The Mel Robbins Podcast - #1 Mindset Expert: Simple Mindset Shifts That Transform Your Body, Energy, & Life
Episode Date: December 20, 2025Today, you are going to learn scientifically proven ways you can use your mind to upgrade your life, starting with your body, your energy, and your confidence. In this episode, Stanford professor and... leading psychology and mindset researcher Dr. Alia Crum reveals the science behind how your thoughts shape your body, your energy, and your health. She’s proven over and over again that your thoughts about exercise, stress, and food are working against you – and how you can change them. She’ll explain that this isn't just about thoughts, but that you have settings in your mind that you need to change. This is not positive thinking. This is repeatable, evidence-based science behind mindset, motivation, and physical change. You’ll learn: -The one mindset shift that makes healthy habits feel easier instead of exhausting -The groundbreaking studies proving your beliefs can change your biology -How to make workouts easier so you get fitter, faster -How the “settings in your mind” influence your metabolism, hunger, stress, and recovery -How to make healthy eating easier so you feel your best every day -How to stop fighting your body and start working with it -How to feel more energized, capable, and consistent without forcing yourself -How to overcome your worst fears so you don’t let anything hold you back If you are tired of criticizing yourself, tired of your fears and anxiety, and tired of never seeing the results you deserve, Dr. Crum is going to teach you, step by step, exactly how to change the settings in your mind to achieve anything you want. Once you hear this, you’ll start noticing shifts in places you never expected. For more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page. As a gift to listeners of The Mel Robbins Podcast, Mel has created a free 20-page workbook to help you make 2026 a great year. This workbook is designed using the latest research to help you get clear about what you want and empower you to take the next step forward in your life. And the cool part? It takes less than a minute for you to get your hands on it. Just sign up at melrobbins.com/bestyear. If you liked the episode, check out this one next: How to Create a Successful Mindset: The Science of Passion and PerseveranceConnect with Mel: Get Mel’s newsletter, packed with tools, coaching, and inspiration.Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryGet on the waitlist for Pure GeniusWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Today, you and I are going to learn scientifically proven ways you can use your mind to upgrade
your life. This is going to be so cool because you're going to learn to make workouts easier
so you can get fitter or faster. You're going to learn to make healthy eating easier so you can
feel your best every day. You'll even learn to overcome your worst fears. So you don't let
anything hold you back.
Today, the world's number one expert in mindset,
Dr. Aaliyah Krum is here in our Boston studios.
Dr. Aaliyah Krum is a Stanford professor,
and she runs the Stanford Mind and Body Lab.
She has proven in her research over and over again
that your thoughts about exercise,
your thoughts about stress,
your thoughts about food are working against you.
And she's going to go into detail
that this isn't just about thoughts, oh, this is way cooler.
There are settings in your mind that you need to know about and you need to change them.
See, this isn't a conversation about positive thinking.
It's mental engineering that works.
If you're tired of criticizing yourself, tired of your fears and anxiety, tired of never seeing
the results you deserve, Dr. Krum is going to teach you step by step using her groundbreaking research
exactly how to change the settings in your mind
so you can achieve anything you want.
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so excited to learn about changing the settings in my mind.
I'm so excited for you to learn about this research.
I'm so glad you're here.
It's such an honor to spend this time together.
And if you're a new listener, or you're here because somebody shared this with you,
I just want to take a moment and welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
And holy cow, did you pick an incredible episode to listen to?
Our guest today is Dr. Aaliyah Krum.
She's going to show you simple mindset shifts that change your body, energy, and life.
Dr. Krum is a professor at Stanford University, where she runs the Stanford Mind and Body Lab.
Dr. Krom earned her BA in psychology from Harvard and her PhD in clinical psychology from Yale.
She has led mindset change programs for LinkedIn, UBS, Stanford Healthcare, and the U.S. Navy.
She's the recipient of the National Institute of Health's New Innovator Award.
Her work proves that your beliefs shape how your body responds biologically, wait to you hear this stuff, to stress, food, exercise, and even medicine.
She's about to teach you how to use the settings in your mind to create the healthiest, strongest
you. Please help me welcome Dr. Aaliyah Crum to the Mel Robbins podcast. Dr. Aaliyah Crum in the house.
Thank you and welcome. Thank you, Mel. It's so exciting to be here.
I am so excited because I really want to make being super fit and healthier and happier easy.
and I do believe that you can help me change my mindset.
So here's how I want to start.
Could you tell the person listening,
how would my life be different?
How might it be better if I take all of this amazing research
and all the tools you're about to teach us
and I just apply it to my life?
What's going to happen?
So, Mel, my life's work as an academic,
but also as a human, is to understand the power of the human mind.
So I think we all know this, right?
There is this power of belief, of mindset, and the people who are listening to your show
are especially clued into this fact.
But I'd like to go a little deeper and be a little bit more specific, right?
So when we say things like, oh, just believe or think positive.
or, you know, change your mindset.
Like, what do we really mean?
I don't know.
I'm hoping you're going to tell me
because I think a lot of us do feel like,
okay, I just have to believe,
but you're here to teach us,
no, there's actually something deeper
and there's something more accessible.
Yeah, I think we need to be more specific.
So say you have something stressful on the horizon,
like a job interview,
or say you're trying to lose weight
or get healthier,
or say you were just diagnosed with cancer or some other health diagnosis.
Like, it really matters to know what should you believe?
What is the best mindset to have?
Like, how much does that matter?
And most importantly, what can we do to adopt more useful mindsets?
So the goal, as I see it for our conversation today,
is to help people to become more sophisticated and more skillful.
and understanding and applying the power of the human mind.
Whoa.
I love the idea that there is this skill that you can develop
to be able to tap into the power of your mind.
It goes way beyond sort of just your beliefs,
but rather understanding the mechanics of how it works.
Now, Dr. Crom, given that you are a world-renowned researcher,
on mindset.
Maybe we should just start with vocabulary.
Yeah.
What exactly is mindset?
What does that mean?
Yes.
So, mindsets are quite literally settings of the mind.
So they're...
Wait a minute.
Hold on a second.
Okay, and now I feel almost like an idiot
because I know I've never heard anybody explain what is so obvious now that you said it.
mindset is the settings in your mind.
Exactly.
Now, their settings, their lenses or frames of mind, which orient us to a particular set of
experiences.
Okay.
Okay, so our minds can be set in many ways.
The mindsets that I'm interested in that have sort of occupied my thinking and research are
the mindsets that are set by our mindsets that are set by our mindsets.
core beliefs. Okay. Sorry, core beliefs are our beliefs about the essence of what something is
and why it matters. Okay. Can you give me an example? Because already I'm like, I don't know if I'm
following this. Okay. So, an example. So we have mindsets about many things in the world.
And a whole, and let me just, because I want to track with you, because I'm so excited to really
think about mindset as simply the settings in your mind. And what I love about the idea of thinking
about mindset as the settings in your mind is that even somebody like me who is not a world-renowned
Stanford researcher like you understands at a basic level, wait a minute. If there are settings in
my mind, then clearly someone or something put those settings in place. And if there's settings
in my mind and I know about them, I have the ability by learning from you, Dr. Crum, how to change
the settings. Exactly. That's what we're learning today? That's what we're learning. Oh my God,
I love this. And anybody can become aware of and change the settings.
Okay. So give us an example of what you mean. Yes.
When you say settings in the mind and how it impacts your life maybe right now and you didn't even realize it.
Yes. So we have mindsets about many things. My colleague Jared Clifton does great work looking at mindsets about the world as one big place.
So do you believe the world is dangerous or safe? That's a mindset.
Do you believe the world is just or unjust, you know, kind of where you are on that continuum
is a mindset? Do you believe the world is abundant, you know, full of resources, enough for all
of us to go around? Or do you believe it's scarce? That's a mindset.
Carol Dweck, David Yeager have done really good work on mindsets about intelligence or your
abilities. So do you believe that your intelligence is fixed, set in stone? Or do
Do you believe it's malleable? It can grow. It can improve. It can change. The work that we do in our lab is looking at mindsets about things related to our health. Oh. So take stress. Do you believe that stress is going to kill you or is it going to make you stronger? What's your belief about healthy food? Do you believe healthy foods are the disgusting and depriving option? Or do you believe healthy foods are actually indulgent and delicious? What about cancer?
Do you believe that cancer is an unmitigated catastrophe?
Or might cancer be manageable?
Might it even be an opportunity to make positive changes in your lives?
So these mindsets, Mel, they're not true or false.
They're not right or wrong.
They're oversimplified, highly evaluative judgments about the nature of these things.
But they matter in shaping our lives.
In fact, they create our realities.
And they create our realities not through some kind of magic, but by design.
So our mindsets change what we pay attention to.
If you believe the world is dangerous, you're going to see more danger in the world.
Our mindsets change how we feel and expect to feel emotionally.
Our mindsets change what we're motivated to do and how we actually engage and behave in the world.
And what our work has shown is that our mindsets also change our bodies.
They change how our bodies physiologically prepare and respond to different things.
I think that last thing is super fascinating, and it's going to help us understand why the settings in our mind, which we can change, matter so much.
And I would love to have you explain your famous milkshake study.
If there was ever a scientific study that I wanted to be a subject in, I think it would be a study called the milkshake study.
But could you explain what this study is, how you conducted it?
And more importantly, what did you find in the famous milkshake study?
And what does it tell us about what's possible regarding the settings of your mind and the power that it has over your health?
Yes.
Great.
So the milkshake study was very simple, actually.
people into the metabolic research lab. This was done at Yale University. And we had them come in two
time points, and we had them drink a 350 calorie milkshake. Okay. What flavor? It was vanilla.
Okay. Just a simple vanilla milkshake. And meanwhile, while they were drinking this milkshake,
we had them hooked up to an IV. And the reason we had them hooked up to an IV is we were
measuring their blood. Okay. And in particular, we were interested in this hormone called Grelin.
Grelin.
Okay, Grelin.
So Grellin, medical experts call this the hunger hormone.
Okay.
So the hunger hormone is thought to help regulate hunger and metabolism.
So when grelin levels are high, that signals to your brain, hey, seek out food, right?
And it also slows metabolism until you actually secure and consume that food.
Okay.
And theoretically, it had been assumed that in proportion to the amount of calories you eat,
grelin levels will drop. So if we go out and have a burger and a milkshake and a lot of calories,
grelin levels will plummet, which signal to the brain, okay, you can stop prioritizing food
consumption and rev up the metabolism in the body to burn the food that you just ate.
Okay. Now, of course, if we didn't get food or if we only ate a little bit of food,
ghrelin levels would drop only slightly, therefore kind of perpetuating those hunger signals
and keeping metabolism slow. Okay. Okay. So,
So you give these people these milkshakes, you put an IV in them, and what do you suspect would happen?
Yes.
So if we had just given them the same milkshake at two different time points, and it's the same person, both time points, same milkshake, we would assume that their bodies would respond exactly the same.
Okay.
So what did you do in the study, though?
Yes.
So here's the catch.
So I'm a psychologist, so I like to play around with how does changing what we believe to be true?
change how our bodies respond. So in the study, we actually gave them a 350 calorie milkshake. At one
point, we told them it was an indulgent milkshake, 620 calories, high fat, high sugar. This is really
the decadence you deserve. We even had on the label like decadence you deserve. And the other time
point, we told them it was a sensible shake. It was called the Senses Shake. It was light and fit.
It was 140 calories, low fat, low sugar.
This is sort of your diet shake option.
Just so I'm tracking.
Yes.
I'm in your study.
One day I come in and you give me the sensible shake.
And I'm told, and I believe it's 140 calories, and that's one shake.
Yes.
Another time I come in at the exact same time, I am told, now it's the same shake I'm drinking,
but I am told, and it is labeled the indulgent shake, and it's 600.
It's a luxury that I deserve.
And so that's the information I'm told,
and I'm assuming these are now manipulating the settings in my mind
about what I'm actually consuming.
What did you find when you did that with people?
Essentially, the labels were setting their minds.
The label either put them in the mindset of indulgent,
you know, high caloric shake
or the mindset of sensibility, somewhat of restraint.
right, the low-fat option. What we found was that their grellin response differed in response
to simply changing the mindset. And in particular, when they thought they were consuming the
indulgent shake, their body's grelin levels dropped at a three-fold rate compared to when they
thought they were consuming a sensible shake. So in essence, what this means is when they thought
they were consuming indulgently, their bodies responded as if it had had more food.
What? Wait, so you're saying that by changing just the settings in the mind,
by having somebody believe that the shake was more caloric and more indulgent,
it actually changed the biology that you could measure in someone's body, the body.
responded based on the mindset changes? Yep, that's exactly right. That's insane. Well, it's not all
that is insane when you start to think about it, right? The brain's whole job is to help, you know,
monitor the external environment, assess the internal environment, and use information from both
of those things to keep us alive, keep us healthy. And when the brain thinks, oh, you're not getting
enough food, it says keep hunger strong, keep metabolism low, because its job is to help us
stay alive. So it's surprising because we have this kind of oversimplified assumption that a healthy
weight is kind of calories in, calories out. But it's really not that simple. And what the study
shows is that our mindsets also matter. The settings of the mind that we're in when we eat will change
how we experience that food, both, you know, on a taste level, but also on a physical level.
I think this is so exciting. And one of the things that I really like about this is that, okay,
so I'm going to dumb this down, okay, for myself. So I would have thought that if you slurped down
a milkshake, whatever it is that you drank, that would be the singular input that your body
then processes and responds to. But what you're saying is that the research is very clear,
that when you get very intentional about the settings in the mind,
the settings in the mind also are communicating to the body at all times
and also sending information to the body that changes the biology of what you're experiencing.
That's extraordinary.
Yeah.
And I cannot wait to hear the specific ways we can use this finding that your settings in the mind.
I'm going to keep calling at that.
don't mind doc because I literally just like that versus mindset because mindset feels mindset always
did feel kind of like attitude yeah you're talking about an intentional setting right that helps
you create a specific outcome yeah and I have another example that I wanted to uh share with you
you know when you were coming um all the way here we were all so excited and the
production assistant on this show got over a decade-long fear of flying simply by listening
to your TED talk and repeating to herself over and over again. She would say on this flight,
this is just an old setting in my mind. And she says that that one technique from you helped her
get over her fear of flying. In fact, I want you to hear from Melissa.
Hi, Dr. Crum. I've been afraid of flying for 10 years. And every time I fly, I get super overwhelmed with the idea that I could potentially have a medical emergency in flight after an experience 10 years ago. And my body follows suit with physical symptoms that I'm sick. But since listening to your TED Talk, I was really able to update the setting in my mind and remind myself that my physical sensations only feel so real because I'm working myself up into believing them.
So last week, I flew round trip from Boston to L.A.
And for the first time in forever, I felt no sickness or anxiety.
It's been so incredible putting your work into practice to make my mindset work with me, not against.
I love this.
And here's what I want to ask you.
Because I have personally the desire to turn this now into a personal coaching session for, like, settings of my own mind and my kids' minds.
But what I want to know is if she were on the plane and she were repeating to herself, this is just an old setting in my mind.
And that intentional saying, these are just old settings in my mind, allowed her to not get all worked up and feel the physical sensations that freaked her out.
Can you explain, Dr. Crum, what's actually happening in this example?
Yeah, well, first of all, Alyssa, thank you for sharing that. It's always so wonderful to know that the work we're doing is useful. What's happening there is really powerful, right? Which is first, you know, going back, her mind was set by probably some experience that she had as a child where she maybe got sick on a plane or maybe was on a plane and felt deep fear.
and anxiety or lack of control or whatever it was on that plane. And that memory kind of forged in
her mind as a setting, right? That, you know, if you fly, you will feel horrible. You will feel
out of control. You will feel sick. You will feel, I don't know what it was, but I'm guessing there
was some association that was made between flying and physical symptoms.
Okay.
Now, what's kind of glitchy about the mind is that, and the body, is that learning that, what the mind does is thinks, oh, I need to protect you from ever experiencing that again, right? So it thinks, let's avoid planes, right? Let's avoid any kind of situations when you're going to feel like that again. But it also perpetuates this belief that if she flies, she's going to feel those things. Now, the belief and the kind of
desire to protect was well intended. But what happens is that belief creates the reality. So when she
gets on a plane feeling, I'm afraid to fly because I'm going to get sick, go back to those four
mechanisms. What does she start paying attention to? All the ways in which she's a little clammy,
all the ways in which she's a little nauseous, all the ways in which she might, you know,
feel her heart racing. Maybe she's going to pass out, right? We all have these symptoms like all
the time, right? This is what's, you know, so interesting about our bodies.
If you ask yourself to pay attention to your body, you realize sometimes we do feel nauseous.
Sometimes our heart races.
It's like happening all the time.
Now she has a reason to find that.
So that belief changed her attention, changed her emotions, you know, anxiety off the charts, fear off the charts.
It probably changed what she was motivated to do.
I'm assuming she didn't take many flights for many years.
And physiologically, those symptoms get created.
So the beliefs were intended to protect her. The settings of the mind were intended to protect her,
but they were actually creating the reality that she feared most. So what's beautiful in her example
is that you don't need 10 years of therapy necessarily to kind of shift the settings in your mind.
Now, don't get me wrong, I'm all for therapy, and sometimes we do need many years to explore the
origins of our beliefs. But in her case, she realized, oh, I don't need that setting anymore.
Thank you, buddy, for trying to protect me. But I don't need that. I just don't need that setting
anymore. And that alone, that awareness sometimes is enough to let it go. There's so much I want to
make sure that we unpacking that. And I love what you said when you said, sometimes you don't
need 10 years of therapy to figure it out. And I don't remember who said it, but I love this saying that if
you didn't talk yourself into it, you probably can't talk yourself out of it. And your work
and what you're teaching us today is that the experiences of your life, they create settings in your
mind. And they may work for periods of your life, but there will come a moment in your life
where you can start to access your research and say, wait a minute, if I don't like the way I'm
experiencing something, let me just consider that there's old settings in my mind.
that I don't need anymore.
And any time I decide to, I can change the settings.
And I also would assume that you don't necessarily have to know the originating event.
You just have to know that there are certain settings in your mind that every time you get on a plane
or every time you get a little tingle in your stomach, you feel like, oh gosh, I'm going to throw up.
And then you start working yourself up into a tizzy.
That's an old setting.
Yeah.
And so I love that because I feel like this is a little bit of.
almost like myself doing, tinkering with my own settings in my mind for any kind of situation.
There's another thing that you said very quickly that I want to make sure I understand.
You basically said, the reason why settings are so important, if I'm getting this right,
please correct me if I'm wrong, is that these settings, the way you see the world,
affect four mechanisms.
And if I heard you correctly,
it's that these settings in your mind
tell you what to focus on.
They have an impact on the emotions you feel.
They also impact what you're motivated to do
or not do, in this case getting on a plane or not.
And they have a physiological impact.
So could you take the example of being afraid of flying
which is an old setting.
A lot of people have that one.
And tell me exactly, how does the setting that I'm either going to get sick on this plane
or this plane's going to go down or something terrible is going to happen, the old setting,
how does that setting impact your attention, your emotions, your motivation, and your physiologies,
just so we kind of get the power of these settings over these four things and how that then impacts your behavior?
Yeah. So the first thing I would want to do is figure out what the setting was, right? So sometimes fear of flying is about the core belief about flying, right? Like flying is dangerous. Okay. I think in Alyssa's case, what I'm hearing, you know, I'd like to talk with her more about it is was actually a core belief about her body, right? That she was worried that she was going to get sick, that she was going to have a medical emergency on that flight. And so it was the
setting of her mind that was a distrust in her body. My body is not only not capable, but might
turn on me in this very moment. Gotcha. And flying was fearful for her because there was, there's no help
to be had on a flight. You know, you can't get any further from medical attention when you're up
in the air. And so that belief of my body, it can't be trusted, right? If we can work with that. How does that
change what she pays attention to.
She starts noticing all the ways in which her body is a little off today isn't really
working for her.
She starts feeling anxious, which, as you know, further exacerbates physical symptoms
in the body.
Maybe behaviorally, and Alyssa, sorry if I'm putting, you know, words in your mouth and you
can correct the record if it's wrong, but a lot of people, they take pills or they drink,
right, which could cause more physical symptoms on the flight, right? So these mechanisms of what do you
notice? What are you doing? How are you feeling emotionally and what is going on physically are all
kind of working together? And they're working together, ironically, to create the reality that you
fear most, which is your body is going to turn on you in that moment. You know, I've never had anybody
explain the actual science of the mind, body, and the connection, and really do it in a way
where I now think I understand what you mean when it's that your mindset is creating the
reality. What you're teaching us and what your research proves is that the settings in your
mind, like let's take a bunch of ones that people have just to start throwing it out,
then we'll kind of get into the health stuff, is that if you believe that you've completely
screwed up your life. It's too late to change. You're never going to get out of debt. You're never
going to find the one, whatever it may be. That setting in your mind becomes the, it drives what you
focus on. So you start to see everybody that's coupled up. You see everybody that's successful.
You start to think that you're the only one. That creates a lot of emotions for you. That probably
makes you feel very unmotivated to do the things that would change your life pretty drastic.
over time. And your work also says those settings in your mind, I'm too late, I can't change,
things don't work out for me, absolutely changes the way your body feels physiologically. Wow.
And so we're going to talk about some of the ways we can leverage this, both for self-awareness,
but more importantly, to make change easier. And to have us learn how to change the settings. So
that our minds are helping us and positively helping us stay motivated and focus on the right things
and feel what we want to feel, which Alyssa just did by just watching your talk, which is
incredible. I just want to say that I think, I just feel for all of us, right? We're doing our
best, right? You really want to find the love of your life. Yeah. And you haven't found them yet.
And, you know, your brain like wants to help, right?
But it latches on to these oversimplified statements, like, I'll always be alone or I'll never be
enough. Or, you know, you want to be healthy and then you're, but something happens and you think,
oh, my body's not good enough, right? These, again, they're, these are mindsets. They're
core beliefs about the nature, essence of who we are, how our bodies are, what life has in
store for us. But I'll say it again. Like, they're not true or false.
They are not right or wrong.
They're oversimplified, highly evaluative judgments that we make in order to simplify things.
But they matter, right?
So choose wisely and know that the choices that you make interact with the world in ways that make it so.
And the other thing I'll just say in response is we shouldn't be to blame for our beliefs, our settings in the mind,
and we can talk about this.
They're shaped by our cultures, by our upbringing, by our parents in ways that we may never
fully understand.
So, but while we shouldn't be to blame for them, we should know that we can be empowered to change them, right?
At any given moment, at any given time, you have the power to flip the switch.
When do these settings in the mind start to, like, latch into your brain?
That's a very scientific way to say it, I know, but.
No, but I was just sitting here going like, oh, interesting.
Like, obviously a baby and their brain in the, like, kind of spongy theta state
is absorbing language very rapidly and learning and all this stuff.
And, you know, they're learning how to walk and fall and all.
Like, the rate that a baby's brain can learn is amazing.
But when developmentally do these settings in the mind that impact belief that
impact your biology and emotion and motivation and attention. When do those start happening?
They start happening the minute you're born and they stop happening the moment you die, right?
Our brains are constantly trying to make sense of the world. And it's taking in this information,
but it's too much. It's too much to take in. So it's relying on these simplified assumptions or theories, right?
So it's like, oh, this person's safe. Check, set it and forget.
it. Oh, like, your body can heal itself with time. Oh, check, set that and forget it. Oh,
you're the type of person who gets sick on planes. You better worry about that, right? So, and then it can be
updated, but oftentimes it's searching for information. It gets things that it thinks are important,
and then it's kind of set, if that makes sense. So you know what I just got? Yeah. All of these
settings that you're talking about came from outside. And what your work is going to help us do,
is maybe for the first time in your entire life,
lift up the hood and create settings in your mind
from the inside that work for you.
Yeah.
And this is why I love the science of mindset
and the practice of mindset
because, yeah, they come from many things,
from our upbringing,
from influential others,
from the cultures we're embedded in,
but they can also be consciously set by ourselves.
We can choose to consciously change the settings of our mind.
And that's where things get really fun and empowering.
I just love what you're teaching us.
This is incredible, and it makes so much sense.
What you believe changes how your body responds.
And if that idea is blowing your mind,
if you're thinking of people that you know need to change the settings in your mind
but you haven't been able to, let's see if Dr. Crum can.
Okay?
Share this with people in your life.
Let Dr. Crum do the changemaking so you don't have to.
And don't go anywhere because we've got a heck of a lot more.
What more could there be a lot more from Dr. Crum after this short break.
Stay with me.
Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins and you and I are learning about this exciting research
and how to change the settings in our mind with Stanford's.
Dr. Alea Krum. Let's dig into it. One of your favorite topics is the placebo effect. What is the
placebo effect? How does it work in our minds and our bodies? And then let's talk about how your
research proves that we can use it to our advantage. Yes. The placebo effect is typically understood
in the context of a randomized placebo controlled trial. Which is for somebody who doesn't know what
the heck that means. What is that? Yeah. So in a clinical trial, people are brought in and they're
randomly put into two different groups, typically to test a new drug or medication. And half of the
people will get the active drug or medication. I mean like the real one? The real one.
Okay. The other half will get a, the exact same sort of capsule, but there'll be nothing in it
or it will be an inactive substance. So that is called the placebo. Okay. Now, clinical trials are
important for testing the specific efficacy or effect of a new drug. Okay, right? So in a clinical
trial, they'll bring people in, they put them in these two groups, they'll measure the effect,
and then they'll subtract out any effect that happens to occur when you're on the placebo, right?
Because the assumption is that's not real, right? What's real is in the capsule. If anything
else happened because you believed you were getting a real pill or you were just taking a pill, the act of
taking a pill or the feeling of being cared for, like, that's not real medicine. So let's just
subtract that out. Okay. Now, what's interesting and people have caught on with is that in almost all
of these trials, the placebo tends to work to some degree. So let me just translate this,
so make sure I'm tracking. So if you're doing like some sort of clinical trial and you've got
the real drug that's supposed to treat some medical condition or whatever, you got them
that group taking that, and then you measure whether or not the drug works.
There's this whole other group taking the placebo.
Basically, you're getting a sugar pill that's fake.
Yeah.
It's not got any clinical research behind it in terms of its ability to do anything.
But the mere fact that you believe that you are getting medication to help with this condition,
you're saying, physiologically, biologically, people's symptoms do tend to get better
in some cases. So what does that tell you about what the placebo effect actually is?
Yeah. So it's really interesting and it's lots of different things. So like a placebo, you know,
simply believing that you're taking a pain reliever. Yeah. Relieves your pain. Simply believing
you're taking a sleep aid helps you fall asleep. Placibos can calm your asthma, reduce your immune
response, lower your blood pressure, right? And it's not just that these
placebos make people say they feel better, but they're actually real neurobiological
correlates. So believing you're taking a real pain medication can release
endogenous opioids in the brain. Placebo-Parkinson medications activate
dopaminergic systems in the brain. You can condition placebo immune responses.
right so it's you know it begs the question as you just ask like what is actually happening yeah what is
happening so obviously it's not the fake pill right like there's no magic in the sugar pill what we think
is happening is it's essentially the combined effect of three things so first is the ability of your
body to heal itself with time okay now this often gets discounted but i don't think we should discount it
Right. Your body has an incredible, remarkably efficient systems, right? You have a growth-promoting endocrine
system. You have an adaptive immune system. You have a regulating nervous system. And they're all
trying to work for you, right? So those systems in the body, and they heal us from most things we
experience in life, even when we're not paying attention. But those natural systems in the body
can be activated by our mindsets, by the belief that you're in good hands, that this condition
is managed, that you're going to be okay. Those beliefs prioritize and prepare the systems to align
in your body. And, you know, the other thing that's important here is it's not, you know,
your beliefs don't come out of nowhere, right? They're shaped by the social context, the
the words the doctor shares, the, their bedside manner, the label or branding of the drugs,
right, the white coat, the medical credentials, the medical ritual, all of these things can shape
our mindsets, which can in turn activate the body's self-healing systems. That's so cool.
So are you saying that the settings in your mind,
can act almost like a placebo and turn on, like, things like, how do you use this to your
advantage? You know what I'm saying? Because I know that the advice is not, we're going to pop a
sugar pill and then pretend that now I'm motivated to exercise. But how can you use the fact that
the placebo effect proves what the milkshake study proves? Yes. So it's such a good question,
because we get, you know, kind of fascinated by placebo effects.
We're like, ooh, how cool.
Like, you respond by doing nothing.
Like a fake pill magically makes you feel better.
But if you think about it, while the randomized control trial is good for testing the specific effects of the medication, it's, you know, what we forget when we actually go out and prescribe the medication or in the practice of medicine, in the reality of the reality of the,
of medicine, when we take a pill, any effect of that pill is going to come not just from the
drug inside, but from the belief that the pill is going to work, right? So the total effect of
anything we do, whether that's medication or what we eat, for example, is a combined
effect of what's actually in it and what you believe to be true.
about it. So this is really empowering, right? It no longer needs to be, oh, is it the medication
or the mind? Is it, you know, the mind over matter? No, it's mind and matter. It's mind and
medication. So if you want to heal, if you want to improve your symptoms, right, take the best
medication we have if it's relevant to you, but also adopt useful mindsets.
about it. I think one study that really helps to kind of make this, what I'm saying, concrete,
is this great study. It was done by Cam Hansen and colleagues. And what they did was they took
people who had, you know, persistent migraines. And they followed people as they got these migraines
in their life. And every time they got a migraine, they were given a pill. Now, sometimes they were
given the real pill, a max salt, which is an actual real medication for migraines.
Other times, they were given a placebo, an inactive fake pill. So like the original clinical trial,
but they had a catch to it. So what they did was sometimes when they were given the maxalt,
they told the people it was maxalt. Other times they gave people the real max salt, but they told
them it was a placebo. Huh. When they gave people a placebo,
sometimes they told them it was max salt and other times they told them it was a placebo so now you're
really screwed everybody okay so what did you find what they found was was fascinating right so the most
pain relief came from the max salt labeled max salt okay so when you were told it was the right pill
and you took the pill you got the most relief when you told when you had the real pill and believed
it was a real pill you had the most relief so you got settings in the mind and the bio you
biology together. Exactly. Got it. But now get this. When they were given the real pill but told it was a
placebo, it worked significantly less. Whoa. So you've got the real pill. You got the biology,
but because of the settings in your mind not believing it, your mind reduced the effectiveness
of the pill being able to work on the biology. Yeah. And that's crazy. Right? And it's still worked,
but just not as well as the pill plus the belief. And in fact, it worked about the same
as a placebo pill labeled Maxalt.
No way. So then you get the settings that you think you're getting the medicine,
but the biology isn't there, and your mind still works as if you're taking the pill.
Exactly. That's crazy. It's crazy. And it's so, it was beautiful because it was sophisticated
and skillful, you know, how they separated these things. But those conditions kind of,
what they suggest is that the pain relieving effect of, um,
the pill was about the same as the pain-relieving effect of the belief.
Now, another fun and interesting thing they found in the study was the placebo labeled the placebo
was also better than doing nothing. So that's a whole other conversation on understanding
that. But why do you think taking a pill that you know isn't the prescription, but taking it
anyway, has a positive impact on your health? I think it's because people still believe that
something might work for them here. Ted Capchuk, who's an incredible person and scientist,
has been doing a lot of research on what he calls open label placebos. And they tend to work,
but I think, you know, we still don't really know why. I personally think it's the belief in
placebos. Yeah. But we need more research. But it points back to what you're teaching us today,
which is the settings in your mind are wildly powerful. So change the settings to align with the
outcome that you want. I want to just tease this apart a little bit because I love what you're saying.
And I personally, I 100% believe this is true. One thousand percent believe that it's true.
And at the same time, I want to be sure that the person listening or who's watching right now and spending time with us, that they really get what you're talking about. Because it can be a little confusing when we talk about belief versus what's actually happening physically. So if somebody has cancer or if somebody is really struggling to lose weight, just believing that you're going to heal or believing that you're going to lose weight,
that doesn't cure cancer. That's not what you're saying, right? And learning that you can change the
settings and understanding the power of belief to shape your behavior and your biology for better
health outcomes is what's super exciting. And you've got all this clinical research when it comes
to milkshakes and people's biology. You also have this really fascinating study on placebo drugs
and how it has actual physiological impact in people's bodies.
And so it proves the power of the settings in your mind and why they matter.
And so I want to make this super practical because, you know,
so many people are concerned about what they eat.
They would like to lose weight or be healthier.
They want to be able to stick to a diet or do an exercise routine.
what do you say to them about the settings in your mind and mindset?
So this question about cancer is really important, right?
It isn't, it shouldn't be mind over matter, right?
It should be mind and matter.
So if you're diagnosed with cancer, like you should get the best treatment for you.
We have great drugs and therapies for cancer.
many of the cancers that were incurable 10, 20 years ago, are curable now. And that is a beautiful
thing, thanks to hardworking biologists and scientists. So we should take those, right?
But what I would add is we should also think about our mindsets. So what are the mindsets we have
about cancer, about what it means for our life? What are our mindsets about the treatment and the care
we're getting. It turns out those mindsets matter too, and they can radically shape the whole
experience that someone is having when they are going through cancer. As a world-renowned
researcher on mindset and its impact on health, what is the mindset that is the best mindset to
have when you are going through a cancer treatment or you're facing some other kind of scary
health diagnosis. Yeah. So we've been working on this question for nearly 10 years now. I'm working
with Dr. Lydia Shapira, Dr. Jonathan Barrett, David Spiegel, Sean Zion, and others. And, you know,
what we've found is that, you know, the best mindset to be in when you have cancer, first,
it's not just think positive. It's not just believe you don't have cancer or believe you'll be
okay, those are actually acts of denial. The best mindset to be in when you have cancer is the
mindset that this is manageable. Contrast that to the mindset of this is a catastrophe. It's
unmanageable, right? Another mindset that we found is very useful for people going through cancer
is the mindset that their bodies are capable. Many people who are diagnosed with cancer
feel like their bodies have let them down, that their bodies have turned on them or at, you know,
at best are just sort of not working right now. And what we've found in a number of studies,
including trials where we work to inspire people into different mindsets, is that moving to
adopt the mindset that cancer is manageable, their bodies are capable, is profoundly transformative
in shaping their whole experience. So it changes.
their quality of functioning in life. And it also reduces physical symptoms like nausea and fatigue
and upset stomach and other things when they're going through chemotherapy. So we don't know,
right now we're doing another trial looking at how to change these mindsets. And we're measuring
people's blood samples. And we're looking at immune markers that are associated with cancer
outcomes. So we don't know yet the results of those trials. But I would bet a lot of money that
these mindsets don't just stay, you know, above the skin. They're getting down and they're
influencing our body's response. Well, I'm excited that you're explaining the mechanisms in the
brain and the research that proves that your mind and body are linked and the settings impact
your biology. And given all this amazing research and given that you focus on health,
I really want to make this super practical. And so many people,
struggle with motivation and losing weight and, you know, eating healthy or staying consistent
with exercise and taking care of themselves, getting fit. Dr. Crump, what do you want to say to
them about the power of the settings in your mind? So first I want to say that, you know,
I don't do research only because it's interesting, right? Like, I do research in large part
because I have problems I want to solve or I see problems in others that I want to help.
solve. So in fact, the idea for the milkshake study came from a problem that I was
struggling with myself. And that was struggling with diet and weight, which a lot of people
have. And the idea, actually, for the milkshake study came to me when I was having dinner
at the cheesecake factory. Oh, my God. Okay. So you with me here. I assume you've been to a
cheesecake factory at some point. Absolutely. Yes. And so I was at the cheesecake factory with my mother.
And if you haven't been to the cheesecake factory, they have a menu that is spiral bound and probably
has what, 400 items on it. It is the biggest menu I've ever seen in my entire life and they give
monster portions. Okay, so we're at this restaurant. You're with your mom. Great place to go to
celebrate or hang out with somebody. Yes. And with my mom, we had a great meal. It was the end of the meal.
All of plates were cleaned and cleared, and I was faced with this obvious but, you know, existential question.
Are you going to have dessert?
Yeah.
Are am I going to order the cheesecake?
Okay, so you're with me here.
So anybody here who's struggled with their weight or diet knows that this is a stressful question.
And it's stressful because it's really a catch-22.
you're like faced with two bad options. So on the one hand, you could let yourself go and have the
cheesecake, right? But if you're watching your weight, you're eating it with this sneaky sense of
guilt and shame as you eat. Or you could, you know, be virtuous and restrain. But if you're like me,
that would leave you leaving the whole experience, like somewhat unsatisfied. Like it is the cheesecake factory
after all. So here I was agonizing over that decision when the thought occurred to me,
you know, what if our beliefs, what if my beliefs about this cheesecake could change my body's
response to it? And I thought, I hoped, I was like, maybe like the placebo effect,
if I just believed this cheesecake was good for me, that my body would respond as if it was good for me.
that's where the idea for the milkshake study was born. Oh. Yeah. So fast forward, we did the study. Hold on. Did you order the
cheesecake? You know, I didn't order the cheesecake. And the reason I didn't order the cheesecake was that at the time I had been obsessively counting calories. I had been struggling with my weight. I had disordered eating. I had gone through a period of bulimia. I was recovered at that time. But it was still sort of a like, I was well over the 2,000 calories.
that I allotted myself, I was like, I will not have this cheesecake, but it was not a very
pleasant state to be in. So I hoped, like, okay, maybe I can just make, maybe I can find a way
to literally have my cake and eat it too, like if I just believed good things about it.
So I kind of went into that study with this wishful thinking. Okay. And fast forward to what we
found, which, as you know, is that our beliefs did matter, right? What we believed about the
cheesecake, in this case, what people believed about the milkshake changed their body's
physical response. Now, that alone was radical, as we've discussed, because it took that
calories in, calories out equation and flipped it on its head. But when I started to apply these
results in my own life, when I was like, okay, what did I learn from this? How can I make this
useful to me? What I realized was that the lessons from the milkshick study were even more profound
and important. And I realized that we, you know, what I thought was going to happen was the exact
opposite as what actually happened. So if you're eating, right, what you want to have happen is you
want your ghrelin levels to drop. Right? Because that will signal to your brain that you've had
enough, right? But what we found was when people thought they were eating healthy, sensibly,
sort of, you know, restraining their eating, their bodies responded as if they weren't getting
enough. It was actually the mindset of indulgence that was the better mindset to have, right? Because
the mindset of indulgence, even though it was the exact same milkshake, led to them the appropriate,
the ideal response of ghrelin levels falling. Wow. So this was like mind-blowing for me because I realized I had been going
about it all wrong. Like, I had been, you know, sort of gritting my teeth, trying to diet,
but I was doing all the hard work in a mindset of restraint, a mindset of sensibility,
a mindset of I'm not getting enough. And that setting of my mind was counteracting the hard
work that I was at dieting. So I realized, Mel, I realized, like, it's not about the milkshake,
it's not about the cheesecake, right? The real gem in this study is that the mindset of indulgence
is the best mindset to be in when you eat. And let me be clear about what I mean by indulgence,
right? Indulgence by the original definition of the word, it means to allow oneself to enjoy the
pleasure of, right? So does this license you to eat cheesecake and milkshakes all the
time? No, of course not. But now when I eat, whether that's a cheesecake or a salad or like a
side of veggies, I try to eat in a mindset of indulgence. So if I find myself back at the cheesecake
factory, I'll eat the whole meal in that mindset. And what I found is that when I eat the whole
meal in that mindset, I don't even want the cheesecake. Of course, sometimes I'll have cheesecake.
cheesecake if I really want it. I'll eat that in a mindset of indulgence, too.
Dr. Krom, I have so many more questions, but I want to take a quick pause because here's
what I want to say to you, if you're watching this on YouTube or you're listening, if this
conversation is getting you to see things in an entirely new way, do not keep this to yourself.
I mean, don't you wish you knew this in middle school? Please share this with your family.
Share it with your friends. Because anybody that learns about the settings and
their mind, they're going to appreciate it and you're going to have helped them take control of
their life and make positive changes. Isn't this so awesome? We haven't even scratched the service yet,
so don't go anywhere. We'll be right back. Welcome back. Welcome back. It's your buddy Mal
Robbins, and today you and I are learning how to change the settings in our mind with standing.
Stanford's Dr. Alea Krum. So Dr. Krum, this we have to unpack, because this is amazing.
Yeah. What you're saying is that when you have settings in your mind that are all around healthy eating and can only have certain calories and I'm trying to be good and all of those kinds of settings, regardless of what you're eating, signal to your body that you're not actually full.
Yeah.
because you are in a mindset, the settings in the mind of restriction and scarcity and you got to like just follow this certain thing versus what the research shows biologically is that if the settings in the mind are that I am going to be in a mindset where I am in the indulgent setting, meaning I am allowing myself to enjoy this.
regardless of what I'm eating, that setting in the mind lowers all of the craving and hunger.
Yeah. That's incredible. And you have the research to prove it.
Yeah. And also, you know, the research is one thing, but I can say that this study alone
changed my life. Like that insight for me totally just, it changed everything, right? And I can
literally say I no longer struggle with eating. I enjoy what I eat. I feel good.
about what I eat. And it's all because of this, you know, striving for this mindset of indulgence.
So if you go a little deeper into your own settings, what were the old settings in your mind
that kind of kept you in that, like, restrictive scares, you know, mode around food? And then what
were the new settings? Just so the person that's with us, because I know this is going to be like,
share, share, wait a minute, indulgent mind, because it makes a lot of sense. What's
specifically was the old setting and what specifically was the new setting that allowed you to have
that big of a life transformation yeah the old setting was one that was focused on what the behavior
what am i doing right it's all about i shouldn't eat this i should eat that um and when you do that
and you eat the thing you should but not the thing you want you put yourself into a mindset of
restraint, like you're avoiding the thing you want, which leads to the setting of the mind of
I'm restraining myself. I'm not getting what I really want. And that mindset, it turns out,
to be unhealthy physiologically with respect to hunger signals and ghrelin. The new mindset was,
okay, sure, like still try to eat healthy, right? Still try to eat nutritionally, say. But the more
important goal that I have is not focused on what I eat, but what mindset I'm in when I eat
it. So the goal whenever I go about a meal is to ask myself, what would it take here to eat in a
mindset of indulgence, to enjoy whatever it is that I'm eating for the sake of the pleasure
in that food? And I would say that, you know, yeah, it is this tricky difference in
indulgence, like, don't misunderstand it as, oh, this is licensing you to just like, you know,
whatever it is just for the sake of eating it. Like, I don't hear that. No. And what you do is you're
just like, I can, you know, like, if I really want to eat this dessert, that's okay, right? Can I eat
it in a mindset of indulgence, a mindset of this is enough, this is good, this is pleasurable,
this is what I want right now. So I, you know, I always look at this. I always look at the
dessert menu. And I give myself permission to say, do I really want anything on this menu?
This is so cool. I would love given your amazing research and the insights and now the science
that we understand, the profound breakthrough that it's had on your life, to really kind of
break this down into practical tools based on your research. And so I am going to pick up
objects that are related to health. Okay. And for, if you're listening, I will describe it. You'll be
able to see it if you're watching on YouTube. And then I would love to have you describe what are the
settings in our mind, the mindset that we should have if we want better health outcomes. Okay.
All right. I'm holding a big head of iceberg lettuce. Okay. If you like a wedge salad, we've got a
whole head here waiting for the blue cheese and the bacon. Okay, great. So I guess I would turn it
on you, Mal and I would say, like, when you look at that lettuce, like, what's the first thing that
comes to mind? Well, the first thing that came to mind is my mom, because she loves iceberg lettuce
and a salad. Oh, interesting. Yes. Okay. Well, that's interesting. If you decided you were
going to feed your kid, maybe when they were littler. Yeah. Yes. This iceberg lettuce.
for dinner. What would they think? Yuck. That's it? Salad. Do I have to eat it? I don't like the texture.
That would be Oakley. Exactly. So that's a mindset. It is. Picky eaters are a mindset?
Well, the belief that healthy foods are the disgusting and depriving option is a mindset. And we have it actually
for good reason. Again, they're set by things outside ourselves. Like,
Food companies spend billions of dollars each year, trying to teach us that the delicious option,
the indulgent option, is the, you know, the fast food option.
Yes.
Oh, that's true.
Right.
So they're spending billions associating McDonald's cheeseburgers or, you know,
insert X brand name product with not only taste, but also other things we want, like happiness,
and attractiveness and freedom, right?
The vegetable industry hasn't spent any money really trying to get us to think about healthy foods
in a way that associates them with pleasure and taste and happiness and freedom.
Now, of course, I wouldn't say, you know, go out and eat a head of lettuce, right?
Like what we should try to do, again, it's the mind and the matter.
Okay.
Can you take that head of lettuce and make it something?
that actually looks indulgent, right? Turn it into a salad. Add the blue cheese dressing. Add the
nuts. Add the farm-grown tomatoes. Add whatever it is that is, you know, appealing to you. Can I say
something? Yeah, please. Did you just change the settings of my mind? Is my mouth starting to water
because you are now encoding in me this sort of indulgent setting related to the salad?
Because I started to feel hungry for a salad as you were describing it as an indulgent thing.
Yes. And that's the beauty of our mind. It's connected to every single physical system in the body.
So just changing this thought of like, oh, I'm going to eat this indulgent salad, your body is preparing to eat it.
So changing the setting about the things that you don't crave but would be better for you to indulgent is one way to use all.
the science to help you be more motivated to stick to your healthier eating goals. That's really
cool. Yeah. My mom used to, when I would come home after some sport, she would give me V8.
Of course. Remember the lit? Like it would pop? Yes. And she would give me V8.
What was it? Thank God I had a V8. What was it? I think I'll have a V8. That's a Heineken. I think
I'll have a Heineken. There's something related to a V8. There's a V8. There is a unhealthy options
get in your mind. Oh, you know what? It's indulgent. Come to think of it. I'm out with my work
colleagues. I'll have a Heineken. Very indulgent, which makes me well be smart and happy and
connected. But the V8, she would pour in a wine glass. You know, I was like, I don't know,
10, 11. I never got to drink out of the wine glasses. And she would put a lemon on it. Right.
I was just like so thrilled to get this, you know, indulgent option, which was actually vegetable juice, right? So she, you know, we, we as parents can rethink how we approach healthy eating with our children. Again, it's not, don't just focus. Like, yes, hopefully you can get them to eat more nutritiously in life. But the focus should also be on how can you get them to believe that those things are actually the more delicious option.
They're the more indulgent option.
That's so cool.
All right, now I'm going to pick up another item, and I think my team is playing a joke on me
because I'm going to try to grab a weight.
This is a 30-pound weight.
Oh, my God.
Okay, I have a lot of settings about how weak I am, apparently, as I'm lifting this thing.
Okay, so let's talk about weights and mindset.
Yeah, so what's the first thing that comes to mind or came to mind when you were lifting?
it. I'm almost embarrassed to tell you. Because the settings are I'm weak. I need to do more weightlifting.
I have terrible grip strength. I'm going to die early if I don't get my farmers carry going
that I'm not doing enough. I don't know quite what to do in terms of the lifting. I know a few
moves, but not a lot. And just basically, I'm weak. Yeah. And,
like a half to. And you're like angry at your seat. You're like, why couldn't they put a 15 pound?
Yes. Like, are you trying to embarrass me? I'm like, I, like, I don't, what's going on here?
I don't know why we have 30 pound weights at the office. I don't know who's lifting instead of
working. But it's not me. I heard Stacey Sims was in here. Dr. Stacey Sims was in here.
And I have been doing a lot of resistance training, apparently not heavy enough because I, I can't lift that
with one hand. Well, this is, it's such a beautiful example because it's like, you know, the minute you lift it,
that triggers a mindset, right? And for you, it was, I'm not strong enough. I'm weak.
Yeah. I'm weak. And that, again, is a mindset, right? Maybe what if they had brought a 10-pound weight?
Maybe if you had lifted that, you would have said, ooh, I got this. Oh, that reminds me that I'm strong, that I'm fit, that I'm fitter than most people.
Well, it's funny because if it had been a 10-pound, I would have lifted that sucker like an Olympic torch.
But now that this was 30 pounds, I'm thinking, Dr. Sacey Sims is going to see me bending over with a
hump on my back like my grandmother because I can't get this thing off the ground.
And so a lot of self-destructive settings in the brain. What should I be thinking?
Yeah, well, because I do want to, like here's two goals of mine. My goals this year are very simple.
I want to take all of the expert advice that I really believe in all of the science.
And I do want to make resistance training and getting more complete.
quality protein in my diet every day. The streaks that I go on, Dr. Crum, I feel like a completely
different person. But then I'll go through a busy streak at work. And now we're going to have a
psychology session. Is that okay? Because I have not, I was consistent for a while. And then I fell
off the mark because all kinds of crazy stuff started happening, you know, in business, all good.
And life happens to everybody. And I have not.
been consistent. Yeah. Yeah, and when you're not consistent or when you go back on what you had
hoped you were going to do, this creeping sensation comes in or belief that you're not doing
enough, that now you're failing. Yes. That now you're going to get unhealthy and you're going to
die earlier. You're going to have heart disease. It's like you can see your mind just spiral.
Right. And so again here, like, look, the behaviors matter. I'm not saying don't try to do resistance
training or don't try to get more protein or don't try to eat better. But you should focus as much
on getting into mindsets that are useful for you. Let's talk about both. Yeah, as you are on the
behavior. So you can start to think of the spiral, right? If you have a busy week and then you're
like, oh, I'm not getting enough. Yes. I'll never be able to achieve these goals that I set for
myself. I'm, you know, I'm just inevitably going downhill. Yes. Then what do you start paying
attention to all the ways in which you are. How do you start feeling worse? How are you yours? How's your
motivation? Now you don't want to go to the gym, right? You don't want to do that extra thing, right? And your
body is like, oh, I guess, you know, I guess we're going that way. Yes. Right. So it's you, by the, you know,
if you aren't focused on the mindset, you can really spiral quickly in the wrong direction.
I can really see that. I can see that because I can, I can see how your mindset, if you're
like I blew it. Yeah. You know, I was good for a while. Now I'm bad. Just proves more of the same.
It means you won't go back and try again. Yeah. And it's so subtle but so powerful.
So powerful. I love that. I'm capable. Do you get that? We're doing enough and we're capable.
And that if we just keep saying that, it makes it more likely that you're going to believe it,
which makes you more likely to be a little more active. That's right. Now pick up the way
Okay. Okay. I can actually pick it up with one hand. Yeah. Take that, Dr. Stacey said. I'm proud of me now. I'm going to tip over in this share, though. Okay, we're going to do two hands. But I felt a little stronger. Yeah. Yeah. And that's what's interesting, too. It's like once you get into that mindset of capable, then the weight will actually feel different to you. Is that research backed? Some research has shown, yes.
that the feeling of a weight in your hand differs depending on the mindset you're in.
We need to do a lot more research.
I love that because when I saw the 30, my setting immediately clicked on and it went, oh, no.
Yes.
I don't know if I can lift that off the cabinet.
That's right.
But after taking on the setting, well, I'm capable and I'm moving my body and I'm doing
pretty good here.
I just picked that sucker right up.
Look at that.
Mine never matter.
Right, then I'm going to stand up.
Okay.
My God, okay.
Okay.
Now, you've got something else.
See, Mel, now you've gotten your workout for the day.
I have to worry about it anymore.
Oh, God, I got chocolate all this.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay, I, the top of, I've got chocolate cake right here.
It's not quite as big as a, as a cake from the, the cheesecake factory.
But let me show you something.
If we did this, this is what.
a cheesecake factory slice a cake would look like right there. For those of you that don't have
the glory of a cheesecake factory. Okay, so I'm going to tip this down this way. I've got a big
layered chocolate cake in front of me, and now I've got it all over my hands. Okay, so what do we
think about this? Well, I'll ask you again, what's the first thing that comes to mind when you see
this? Well, the first thing that came to mind was actually what came into my nose, because it
smells delicious like it smells like a really good expensive yeah kind of luscious butter cream
chocolate cake this is not a dry slice of cake people yeah this this sucker looks like lubrication
for your mind body and spirit that's what this looks like and and when i saw the sprinkles
i thought celebration when i first saw them bringing this into the store i thought that this
was going to be like a surprise for somebody's birthday.
Somebody recently got married here and I thought that maybe we're going to surprise them
with a cake.
Yeah.
I didn't realize it was for you.
So I, the first thing that comes to mind is I want a bite of this.
Yeah.
It looks delicious.
It's interesting on the language that came to your mind.
Uh-huh.
I feel like you need to lick your thumb.
Well, I've got, if you're not watching on YouTube, I have chocolate frosting and
sprinkles on my pointer finger and my thumb because the frost, the cake tipped over
on the file cabinet next to me, and I don't know why I picked up the icing. Okay.
Yeah, so I think what I find fascinating was the first thing that came to mind was all
these delicious and indulgent words, right? Like luscious, delicious. And again, I think
those are settings of the mind that have been set by forces outside of yourself. So you've grown
up in this environment that's been telling you. Oh, well, my grandparents owned a bakery.
Oh, well, there you go.
So I love baked goods.
Yeah.
So you love baked goods, but also the baked goods are the luscious, delicious,
mouth-watering, you know, sensations that you can get.
And that's great.
That's wonderful and that's beautiful.
That is actually a mindset of indulgence.
You know, I'm starting to get this.
Because for a long time in my life, if I saw a cake, even if I wanted, I'm like,
I can't have that.
It's like, whatever, not time for cake right now.
I'm going to ruin my appetite, all these settings of don't, don't, don't, don't, don't.
Yeah.
And that would just make me want it more.
Yes.
Why does that happen?
A lot of reasons, but one reason is what psychologists call ironic mental brain processing or the white bear effect.
So whatever you do in the next 30 seconds, you can think about anything you want.
Yep.
But whatever you do, don't think about a white bear.
Don't think about one?
Ready go.
What do you think of it?
I'm thinking about a polar bear right now.
Exactly.
So it's this phenomenon in our brains in which when we try not to think about something,
the brain registers, okay, that's a goal.
Don't think about that.
And then when our brains have a goal, it wants to check in to see how we're doing
with respect to our goals.
So it's like, let me check in about that goal to not think about a white polar bear.
Oh, there it is.
is, right? So when you're trying not to think about the cake, right? Your brain's like,
well, what about that cake? What about that cake? You didn't eat that cake. Not to mention,
your grilling levels are probably like, what about the cake? Mellie, like, you eat the cake, right?
I'm ready to eat the cake. So, but let me ask you this. So I don't know where this cake came from.
Got me either. But here it is. But what if I told you that the cake was actually a store-bought
cake from not a great store. It's not from your grandparents' bakery, that it's three days old.
It's actually kind of dry. Ooh, I don't want that. Right. It's the same cake. That's why I'm not
eating the frosting on my fingers, because God knows what's on that file cabinet. I don't even know
where it came from. And so I just scooped it up and I don't know what, but I want the cake.
Yeah. But so it's the same cake. So you describing this as store-bought stale, it's got that kind of
crust thing on the side of it because it's been out for a little bit. Yep. And what if, you know,
I told you the content in it was not very, it's not real butter, it's Crisco, it's all these
highly processed ingredients, you know, all of a sudden, the same cake under a different setting
of the mind becomes less appealing. It's true. That's not this cake. So it's still very
appealing. I'm not sure what the cake is. But the point is, regardless of what the cake is,
is, you have the power over your mindset about it, right? And you can choose to view it and think,
okay, this is tasty, this is indulgence, this is what my body really wants and needs right now.
And maybe it's for a celebration, right? Maybe it's to celebrate this great podcast that you're doing.
Or the new settings in my mind around indulgence. Yeah, then eat it by all me.
I feel like I should, you're my guest. Do you want a bite first before I take a bite or do you not want some
You know, honestly, I don't want any of this.
Okay, well, I do.
I want some luscious chocolate cake, but I only want to bite.
I'm not that, I'm not that, I just want to taste it.
Really good.
Oh, my God, that's delicious.
And I don't even want any more.
I think this is so fascinating and so interesting.
Okay, so another thing that a lot of people have goals around, let me show you something else.
I am holding up.
Some money. I've got dollar bills here, four of them, one of which has chocolate frosting
on it because the dollar bill hit the frosting. Let's talk about mindset and settings in the mind
related to money. Yeah. So objectively, it's what? Four bucks. Four bucks. Okay, so that's the
objective reality. Okay. The mindset is what is your core belief about it or what is your
assumption about the essence of that money? Well, at the moment, my setting is that,
this is going to sound really weird, but that I should give this to somebody. That dollar bills to
me feel like something to give to somebody else. Now, maybe if this was 100, I might not think that.
But there's something about, but there was a period in my life where if I had even just held
$4 bills, I would have said, I better, like, hold on to this because I'm about to lose this.
Yes.
Like, I don't have a lot of money.
Yeah.
Like, I can't make money.
Like, something's going to happen with this money.
I better hold on to this money.
And the belief of, like, there's a, I don't know, I don't know what settings people should
have about money.
Yeah.
I think you do, Mel.
I mean, we have mindsets about money that it's either scarce.
that it's not enough, that it's going away, that it's, I'll never have enough, I'll never be good with money, I've lost it all, right? I can't. Or you have the belief that you have enough, that it's there for you, that it's abundant. And when you put your mind to it, you can make whatever it is you need and give away the rest, right? Those are just beliefs. They're just settings of the mind. Now, of course, the objective amount of money matters too. Of course.
Right. But you could start to see how if you were in this mindset of scarcity, that might lead you to think, feel, and behave in ways that actually made the money more scarce in your life.
Yes. And it made me less responsible with it, too, in a very weird way. And I, what's interesting about this with money is that when you don't have any, it is such a crushing level of stress because you think about it and worry about it.
it all the time. But I could see how changing the settings to, I'm capable of figuring this out.
I am capable of getting through this very stressful period. I am capable of making more money.
Yeah. And that money will come to me when I start believing that I'm capable of doing that
because that'll change the way I act around it. Yeah. Yeah. And in some cases, it's not about the
money, right? Like in all these exercises, you're showing one object, and we're talking about the
object. But usually it's a category of things that the settings about those, the core beliefs about
those, are the most poignant and powerful, right? It's, you know, it's not just a head of
lettuce. It's what's your belief about healthy eating in general? It's not just, oh, can I
lift up this weight or not? It's, you know, on the whole, do I feel like I'm fit?
that's what matters, right? And maybe it's not even the money. It's just the belief that
you can create the life you imagine. Those are the beliefs that matter. They're about categories
of things like yourself, healthy eating, your fitness, and so forth. I've got to change those
settings, Dr. Crum. Dr. Crum, if the person who's with us right now really wants to put your work
into practice today, what's one thing that you think is the most important thing to do
after listening and learning all this today? Yeah. I think what I would say to the person
listening or watching is to start where you are, right? To start by acknowledging the problems that
you're facing, start by acknowledging the goals that you have. And then take that next step
and ask yourself, what mindset could I adopt that would help me address those problems or
achieve those goals? So if you're a person dealing with stress, can you remind yourself that the
body's stress response was not designed to kill you? And remind yourself that it's there to
support you, that there's something there you care about, and you can channel your efforts
towards that thing. To the person who might be struggling with their weight, I would remind them
to, sure, focus on eating nutritiously, but focus more on adopting the mindset of indulgence,
eating while enjoying the pleasure of doing so. And if you're somebody who's dealing with a health
diagnosis like cancer or any health diagnosis for that matter, can you know that mindsets like
this is manageable, your body is capable, that those mindsets are well within your grasp.
And what I love is they're also well researched and have extraordinary benefits that
you have now explained to all of us. It's so amazing. Dr. Krumm, what?
are your parting words?
Yeah, I think I would say two things.
The first is to just get in touch.
We've done a lot of research, but we're really just at the tip of the iceberg in understanding
the power of our mind.
And I don't do this research so it can sit on dusty shelves.
I truly do it to solve my problems, our problems, right?
So I really encourage people to get in touch, however that might be.
whether that's LinkedIn or through our website, Instagram, and share your stories, share what
works, share what doesn't work, share your questions, share your ideas, right? Because this is what
makes the research better. This is what enables us to do studies that are relatable. They're relevant
and they're applicable at the end of the day. And then lastly, I think I would say most importantly
is that you got this, right?
There's so much in life that we can't control,
that we can't change,
but our mindsets are something that we can.
So you got this.
And because of you, Dr. Crum, we actually do.
So thank you for your research.
Thank you for traveling all the way to Boston
to be here to teach us all of this.
Thank you for everything that you do, and thank you for explaining the power of the settings
in your mind in such a way that I totally believe you, and I am going to use everything we talked
about today, and I know it's going to make a huge difference in my life. So thank you.
Thank you, Mel. It really is an honor and a pleasure to have this conversation, and I'm so
grateful for the work that you do. Oh, well, thank you for saying that.
And I also wanted to say, I'm grateful that you're here with us.
I love that you spend time listening and watching this show because it is helping you learn.
It's helping you grow.
It's helping you do better.
And it's also an incredible resource.
I mean, share Dr. Crum's research with everybody that you care about.
How extraordinary to know that there are settings in your mind that are well within your control to change.
And the research is there.
and it proves that it creates better outcomes.
You're going to feel better.
You're going to do better.
And in case no one else tells you, as your friend,
I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you.
I love you for listening to this.
I love you for being interested in this.
I love you for taking what you learned today very seriously.
And I also believe that if you do that,
it will help you create a better life.
All righty, I will see you in the very next episode.
I'll be waiting to welcome you in the moment you hit play.
that you need to change.
This isn't positive thinking.
Hold on, let me do that again.
Oh, my God, there it is.
Oh, my God.
Aliyah, it's probably good then.
Amazing.
It's like one of these moments for you,
like, I can't believe this is actually happening.
You know, you think about it.
You're like, all right, here we go.
Here we go.
Have fun.
Oh, my God.
I saw a girl.
I saw that chocolate cake, man.
I want to take your class.
class. Oh, that would be great. Imagine you just show up. Look at how good you are. I'm like
already 15 things down the page. You are so good. Okay, so Dr. Crum. Amy is good. Amy is fabulous.
Where's Amy? Good job, Amy. Good job, Amy. Welcome back. Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
And hold on. Today, welcome. What do I normally say? It's your buddy. Oh, yeah. Let's see how it
goes. It's all right.
Oh, my God.
Next time we'll share milkshakes, okay?
Yeah.
Now we'll both take a sip of water through
chocolate on our teeth.
All right, look at our teeth.
Give us a teeth check.
Are we good?
Oh, you look great.
Yay!
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyer's right
and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented
solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist,
and this podcast is not intended as a substitute
for the advice of a physician, professional coach,
psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it? Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
Sirius XM Podcasts.
