The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Stop Negative Thoughts & Reset Your Mind for Positive Thinking
Episode Date: May 8, 2025In today’s episode, you are getting a step-by-step guide on how to change your mindset, stop negative thoughts, and make your mind work for you. What if the voice in your head — the one that crit...icizes, spirals, and second-guesses everything — could actually help you? In this powerful conversation, Mel sits down with one of the world's leading experts on the mind, Dr. Ethan Kross, PhD. He's a neuroscientist, award-winning psychologist, professor at the University of Michigan, director of The Emotion & Self Control Laboratory, and leading expert on the science of emotion, self-talk, and mental resilience. Today, he's here to teach you how to stop negative thoughts from running your life — using simple, science-backed tools. In this episode, Dr. Kross shares specific tactics, strategies, and insights you can use to break free from spiraling and reset your mind for positivity. If you're tired of overthinking, doubting yourself, or feeling stuck in your own head… this one’s for you. Class is in session, because after you listen to this, your brain will not be the same. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode, you’ll love listening to this one next: 6 Simple Science-Backed Hacks That Will Make Your Life BetterConnect with Mel:  Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
I just walked out of the studio here in Boston.
I am absolutely blown away by what I just learned about stopping negative self-talk
from our guest.
You're about to meet him.
His name is Dr. Ethan Cross.
He's a professor at the University of Michigan, a neuroscientist, and he spent the last 25 years researching
how your self-talk determines your experience of life
and how it also impacts what it actually feels like to be you.
Now, this is something that I've struggled with,
and I know you struggle with negative self-talk too,
and the people that you care about struggle with it.
I mean, I'm so blown away by what you're about to hear
and what you're about to learn.
In fact, I've never heard anyone lay out the exact ways
you can stop negative self-talk.
In fact, right out of the gate,
he's gonna tell you there are four reasons
why you and I talk to ourselves.
I mean, I didn't know these four reasons.
And once you hear it, it's so fascinating
and it makes a lot of sense.
And then he's going to share that you say 4,000 words a minute to yourself.
And just to put that into perspective, that's like reading the first book of Harry Potter series
in less than 20 minutes.
I mean, that's a lot of words.
And if you're anything like me, 99% of what you're saying is pretty terrible.
I'm not good enough.
I shouldn't have done this.
What if that happens?
Never should have sent that text.
I promise you, you are going to leave this conversation
today a different person.
Because Professor Cross isn't just bringing the research,
he's bringing tools and he's bringing a lot of them.
Professor Cross is gonna tell you,
you can turn your inner critic into a coach.
He's going to give you tools so that the next time you find yourself
falling down that rabbit hole of rumination and worry,
you can throw yourself a lifeline.
So if you're ready to stop overthinking and silence that self-doubt
and finally take back your power,
this is the episode you've been waiting for.
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so fired up for our conversation today.
I'm so excited that you're here.
It is always such an honor to spend time together and to be with you.
And if you're a new listener,
I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you
to the Mel Robbins Podcast family.
I'm thrilled that you're here.
And because you made the time to hit play
and listen to this particular episode,
it tells me something about you.
It tells me that you're the kind of person
who wants to take control of your inner voice
and you want to learn how to be more encouraging and positive,
especially when it comes to yourself.
And you know what?
I think that's amazing
because I wanna learn how to do that too.
And if you're listening right now
or you're watching on YouTube
because someone shared this with you,
I wanna take a minute and point out to you
that that means that you've got someone in your life
that really cares about you.
And so thank you for trusting them
and thank you for being here.
And this is a home run of a podcast episode
for you to listen to or watch.
Because Dr. Ethan Cross is in the house.
He is a psychologist and a neuroscientist
and he's been a pioneering researcher
in the field of self-talk and emotions for 25 years.
Ethan Cross is also a professor
at the University of Michigan,
where he's taught for the past 17 years.
He is also the founder and the director
of the Research Institute at the University of Michigan,
the Emotion and Self-Control Laboratory.
His work has appeared in esteemed journals like Science
and the New England Journal of Medicine.
He earned his PhD from Columbia University
and he is also the author of two bestselling books,
Chatter, The Voice in Our Head,
Why It Matters and How to Harness It.
And his latest bestselling book is called Shift,
Managing Your Emotions So They Don't Manage You.
His books have been translated into over 40 languages
and today he's gonna unpack the insights
so that you can use this research
to stop the negative self-talk.
So please help me welcome Dr. Ethan Cross
to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you for hopping on a plane
and being here in our Boston studios.
I cannot wait to dig into your work
in your best-selling book, Chatter.
And of course, congratulations on your new book, Shift.
It's so exciting to have you here.
Well, it's an absolute honor to be here with you.
You know, I've been listening to you for quite some time
and the compatibility between a lot of what you talk about
and what I write about and do research on couldn't be better.
So just an honor to be here.
Awesome. Well, let's just jump right into it.
And here's how I want to start.
I would love to have you,
do you want me to call you Professor Cross, Ethan?
What do you like?
I love Ethan.
Okay, Ethan.
We're going with Ethan.
Ethan, I would love to have you speak directly
to the person who's here spending time together
with us right now and tell them exactly
what they could expect to have be different about their life.
If they take everything that you are about to teach us
about our self-talk, about our emotions to heart,
and they put it to use in our life.
Here's what I hope everyone takes away from this.
Okay.
Three things.
Number one, you'll be able to take your inner critic
and turn it into an inner coach.
Number two, if you ever find yourself
falling down the rabbit hole of rumination and worry,
we're gonna give you some lifelines to pull yourself out
so you can actually use your mind to solve your problems
rather than just get stuck in them.
And then number three more broadly,
we're gonna give you lots of really pragmatic,
tactical tools, simple to use tools
that you can use to really master your emotions.
So if you wanna turn the volume on them up or down
or shorten or lengthen how long they last
or even switch from one emotional state to another,
we're gonna give you some guide posts
that steer you in the right direction.
Wow.
So we've got our work cut out for us.
That's a tall order.
Yeah, we better get started.
Well, I've read your books, so I know you can deliver on that.
You have been at the University of Michigan, you are the founding director and have been
running this incredible lab, the Emotion and Self-Control Lab.
What has it taught you?
What do you want us to know?
The first thing that I've learned over the past 25 or so years doing research in this space is if you ever find yourself
going down that vortex of doom and despair or anxiety or even overcome with
other negative emotions that don't really feel good in the moment, welcome to the
human condition. We all do at times and I think that's a really important point
for people to take home because I can't tell you how many people I meet who
really feel bad about themselves when they find themselves slipping into one of those
emotional states.
We evolve the capacity to experience negative emotions for a reason.
And we'll talk more about that today when they're experiencing the right proportions,
they can be useful.
So number one, if you experience worry, rumination, if you find your inner
critic activating at times, there's nothing wrong with you. To the contrary, I would argue
there's everything right with you. Number two, there are no one size fits all solutions
for managing these states that we want to bring more under our control. We have evolved to possess lots and lots of different tools.
And I think the key to managing our emotional lives
more effectively involves learning about
what all those tools are and then figuring out
what are the unique combinations that work for you
based on who you are as a unique individual.
It's a lot like in my mind's physical fitness.
Lots of people have the goal to be physically fit, but the way they get there can be radically
different compared to other people.
And the same is true when it comes to, if we want to call it emotional fitness.
You got to learn about all the different machines in the gym, and then you got to figure out
what are the exercises that work for me based on who I am and what my goals are.
Well, let's start with going down the rabbit hole.
Yeah.
Because, you know, your first bestselling book, Chatter the Voice in our head, why it
matters and how to harness it.
When is the last time you went down the rabbit hole?
Oh, boy.
Like you seem like a such chill guy, like, like super tortured yourself about worry or
negative thoughts.
Yeah.
Probably maybe a couple of months ago.
And it was linked with one of my daughters.
Are you going to get in trouble for telling the story Ethan on a podcast?
I'm actively monitoring it.
See, now he's going down the rabbit hole.
My wife is going to kill me.
Yes, no.
This is something I'm used to experiencing.
No, this is fair to say.
So my youngest daughter was applying to get into the same school as my oldest daughter.
And when my oldest daughter was applying to get into a school, you know, there was,
okay, if it works out great, and if not, no big deal. But now with the second daughter,
there's a social comparison element here. And, you know, she has this older sister that she looks
up to and admires. And so I'm thinking, well, what would happen if she doesn't get in?
And she fortunately did get in.
And it was a great relief.
But I did find myself going down the rabbit hole
on occasion playing the what if this happens?
And you know, I should say that when I do that,
when I go down the rabbit hole of despair,
which I can get stuck in every now and again,
like the best of us, it I can get stuck in every now and again, like the best of us.
It always amazes me how exceptionally adept we are at brainstorming endless worst case
scenarios to our problems.
I mean, have you experienced this yourself?
Every day.
Like, I mean, you're like saying a couple months ago, I'm like, dude, like if you asked
me that question, I'd be like, about an hour ago.
But it is true because we are so good
at thinking about the negative
and imagining the worst case scenarios.
But we're not so great at imagining
that things would go right.
That's right.
Well, there's what we call this negativity bias.
One of my favorite titles of a paper in psychology
is bad is stronger than good.
One of our few Nobel Prize winners won a Nobel Prize for discovering that we're
more sensitive to losses than we are gains in our lives. And that all makes sense if
you think about it. The bad things in life have the potential to harm us or derail our
lives a lot more than the good thing. So we should be more sensitive to them. But sometimes
that over sensitivity to the bad stuff can really lead us astray,
especially because no one ever teaches us about how to rewrite the ship when we find
it going in the wrong path.
Well, one of the things that you said that I am excited as you said, I'm going to teach
you how to turn your inner critic into a coach. And I would love to start with this amazing book, Chatter,
and all your research about the voice in our head.
And I want to read a part of your book to you.
Sure.
Because this was jaw-dropping to me.
So our verbal stream of thoughts, our self-talk, is so industrious that according to one study,
we internally talk to ourselves at a rate equivalent to speaking 4,000 words
a minute. And to put this into perspective, I crunch the numbers, 4,000 words a minute
is the equivalent of reading the first book in the Harry Potter series in less than 20
minutes.
So when we think, we are not always thinking in full sentences. We're thinking in these
sound bites that have deep meaning.
And when you spell out what those sound bites
are equivalent to, you get essays in your mind.
And I'm sure you've felt this kind of bombardment
of information when you find yourself going down
that rabbit hole.
It's like our mind is pinballing all over the place verbally
and we're just inundated, which is in part why
when we find ourselves
kind of racked with chatter, it can feel so, so oppressive. This is one of the reasons why writing
about our experiences, doing something we call expressive writing can be so helpful for folks
because it helps us organize our thoughts so that we're not pinballing all around.
You know, you write that the key to beating
this negative self-talk and this chatter in
our head isn't to stop talking to yourself.
The challenge is to figure out how to do so more effectively.
But before we can get into how to control the voice in our head,
we need to answer a more basic question.
Why do we have one in the first place?
So Ethan, what is self-talk?
And what exactly is that voice that's in our head
that's chattering 4,000 words a minute?
So when scientists like myself use this phrase,
self-talk, or the inner voice, what we're talking about
is our ability to silently use language
to reflect on our lives.
And it turns out that is a remarkable tool
that we possess for navigating this crazy world.
So let me like flag four key functions
that this ability to use language silently provides.
Number one, we're the same vintage here,
age-wise more or less, and-
Be careful.
Ha ha ha ha ha. When we were growing up,
what would you do when you wanted to remember
a phone number or a name?
Well, if I didn't have a pen and couldn't write it down,
I would repeat it over and over and over again.
In your head?
Yes.
Yeah, so.
Or I'd come up with like rhymes or like,
I had to try to remember it.
Right, so that's probably the most basic function
that your inner voice serves for us.
It's part of what we call our verbal working memory system.
Wait, so that's what the basic of your inner voices
is to help you remember things?
That's one function.
So you can think of your inner voice
as like a Swiss army knife.
Multi-purpose tool that does many different things for you.
So one thing-
And oftentimes death by a thousand cuts.
We're gonna get there.
Okay.
We're gonna get there, don't you worry.
So number one, memorizing a phone number,
repeating a phone number, repeating a name,
going to the grocery store and asking yourself,
what was I supposed to buy?
Milk, cheese, yogurt, I guess I'm in the dairy aisle.
But the whole point here is you're doing that silently, typically, not out loud.
That's one thing your inner voice lets you do.
Another thing your inner voice lets you do, simulate and plan.
So before, and while you do a lot of presentations for, for, as part of your job, you ever go
over what you're going to say before you go on stage in your head?
Always.
Okay.
That's your inner voice. You are silently rehearsing, preparing,
simulating for what you need to do.
You know what else I used that I just realized?
When I'm packing for a trip,
I'm like thinking ahead to where I'm going
and what I'm gonna need.
There you go.
You're simulating and planning.
People do this before interviews,
before consequential conversations
that they are gonna have.
I am not as good at giving a presentation
if I don't do this simulation beforehand.
My favorite function, so the name of my lab
at University of Michigan is the Michigan Emotion
and Self-Control Lab.
I love the topic of self-control.
We use our inner voice to control and motivate ourselves.
So, all right, so Mel, tell me what do you do to exercise?
Oh.
Yeah, keep going, keep going.
Okay, because of some of the experts we've had on the show,
I now lift weights.
Okay.
I walk, I do yoga and Pilates.
Okay.
I have like a super active lifestyle outside,
but if I'm, quote, exercising,
I have to drag myself to the gym
and then I use an app to motivate myself.
Okay.
And that's what I do.
Do you ever talk to yourself when you're exercising?
All the time, like I did this morning in class.
Tell us, tell us.
I freaking hate this, why are we on our hands?
I don't wanna do a pike right now.
I feel like I'm in a gym class with a woman
who's talking like this and who's like screaming at me,
like screaming and why is she playing ACD
at 6.30 in the morning?
I thought this was a fricking Pilates class.
Like, so it was literally like I'm saying that to myself.
As she would walk closer, I would think, get away from me.
Go to the other side of the room.
So I, or I'm thinking this is too heavy.
I'm tired. I want to quit.
See, clearly I don't have a lot of willpower and discipline
because my chatter is a constant barrage
of why I should stop doing what I'm actually doing.
We have room for intervention here.
Do we?
We have tons of room.
We are going to make, if you're already doing fine in the gym,
we're going to make you do a lot better
by the time this episode is over.
So that's another thing.
If you're listening, you're gonna take home with you.
So it's possible if you are constantly against yourself.
Absolutely.
You can change your self-talk.
But if we just go back to a second,
this is one of my favorite questions to ask people
when I'm giving talks on this stuff.
I just kind of scan the room for what do you say to yourself when you're exercising?
Lots of people talk to themselves and what they say varies tremendously from what you
just described to, come on, you got this to, I really want a bagel right now, and so on
and so forth.
And we know that people who are skilled at harnessing this voice to be motivating and encouraging,
they actually perform better in those contexts.
So I, knowing this stuff,
am very strategic about how I harness myself,
talk when I'm exercising.
I will be motivating, come on man, you've got this,
that's right, I refer to myself in the second
and third person.
We'll talk more about how that works.
I also can become somewhat in my head,
aggressive towards the instructor that is telling me
to do painful things.
Oh, like the woman that I was like.
Yeah, like you were just describing.
So for me, I find it, well, why don't you try doing that?
You know, like, I don't like the way you're talking to me.
I want to do it this way.
I don't say that out loud, I smile out loud,
but in my head, right, I'm having that kind of conversation.
So the point here is another thing
your inner voice helps you do
is control and motivate yourself.
The fourth and final thing I want to flag here,
to me, I describe this as the most magical feature
of our inner voice.
To me, I describe this as the most magical feature of our inner voice. Your inner voice helps us make sense of this messy world that we live in.
We are bombarded by things all the time that have the potential to lead us astray.
We get rejected, we get into arguments, we experience anxiety about what may come.
And when those different kinds of curve balls get thrown at us, what we do is we often stop
and we try to, okay, how do we make sense of this so we could get back on track of living
our lives?
And we make meaning, we use our inner voice to try to make sense of our circumstances,
to essentially create a story that helps us understand what we're going through and who we are.
So your inner voice is actually shaping your sense of self.
So if we just pause here and zoom out, your inner voice helps you do things as simple
as reminding yourself what's on your grocery list and memorizing a phone number when you're
repeating in your head to simulating and planning for the future,
to controlling and motivating yourself,
to making meaning.
If I told someone I could give you a tool
that does all those things,
like these are the things that are really important
to us in life, your inner voice is central
to all of those things.
It's an invaluable tool that you do not want to live life
without.
The big question, of course, that really got me
into this business in the first place was,
on the one hand, we have this remarkable capability.
We reach for it when we're struggling,
but as you know, as I know, as you who are listening knows,
oftentimes we don't activate this voice
and get clear solutions to how to move on.
We just start stumbling.
We start looping over our problems in an attempt to work through them or we start berating
ourselves incessantly for mistakes that are endemic to human life.
And when that happens, I think that is one of the big problems we face as a species.
And as I have said before, I say that not to scare or sensationalize.
I say it based on what I know of the data, because if you look at what chatter, which
I define as the negative manifestation of your inner voice, when it turns into that
negative thought looping, that self-beratement, that just tanks us.
It makes it hard for us to think and perform.
It creates friction in our relationships,
and it undermines our health and wellbeing.
These are the things we care about in our lives.
And so that's why I think it's just critical to address it.
I have never heard anybody explain self-talk
and that inner voice so elegantly
and in a way that I actually get it.
Well, thank you.
I mean, it is truly remarkable when you take a 30,000 foot view and think about
what does our chatter look like?
What does it sound like?
I mean, we say things to ourselves that many people not only
wouldn't say to a buddy, right, we often talk about
that, you know, talk to yourself like you would talk to someone else.
This is a great tool, by the way, we'll talk more about that later.
We sometimes say things to ourselves that we are ashamed to even say out loud.
Sometimes when I do exercises, workshops with groups or students, I'll sometimes invite
people to just write down
their chatter on a piece of paper.
And it's really remarkable.
People are often reluctant to even put in writing
what they're thinking, even when I assure them,
like the shredder's right here.
There's another garbage bag with lighter fluid,
like not bag, garbage can, right?
You can, I'm joking here,
but like no one is gonna look at this.
Right.
Just admitting to what is happening up here
can be so challenging for folks.
And I think that speaks to the gravity
of what we're talking about.
What are some of the examples of negative self-talk
that just show up again and again?
I think hearing it from you would really validate it
for me and for
the person who's with us right now because if we don't, if we're reluctant to even be
honest with ourselves and put it on paper, what can you validate based on the fact that
this is your area of expertise? It's what you research that you see over and over and
over again that are examples of negative self-talk.
There are three, three key forms. Number one, what I call rumination,
which is going over the past.
Something you did in the past, you can't fix it, right?
But you just keep turning it over and over in your mind.
Why did I do this?
Why didn't I do it that way?
What implications might this have moving forward?
So rumination is getting lost in this thought.
It's a legitimate issue from the past
and you're trying to work through it,
but you just keep turning it over and over.
You're not making any progress.
That's often a telltale sign of chatter.
Legitimate issue.
You wanna work through it, but you don't make progress.
So it could be like, just to give it even a more fine point,
it could be that you really screwed up in a relationship
and now you're telling yourself the one got away. Yeah. Like just to give it even a more fine point, it could be that you really screwed up in a relationship
and now you're telling yourself the one got away.
Or you made dumb financial decisions, this was me.
And now why did I do that?
I should have started with my 401k like my father told me
when I graduated from college, like that.
Like just hammering yourself into the ground.
How did I let myself go?
I should have, like, I've just, now it's too late.
I've been drinking, like all that kind of stuff.
It's in the past.
And why is this such a predominant form
of self-talk for people?
Well, it's a predominant form because I often think
that we navigate life in an ideal sense on autopilot.
We just kind of want to live the life
knowing that the world is
orderly, it's safe, it's predictable. And then when we encounter some
challenge to that view that the world is safe, that everything's okay,
it's like an alarm gets hit in our brains that says stop, pay attention, fix this.
And so then we zoom in really narrowly on what the impediment is.
And so maybe it's something from the past and we keep focusing on it until we can resolve it.
Oftentimes though, we don't know how to resolve it.
We just keep on playing it over and over in our minds.
And then the alarm button stays pressed and we just get into this rut of turning it over and over and over.
Some of us don't want to let go of that either because at least if we're focusing on it, and over and over. Some of us don't wanna let go of that either,
because at least if we're focusing on it, that's step one.
But in the process of doing that,
we're really harming ourselves.
We're making it very challenging to think and perform.
I mean, have you ever gotten stuck in rumination
and then tried to have a conversation with someone
or read a book only to find that you're physically
there or you're reading the information on the page, but nothing is penetrating because
your mind is somewhere else.
Oh, completely.
Absolutely.
Like if I get into that loop where I am obsessing over something that I think I did wrong, I
can't do anything else.
Exactly.
So that's thinking and performance, right?
Like that is a major, major obstacle
to being successful in life.
If your ability to really hone your attention now is lost.
And the way that works,
just if you wanna geek out with me for 30 seconds,
our ability to focus is limited.
We have these limited attentional resources.
They are subserved by our prefrontal cortex, the front part of our brains.
And chatter acts like a sponge that soaks up all of those attentional resources.
And it leaves very little left over to do the things that we often want and need to
do.
Whether that be just pay attention to the person we're talking to or read the chapter
in the book and absorb the information. That's one of the way it really sinks us.
So you ask though, like, how does chatter manifest?
Rumination about the past is one.
Another one that will be familiar to everyone in the world
or most of us is worry, right?
We worry about the future.
We think about the what ifs.
We are what if machines. We can easily, what-ifs. We are what-if machines. We can
easily, what if this happens? What if that happens? And before you know it, life is over.
Right.
And that goes really fast. So worrying is getting stuck in these negative thought loops,
typically about the present and future.
Got it. So rumination is the past.
The first is the past. The second form of self-talk is getting stuck in a negative loop
talking to yourself about the future.
That's right.
What's the third form?
The third form that is very common to folks is this self-beratement, this kind of like,
you idiot. You know, how could you do this? You're worthless. So this kind of inner critic
is another manifestation of it. It can, however, take different forms.
So chatter really is this process of just looping,
looping negative information over and over.
If you're being super critical about yourself,
like that's very common.
Sometimes it can be just anxiety, right?
You're looping over what if this happens,
what if this happens?
And so it's really this looping of negative stuff
It's like you keep on getting hit over and over and over you said it before I think you said death by a thousand cuts
Yeah, that's what I feel like when you just start hammering yourself. It's tiring, right? Like it's exhausting
People often who are experiencing chatter they report just like being fatigued. Now I want to be clear also. Yep
We all have this capability
of experiencing chatter at times and just because you do doesn't mean there's anything
wrong with you. Again, this is normative. If it morphs into the extreme state, that
is like the volume is super high and it's on for long stretches of time, like more than
two weeks, then we get into the more clinical
state.
But what we're talking about here today is really, this is just true of human beings
and how we operate.
And again, a big, big part of what I hope to do in talking to you about this and sharing
the science is to convey first and foremost that this is normal.
This is just part of this messy world that we live in.
We have these tendencies to slip into the States.
That doesn't mean there's anything wrong with you.
The opportunity though,
is to learn about what you can do
to help yourself when you go down this path.
If you don't wanna stay on it.
Ethan, what is the solution?
I mean, now that you're exposing you're exposing all the negative self talk.
I mean, is there a simple way to shut it up or a magic wand you can wave in order to just
silence all of this negative self talk?
Or is this a much more complicated thing that we need to take on?
Well, there's not one simple thing that everyone can do.
I don't like that answer.
Yes, I'm sure you don't, but I'm gonna give you-
There goes my negative chatter right out my mouth at you.
But I'm gonna give you,
there are lots of simple things you can do.
Oh.
Is the way to think about it.
Oh, I like that.
So yeah, you should.
There's a lot of hope.
There's a lot-
There is, because I feel bummed.
I think you should feel good when I tell you
that there's not one thing you can do to manage your chatter
because here's what
often happens when you give people one solution. They try it. That one thing doesn't work for them.
And now they think, what's wrong with me? Why is this working for everyone else, but not me?
We just published some research not too long ago that looked at how people dealt with their anxiety
during the COVID pandemic. So we did these large studies,
we tracked people over time and every day
we had them rate their COVID anxiety
and we had them indicate which of something like
18 different tools they used.
Now all we wanted to know was what are the tools
that are moving the needle?
Yeah.
So what was really interesting about that study was
there was no individual tool that moved the needle. Yeah. So what was really interesting about that study was there was no individual tool that
moved the needle on people's anxiety.
It was only like when you used a combination of tools.
It's like curling biceps didn't do it on its own.
You had to do bicep curls, pushups, and sit-ups, right?
Except for journaling.
Journaling was the one tool that alone moved the needle on people's anxiety.
However, it was also the most infrequently used tool of all the tools we ask people about.
How does that make sense?
Yeah, why?
It's effortful to sit down for 15 to 20 minutes and actually write. There's also a vulnerability
to putting it out there.
And so I think teaching people about that
is really useful too,
because that could be a powerful tool for folks.
So do you have a favorite journal prompt
that's helpful for starting the process
of identifying your negative chatter?
What is it?
Yeah, well, for me,
it's like straight out of the pages of the literature.
So I tell people to write about your deepest thoughts and feelings about whatever it is
that's bothering you.
Really let yourself go.
Don't worry about punctuation or grammar.
Write continuously for 15 or 20 minutes.
Now what do we learn from the time we're young about stories?
They have a beginning, a middle, and an end.
So what writing does is it gives these guideposts to help
you take this jumble of crap in our minds, which are making us nuts, and we're organizing
it. And that's the beauty of what we call expressive writing.
So the whole idea here is that we have this remarkable set of tools that we can leverage to help us work through our chatter.
But we need to know what those tools are.
And what really mystifies me is we don't get a user's guide
for where to find these tools.
And a user's guide that teaches us how to use it
when we are born into this world.
We're born into the world with the ability
to experience this chatter or this emotion dysregulation.
But no one teaches us how to use it or how to manage it.
Until now.
Yeah, and there is hope.
There's absolutely hope.
What I find it liberating to know
that there are so many different tools
that I can bring to bear to deal with
the different circumstances that I might encounter.
You know, my emotional life is utterly distinct.
It's like a fingerprint, right?
It's very different from yours
and every other human being on this planet.
So why would we expect the same single tool
to work for every single one of us,
given how unique we are.
My grandfather was a master carpenter.
I remember distinctly when he would show up to a job site, he would show up with this
remarkable set of tools, this toolkit.
No matter what problem he encountered on the job site, no matter what he needed to do,
he had a tool, a general, he knew how to use these tools
and he could wield them to solve the problem.
If he showed up with just a hammer,
he'd be out of business.
And that's how I think about tools.
You wanna give people those basic tools that exist
for pushing our emotions around.
And once you have them, you've got a great resource.
I just love how you teach.
And you know, what I wanna do is just hit the pause button real quick so that we can
all just think about what you're sharing so far.
And I also want to give you as you're listening to Ethan a chance to share this with people
that you care about, because I think we all need to know how to stop the negative self-talk
and don't go anywhere because Ethan is just getting started.
There are so many tools that he's going to be sharing with you.
Don't go anywhere.
He and I will be waiting for you after a short break.
Stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
Today, you and I have the honor of getting to spend time with
and learn from Professor Ethan Cross
from the University of Michigan.
He is teaching us all about our self-talk
and simple ways that we can actually change it.
You've got like, I mean, I'm looking at 12 tools
that you can use personally.
There are tools for getting other people to support you.
There's tools for receiving support. Let me start with the first one.
Use distanced self-talk.
One way to create distance when you're experiencing chatter involves language.
So what is distance self-talk and how do I use it when I'm going down the rabbit hole?
And you know, I've actually heard you use this on prior podcasts and you weren't even
aware of it.
No, I'm not. So can you think about times when you might have
coached yourself through a problem
using your own name and you.
Oh, you mean like talking, like saying to myself,
oh, come on, Mel.
Yeah, there you go.
That's distant self-talk?
You just did just distant self-talk.
So distant self-talk involves using your name and you,
typically silently coach yourself through a problem.
You could do it out loud, but if you do it out loud, you want to be aware of who's listening
because it violates social norms not only to talk to ourselves out loud, but use our
own name to do it.
We talked before and you've talked before about how much better we are at giving advice
to other people than we are taking that advice ourselves.
Little factoid there,
there's actually a name for that phenomenon
that we've studied this in my lab.
It's called Solomon's paradox.
Solomon's paradox?
Named after the Bible's King Solomon.
Here, I'm gonna give you another pop quiz.
Don't get nervous.
If you get it wrong. I'm not gonna know the answer to this.
No, I think you will.
I think you will.
So what was King Solomon famous for?
I have no idea.
Being?
A king?
Being wise.
Oh, being wise.
He was a wise guy.
So King Solomon, like super wise individual,
people would travel from all over the world
to receive his counsel.
But when you look at his own life,
he made a slew of terrible decisions.
This is true of humanity.
Like when I ask audiences, hey, you're much better at giving advice to others
and taking that advice yourself, every hand in the room goes up.
We, when you use distant self-talk, what it's doing is you're using language
to automatically shift your perspective to put you into this.
I'm talking to someone else, advice giving mode.
Think about the word you.
The word you is the verbal equivalent
of pointing a finger at someone else.
Most of the time we use the word you,
some are thinking about or referring to another person.
So when you use the example of being in the gym
and one purpose of your self-talk is motivation,
and you say, come on, Ethan, you got this.
That's an example of using positive motivating self-talk
using this distanced language.
That's exactly right.
You're putting yourself into this coach advice giving mode.
And what did we say earlier?
We don't say to our friends the things that we say
to ourselves when we get stuck in that chatter.
So when you use your own name and you
to coach yourself through a problem,
it's like it's putting guardrails up on your self-talk
that prevents you from going down that more negative route.
Can you give me a couple examples
of just generic positive distance language
for somebody that hyper focuses on the mistakes they make
or like saying that I'm never gonna be good enough.
Yeah, sure.
Like what are some examples of just things people
could start to say to themselves?
Ethan, all people make mistakes.
You've made mistakes before, you've learned from them
and you'll be fine.
Oh, that's nice.
Yeah, that's a good- That's a nice thing
to say to yourself.
Rather than I'm such an idiot, I'm such a...
I mean, you have to...
You know, I mentioned before we started filming
that I grew up in Brooklyn, New York.
And although you may not hear the accent right now,
in my mind, when I go into the chatter zone,
it's a filthy sometimes, inter-beratement.
And so I'm not doing that when I'm in distant self-talk mode.
So give me another positive one.
So really what we see happening is you get into this more
challenge orientation.
I can manage this.
I can do it.
As opposed to being in what we call threat mode.
I can't manage this.
I'm going to screw up.
So another example would be one of my favorites from a study was someone was thinking about
having to plan a huge event for someone and it was really, really stressful.
You can do this, you can manage this retirement party for this person and get a great turnout.
People are going to come and they're going to love it.
You've got this.
In my book, I actually, I share an artifact
from Mr. Rogers, remember Mr. Rogers?
Of course.
He was the-
You're sitting in 143 Studios,
which was his favorite number.
Really?
Uh-huh.
Wow, there is some cosmic connection
that led me to bring this up.
So Mr. Rogers in my mind is the human equivalent
of a warm cup of tea on a rainy afternoon, right?
Just kind of soothing. And there was this moment where he had taken some time off from
filming his show and then he was about to come back and he was wracked with chatter,
wracked with self-doubt. And he journaled a little bit about it and he's, you know,
how can I possibly live up to expectations? I've been gone and I'll never be good enough. And then at a particular moment in that essay,
he switches, he starts using distant self-talk essentially. You've got this, the hour have
come, you're going to do a great job and so forth and so on. It's in the book and it's
just remarkable because you see the entire tenor of the conversation shift when
he goes into this distant self-talk mode.
You know, one of the other tools that you talk about that's very effective at helping
you get a handle on the inner critic and this negative chatter that we have is rituals.
Can you explain that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, you know, rituals in popular culture get a bad rap because we often equate them
with certain forms of anxiety. And there are those links that do exist where you have people
who are suffering from anxiety conditions become really over-reliant on a ritual to
a point where it can be harmful. But a ritual in the right proportions can be quite helpful.
I often call them ancient chatter fighting tools. So if you think about
it, are you religious in any way or?
Very spiritual person.
Okay, very spiritual person. So I'm sure that there are certain spiritual rituals that you've
been exposed to. Grieving rituals, right? Religions around the world have been like, well, let's
just stop for a second. Let's pause for a second. Take the loss of someone. This is like a real chatter challenge
for a lot of people. Like their worldview is shattered now. How are they going to go
on without this person that they love, that they care about? Religions have identified,
Hey, that might be a really hard time that people are dealing with. Let's give them a
tool to manage that
situation. It's a grieving ritual. So here's what we know about rituals. Rituals are relatively
rigid sequences of behaviors that you perform them the same way each time, more or less.
They don't necessarily, it's not clear why you do the things that comprise a ritual.
Like if you've ever watched an athlete
before a game do a ritual, they do some funky things.
Like tug on their earlobe a few times,
pick a wedgie, put their hand through their hair.
The key is you're doing the same thing in a sequenced order,
in a rigid sequence order the same way.
Here's how this can help us. Ch chatter is often triggered when we don't feel like we have order and control things are just not under our control you've written extensively about this right.
A rituals under your control.
the same way each time. And when you do, it leads to what we call,
this is a mouthful, compensatory control.
You're compensating for the lack of control you feel inside
when your chatter is taking over
by exerting control around you.
This is also why people do this,
I'm guessing pretty common thing.
I'm gonna guess you do this.
Here's another.
I don't know. Yeah, I feel like I'm putting you on thing. I'm going to guess you do this. Here's another. I don't know.
Yeah. I feel like I'm putting you on edge
throughout our conversation.
Not at all.
Do you ever organize and clean
when you're experiencing chatter?
Okay. So let's have a conversation about this.
Because not only did I see on page 170,
tools that involve your environment
to really get your negative self-talk in control.
But the first one is create order in your environment.
When we experience chatter, we often feel as if we're losing control, you're right.
Our thought spirals control us rather than the other way around.
When this happens, you can boost your sense of control by imposing order on your surroundings.
Organizing your environment
can take many forms, tidying up your work or home, making a list, arranging different
objects. This is, I think, my number one way to combat negative self-talk, and I never
knew that's what I was doing.
So that was true of me as well before I got into this space. And it was, this was a super,
a super aha is a technical term for me.
So growing up, I've always been,
I would describe myself as positively disposition,
very happy, clean.
I've always believed in hygiene.
I shower daily, sometimes twice.
Twice.
Sometimes if I go to the gym, you know,
I like to stay fresh,
but not terribly organized in the sense
of putting my things away.
Probably like my wife's biggest pet peeve
are the trail of clothing that exists
from the shower to the closet around the room.
And if you go into my office,
I assure you it does not look like this facility
that we're taping in right now.
Piles of books, that's when times are good.
Okay.
Yet, going back to when I was a kid,
whenever I would experience chatter,
I would do this, something deep inside me
would beckon myself to, it was like,
you remember Field of Dreams, like build it and they will come? Yes, yes. And to, it was like, remember Field of Dreams, like build
it and they will come.
Yes, yes.
For me it was like, clean it, clean it, and you will experience relief.
And so I would like go and put things away.
And I do this, you know, like go into the kitchen, do all the dishes, maybe even scrub
the counter.
Same, even.
And then even masochistically, and tell me if you do this,
sometimes I even go to my kids rooms and put their stuff away. Of course. And like all of a
sudden things feel a little bit better. I absolutely had no idea this is a technique that we reach for
when our overwhelm and our minds get to be too much. You're compensating for the lack of control you feel inside
by trying to exert order and control around you.
And now that you know how this works,
you can weaponize this.
Okay, well, let's talk about that.
Because I can see lots of various moments in my life,
like when my husband and I were really, really struggling,
the kids would joke that they would come home from school.
And every other day, I would have moved the furniture
around dragging it and scraping the floor
in the room where the TV was.
Like just like, I gotta change this around.
And even thinking about packing Sunday night to come down,
I have this thing about packing
where I start to feel very overwhelmed
and then I'm mad at myself that I didn't pack before.
And now I'm beating myself up relentlessly.
Why is it so hard for you?
Like just make a damn list.
And why didn't you do this on Saturday morning?
And Jesus, you meant to leave like two hours ago.
And I'm like hammering myself.
And that of course makes it impossible to leverage
what you've already taught us,
which is the planning and forecasting aspect
of your self-talk because I'm so busy berating myself.
So literally I come down in the kitchen on Sunday night,
I'm two and a half hours late leaving.
I'm not even packed yet, Ethan.
And I have clothes still spinning in the dryer upstairs.
And you know what I did?
I literally pulled out the junk drawer in the kitchen.
And I-
You started organizing.
Yes.
And my husband comes over and he puts his hand
on my shoulders like,
you don't need to be doing this right now.
And what I wanted to do is scream around me like,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
And I took a deep breath and I was like, right.
But what I'm realizing is that was me trying
to create order and what felt like a tornado
of negativity in my brain.
That's exactly right.
Is that why we do to-do lists too? Like when we feel overwhelmed? It's a tornado of negativity in my brain. That's exactly right. Is that why we do to-do lists too?
Like when we feel overwhelmed?
It's a way of organizing.
And so these can be useful tools
for helping people to constrain their chatter
as long as we don't become over-reliant on them.
And I'm giving you that caveat,
that is true by the way of all the tools
that we're talking about and that I write about.
You know what I find interesting too
about what you just said?
Tell me. The chaos doesn't bother me that I write about. You know what I find interesting too about what you just said? Tell me.
The chaos doesn't bother me when I'm happy.
Yeah.
My desk can look like we tipped over an aisle at Staples.
Yeah.
And just crap everywhere.
But if I start to feel overwhelmed or stressed at work,
I don't do work, I clean my desk.
You described yourself so interesting.
Like you get caught up in this kind of tizzy,
so to speak, of, ah, right?
Kind of how it feels, right?
Like, let me out, let me, give me freedom.
And you're reflexively going to clean.
And if that's working, great.
But we can also get even more sophisticated
about beforehand thinking about, what are the two or three things
that we want to do when we find ourselves in that state.
And then basically ahead of time coming up with a plan.
What do we do?
So here's, we whoop it up.
You didn't even whoop it up.
Whoop it up.
Just like, like, all right, another, another question here.
What comes to mind when I say whoop?
Uh, like, I, like, isn't there that song, whoop?
There it is.
You just redeemed yourself.
Now we're back.
We're at like 75%.
We're getting back.
Yeah, whoop, there it is, right?
So people have struggled endlessly.
You go from listening to a podcast, reading a book, you learn about information, and then
the bleep hits the fan,
and the question is, you don't do it.
Right, it's the New Year's resolution dilemma.
I'm gonna lose the weight, I'm gonna go to the gym every day,
three days later, you stop doing it.
And so scientists have spent a ton of time trying to figure out
why are we so bad at following through with our intentions
and how do we make people better?
And you can boil down the decades of research into a simple framework called whoop
Here's what it stands for the W stat step one. That's your wish. So what is your goal?
so your goal might be to
Calm the chatter down like reduce the noise when you find yourself slipping into that state.
That's the goal I want to achieve.
Okay, that's the wish.
That's the wish, okay.
The first O, that's the outcome.
So what's gonna happen to you if you achieve that goal?
I'm gonna have less stress.
I am going to cause less drama for myself and other people.
I am going to cause less drama for myself and other people.
I am going to feel more at peace and more in control because all of this negative chatter and overwhelm
that becomes very paralyzing
makes me feel out of control and incapable.
So the outcome would be very positive.
So great job.
And the reason we focus-
I love the affirmations.
Just hang around all day.
Hey, I'm happy to give them.
But it's true.
And the reason why we do the outcome next, now like you've articulated your goal, we
want to energize you.
Like this is a goal worth pursuing.
This is worth my time.
So now you're in this energized state for pursuing this goal.
Now we get to the second O, which are the obstacles.
The personal obstacles that are going to stand in the way of you achieving this goal.
So what might be an obstacle that might prevent you from turning the volume on your chatter
down?
I am fluent in negative self-talk.
I am fantastic at criticizing myself.
I can whip myself into a human tornado in a nanosecond.
And it can be very effective when I get into a tizzy
because other people try to help.
So I think those are all lots of obstacles.
Like just being honest about like, I don't even know if I can do it would be an obstacle.
Yeah.
So you mean turn the volume down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you've just gone through your obstacles.
So what we would then do, we would focus on one of those obstacles to start and we get
to a P, which is our plan.
But it's not any kind of plan.
It's what we call an
Implementation intention. It's easier to call it a plan. Yes. It's basically an if-then plan
So if I find myself
Doom casting and becoming you know this savant in negative self-talk
Then and you plug in what you are going to do, you plug
in the tools that you are going to use in that situation.
So if I find myself berating myself incessantly, then I'm going to coach myself using distant
self-talk.
Mel, you can handle this.
It's not that big of a deal.
Go for a walk in nature.
That's another tool in your book.
Go for a walk in nature.
Jump into the mental time travel machine, go forward and back.
We'll talk about that in a little bit.
Okay.
Right?
Let's talk about it right now.
What do I do?
Okay, so.
What is it?
I'm not going to remember it.
Mental time travel are, these are two of the most useful tools that I possess along with
distant self-talk.
Super simple.
Okay.
We talk a lot about the importance of being in the moment, grounding ourselves in our
breath.
That is useful, but what we forget when we talk about being in the moment is number one,
our minds evolved to travel in time.
You can actually use that to your benefit.
Number one, how am I going to feel about this issue next week, next month, next year?
Most of our emotions follow a time course.
They get triggered and as time goes on, they eventually subside.
Most of our emotional experience follow that trajectory, but when we are stuck in
chatter, we just zoom in on the awfulness.
It feels like it's never going to end.
When you jump into the time travel machine, how am I going to feel about
this 10 years from now, 20 years from now?
It highlights the fact that what you're going through, as bad as it is, it's not permanent.
Things will eventually get better. It gives you hope. And that turns the volume on our chatter down. That's one thing. That's mental time travel to the future. I think that could work. That's
powerful for me. And then that helps me also access the positive distance
talk that you've taught us.
Exactly.
Which is if I time travel even two weeks,
like a week from now,
though you've already packed and been on the trip
and now you're home.
Like it's not that big of a deal.
And then I can start to go, Mel, take a deep breath.
You're capable of packing.
You got it.
So you, you're blending these tools,
which is off also how these things actually operate
in daily life, right?
So we go back to the one thing, it's not one.
Now we're doing two.
And you know what else I want to point out,
because I think it's important to keep highlighting this.
You've given us other tools of creating a ritual
and playing music and going outside and taking a walk.
In that moment, playing a song and taking a walk
would just stress me out more.
Don't do it.
Right?
But I can see how now you're starting to build
this toolkit.
That's right.
Where I'm not going for a walk right now,
but I can time travel to calm myself down.
And then I can use positive distance talk to say,
Mel, you can pack a bag.
That's right.
So you can customize the tools based again on who you are
and the circumstances you're in.
So let's close the loop though on mental time travel
because we just talked about going into the future.
You could also go into the past,
works a little bit differently.
For me, this is my, is ace in the hole the right term?
I think it is.
I don't know, what does it mean?
It's like my secret superpower.
Oh, gotcha, okay.
Yeah, I think I might've gotten it wrong, but that's okay.
So-
We'll give it to you.
Yeah, okay, well, now you're giving me the aphorisms.
This is reciprocal, it goes very well.
So the story I open up my second book with, Shift,
is a story of my grandmother in World War II,
surviving the Nazis, basically slaughtering our whole family.
My grandmother's my ace in the hole.
When things feel so big and just kind of, how am I possibly going to get through this?
I jump into the mental time travel machine.
I go back to 1940 whatever.
I spend just a little bit of time with my grandmother in my mind.
And what that does for me is it zooms me out.
It makes it super clear to me that what I'm going through, as difficult as it is,
it pales in comparison to what she went through and survived.
And I think we all have those personal experiences or experiences in our family or in our culture that you can
anchor on to put what we're going through in perspective.
Is there something you would add to that though?
Because if you're a world-class self-critic and curator, I could see that strategy being
something that only becomes more evidence where you go and you're such a piece of crap
that you're sitting here working yourself up
about this thing.
How do you know what I'm saying?
Like you actually shake.
So how do you take that to give yourself perspective
but then keep yourself lifted in your capacity
to coach yourself through it?
You wanna keep the spotlight on the challenge
that they endured compared to what you're dealing
with right now.
Right.
And really use it as a source of motivation.
Got it, okay.
Exactly.
You don't wanna slip back into,
well, anything sets you off.
That would defeat the purpose of that exercise.
And if you find that doing that
leads you into that territory, don't use that tool. Use a different one.
That's great.
And that's a really important take home for these tools. Different tools work for different
people in different situations.
This is so fascinating. And I could just talk to you all day. I have so many more questions,
but I want to take a quick pause so we can hear a word from our amazing sponsors
And I also want to give you a chance to share this amazing conversation with people that you care about
Because there is zero doubt in my mind that these tools are gonna help me stop the negative self-talk
And I want that for you and I want that for the people in your life, too
So share this with people you care about and don't go anywhere because as you are learning,
Ethan has a lot of tools, that's right, plural,
and he's got a lot more to share with you when we return.
We'll be waiting for you after a short break.
Stay with us.
Welcome back, it's your buddy Mel Robbins. And today you and I are learning from Professor
Ethan Cross from the University of Michigan. So, you know, over the break, Ethan, I was
thinking about something else I wanted to ask you. And so where I want to go next is
how important of a role does environment play in self-talk being positive or negative? It can play a big role in a few different ways.
So we already talked about your local environment,
how the way you structure your environment,
how organized it is can affect what's
happening between your ears.
There's also ways of putting things in your environment
to trigger positive experiences like pictures of loved ones,
which sounds so silly on the one hand, but we did this research years ago where we had people
think about really painful experiences and we had them then look at a picture of a loved one or a
picture of someone else's loved one to see what are the implications of looking at your,
what we call attachment figure,
someone you're really connected to.
And what we found is that looking at that person
that you care about,
this activates a sense that there are people in this world
that support you, which sped up how quickly people recovered
from a distressing experience.
So after that research, I went on a shopping spree
for picture frames and all of my offices
have pictures of my family and friends all around it
for that reason.
Yeah, I think that if you think about walking
through an office, oftentimes that's the thing
that tethers you through the day,
is the reminder of what's meaningful in your life,
especially when you're having a stressful day.
Exactly.
Sort of like the way that you time traveled backwards to your grandmother.
Helps put things in perspective.
Correct.
So that's one thing you can do.
Okay.
Green space exposure.
I was a little hesitant to really buy into this when I first started researching the space.
I come from a place we talked about for Brooklyn, New
York. I like to remind people that one of the most famous books to come out of this
borough or about this borough was titled, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Singular, right?
So like there's not a lot of, there was not a lot of green space growing up, and I'm a city guy. I find green space exposure to be quite profound in terms of how it impacts my emotional life.
There's been a lot of research on this.
What happens is when you're stuck in chatter, it consumes your attention.
It's the only thing you can think about.
When you go for a walk in a safe, natural setting, what happens is your attention is captured
by your surroundings, but in a very gentle way.
The sights, the sounds, the smells,
like your attention just drifts on them.
And what that does is it gives you this opportunity
to rest and restore over the course of that walk.
So you finish it, you're feeling more rejuvenated,
and you actually have more attentional capacity
to work through your problems.
So that's one way that your environment,
in particular, green space exposure can help you.
You know, I just had an experience where last week
I got some very, very difficult news.
And so I had a horrible night's sleep,
could not fall asleep, woke up,
it was like 5, 15 in the morning,
which is ungodly early for me.
And it was pitch dark outside and my husband, Chris,
was gone and I laid there and I could just feel
the negative, what if this and what if that,
or you're just kind of trying to problem solve
through something that's scaring you to death
in your life or your work or whatever.
And I thought, I need to get the hell out of this bed.
So I got up, I got the dogs outside,
and then I thought I should go for a walk,
even though the moon is still out and it is pitch dark
because my mind is a horrendous place right now.
And the last thing I wanna do is look at social media
or try to solve it that way or log on to email.
And so I put on my coat and I still had my pajamas on
and I started walking down the driveway.
And as I was walking in the pitch dark
and I'm seeing the moon start to lower
and I started thinking to myself,
sort of like you thought about your grandmother,
about the fact that in the scale of humanity
and the fact that I am but a speck on this planet
hurdling through space, the crap that's keeping me up,
and like, I'm sorry, again, still negative,
shaming myself if you take notice,
but as I rounded the corner and the moon is set,
it probably took about 13 to 15 minutes of walking,
but there was an owl, it was like, hoo hoo,
and I'm like, oh, that the owl
doesn't care. And as I kept walking, and my senses were activated, it pulled me into the
experience of the walking. And then the sun started to come up and slowly but surely,
I noticed that the beat down was gone.
Why does that work?
Because I think we've all experienced feeling better
and clearing our mind when we either take a walk
or if it's available to you,
you can get outside in green space.
So a couple of things I wanna point out.
So number one, you said 13 minutes.
You said it took about 13 minutes.
And the way I interpreted you saying that,
I was like, it took a while.
But if you think 13 minutes is a while,
how much time have you spent in that negative self-talk?
56 years.
56 years.
I think 13 minutes is pretty damn good.
Like 13 minutes is probably quicker
than the amount of time it takes for Tylenol
to have its effect when you've got a bad headache. Right? Like that is pretty magical. So we
talked a little bit about how nature can help us restore. That's one way it can help us.
Another thing that it does is it gives us the opportunity to experience the emotion
of awe, which is an emotion we experience when we're in the presence of something vast and indescribable,
something that just feels bigger than ourselves.
And nature is replete with those awe triggers, like the moon.
It's so beautiful.
And you're in Southern Vermont.
I've been up there at times.
It's gorgeous up there.
When we experience this emotion of awe,
what it does, it leads to what we call
a shrinking of the self.
You feel smaller when you're contemplating
something vast and indescribable.
Here you are, Mel, you're worried about this thing.
I'm sure it's a legit, it feels,
doesn't only almost feel legitimate,
I'm sure it feels existential in the moment
that you're having it, like, it's over, I'm over, the world is over, right?
Like, yeah, we've all been there.
We know what it's like.
Well, when you're in nature
and you have this opportunity to experience,
oh, it's just, it makes you and your concerns
feel a whole lot smaller when you're contemplating
the vastness of maybe like the site you're in.
I mean, you're probably walking somewhere,
trees are alive for hundreds of years, right?
Like that makes what you're dealing with
just feel a little bit more insignificant.
And when we shrink ourselves in that way,
our problems shrink too.
So I will often weaponize this by going for walks
in the local arboretum
when I'm really struggling with something
and it inevitably helps.
It's like, I'm worried about this,
like when there are so many more things
happening in the universe,
like come on, let's get back into gear.
Yeah, and more importantly,
I think it helps you access the other tools,
because the thing is,
is that the walk didn't disappear the problem.
It actually lowered the chatter,
and so when I got back and into my work day and inevitably other things happen that then
bring it back up.
You got it.
Whether I started organizing my desk.
Yeah.
Or I'm using the other tools, I can see what you're teaching us, which is you have the
ability to catch it.
That's right.
When it's taking you down.
That's right.
And then use these tools to create distance from it.
So there are so many tools in the book, and we've covered a bunch of them so far, but
what are some other quick and simple tactics and tools that the person listening can use
to make their inner voice more positive?
Okay.
So let's enter into the rapid fire part of the conversation.
Sensory experiences, tremendously underutilized tool.
I was blind to this up until relatively recently in my life when my daughter was in a terrible
mood, was bumming me out, and one of the great songs of all time came on the radio in the
car or iPad, whatever you call it nowadays.
Journeys don't stop believing, and everyone got excited and happy in the car or iPad, whatever you call it nowadays. Journeys don't stop believing.
And everyone got excited and happy in the car.
Music effortlessly shifts our emotions.
You can use this yourself.
You can use it to shift other people's emotions.
All of the senses are useful tools to shift our emotions.
Sense, I'm staying at a hotel not far from here.
The moment I walked into the hotel,
I was awash with this pleasant scent that the hotel has been piping through the ventilation
system to make the patrons feel comfortable. We spritz ourselves with chemicals to make
ourselves feel good and make other people feel good. Our senses are powerful tools.
Let's talk about other people though, because other people feel good. Our senses are powerful tools. Let's talk about
other people though, because other people I think are really important and it touches
back to this problem where sometimes you go to other people and we push them away. So
how do you, how do you find other people in your life to actually help you when it comes
to your chatter or your big emotions you're experiencing. I call
these our chatter advisors. How do you find your chatter advisors? You want to
look for people who do two things. There are two key steps to providing good
chatter support. Step one, you want to listen, empathize, validate, connect with
the person. Lots of big terms there, but what I mean is like, you wanna be there emotionally for that person.
I wanna learn about what you're going through.
Like, I really would like to know
what set you off at 5 a.m. the other day?
Tell me about it.
Terrible, like, I've been there too.
Genuinely connecting.
What that does is it helps satisfy the person
who's suffering these needs they have to feel connected.
Once I do that, then I want to
shift into this kind of advice or cognitive mode. So all right, now we're connected, you
can rely on me, but the problem's still there. Let's try to look at it. And as someone who
is not going through the problem myself, I'm in a great position to help put it in perspective
for you.
Yep. I'm in a great position to help put it in perspective for you.
Those are the two steps to providing good chatter support.
And you would be amazed at how frequently people who are exceptionally well-intentioned
don't follow those two steps.
There are two ways it breaks down.
Number one, some people think that their job is just give you a sounding board to let it
out. Just keep going.
Right.
There's value in that in connecting and learning.
But if that's all we do in a conversation, it can lead to what we call co-rumination.
Now we're just kind of bathing ourselves in the, in the problem together.
And as a function, we often leave the conversation feeling connected, but the
problem's still
there.
That doesn't work.
The other thing that doesn't work, you come to me with a problem, and within five seconds,
Mel, this is simple.
You know, like I wrote a paper on this.
Here's what you need to do.
Just do ABCD.
You'll be fine.
Call me in the morning.
We call those people jerks, right?
Or Mel Robbins.
Yeah.
I doubt that.
And so you really want to follow both of those steps in that order.
Listen and then advise.
There's an art to doing that well.
I'll use my wife here as an example.
Is she going to kill you?
She might kill me, but it's okay.
We love each other.
So if my wife came to me with a problem that she was experiencing some chatter about, I
would immediately start listening, empathizing, connecting.
And when I sensed that she had gotten it out and I really understood the problem, I would
ask her for permission.
I'd be like, hey, I totally get it.
I have a thought.
Do you want to keep going or can I share it with you?
Sometimes the way that she'll answer that question is, no, I'm not done.
Just let me keep going.
And then I let her keep going and then I come back to it.
At other moments, it'll be, yes, please, what do you think?
Let's help me.
And so what I love about this framework that I essentially just described that we just talked about is it gives me guideposts
For how to steer this conversation when someone comes to me
That's my wife my friend my students whoever there are these two steps that I follow in the same sequence each time
Step one is I'm there to empathize and connect listen and learn step two
Now I'm gonna try to help work with the person
to broaden their perspective.
So this has happened to you before,
how'd you deal with it last time?
Or you know something like this happened to me
and here's what I did.
Simple ways for broadening perspective.
Like a couple of questions like that you ask,
it often helps the person find the answer.
I will often ask people to do a chatter advisor audit. So I'll have people
like divide their world into personal and professional. And then I asked them to list
all the names of the people they go to, to talk about the chatter when it erupts. Then
I'll explain to them how this art of chatter advising that we've just gone over, that the
key to being a good advisor is to empathize, listen, and then shift into that
advising. And I'll have them circle the names of the people on their list who do both of those
things. And I have them cross out the names of the people who don't. The people whose names you
circle, that's your advisory board. And it's not always the people that you're closest to.
Oftentimes it's actually not.
It's not. And that's okay. You know, there are people who I love, who I'm super closest to. Oftentimes it's actually not. It's not, and that's okay.
You know, there are people who I love,
who I'm super close to, I don't talk to them
about my chatter, it doesn't help me,
it actually pushes me in the wrong direction.
But my board is an amazing asset that I possess,
and I lean on it frequently to deal with my chatter.
Ethan, what does a person do if they're,
you know, listening to you and they've got someone
in their life
who's really struggling because of the way they talk to themselves?
I mean, just down on themselves, down emotionally.
What is the best thing that you can do to help somebody that you care about when you
see them really beaten down?
So I like to divide the way of helping others into two buckets.
One thing you can do if they come to you for help, as often happens to us, people want
to talk to us, people want our support, then you follow that guide that we just talked
about.
You listen and learn and then you advise.
And part of the advice is giving them the tools.
The way we help others is teaching others about these
tools. I do this to my kids all the time. I'm constantly complaining that we're born into
the world with the ability to experience chatter and big emotions. We're not born into the
world with the user's guide that teaches us these tools. So if my kids come to me, I listen
and then I offer them tools. But then there's another situation
where you see people you care about, your colleagues, your loved ones, and they don't
ask you for help. And then the question is, well, what do you do? Do you let them just
figure it out on their own, suffer in silence? Do you volunteer the support without them
asking? There's been research on this, and it's tricky. The research shows that if you volunteer the support without the person asking, it has
the potential to blow up in your face.
As a parent, I'm sure you've experienced this as I know I have.
So sometimes if I've seen my kids, I know they're struggling with something, this is
something I can help them with.
And I volunteer the advice, it's basically a mild version of how they
respond. When you offer support and it's not asked for, what that does is it communicates
to the person that they're not capable of handling their own circumstances. And that
can elicit defensiveness. So here's the really cool thing. We have learned how you can still help people when they don't ask for help.
And what it involves doing is providing support invisibly.
Okay.
Is this another one of these secret weapons?
This is a secret weapon that everyone that you are listening, if you're listening, you
now have a secret weapon.
Lay it on us, Ethan.
Okay.
How do we do invisible support?
Invisible support is providing people with support,
but without shining a spotlight
on the fact that you're doing.
You kind of asked me about this earlier
when you asked me about how do you tactfully
help another person when they're struggling.
This is how you do it.
Okay.
And there are many forms this can take.
I'll give you a couple of examples.
Let's say someone on my team or my lab
is working under a really tense deadline.
And they don't have time to take care of themselves
and do simple things.
I can just order in food for them.
If my wife is struggling with lots of stress at work,
lots of chatter, it's her turn to get the groceries.
I just do the groceries, pick up the dry cleaning.
I don't do it, come home and ask for a pat on my back.
I just do things to make the other person's life just a little bit easier,
a little bit more manageable.
That's one way of supporting someone invisibly.
Let's say someone else is struggling with a skill.
Let's say it's public speaking.
So someone on my team is struggling with communicating their science in a way that people can understand
with impact.
Before I take them aside and say, hey, I've noticed that you could do a little bit better
here, here are three things I want you to try.
I'll first have a team meeting and we'll all share out best practices.
What are the two or three things that we've all benefited from for speaking
more effectively? What I'm doing there is I am getting the person information they can
benefit from, but I'm not shining a spotlight on the fact that I'm targeting it to them.
So even sharing sources that you've benefited from, podcasts, episodes, books, share that
with someone else. You don't have to target it to them and say,
hey, this is gonna help you,
but if you found the material meaningful,
just share it in that context.
And what it does is it gives them the opportunity
to benefit as well, but without them thinking,
this was specifically targeted to them.
Oh, you can always do it in a group chat.
That's my favorite thing to do,
is just hit the family group chat, hit the friend chat.
Hey everybody, great episode.
This episode was awesome.
I learned so much.
Or this book was great.
Yeah, those are simple things you can do.
And I do that all the time.
Let me close the loop on invisible support because I told you about two ways you can
do it.
There's a third and it's my favorite.
What is that?
It's affectionate, but not creepy touch.
Are you familiar with this one?
Yeah, that's what aunts do, not uncles.
Well, definitely not uncles,
but it's what moms and dads do.
That's true, affectionate but not creepy.
Yeah, like what do you do with your kids
when they're born into this world?
First thing we do.
Oh, I just pulled them against you, you hug them.
That's right, and we have receptors on our skin
that encode for an affectionate embrace.
And when it's registered, there's this automatic release
of stress fighting chemicals that flood our system.
And so, if my daughters are experiencing
something challenging or my wife,
I'll just kind of give them a hug, caress their back, again, not creepy.
But even at work, you know, like a fist bump, right?
Is a simple way, we are a social-
Pat on the back to somebody.
Pat on the back, right?
Tactile species, that's a way of supporting someone
invisibly as well.
I totally get it.
Yeah, you do want to make sure to convey
the not creepy part of it though.
For sure.
Yeah. I would love to make sure to convey the not creepy part of it though. For sure.
Yeah.
I would love to have you speak directly to the person listening, because you have shared
so much with us about your research and ways that we can flip that negative chatter into
a positive coach.
And just so many tools to reach for that will help you do that.
If the person takes just one action based on everything that you've poured into us from your two books, Chatter and Shift,
what is the most important thing to do?
The most important thing to do is learn about the tools.
Just familiarize yourself with them.
What I love about these tools is decades of research
have gone into their identification.
Complex, backbreaking effort.
But the take homes are super simple.
Mental time travel, how am I gonna feel
about this next year?
Into the past, how does this compare with what Bubby went through?
My grandmother.
Ethan, you've got this.
I mean, these are simple things that don't take a whole lot of time and energy to practice.
Just familiarize yourself with them and then start self-experimenting.
That is the launch pad for gaining control of your chatter.
And so my invitation to you is to familiarize yourself with the tools that are out there,
start self-experimenting, find the tools that work best for you, and share them with other people.
That is the way I think we help really combat this universal affliction.
Ethan, you are so awesome.
Now you're giving me all the, yeah.
Well, no, I actually mean it.
Like I'm stunned because this topic can be so heady
and you made it so accessible and tactical,
just like you said that you would.
Congratulations on the bestselling book,
The Manual that now exists for all of us
to turn our inner critic into positive coaching chatter.
Congratulations on your mega best seller shift.
I am so happy you came.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Well, the feeling is totally, totally, totally mutual.
And I also want to thank you.
Thank you for choosing to spend time
listening to something that can help you create a better life.
And there's no doubt in my mind that everything
that Ethan taught us today is going to help you change your self-. And there's no doubt in my mind that everything that Ethan taught us today
is going to help you change your self-talk
from something that is beating you down
to something that's lifting you up.
And that will change your life
and the life of people that you care about.
Thank you for sharing this with people that you care about.
And in case no one else tells you,
I wanna tell you in the words of Ethan,
you got this, you can do this.
And I also wanna tell you in case no one else does,
I love you. I admire the fact that you're taking time to listen to something like this. You can do this. And I also want to tell you in case no one else does, I love you.
I admire the fact that you're taking time to listen to something like this.
And I know it was worth your time. And I also know it's going to help you create a better life.
All righty. I'll talk to you in a few days.
And I will be waiting to welcome you in to the very next episode.
The moment you hit play. I'll see you then.
My brain is like, take a bunch of mice, put them in a cardboard box and tip them over
in a restaurant.
I see.
That is how my brain works.
Sounds liberating.
Why are you like a spreadsheet on legs?
No, I'm a little bit of both.
Positively shifting people's emotions at how big the shift you get from going to the bathroom when you
really need to go. Oh it's true because you're managing it. You're probably bracing in tents.
I just went up like on a 10-point scale four points. I'm so much happier. Is that one of
your tools? Negative self-talk. Take a leak. Yes. Professor Cross is going to tell you that there
are four reasons why you actually talk to yourself. Oh I always said that actually. Is it sounding all right? And what I want to know is after having,
oh wait, sorry, your work has been cited, sorry.
That was great.
Thanks so much. So good.
So much fun. Oh my God.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write
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. Stitcher.