The Mel Robbins Podcast - If You’re Feeling Uncertain & Anxious, You Need to Hear This
Episode Date: March 13, 2025Life is hard. Struggles are inevitable for you and for the people you love. But even when things feel overwhelming, there’s always something you can do. And in today’s episode, you’re getting a... toolkit – a companion guide to all of life’s twists and turns. When life feels chaotic, you deserve clarity. When emotions feel overwhelming, you deserve tools that work. And when you feel stuck, you deserve a way forward. That’s all in today’s conversation with world-renowned clinical psychologist Dr. Julie Smith. Dr. Julie is here to share the essential strategies that will help you navigate stress, anxiety, and life’s toughest moments with confidence. This episode will change the way you approach your emotions and mental strength forever. You’ll learn: -How to handle difficult emotions in the moment -The biggest mistakes you make when dealing with stress & anxiety -How to stop overthinking and regain control of your mind -Practical tools to build resilience and mental strength -Why you are so much stronger than you realize—and how to tap into your strength This is one of those conversations you’re not only going to love, you’re going to want to share it with everyone you care about. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you enjoyed this eye-opening episode, listen to this one next: How to Control Your Mind & Redirect Your Energy to Self TransformationConnect 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Since I started this podcast over two years ago, I have been on a mission to introduce
you to interesting, smart and inspiring people that have something that you and I can learn
from.
And there's one person in particular, and I am not exaggerating when I tell you this, that I, since the very start
of this show two years ago, I have been wanting
to get her to come to our studios in Boston.
Now, the problem is simple.
Well, she lives 3,235 miles from here.
Plus, she has three young kids.
She is extremely in demand because she has
a private practice as a psychologist.
She's also sharing life-changing information online
to millions of followers
and is in the middle of launching her mega bestselling books.
So she hasn't been able to make the trip from Europe
to be in our Boston studios.
And you know what?
I respect that.
But today is the day.
She hopped on a plane with her husband and their three kids
and came all the way to Boston to be here for one reason.
She's here for you to help you and the people that you love
through the ups and downs of life.
So we're gonna send her husband, Matt, and their three kids
to the amazing Children's Museum here in downtown Boston
while Dr. Julie Smith and I unpack her extraordinary toolkit
for life because life is hard. You are gonna struggle and so unpack her extraordinary toolkit for life.
Because life is hard.
You are going to struggle and so will the people that you love.
And that's normal.
But even when things feel overwhelming, there's always something you can do.
You're stronger than you think.
All you need is a little toolkit and today you're going to get it.
And this is one of those conversations that you're not only gonna love,
you're gonna wanna share it with everyone you love.
So let's get into it.
Hey, it's your friend Mel.
Welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so thrilled to be here with you today and it's always an honor, always, to spend
time with you, to be together.
If you're a new listener, I also want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the
Mel Robbins podcast family.
And because you made the time and you decided to hit play on this particular episode, here's
what I know about you. You're the kind of person who values your time and you decided to hit play on this particular episode. Here's what I know about you.
You're the kind of person who values your time and you're also someone who is
committed to learning how to become the best version of yourself and getting
better at navigating life's ups and downs.
And we could all get better at that, myself included.
And if you chose to listen to this because someone shared this with you,
I think it's an important thing that I want to acknowledge
and point out to you.
It's really cool that you have people in your life
that care enough about you to send this to you.
And they sent this to you because they want you
to have the experience of learning
from the amazing Dr. Julie Smith,
and they want you to have the toolkit
that she's gonna share with you.
And I personally could not be more excited
to have Dr. Julie in person today.
She is a world renowned clinical psychologist,
a bestselling author of the mega blockbuster bestseller,
Why Has Nobody Told Me This Before?
Which has spent 109 weeks
on the UK Sunday Times bestseller list.
She has impacted millions of lives
with the content she shares online.
And now she's taken all of that wisdom and poured it into her new best-selling book,
Open When.
It's a book that you open when things are going wrong.
It's a toolkit for life that will help you handle the ups, the downs,
and everything in between.
Because when life feels chaotic, you deserve clarity.
When emotions feel overwhelming, you deserve clarity. When emotions feel overwhelming,
you deserve tools that work. And when you feel stuck, you deserve a way forward. And
today, you're going to get it. So without further ado, please help me welcome the incredible
Dr. Julie Smith to the Mel Robbins podcast. Dr. Julie Smith is in the house.
Welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you.
I can't tell you how excited I am to be here.
I'm a massive fan, so thanks for having me.
Well, I'm a huge fan of yours,
and I am grateful that you hopped on a plane
and you flew overseas to be here with us.
And I want to start by telling you,
your new book, Open When, is
absolutely extraordinary. I am so proud of you. I am so excited for the world to have
this book. I just, before we even dive in, I just want to read just even the table of
contents because it is literally a guide to life. I mean, I just want to read just even the table of contents because it
is literally a guide to life.
I mean, I want you to open this book when you compare yourself and come up short, when
your friends are not your friends, when you want to be less awkward around people.
And these are all bite-sized chapters filled with things to do and ways to change how you
think.
Open when your inner voice is your own worst critic, when you doubt yourself and ways to change how you think. Open when your inner voice is your own worst critic.
When you doubt yourself and want to feel more confident.
Open when you're overthinking everything.
When you have done something you regret.
I needed this book 30 years ago, Dr. Julie.
Open when your anger erupts too often. I mean, who hasn't struggled with
these things?
Yeah. And that's really the main idea behind it. All of the chapter titles came to me at
about 5 a.m. one morning when I was awake too early. I was just churning all these things
over. And there's just so many scenarios that we all face at some point, right? That everybody
goes through,
but none of it comes with any kind of manual or sense of what you should do about it.
And all those situations leave you in turmoil,
sort of not knowing which way is up or often there's emotion to deal with,
and it's confusing, and you're not sure which way is through.
And really the whole idea for this book came from the first one.
So why hasn't anybody told me this before was my first book, which was all these kind
of insights from therapy and things that you could spend time practicing to kind of build
your resilience so that when stuff happens, you're better equipped, right?
And I had these lovely comments coming through, some stories that were told to my mom actually
saying, we find the book so helpful, we're keeping it with us so that when we're in a crisis or a panic,
we can open the book and see what it says.
That was such a nice thing to hear,
but I could not get it out of my head that I just didn't write it for those moments.
If you're in the thick of it and you're in a crisis,
the last thing you need to hear is,
well, you probably should have started practicing mindfulness six months ago,
because then you'd be equipped now. What you need is someone to kind of grab you by the shoulders,
look you in the eye and say, I know a way through, follow me. And often that's just
a shift of your attention, right? It's focusing on the direction that's going to see you through
and out the other side. And for me, I guess the person that does that in my life for me
is probably my husband, Matt. He probably doesn't even realize he does it, but he says the same thing.
Don't tell him.
No.
He said the right things that will just kind of shift me back on track and then I'm back
on.
But even for people that, you know, lots of people don't have that person in their life,
but even for people that do, that person isn't always there at that time.
And I was thinking about, gosh, when my kids grow up and they leave home home and you know, what could I send them off with that would see them through
those difficult moments when I can't be there to give them a hug and say, I know the way
through this. So yeah, that's the kind of, it's the one I want to stick in the suitcases
of my kids when they leave home or, you know, send off to family and friends when I can't
be there for them.
Well, I completely relate because when I read your book,
I thought I have to give this to all three of my kids
because it is a manual for life.
And let's face it, life is very difficult.
And what I'm excited for us to do today
is to unpack all these little nuggets of wisdom
that are life skills,
that are tools that you can assemble in a toolkit for life,
because life is stressful right now.
Like if you're not feeling anxious,
somebody that you love probably is.
If you're not overwhelmed, somebody else is
that you care about.
If you haven't lost a job
or are stressed out about the headlines,
somebody that you care about is.
And everything that you're about to share
that you've also beautifully written about
in this new bestselling book, Open When, are just tools.
And I love that you said that it's the kind of thing
that you wish everybody knew
and that you almost wish people didn't have to pay for.
You have been in clinical practice for over a decade.
You have millions of followers
who hang on your videos and are so inspired and empowered by them. I would love for you
to just tell the person listening, how do you think about what you're doing in your
role as a clinical psychologist? Like if you just explained it in just plain speak, how
would you describe what you do for people?
I've definitely been swimming against the tide professionally because you've got the
therapeutic stuff and the clinical work, but then moving that educational aspect of stuff
out of the therapy room because I recognize that it's not therapy skills, it's life skills
and it's stuff that I was finding helpful, my friends were finding helpful, my family
were finding helpful, my friends were finding helpful, my family were finding helpful.
And a lot of these people that were coming along for therapy who perhaps weren't at that
more severe end of the scale, they didn't have any sort of clinical diagnosis or they
were just struggling to deal with whatever life threw at them because they didn't trust
in their ability to be able to deal with the emotion that came along with it.
And they didn't necessarily have some of the skills that you need to be able to deal with the emotion that came along with it. They didn't necessarily have some of the skills that you need to be able to move through that
emotion or to deal with the relationships or moods or whatever it was.
Once people had that information, they were just raring to go.
I wanted to get that out there and make it more available to people.
That's really what I'm doing is sharing the stuff that is the juicy bits that have
come out of all this great stuff that is used in clinical practice.
But we should all be using it because whether your problems are big or small, it's still
useful.
And so yeah, I'm kind of making sure that everyone is armed up to the hill to deal with
life because life is really tough.
Dr. Julie, what would you tell someone who feels like they're the only person in their
friend group or their family who's actually struggling?
We actually did a video on this quite a while ago.
We used lots of rice just as this idea of representing the population.
So let's say the rice here, this white rice represents the population of the world. Okay. So you've got all of this and one in four people will experience a mental health
problem at some point this year.
Right.
And the wild rice represents that one in four.
But when you mix them up like that and you give it a little kind of mix, you
realize that that one in four is a huge number. And even if you just take one
little pinch of people, so let's say that's the people in your life, even if you're lucky enough
not to be struggling at this moment, the chances are you're going to be rushing shoulders with
someone who is. So you are never alone when you're struggling because even though people,
you know, you won't be able to see it in this visual way that you do with the rice because people don't often talk about it when
they're struggling, but someone else will be dealing with something and so recognizing that
we need to be kind to each other all the time. Dr. Julie, why is it important for you to recognize
that you're not the only one? Like what benefit does it have on you
if you are in a moment where you're struggling?
There is such power in being able to recognize
that what you're experiencing is a normal human experience.
Even when you feel like you're the only one experiencing it
at that moment, knowing that that doesn't make you abnormal,
that it's a normal part of the human experience
that other people might have experienced at some point, even if they're not going through
it now, means that you don't have to judge yourself as not being enough or not getting
this thing called life correct or right.
Normalizing something helps you to take the judgment out of it and start looking at it
with curiosity.
The other thing that I love about it, and this visual is so helpful,
is that there are going to be times
where I am the wild rice that's going through something,
and then there'll be times that I'm the white rice
and things are okay.
And also understanding that we swap those positions in life,
I think, gives you perspective that where you're at right now,
if you're struggling, isn't where you're always going to be.
Yeah, absolutely.
It changes and it's temporary
and those thoughts are so simple and yet so powerful
because if you know that something is changeable
and that sometimes you're okay and sometimes you're not
and that's normal human experience,
then you're able to accept it
and allow it to pass over you in that way.
And it also gives you the motivation and hope
that if you do use the tools that you share
with us, that you'll pass through it a little quicker.
Yeah, there are absolutely, there are so many things you can do to help bring yourself back
to baseline and to prevent it from happening so much of the time or to prevent those emotions
from being so intense.
You know, lots of skills you can do that you can learn
and get better at that help you do that.
Well, that's why I'm so glad that you're here
because I think that, you know, you hear the word
mental health and you think something big and scary,
but no, you can struggle with friendship,
you can struggle with loneliness,
you can struggle with not having a direction in your career,
you can struggle with money.
There's so many things in life that cause you to doubt
or overthink or feel
down about yourself.
And I'm so excited to dig into the tools.
Dr. Julie, as a clinical psychologist, you say that everybody deserves to have an emotional
toolkit.
What does that mean?
There's loads to that, depending on what you're facing at any given point.
And I would kind of break it down into, there are certain things where people struggle,
no matter what the details of your problem is and what life's throwing at you, a lot
of people struggle with, okay, emotions.
So people will often come into therapy, you know, diagnosable or not, people will come
to therapy and they'll say, you know, I've got these feelings that I don't want to have.
I'm having too much of those.
And I'm missing a lot of the nice pleasant ones that I
used to have more. I would like some of those back please. So a lot of it is a sort of, there's some
skills around emotion regulation. So there are things you can do to help you regulate the negative
emotion, not make them disappear. So that there's a learning about, okay, emotion is normal human
experience and it's information. It's not something that's wrong with you.
If you experience sadness or anger or anxiety, it doesn't necessarily mean there's something
wrong with you.
It's a normal part of human experience.
Often what we do in therapy is we take the judgment out of it and we look at it with
curiosity instead.
All emotion is information.
It has something to tell you usually about what you need or what's going on around you.
So there's this kind of shift around emotion regulation and learning about emotion.
But then there's also stuff about thoughts that people struggle with thoughts.
So all this stuff online about only positive vibes and don't have negative thoughts and
that really sets people up to feel like they're failing because inevitably
they have negative thoughts, they have judgments, they have self-critical thoughts, and when
they have them, they then think they're failing at being a positive person.
Whereas often what you would use in therapy that's really how, and I use this all the
time, is the idea of thought diffusion where you get yourself a bird's eye view of what's
going on in your head and you look at the pattern of, okay, these thoughts are coming in and those
thoughts are coming in and these are all possible perspectives that I can take on this, but
I have the choice.
So it's this idea that your attention is like a spotlight and if all your kind of thoughts
were actors on the stage, you've got control of a spotlight. And if all your kind of thoughts were actors on the stage,
you've got control of the spotlight.
So what most people try to do is scramble up onto the stage
and pull actors off the stage.
I don't want to think that,
and I don't want to have that thought
because that's horrible.
And I just want to think this.
And you can't control it, right?
But what you do have is the spotlight.
So all these different thoughts will be coming into your mind
and you can just choose what you're giving most of your time and attention to.
And that will impact how you feel.
You don't have to eradicate those other thoughts.
There are other possible scripts that you could listen to, but you get to choose which
ones you give the limelight to.
Well, and what's great about the way that you're framing this, because you're now talking
about teaching us skills
around managing emotions and feeling emotions
and not being scared of emotions and processing them
and tools around understanding the way that your thoughts
are shaping your experience and learning the skill
of choosing what you want to think about
or how you want to think about things.
And we're going to get into those.
So Dr. Julie, you've been very open about your recent cancer diagnosis.
Can you use that as an example of a situation where life sucks, things happen, and how you
were then using this toolkit that we're going to unpack for the person that's with us to
navigate through
that situation that just happened.
Yeah.
Do you know what?
I am generally not that public about my personal life a lot, but the reason I kind of shared
about that was because I knew there would be other busy moms and dads like me who were
tempted to put their own health on the back burner.
So, you know, that's
just something I would say to anyone out there who is listening, who has any kind of health
concern and is tempted to wait and put it off until they're less busy. Because I did,
I was six weeks away from handing in the manuscript to open when and discovered a lump in my breast
and I thought, should I just wait until I've got this book off my desk before I go and
sort of like, you know, I'd had lunch months, I knew it wasn't a great, nice process.
And I thought, do I have the mental capacity for this right now?
And you know, lots going on.
But in the end, gave myself a bit of a talking to and thought that's a stupid idea when they
got the tests.
And time was my greatest tool.
So my greatest weapon against this thing and now I'm fine.
So anyone out there who has a kind of health concern and is tempted
to put it off, don't, just do it.
So yeah, I got diagnosed then, so that was about six weeks before I handed the book in,
then I got diagnosed and I was about a week or two away from handing the book in.
So I was at that stage where I was kind of reading through, editing, polishing things
up ready for my editor to see it.
And I just happened to be reading through the chapter on when fear shows up.
Isn't life funny?
Oh my goodness.
And I kind of, I read it and I thought, this just isn't the kind of words I need to hear
right now.
It was very gentle and a lot of people like that approach, but I just thought I need something
much stronger here.
So I hit delete and I sat there and then rewrote the whole thing.
It was very much a shift in language.
When something like that happens and life throws you a massive curve ball like that,
you're faced with the prospects of your own mortality, the fear is just catastrophic.
I was like a rabbit in headlights.
That's what I felt like, that I was just stunned.
Because you don't find out everything at once either.
You don't sort of find out and then find out what the treatment plan is and what the prospects
are.
You find out in bits and pieces.
So there was so much uncertainty and I did not want to feel like the prey.
I didn't want to feel like I was trying to work out which way to go.
So I kind of used the power
of that language to write myself. Each chapter begins with a letter from me. So I wrote this
letter to myself and it's very much a sense of you cannot control the fact that fear is
here, right? But it can help you to move through this thing. It's now your responsibility to
cultivate that courage to move through and out the other side. And there was lots of language around becoming the predator instead
of the prey. And there's this fundamental difference between those two, right? So that
prey is darting around, just avoiding threats and pitfalls and trying to survive it. Whereas
a predator has a goal, has something in its sights, and it's on the front foot, and it uses all that drive and
that action to make something happen. And so I thought, right, yeah, this cancer isn't coming
after me, I'm coming after it. We better watch out. And I felt fundamentally, the situation was the
same, but I felt fundamentally different in terms of how I was dealing with that. I wanted to be on
the front foot, and I wanted to be, and, the quote at the beginning of the book, it was never going to be in the book,
but I had to put it in in the end because it was so fundamental to my experience, was
get busy with life's purpose, toss aside empty hopes, get active in your own rescue if you care
for yourself at all and do it while you can. It kind of makes me emotional just even saying
it there because it takes me back to that moment of I had it on a post-it note that was on my desk
and every time I read it I felt that drive, that kind of fire in my belly to do something
that was active in my own rescue. I feel like it reflects everything, this whole journey and all
those people I was with in therapy who felt that they were at the mercy of their emotional experience.
It doesn't have to be those kind of extreme experiences, but normal emotional ups and
downs, relationship ups and downs, they can feel so just chaotic, can't they?
Often that chaos is, I don't trust myself to be able to cope with whatever comes up.
And that's what fundamentally changes when you change the language and you choose to
focus that spotlight of your attention where it is going to be most helpful to you.
So that you can have this vision of, as I move through this, and as I get out the other
side, I want to look back and be so proud of how I dealt with it.
Have that as your vision for how you're going to be forward,
rather than the darting of the rabbit in the headlights,
which way is left, which way is right.
I wanted to have that absolute focus and it really worked for me.
Well, Dr. Julie, I think it's a unbelievably relatable story.
I'm thinking right now of friends of mine
who are sitting in a hospital
and they have a loved one who is waiting heart surgery.
And it's just like every day holding on to hope.
And even thinking of friends who just lost their job.
And that whole flip from feeling like the prey where something's coming after you and
you have nothing that you can do versus that flip to, no, I'm going to be the predator.
Yeah.
I'm going after it. That is an example of the kind of tools you are so brilliant at giving to people
in your private practice to giving to all of us online. And I can see how that's already going to help somebody, whether they're dealing with
a breakup or they're dealing with just that sense of helplessness.
No, that's what a prey feels like.
We're going to think like a predator.
And I think the key there is that the fear is still there, right?
We're not eradicating the fear.
We're not making you feel like everything's fine.
But it was a way that helped me to get through it.
The idea that I could use fear to my advantage.
I didn't have to make sure it had disappeared
before I did something useful
that could help me move forward.
It felt fundamentally different.
Well, it is because I think we've all heard the,
like, use the fear and do it anyway,
or like, let the fear fuel you.
And like, what does that even mean?
But if you then turn it into a tool and say, no, no, no, no,
you're either the prey or the predator.
Yeah.
Choose.
Yeah.
And that helps you process the fear,
which is a mentally healthy response to a cancer diagnosis
or to a breakup or to a job loss,
but it helps you process it
and then use it to your advantage,
which I just absolutely love.
Dr. Julie, let's hit the pause
so we can give our amazing sponsors
a chance to share a few words.
And I also wanna give you a chance
to share Dr. Julie's wisdom with the people that you love.
Don't go anywhere.
We have so many more topics and so many more tools in the toolkit
that we're going to share with you in re-return, so stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Robbins, and today you and I have the pleasure of getting
to spend time together learning
from Dr. Julie Smith.
We're hearing all about her toolkit
and the simple tools that she has to share with you and me
to help us navigate the ups and downs of life.
So Dr. Julie, the next question that I have is this.
For somebody who's feeling extremely overwhelmed right now
with a situation in life,
or maybe they're grieving something,
a relationship that's over, they've lost somebody.
Do you have any other tools that you would recommend for what processing those emotions
mean in that context?
Yeah, yeah, because I think it's key here that I've never wanted to give the impression
that I then didn't have some really dark moments in that, right?
That I'm a human just like everybody else, and so dealing with something in that way doesn't mean that you don't feel overwhelmed at times. So, you
know, I had those moments and the way that I deal with those sort of big emotions and
the overwhelm was to allow it to be there and to recognize, you know, I've sat in so
many rooms with people and just helped contain those feelings and help
people through them, not to eradicate them, but to sort of hold their hand as they experience
it.
I talk about that in the book actually, this idea that your inner world is a bit like a
sauna.
There are benefits to being there, but only if you don't stay too long.
When you're really struggling, the best thing you could possibly do is reach out to
a human being that you trust and connect in that moment because they will help you to
kind of regulate that emotion.
But if you don't have someone there in that moment, being sort of in a position where
you're not trying to numb it, you're not trying to push it away, you're just allowing
it to wash over you, then that's exactly what it will
do.
And I did a video ages ago about the idea that if you stand in the ocean up to your
waist, right, and the waves are coming, and when the wave comes, it lifts you off your
feet a bit.
So imagine if you try to hold back one of those waves, you're going to end up taking
a tumble and mouthful of water, and it's not going to be pretty.
But if you accept that those waves are coming, then you do something different, right? So maybe
you turn to the side or you brace yourself and bend your knees so that when you do come off your
feet, you're going to land again. And in the acceptance of that sort of emotional wave coming,
you're better prepared to then deal with what it does to you. And it will naturally pass without causing you too many problems.
And that's really what emotion does.
If you can kind of soothe your way through it, knowing that it's temporary,
knowing that it will, even if it goes away and it comes back again,
you can do that again and again and on repeat.
And listen to what it says.
You know, at that point when I felt that overwhelmed, it was telling me I was scared about
what was gonna happen to my children
and what was gonna happen to me
and what the future held and how sick I might become
and all those kind of things.
And I didn't have the answers to those things
in that moment and so the fear was there and that was okay.
And then we focused on, okay, what's the next step
that I need to take in order
to keep moving through it?
So that's almost an example of another tool, is visualizing yourself in an ocean and understanding
that when the emotion rises of overwhelm or grief or anger or sadness or fear of whatever,
just let it rise and visualize yourself kind of letting it fall.
Yeah.
You know, another thing that you write about in OpenWin
is just kind of chronic comparison
and how we look around at the world around us
and then we tell ourselves,
I'm less than, I'm never going to make that money,
I'm never going to be this, I'm never going to be that,
nothing I ever do is right.
And you're using comparison as a way to beat yourself down.
And you have this quote in the book that I freaking love.
Resentment is not a reflection of what the world owes you.
It is a sign of what you need to work on.
What does that mean?
So for a lot of people when they feel resentment,
the tendency is to look at the person who you feel is making you feel that way, right?
That they're doing something wrong or they're overstepping the mark or they're breaching your boundaries.
And again, for me, that's very prey rather than predator, right? That's the sense of,
you know, it's being done to me and therefore I don't have control of that feeling. And
resentment will just destroy your relationship if you allow it to continue.
And the only real way to kind of respond to resentment is looking at what it's telling
you.
And it's often that you've not been putting healthy boundaries in place to prevent that.
Or maybe it's a gratitude problem.
So another sort of real great remedy for resentment is gratitude and looking at, you know, maybe
you're being hard on the other person and maybe you're taking them for granted and maybe there's other things to feel grateful
for in that relationship. But often it's that sense of you've allowed certain barriers to
be breached or certain healthy boundaries to be breached and walked over and then you're
going to be bitter about it, as opposed to taking responsibility for holding them up
and doing the really difficult thing,
but the thing that's gonna create
that kind of healthy experience in your relationship again.
Based on the millions of people that follow you
and your own private practice,
can you give me an example of how that works,
like something that people write in
are really struggling about comparison,
or whether it's their body to somebody else,
or that they're not married yet,
or just something
that you're seeing a lot of so that we can ground that advice and example.
Do you know what?
Something I see a lot of, not necessarily in therapy anymore, but just in real life,
is when people start to compare themselves to the wrong people.
So when you start to compare yourself to your friends, and it just destroys the friendship
because you set yourself up where you could have been a team and the two people that walk
through life together and support each other.
Suddenly you put a scoreboard between you, which means that their victories mean some
sort of loss for you and vice versa.
Then you can't share your personal victories because they see it as a threat.
And so then your conversations are censored between you.
There's things you can't say.
There's, you know, or even when you're telling them about something that's gone wrong for you
or something hard that you're dealing with, you know, that's a bid for connection, right? A bid for support. But they'll come back with,
oh, well, I had something worse. So suddenly you're in this competition with a person who
you're supposed to support and they're supposed to support you back. And so anytime that you
compare yourself to someone that you're in a decent relationship with, it's bad news.
And that's often what I talk about in the book about the social comparison stuff is
online people will tell you, just stop comparing yourself to other people.
And that is impossible, right?
Good luck.
Because we're human beings.
Often the problem is not that you're comparing, it's that you're making the wrong comparisons
that's going to lead you down the wrong path.
How do you stop yourself from doing it? So if comparison's normal and you say, because I was really intrigued and you're like, you're making the wrong comparisons that's going to lead you down the wrong path. How do you stop yourself from doing it?
So if comparison's normal and you say,
because I was really intrigued and you're like,
you're making the wrong comparisons,
who are the right comparisons to?
So let's say you want to get better at something.
Let's say you want to do better at tennis,
then comparing yourself to one of the greats is when you're just starting out,
it's probably really unhelpful.
But also, what you want to do is compare yourself to someone who is going to help you get to where you need to go.
So let's say you want to improve your backhand, and there's someone at the local club who does that really well.
And they might be a few steps ahead of you in their journey,
but what you can do there is you can look at that and learn
from that what they do well. So you've got to be really concrete. It's got to be very separate. So
not comparing personalities or types or self-worth. You're comparing something that is actually going
to be helpful for you in your path with what you want to do well at. So you can see how that could
be a great learning experience. Of course. And I love that you said be specific, because if you're saying who's somebody that's
a couple steps ahead and there's a specific thing that I want to get better at. And when
you compare yourself to somebody like that in that narrow framing, now it becomes a tool
instead of it becoming torturous to you.
When we can use that sort of ability to compare in a way that's really constructive, then
it can really go places and your life starts to shift in this really positive way.
So Dr. Julie, when you have somebody come into your practice or right into you online
and they're having trouble just being with other people, very shy, very introverted,
like feel very awkward around other people.
What are some tools and strategies that you recommend?
This is kind of quite a personal one for me really,
because I remember I was such a shy child, right?
Really?
I read a lot, it was mostly because I was the shy,
quiet one in the corner.
Nobody would ever have dreamt
that I would do stuff like this, including me.
And I even remember when I got to clinical training and I'm sat in a room with someone
and I'm being assessed, doing an assessment of that person.
That's horrible.
And I remember thinking in that moment, why?
Why have I chosen this career?
I hate talking to people.
I hate being looked at by other people.
And here I am doing both at the same time.
And then the idea of putting stuff out there publicly only started because it felt like a nice thing to do. Never imagined it would turn
into something where I was doing live TV or radio and I was terrified of doing that stuff.
And in all honesty, I had to keep doing it because I felt that I had to practice what I preach about
how if you struggle with being
around people or talking to people or public speaking or whatever it is, you have to spend
time doing it.
If you want your confidence to grow, you have to be able to go where you have none and to
be able to sit there for a while and be willing to be the beginner and stick with it and look
after yourself when it doesn't go well.
That was key, I think, with the going on live TV and things like that.
The only way I was really willing to do that was if I fully committed to myself, that I
would have my own back.
If it all went wrong, if I tripped over and flashed my underwear to the nation, whatever,
I was not going to kick myself when I was down.
I was quite academically and things like that.
I guess I was always quite hard on myself and that highly self-critical stuff was probably
quite there when I was younger.
But I had to say there was no way I can do this and be this vulnerable if I'm going to
speak to myself like that.
Just not a chance.
So I had to be fully committed to being in my own head, being like a coach. So someone who would have the absolute,
my best interests at heart the whole time,
not speak to me like I was, you know, a piece of shit
and treat myself in a way that, you know,
a coach would treat an elite athlete to say, you know,
when you're down, this is how we get back up
and we move forward.
You have this quote,
it's not so much that the socially confident
have worked out how
to prevent awkward moments.
It's simply that they barely focus on trying to avoid them at all.
Sometimes focusing only on what you're trying to avoid leads you straight to it.
And so if you have somebody that is listening right now, and this is really like an issue,
like I feel awkward around other people.
I'm not good in big groups.
I don't like to like put myself out there.
What assignment or what would you tell them
if they were sitting across from you?
Because that person might be listening right now.
What do they actually need to do?
Yeah, well, I guess there's two things here.
One is that you take your time.
You don't start with the scariest thing. Any
type of fear that you're tackling. What we would do in therapy is we create a scale.
So we would list all the things, all the different situations that are scary with the least scary
at the bottom. So maybe if it's a social anxiety thing, maybe the idea of saying hello to that
person at the local store when I pick up my paper or whatever fills me with anxiety.
But I know I could do it if I really tried.
That would go at the bottom.
And there may be a sort of 100% worst case scenario is I've got to speak at a friend's
wedding or something like that.
And there's loads of scenarios in between that are all slightly tweaked and slightly
different that you might think are more or less scary.
And you don't start at the top, you start at the bottom.
So you start with a thing that feels kind of manageable, but a challenge, and you repeat
it as much as you possibly can.
Because what you do is everything that's new and novel, you will get this hike in your
stress response.
So your brain is saying, we're not sure about this, anything could happen.
So we're going to increase your level of alertness so that you're ready for anything. And that's really what it is.
That's what's happening. You're getting that level of alertness so that you can cope with
it. But you experience that as stress, so it's uncomfortable. And so if you're tackling
those scenarios, what we often get people to do when they're in it is focus on that
idea that your attention is a spotlight and you have control of that.
Okay, so I've now pushed myself to go to this networking meeting. I did not want to go.
I hate small talk. I'm feeling awkward. I'm now standing in that semi-circle with like
four people. I keep staring at people's shoes and I'm thinking, this is horrible. I don't
know what to say. So how do I use the spotlight tool right now?
So when you're socially anxious, your focus will be inward.
It will be on how are other people perceiving me?
Am I standing funny?
Am I fidgeting?
Am I saying stuff wrong?
How am I coming across?
And it will be all this kind of inner turmoil stuff that just keeps triggering more and
more anxiety.
Whereas someone who's confident and not socially anxious
will not be focused inwards on themselves,
they will be focused on the other person
and trying to get to know them or find stuff out about them.
And actually I've sat in rooms with people
who've really struggled with anxiety and paranoia
and we've had to have kind of big care meetings
with all their different professionals.
And I remember sitting with someone And we've had to have kind of big care meetings with all their different professionals.
And I remember sitting with someone and getting them to take notes about what the plan was.
And so all that was, was a focus of that spotlight of attention.
So rather than thinking who's looking at me, who's thinking what, it was who's just said
something that is part of the plan, let me write it down.
And you just take control of that spotlight of attention.
And then what you do is you get this experience that it can go well.
It can go okay.
And I can practice where I focus my attention and it influences how I feel.
And that is the superpower starting to really open up this idea that I can take control
of this one thing in this scenario and it influences the feeling or it makes that feeling slightly more manageable.
So it doesn't take it away. It still might always be a little bit awkward, a little bit
uncomfortable. The self-doubt might always be there in a little way, but you know what
to do with it. And that's the key is you're not trying to take it all away. You're just
showing yourself, proving to yourself through action
that you can do something with it.
You know what I love about that reframe
is that you literally just so skillfully said,
if you're focused inward, you're gonna feel anxious,
but you can take the spotlight and focus on
what are the other people saying?
Am I listening?
What are they wearing?
Can I give a compliment?
And now all of a sudden you're using this tool to be able to navigate the situation.
And when you end it, it might not be incredible, but you got yourself through it.
Yeah.
And that's the cool thing.
Yeah. And every time you get yourself through it, your brain clocks another bit of evidence that you can.
That even when it doesn't go really, really well, you survive it anyway.
And that's what you need is your brain
learns through evidence of actions.
That you've got to kind of build up
as many of those experiences as you can.
And then, you know, confidence is a sort of byproduct
of doing that on repeat as much as possible.
You know, one section of your book,
Open When, is when you're really hard on yourself and you've done things that
you regret and we've all been there, but you cannot, like you're really struggling to forgive
yourself. What are some tools and strategies that you recommend when you have a real, when
you're just really hard on yourself?
Yeah. I think looking at your relationship with failure is huge and a real game changer,
actually. You know, when I talked about this idea of, you know, going on live TV and it
being terrifying and, and I needed to commit to looking after myself, it was really, that
was a shift in my relationship with failure that I committed to looking after myself in
the face of setbacks and humiliation
and failure that might happen.
If the inside of your head is not a safe place to be, how are you ever going to take risks?
How are you ever going to move forward?
One of the things I used to talk about in therapy when people were highly self-critical
is this idea that imagine if I was going to lock you in a room for a whole year, so 24-7 for a whole
year, you couldn't come out. And in there, I was going to put your high school bully,
the worst person you can think of from your early days, and you're going to live with
them 24-7 for a year. How might you feel when you came out?
Horrid. Beaten down, scared. My first thing that I thought was,
my God, I guess I better figure out how to be friends with this person or else they're going to destroy me.
Yeah. Yeah. So someone who just hammers you all the time.
Oh my God, yes.
You're never going to come out of that feeling at your best.
Right.
But imagine now if I said, okay, I'm going to lock you in that room for the year,
but you get to say you're best friend.
How would you feel different when you came out?
I'd feel fantastic. Like I'm actually going away to camp.
Yeah, like a holiday, right? You would have a great time and you would feel encouraged
about whatever you're going to do next and happy. And really that idea of being in that
room with a person is you inside your own head. The way that you speak to yourself can either be a really good friend or a bully.
Because you're with yourself 24-7, it will have the same impact as that scenario of,
am I spending time with someone who's having a positive impact on me or someone who's having
a negative impact on me or someone who's having a negative impact on me. But the great news is that you have control of that and you
can begin to shift how you speak to yourself.
How do you begin to talk to yourself as a friend if you actually believe that
you're a bad person or that you look in the past and you see lots of evidence of
the mistakes that you've made?
Yeah. Well I think if you're looking back and you're seeing how hard you are in yourself,
the fact that you can recognize it is a sign of progress, right? When I look back on my
early videos that I put out onto the internet, and I think, oh my goodness, I can barely watch
it. I just can barely look. And my response then is always, that's a sign of progress.
early look. My response then is always, that's a sign of progress.
If we weren't doing better videos now, I wouldn't be so cringey when I watch the old ones.
It's a sign that you're learning and you're progressing.
When you look back and there's something you regret or you think, how could I be so stupid?
How could I get that so wrong?
That's a sign that you're not there now.
I love this idea of elite athletes employ coaches with so much thought and precision.
They don't employ that high school bully to get them through really difficult competitions
or help them improve their game or anything like that.
They employ someone who has their back, has their best interests at heart, believes that
they have huge potential and need to do some hard work to get there.
Someone who's always going to be honest with them, but is going to bring that honesty with
kindness and compassion and forward thinking.
When we think of that kind of idea of people employ coaches like that because it works
and because it helps them to bring their best.
You apply that to normal life and we all want to bring our best.
We all want to keep progressing and learning and bringing out the best in ourselves.
What you need is to be the coach for yourself.
No one else is there 24- seven, not even our family.
But if we can have that idea,
it's not so much exactly what you say every time,
what are the words I need to say to myself?
It's an idea of what would a coach say to me right now?
How would a coach help me to get back up
when I've fallen down or I've really messed up?
What would they be saying? They wouldn't be calling me names because that wouldn't help. It's just giving
yourself this idea of this concept of what is the voice that I need to hear right now
that's going to help me through? That's where the idea with the book came, where each chapter
begins with a letter from me. It's this idea that often in those moments, you just need
someone to bring the right words that helps to shift your attention in the right direction and
give you that sort of drive in your belly that's just going to get you back up and pushing
through this difficult moment.
So it's really hard to do that for ourselves in the moment.
It takes time and training and practice.
And I think often we learn that from hearing it.
And so if we don't
have anyone in our lives that seems to bring the right words that we need to hear, then
we can get it from a book.
Yes, you can. And you can get it from podcasts and from social media clips. And what I loved
about what you just said, though, because I really want to highlight this, is that A,
recognizing that you kind of have engaged in regrettable or despicable or hurtful or
painful behavior.
Even just recognizing it, I love this reframe that that's a really great sign of progress
that you have the ick factor with yourself.
And that's different than holding it over your head.
And so if you can recognize it,
is there any trick to reframing then,
like how you actually talk to yourself moving forward?
Like when you can't think of anything else,
is there something that you give to the clients
that you work with that is kind of universal
that helps them shake off the hold
that being hard on yourself can have.
A line that's often used in therapeutic work when we're helping someone build and train
in kind of self-compassion is, I did the best that I knew how with what I had at the time.
And I have new insight now, I have new skills now that I didn't have before.
I mean, we were talking earlier about the kind of idea of where you focus your attention
and what causes anxiety.
If your attention is focused on the past too much, you will get depressed and you will
get miserable.
If your attention is always focused on the future and things that might happen but haven't
happened yet, you're going to get anxious.
And if you're focused on the present moment, there's much less to be depressed or anxious
about.
It's just the present moment, just me and you and here.
That's mindfulness really.
That's the idea of choosing where you focus your attention and so being able to, like
you say, say something like, I did the best I knew how with what I had at the time, even
if I had very little at the time in terms of skill, and now I'm going to bring myself
back to here.
And I can figure out how to do better. You know, you mentioned the future,
and Dr. Julie, I would love to know how you help a client
who feels a lot of uncertainty about the future.
And right now, I think it's at an all-time high
when you look at the headlines
and when you look at the reports around the spike
in anxiety and stress that people are feeling around the world.
So what are tools that you can use to manage the uncertainty when you look out to the future?
Yeah.
I think when everything's uncertain, a lot of the distress that that causes is when we're
trying to control it.
It's a bit like your book, isn't it, with the let them, right?
It's the allow life to be it. It's a bit like your book, isn't it, with the let them, right? It's the
allow life to be uncertain. Every move in life is uncertain. Nothing is given. Nothing
is fully controllable. And so it's probably one of life's most important skills to be
able to tolerate that uncertainty and to know that when everything becomes really stressful, I'm really uncertain.
Narrowing your focus is probably the most helpful sort of real-time tool to just focus
on the next couple of steps ahead.
What am I doing that's keeping me moving forward even in times of great uncertainty or stress
or all sorts of problems that might
be up ahead. And certainly that's for me when I talk about the whole, you know, cancer experience,
it's something that does to you that takes away, I mean, you always, I think everyone
probably worries about, you know, will I get this or that when I'm older and when will
that stuff like that happen? But when it does happen, you realize you had a certain degree of safety.
This idea that happens to other people mostly.
Even if you're a bit worried about it,
there's a kind of distance that you have.
And I remember thinking, I don't wanna be in this club.
I don't wanna be in this club.
I did not sign up for this.
And I think that was this sense of anything can happen.
Like right now, it feels more possible than it ever did.
And so even once you're okay and out the other side
of treatment, when so many people survive it,
and it's just fantastic that people are having
successful treatments, but it leaves with you
this sense of anything can happen.
And probably the most fundamental way that I deal with that
is saying, yes, that's why I have to live as if I have a future. Because otherwise, I'm back to
rabbit in headlights. Anything can happen, so I can't live. I can't carry on.
I'm glad that you said that because I think when people hear you have to allow the uncertainty,
you have to allow the fact that there are things out of your control, whether it's the headlines or the fact that you're
now single again. Yeah. And you didn't want to be or that you just had a
miscarriage and you didn't want it or you just got the cancer diagnosis or
somebody that you love is going in for surgery and it's all uncertain or AI
feels like it's taking over the world and will it take over your job and so
that sense of like oh my gosh I just have to let them, I have to allow this because I can't control it.
I'm so happy you reminded us that that's not where it ends, because you brought it right back to the
prey versus the predator, which is there are small things that I can do to put the foot forward and
get ahead of this thing or just focus on what is
important to me. And there was a tool in there, which is believing that you have a future,
believing that things are better. Why is that important?
Because if you don't, you have nothing, right? You have to live as if you have a future,
because otherwise you start dropping into this sense of doom
that everything is pointless if you feel that you don't have a future.
You have to live with that meaning and purpose because if you don't act as if you have a
future and then you do, you mess up your future.
A lot of it is about bearing of suffering side of it and moving forward
anyway.
And then things, you know, you get these little pockets of time where things feel a bit better
or things, you know, you open up the possibility of experiencing kind of pleasure or meaning
or purpose throughout, despite the fact that the world is often scary and uncertain. And in some ways, it's always been that way.
It's true.
Yeah.
It's true.
So in your private practice and with your online audience, what are you seeing that
people are struggling the most with right now?
I think there's this kind of mix between the emotional stuff, so understanding that there
is a way to deal with emotion and that when you experience
a bunch of negative or painful emotions, that that doesn't mean something is wrong with
you linked with relationships.
What are the big struggles in relationships?
I think it's a mix of dealing with my emotion in the relationship and dealing with someone
else's emotion in the relationship and dealing with someone else's emotion in the relationship.
And I think we're lied to, especially on social media now, about this idea that, you know,
you hear all this stuff about, you've got to be healed before you get into a relationship.
Oh my God.
Like, when are you healed?
I mean, if I had followed that rule, I would never have married Matt.
We've been together 20 years, you know?
And it's this idea that you've got to become this perfect idea of human being,
and the other person's got to have done the same work,
so that when you get together,
you have this perfect fairytale relationship and it's never hard.
It's just utter rubbish.
It's just not true whatsoever.
When people then struggle in relationships because you're both dealing with
emotion and stress and all the ups and downs of life, people then think that it's not the right
relationship or you're getting it wrong.
And actually, that is the process of a relationship is building that together and going through
those things and learning about each other in the process and forgiving each other for
when you bring your worst to each other.
And you just build so much strength through that.
So I think there's this combination of what on earth is emotional about and how do I deal
with it, but also then what do I do with that in a relationship.
When the relationship shows me up to not be my perfect self and I'm not being my best
self, what does that mean?
So yeah, it's some sort of combination between those two, I think.
And what is your, like what's the most important thing that you think we need to know to make
our relationships better?
No relationship is perfect, but that doesn't mean you have to give up on it.
I think the strongest relationships have often been through the most together, right?
Because you feel safety when you've been through stuff
together and it's pulled you together and not apart. I think in this whole misconception
that everything's got to be perfect, otherwise it's not the right person or it's not the
right relationship.
So Dr. Julie, what if you're in a relationship with somebody who doesn't want to deal with
their emotions, they don't want to look inward, they doesn't want to deal with their emotions,
they don't want to look inward, they don't want to have these kinds of conversations
with you, what advice do you give to your clients when they come in and they talk about
the fact that I'm trying to connect, I'm trying to get them to process their emotion, they're
not opening up.
Yeah.
In some ways, I would ask why they're trying to get them to open up, what's going on there,
because we can only change ourselves and we can only improve ourselves. And again, it's that focus on what
am I bringing to the relationship? Because it's an okay way to be. If you're not a talker
and you don't really talk about emotions that much, that's okay. For some people that works.
And we don't all have to be really insightful or psychologically minded or anything
like that for stuff to work. And sometimes I think that's okay. I mean, like Matt and
I, for example, I'm well into this, you know, I'm a full on psychology nerd, constantly
reading about stuff. I'm a therapist, so always reflecting on things. And he's probably the
opposite to me in that sense. but that means we have different strengths
and we even each other out.
God, can you imagine how much we talk for hours
if we were both psychologists.
Dreadful, we'd have no fun.
Oh my God, it would be awful, right?
I wouldn't want you at a dinner party.
You're like, not those two, God.
And actually, you know, you look online
about some of these sort of apparently ideal ways
to repair an argument or those kinds of things.
Actually for us, probably a lot of the time, we just use humor.
And we know each other so well now that we can kind of go,
oh, you're doing that thing again.
And then we both have a laugh about it and then we're back in.
And it's okay for it to be that way.
We don't all have to be therapists to have what could be an ideal relationship.
Dr. Julie, I could listen to you all day long, and I need to give our amazing sponsors a chance to say a few words.
And so let's hit the pause button.
I also want to give you a chance to share this with someone in your life
who could use all of the remarkable tools
that Dr. Julie is sharing with you and me today.
And everybody in your life needs to hear this.
I just love this conversation.
We have so many more topics to unpack when we return,
so don't go anywhere.
Dr. Julie and I are gonna be waiting for you
after a short break, so stay with me.
["Dreams of a New World"]
Welcome back.
I am so thrilled you're still here. Thank you for being here. Thank you
for taking the time to listen to this and to learn from Dr. Julie. And thank you for
sharing this with people that you care about in your life. All right. So Dr. Julie, here's
where I want to go next.
You know, since so many people are either struggling with anxiety or they have someone
in their life who is, what is the advice that you give your clients when you're working with them through
a period where they feel anxious?
I think probably one of the first bits is the idea that anxiety isn't something that's
wrong in your brain.
It's not a problem that is a fault of yours.
It's not something that's wrong with you.
It's an experience.
And often what
happens in therapy is this process of someone kind of says, you know, I'm feeling this or
this is coming up for me. And then what follows is a judgment. You know, that means I'm weak,
or I'm not coping and everyone else can do this. And what we do is we kind of go, okay,
notice that judgment. Notice how you just judged yourself, how you're feeling right
now. Or, you know, comparing, apparently everyone else has it together, then no one else feels
this way.
And let's just drop the judgment and turn back to that feeling with curiosity.
Isn't that interesting that you feel that way?
What's going on that makes you vulnerable to that feeling at this point?
Let's say, I don't know, a new mum, for example, who finds themselves totally isolated, has
no idea what to do and
how best to look after this baby and, you know, husband's gone back to work.
And the anxiety is just huge.
And I remember thinking when I first had a baby, I don't know if I can handle this degree
of fear about how am I going to get it right for this little human being forevermore.
I don't know if I can deal with it.
And a lot of it is this kind of this idea that if you turn towards that feeling with curiosity, you can
hear what it has to say.
Often it has something to tell you about what you need at the time.
For example, in that new mom scenario, usually that's around, I need human connection. I need some reassurance.
I need adult conversation or I need to feel safe
in this situation.
And so the answers start to appear
when you're just willing to look at the emotion
and ask, what are you telling me?
What is this?
And sometimes it has a lot to say,
and other times it might not have a lot to say,
and that's okay too, because what we teach in kind of emotion regulation work is to feel an emotion,
look at it and say, is this warranted?
And is it proportionate to the situation?
Because sometimes if I haven't had enough sleep or I'm dehydrated or I've had too much
coffee, I might have a really extreme reaction to something
that I would normally have a small reaction to. So that would be disproportionate to the situation
because of those other factors that made me vulnerable to that. So if you're willing to kind
of look at, okay, what's going on here, then the answers start to appear. But because so many of
us are not willing to look at it with curiosity, we just judge ourselves for the fact we've had
the feeling and then we try to numb it and push it away.
And then we're in a battle.
You know, that's something that I actually worry about, because I feel like it's a super
positive thing that there's so much conversation about mental health and about the things that
people struggle with and normalizing it so you don't feel alone and so that you seek
out support.
Yeah. But I do worry about how it's easy to opt out of the things that you need to do
because it's quote bad for your mental health.
Yeah.
How do you know the difference between whether or not it's actually really something you should opt out of
or whether or not you just don't want to do the thing
that you probably need to be doing, but it just feels hard.
And I think that probably brings us to the one tool that I probably use the most in the most formal way from therapy, because it's just so helpful, is the values stuff. So it's just working out what matters most to me
at this point in my life,
because that changes and fluctuates, right?
Okay.
And so every few months,
or sometimes when I just feel a bit out of sorts
and I feel like life's, you know,
everything's upside down,
I will just get a piece of paper
and I'll split it into different boxes
and I'll have all the different aspects of my life.
So there'll be parenting, marriage, friendships, health, education, career, whatever, you name it.
I'll put them all out. And then in each box, I'll just ask myself what matters most to
me in this area of my life. So not what I want to happen to me, but how I want to show
up in good times and bad. So what I want to kind of represent in that part of my life.
So I might have a few words or a few sentences, and then I'll rate that just a crudely kind
of out of 10.
How important are those values to me in this area of my life?
So zero, not at all, 10 out of 10 is max.
And then you rate it again.
And this time, how much I feel I'm living in line with these values in the last couple
of weeks.
So then what you get is zero, not all 10 out of 10 is definitely.
And then you get all of these kind of different boxes and these different scores.
It's not a tool for self-criticism.
It's a tool for finding where you need to focus your attention next.
Because you'll get this idea of, okay, well, if something over here is 10 out of 10 important to me,
but I've just rated it as 2 out of 10 in terms of how I'm living in line with that at the moment,
then that deserves my attention.
And it's not because you're failing, it's because life pulls us in different directions.
You can't fill all of those at the same time.
So I might be busy with a project trying to finish a book or something, and so I haven't
been taking the kids to their clubs recently, someone else has done it for me, and I just
noticed that pull that I'm not being the present parent I want to be, and so then I'll say
no to a few things at work so that I can do that.
And so there's this constant kind of shifting and moving between things.
But going back to your question, when you understand and you have that clarity in terms
of what matters most to you at that point in your life, then it's much easier to make
the decisions about what you should and shouldn't be doing.
Because our tendency is to go, okay, I'm only going to do the things that feel good, and
I'm not going to do the stuff that makes me feel bad or uncomfortable.
But if you make decisions based on comfort
and discomfort, it's not going to lead you anywhere meaningful. Your life is just going
to shrink. Whereas if you make the choices based on your values and what matters to you,
that will inevitably involve you doing things that make you feel terrible sometimes. I know
having children was really, really important to me, but my goodness, those night
shifts where every cell in my body wanted to stay in bed and be comfortable and warm
and not get up to the crying baby who was desperate for me at that point.
But I did the uncomfortable thing because it mattered most to me at that point.
Well, I asked you this because one of our producers just said, well, you know, I used
to have a lot of anxiety about flying, but I'm not anxious anymore because one of our producers just said, well, you know, I used to have a lot of anxiety about flying,
but I'm not anxious anymore because I don't fly.
Yeah.
And it's kind of funny, but it made me wonder, Dr. Julie,
what happens if you keep avoiding the things that
make you anxious?
So avoidance of the thing that you fear, it lies to us.
So it tells us that we are making everything better, but it makes fear
worse over time.
Right?
So let's, I mean, I talked about this in one of my videos with this kind of rainbow thing.
And let me explain for the person who's not watching this on YouTube.
She has this like child's play toy, which is like this big wooden rainbow in front of
her and it's got all the colors of the red, the orange, the yellow, the green, the blue, the purple,
and it's about six inches high. Dr. Julie has a rainbow made of wood in front of her.
Well, I used to draw this out in therapy actually with rings.
So I would kind of have, you know, you in the center of the page and then lots of rings that
represent the different layers of your life, but this is the, you know, the rainbow represents the different layers of
your life.
So let's say suddenly something, let's go with, rather than flying, let's go with something
that kind of has that different layer.
So maybe the social anxiety stuff again, right?
So let's say suddenly going to really crowded places with lots of people you don't know
starts to fill you with anxiety and you're not sure why, but it just does, right?
It just doesn't feel comfortable anymore.
So you decide, well, I'm not going to do that anymore then.
I'm going to take that out of my life.
So you now no longer go to any situations
where there's big crowds, which means when your, you know,
friend is getting married next week
and they're having 200 people at the wedding,
you're not going to go to that either.
So you take that bit out of your life.
And then being on a crowded train or bus or boat suddenly becomes anxiety provoking. So you take that bit out of your life. And then being on a crowded train or bus or boat
suddenly becomes anxiety provoking. So you take that out of your life. So you can't travel.
And then being in a crowded restaurant, even with friends, suddenly becomes fearful. So you stop
doing that too. And what happens is every time that something falls outside of your comfort zone
and fills you with fear, the natural instinct is to avoid it, right?
And even the moment you decide to avoid it, you get this relief, this,
oh, phew, I don't have to deal with that today.
So it's quite addictive.
But what happens is, over time, when you keep doing that, when you live by that rule,
your life shrinks.
And suddenly, there's so much stuff that you can't do because
your life is sort of focused on and all of your decisions are based on that rule that
I cannot do things that cause me anxiety or fear.
And with each piece of the rainbow, Dr. Julie, that you remove, the actual arch is getting
smaller and smaller and smaller. And when anxiety or grief or nerves or depression
or sadness or heartbreak starts to creep in,
we do have the tendency to just withdraw.
And by the time people come to therapy,
they've got rid of a lot of these layers
and they feel that life is depressing
because it's so much smaller
than they ever imagined it would be.
And a lot of those layers include things that matter to them, right?
So your best friend's wedding or traveling across the world to visit family or whatever.
So it puts all of these different things out of bounds.
So it becomes so difficult to live in line with your own values.
It's so sad when you see how small it's gotten.
And it actually reminds me of times in my life
where either my anxiety was so bad
or my postpartum depression was so bad
or one of my kids was struggling with anxiety
and they just stopped doing things that they used to enjoy
because they just felt like it was too hard.
And as they stopped doing sleepovers
or they stopped wanting to do fun things on the weekend
or they stopped wanting to try out for sports
or they stopped wanting to go to the party,
it's just like that rainbow.
Every single thing that they stopped doing
or were scared to do was an example of the way
that their life just got smaller and smaller and smaller.
Yeah, absolutely.
And it is so sad, and it's easy for it to kind of creep up on you.
I think the visual is so powerful because you actually see what's happening,
when in reality when you're going through it,
it just sort of slowly feels like it's happening,
until all of a sudden you're just in a really small life.
Yeah.
Thank you for showing us this visual
because as much as it's sad,
there's also this flip side to it
where it's really compelling
because you actually see the solution.
If your life feels very small,
there are things that you can start adding back in,
even if it feels overwhelming or scary to try to do it, that
will actually immediately start to make your life feel bigger and fuller again.
Dr. Julie, what is the first step, other than recognizing this, to start to put the pieces
back in place that you didn't even realize that you took away.
I think the key is you don't have to do it all at once.
Okay.
I would get clarity, you know, do that values exercise.
I think it's in both of my books actually because it's so helpful with so many different
scenarios.
But really simple, you know, do that pen and paper bit and look at what matters most to
me at this point in my life, because that makes all the decisions about the direction
you want to go in much easier. Because why face your fears if it doesn't matter to you? And
that's key. You don't have to, you know, if you have no inclination to ever travel, then
don't worry about going on planes, right?
But I think most of the time, you know you're silently giving up on a part of your life.
I think most times, like, I choose to believe
that we all want to thrive, we all want to be happy,
we all want to feel the full possibility of our lives,
and that when we are self-sabotaging or avoiding
or shrinking or holding ourselves back
and limiting that, we know.
And how do you recognize, though, when you're doing that?
You know what I'm saying?
Because I think you can get so used to being small.
Yeah.
Well, I think sometimes it's triggered by things like having children or getting into
a relationship because then doing certain things matters to them.
So I always had a fear of heights, right, growing
up and I was totally just allowed to avoid that. It was just something I was scared of
saying, Julie doesn't have to do that high ride or whatever it was. And once I had children
and I knew all this kind of stuff from therapy that it was changeable, there's no way I want
to pass this on because it holds you back. And so at no point do I mean, we don't live in a big city, so I'm never really exposed
to high buildings or balconies, that kind of thing.
But every time we go away and we do stuff as a family, I will never allow myself to
avoid doing something that is high based on that fear because I don't want the children.
So the children then become the key to,
I don't want them to suffer the consequences of this,
even though I might have had consequences myself.
So if you don't have kids,
how do you find that anchor for yourself?
And could you build back up,
since you've taken some of the rainbow stripes off
to show us how you can,
let's just say the person listening feels very small.
Let's say they went through divorce.
Yeah.
And it was shattering and life-changing,
and they're still alone, and their partners moved on,
and the friend groups have changed,
and you've had to reinvent yourself,
and you recognize that there are just ways in which you're
holding yourself back, and you have justifiable and very normal fears
about getting hurt again or putting yourself out there
or the negativity that you tell yourself
that nobody's gonna find, whatever it may be.
But you're now listening to you, Dr. Julie,
and you're going, that's me.
Or you're listening and you're going, that's my mother.
My mother is stuck like that
and her life has become very small.
Yeah.
If you've had that epiphany, how do you start building back in those pieces of your life
that you've been avoiding because it just feels new or uncomfortable or like, I didn't
sign up for this or it's going to be hard?
Yeah.
And I think if you imagine that kind of, it's you stood on this little island that's surrounded by water that's scary.
Then all you do is you just dip your toe in.
So you're just stepping out of the comfort zone, just enough that it creates a challenge
for you, but one that's doable.
So you're not diving in and then struggling to swim.
You're dipping your toe in, you're paddling in the water, and then you're stepping back
and you're repeating it, repeating it.
Every time you repeat it, you gain a little bit of land back.
That's where these parts of the rainbow come back.
You work on one layer, just one thing that feels a challenge, and you repeat it as much
as you possibly can.
What happens is when you do that and you spend time in that place that feels a bit
vulnerable, it starts to become your comfort zone.
The thing that you do every day becomes your comfort zone.
And so then your life expands a little bit.
The trick here is to keep going.
So you then have to dip your toe in again.
Well, I remember, I'll share an example because I think it would be helpful and then maybe
you have one that you can share based on some issues that have come up with clients
or that you're seeing online.
I remember when we moved to a brand new place
and I was early 50s,
and I felt like it was the biggest mistake in the world.
I had no friends, I was super, super lonely,
and I started to swirl in all the self-doubt
and the sadness and the loneliness around this massive life transition,
moving from where we had been for 26 years.
And I recognized after about six months of the wallowing that my life had gotten very small.
And the very first step I took was I told myself I had to leave the house once a day, even just to go to the grocery
store or to get a cup of coffee.
And then the next thing became I had to go to the coffee shop and sit there for half
an hour and read a book.
And then the next thing became I had to go to the coffee shop and sit there for
half an hour and read a book and I had to actually talk to people.
And that was an example of a period of my life where I was avoiding the very thing that
would have solved the issue of loneliness and acclimating to a new community.
But do you have another example that might give somebody an idea of what you're talking about?
Like, let's use the issue of heartbreak.
Like if somebody has had their heart broken
and deep down they know that they would love to fall in love
and have a partner and have a new chapter,
but they've been holding themselves back.
What are some simple steps that feel like you may not even
realize you've been avoiding it?
Yeah. So then it becomes that, because on that first day, if you had said, I'm going
to go out and talk to somebody, you wouldn't have done it. So you've got to scale it right
back to, you know what, I'm just going to go out with a friend, not even the idea of
kind of meeting new people or anything like that. I'm just gonna practice being out there
so that might be taking back another layer.
Practicing being out there,
even with the person you trust the most,
you know, your closest friends,
not even trying to date again.
And then maybe I'm going to allow myself to go out
with friends when there are other people there
that I don't know yet.
And then maybe a few sort of events in,
maybe I'm gonna speak to someone that
I don't know and I'm going to introduce myself. But it's really about doing it at your own
pace. But when you do that, you're much less likely to give up. If you go for it and you
expect too much of yourself in one go, then you're much more likely to just, if things
go wrong, then you retreat again and then you're having to start from scratch again.
So it's making it manageable and not expecting it to be, you know, the, oh gosh, you know,
nature takes its time.
So why shouldn't we, right?
It still happens, but you have to give yourself that time to do it layer by layer.
You know, go to the coffee shop first, then speak to someone when you're comfortable in the coffee shop, and then, you know, whatever comes next.
So Dr. Julie, you have shared so much, and I think my kids are going to get so sick and
tired of me telling them, are you the prey or are you the predator?
Do you want to be the prey?
You want to be the predator.
If the person listening took just one lesson or tool away from this conversation.
What do you think is the most important thing?
I think it has always been the knowledge that you do not have to be at the mercy of your own
emotional experience. That there are so many things you can do to influence it. And that's
one of the first things I teach people in therapy is this idea that emotion
is influenced by so many things.
So we can't necessarily wake up and go, I want to choose to feel love and pleasure today,
right?
We can't kind of choose it and then make it happen.
But we know that emotion and emotional experience is influenced by what we do, what we say,
who we're around, what we eat, how we move,
and whether we move, and the work that we do, all of those things.
So those are the things that we can influence and control.
And when we do, our emotional experience starts to change as well.
So just knowing that, that I have a degree of agency in how I feel as I go forward,
then that's everything.
Because without that sense of having any kind of sense of agency, you just don't try.
Dr. Julie Smith, what are your parting words?
My parting words?
Oh my goodness.
That you're not alone.
There's nothing wrong with you just for having a hard time in life.
It is because life is hard.
And there's this arsenal of tools that are often hidden
behind the therapy room door. But we're making them available, we're getting them out there.
So just keep learning because they are so helpful and they are changing lives. So there's
no reason why you can't learn for yourself and change the game for yourself.
Well, Dr. Julie Smith, you're changing lives.
You are helpful.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for showing up
every day for the world online.
Thank you for writing this incredible, instant bestseller,
Open When, which is truly exactly as you envisioned.
It is a guide to life because life is hard,
but you don't have to be so hard on yourself.
And there are simple things that you can do
to put your arm around yourself
and help you get yourself through it.
So thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Of course.
And I want to thank you for taking the time
to listen to something that will help you
get yourself through the ups and downs in life.
I am thrilled that you spent the time listening to this.
I can't wait for you to share this with people
that you love.
And in case no one else tells you,
I wanna be sure to tell you that I love you.
I believe in you.
I believe in your ability to create a better life.
And I know that everything that Dr. Julie
shared with you today is gonna help you do that.
Alrighty, I'll talk to you in a few days.
I'll be waiting to welcome you into the next episode,
the moment you hit play. I'll talk to you in a few days. I'll be waiting to welcome you into the next episode, the moment you hit play.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there. I'll see you there. I'll see you there. of sellotape it when I put it back on. We'll send you home with that one.
There's your prize.
Trace wants to pull the rice away real quick.
Okay.
It's like you guys are eating at a restaurant right now.
You can actually dump it on the floor.
It's fine.
Just throw it on the floor.
I don't care.
Okay.
I've got to put them back on.
So I'll put them here so that I can then put them back on
about getting your life back.
Okay, great.
Such a nice ending.
Thank you.
Amazing.
That's so good.
Just make it up as we go along there.
And do you want to have her hand pick some up?
Oh yeah.
Yeah?
Because your nails look great.
She's a pro, isn't she?
So, good interviewer, makes it easy.
Amazing.
Okay.
Well done.
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 a political podcast.
I am just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist.
I am not a licensed therapist. I am not a licensed therapist. I am not a licensed therapist. I am not a licensed 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.