you know people say to me but you're not a doctor you're not a doctor. You're not a psychologist. You're not a psychiatrist. But I've
been a therapist for 35 years, my entire adult life. And I feel I am very experienced in
understanding human pain. And what did I learn? I learned that almost all my clients' pain comes
from not believing they're enough. It's why I have all these I'm Enough braces, why I created
the I'm Enough movement, because I created the I'm enough movement,
because I worked with millionaires and Olympic athletes and sports stars and movie stars. And I
realized they have the same problem. So what my experience taught me from starting as a therapist,
working with, you know, everyday people, school teachers and police officers and stay at home
moms to working with billionaires taught me that we're all the
same and we all have the same core issue. I just didn't feel enough. But that isn't true.
But if you keep saying it, it becomes true because it feels true. And so if we can just
change those thoughts and feelings. So my experience taught me that therapy is not complicated.
And it taught me that this belief,
oh, someone's got depression, that's very complex.
So the treatment's complex too.
No, it isn't.
Treatment can be really fast and effective
because it comes from, again, the not enoughness.
It's so insidious.
But it's not even real.
But it's like saying my headache is psychosomatic. That
doesn't mean it doesn't hurt. It's just the same as a headache that's caused by an exposure to
toxic feelings. They both hurt the same. One is real, one is psychosomatic, but they feel the same.
And so my experience taught me to treat people and to simplify, simplify therapy, simplify the cure. You know,
the word cure comes from the word curious. And if you're curious, and if you treat every client as
if they are fascinating and compelling and interesting, you'll always unravel in your
curiosity. I mean, we're not allowed to say we cure people, but still, I love the fact that cure
comes from the word curious Marissa thank you so
much and thank you for writing such a brilliant book it's the first time I've read a book like
this that was centered around case studies of patients because you're telling real stories
of patients and really dissecting them it's much easier to follow and to relate to than if you were
just like you you know,
if it was a textbook. I read those textbooks in school, the childhood psychology textbooks,
the psychology textbooks, they were difficult. Yeah, the diagrams and stuff. But this felt very,
very human. And I think that's what made the book so. Yeah, I wanted people to think I identify with
Terry, I identify with Joe. And if I see Terry's story story i can see my story and in terry's um transformation i can see
how to transform me because we all relate so exactly i wanted people to relate to it and get
the same benefit it's a very different approach but it's an incredibly powerful one and i think
it's an incredibly important book for everybody to read thank you as well because you know your
your work influenced my my first book in a big way. And just when I saw that clip going viral online
where you talked about people not feeling like they're enough,
it was exactly what I'd felt for my whole childhood.
And it was really just an illuminating thing
that allowed me to behave in a different way
and cure some of my own sort of insecurity, shall I say.
So thank you.
So the simpleness of it was the...
People think if it's
simple it can't be profound but the strength often is in the very simplicity and it can be so profound
so yeah it's always easier when it's simpler thank you I'm so pleased and touched that I could help
you it's great not just me yeah many many millions yeah thank you Marissa thank you too it's been
lovely thank you Marisa thank you Stu it's been lovely thank you