The Mel Robbins Podcast - This One Episode Will Change How You Think About the World & Your Life (From #1 Cancer Surgeon)

Episode Date: March 19, 2026

Today, you’re going to learn the life lessons most people learn too late.  This episode will teach you exactly what matters most in life.  Because in this powerful conversation, Dr. Rahul Jandial,... MD, Ph.D. – a world-renowned cancer neurosurgeon and neuroscientist – shares the #1 regret he’s heard from more than 15,000 patients at the end of their lives. Dr. Rahul Jandial is the Medical Director of Neurosurgical Oncology and Skull Base Surgery at City of Hope in Los Angeles, one of the leading cancer centers in the world.   He operates on brain cancers and spinal tumors in both adults and children, and he directs a research lab focused on developing cutting-edge neuroscience and cancer treatments.  Today, he is going to share what matters most when time is limited: what people wish they’d done sooner, what they wish they’d stopped caring about, and what becomes crystal clear at the end of life - including why so many of us wait too long to start living the life we truly want, and how to shift that starting now.  In this episode, he also shares his own story - from college dropout to security guard to neurosurgeon - and how reinventing his life taught him to go after more and trust himself. This episode is both a wake-up call and a lifeline to hold if you are navigating chaos, facing brutal news, or experiencing a hard time.  In this episode you will learn: -How to stop postponing the life you want and start making better decisions  -What to do when life hits you hard, including a diagnosis, a layoff, a breakup, or the loss of someone you love -How to get through the first hours after brutal news without spiraling or panicking -What to do if you are overwhelmed and not sure what to focus on  -A simple daily practice so you can handle chaos with more control -How to bet on yourself even when other people don’t understand it  After this episode, you're going to know exactly what matters most in life and how to find the mindset you need when life hits you with something you didn’t see coming.  For more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page.   If you liked the episode, check out this one next with Dave Evans and Bill Burnett: How to Design Your Life in 1 Hour Connect with Mel:     Order Mel’s new product, Pure Genius Protein Get Mel’s newsletter, packed with tools, coaching, and inspiration. Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them Theory Watch the episodes on YouTube Follow Mel on Instagram  The Mel Robbins Podcast Instagram Mel's TikTok  Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-free Disclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I just finished recording the episode you're about to listen to, and I just, I have to tell you, this is one of the most impactful conversations that I've ever had. What you're about to hear will stay with you long after you're done listening. I mean, I'm personally sharing this with everybody I know, because today, Dr. Raoul John D'all, a world-renowned cancer surgeon and neuroscientist who treats stage four cancer patients every day. I'm talking adults, children. He is here to give you the life lessons most people learn too late.
Starting point is 00:00:48 After treating more than 15,000 cancer patients for over 25 years, he's going to share the number one regret he hears from his patients when time is running out, what people wish they had done sooner, especially when it comes to love, taking risks, reconciliation. He's going to tell you what really matters at the end of life and why most of us wait too long to start living the life we truly want. Now, I guarantee you what you're going to learn from people looking back on their lives will change how you live your life starting today. And Dr. John D'all is also going to walk you through a very specific playbook for dealing with difficult moments. Like a diagnosis, getting laid off, crisis, a breakup that just devastates you
Starting point is 00:01:35 or losing someone you love, how to navigate chaos, and the exact mindset you need when receiving heartbreaking news or when life throws you something brutal. After this episode, you're going to know how to find your power when the path forward feels unclear. And even if you're not in chaos or crisis right now, everything you're about to hear will prepare you for it. And, and it's also going to be an episode that you're going to want to share with absolutely everybody in your life. Because when you really take in what Dr. John D'all is going to teach you today, and I want you to really take it in, I promise you, you and everyone that you share this episode with, you'll never be the same again.
Starting point is 00:02:31 Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robinson. podcast. I am so excited for our conversation today. I'm thrilled that you're here. It's such an honor to spend time with you and to be together. 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 so glad that you're here. I cannot wait for you to meet today's guest, the extraordinary Dr. Rahul Jandial. He's here to tell you exactly how to get through life's most difficult situations. Dr. Rhaal, Dr. Rahul Jondial is a world-renowned cancer surgeon, neurosurgeon, and neuroscientist. He is won award after award after award and is one of the most cited and distinguished doctors and surgeons alive today.
Starting point is 00:03:21 He is the medical director of neurosurgical oncology and skull-dase surgery at City of Hope Medical Center in Los Angeles, which is one of the top cancer hospitals in the world, where Dr. John Dahl operates on brain cancer and spinal tumors in adults and children with stage four cancer. He also directs his own research lab, the John Dial Laboratory at the City of Hope Cancer Center, which focuses on developing cutting-edge neuroscience and cancer treatments. He also serves as a professor within the Division of Neurosurgery at City of Hope, where he teaches doctors from around the world the most innovative cancer surgery techniques and brain tumor research. research. He received his medical degree from the University of Southern California, his Ph.D. in
Starting point is 00:04:08 neuroscience from the University of California, San Diego, and completed a cancer surgery specialization at the University of California, San Francisco. He is the author of 10 best-selling books and over 100 academic articles on surgery, neuroscience, and cancer biology, including his most recent New York Times bestselling book, This Is Why You Dream. And today, Dr. John D.all is distilling more than 25 years of experience as a cancer surgeon to share with you the lessons about life that most people learn too late. Please help me welcome the remarkable Dr. Rahul Jondiol to the Mel Robbins podcast. Dr. John Dial, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. Pleasure to be here. I am so excited you're here and I know that some of the things that we
Starting point is 00:04:55 are going to talk about today you have never talked about in an interview. Written about them, but not had a conversation about. Well, that makes me even more excited for what you're about to teach us today from your extraordinary life. You know, if you think about some of the major life lessons that you've learned both through your work and your own personal experiences, what could change about my life if I take to hurt everything that you've witnessed the wisdom you're about to share and I apply it to my life? what could change? Well, from me personally, what I want to share are rules for survival that have served me well throughout my life, as well as lessons from my cancer patients that have given me a greater
Starting point is 00:05:42 sense of meaning and purpose because I've had the fortune privilege to share in their lives during their difficult moments. So from there, I've sort of come up with a playbook, if you will, on how to deal with crisis, how to embrace change. it's imperfect but it's been it's been something i've been shaping and molding for uh for 25 years now you're about to unpack this playbook for an extraordinary life and if you could go back and speak to the nine-year-old you it's a little photo there that i'm passing oh yeah that was an interesting time. Sometimes I mention like my life started at LAX. I don't really remember the first eight
Starting point is 00:06:32 years of my life. It was when I arrived and it was an intense kind of thing. Like one day you're at the foothills of the Himalayas and Kashmir. It's beautiful. It's violent. You get on a Pan Am flight and 24 hours later you landed LAX with my father, with my mother, with my brother. And so for me, It's always people are like, where are you from? I'm from LAX. It's sort of birth, rebirth, and I think the suddenness of that, and I could tell there was something intense going on with a lot of tears in the old country. And super fortunate to be here and all this wonderful country has given me the opportunities to sort of so many second chances this country has given me, really.
Starting point is 00:07:19 but if I could go back, you know, I think I would say that you will be underestimated. There will be pain. There may even be violence, but suffering comes from regret and peace comes from meaning. I would give myself those words as a compass because other people gave me that through mentorship and love. If you look at that photo of yourself as a nine-year-old and you think back to landing at LAX, what would you want to tell the nine-year-old version of you in that moment about what's about to happen and how your life's about to change and all of the extraordinary things that your life is going to hold for you? I would tell them it's going to be wild and it's going to be beautiful.
Starting point is 00:08:15 and it can't be completely engineered. And you're going to have to go with a lot of things that you don't expect and don't want. And the adversity will reveal your character, but it'll also fortify you and make you the person you're going to be. Is there any background that you want to share about, like, why your parents left, what was happening, coming to this country? Northern India was violent at that time. My father's an aerospace engineer.
Starting point is 00:08:43 He's passed away seven years ago. and this great country gave us the opportunity to come here. We left a crisis and came to a sanctuary where everybody, my family has since thrived, and I've done my best to be appreciative of the people that live in this country. And I personally love Los Angeles because it's not just where I landed. It's just the diversity, the creativity has just been, And it's home. And it's home. Now, today we look at you, cancer surgeon, neuroscientist, bestselling author. You have all of these unbelievable accolades and awards. And when you were in high school, did you want to be a doctor?
Starting point is 00:09:33 No, I was, I mean, I don't, I did not like studying. I was like, I set the record in my high school for going to detention and that sort of thing. I was not just, that's why everybody's like, that's. guy? I mean, even my mom is like, oh, boy, how did this, how do you, how did you get from that to that? And then, um, so no, it wasn't like that at all. I mean, I just, I just wanted to get out of L.A. at that time because L.A. was real intense in the 80s, you know, the crack epidemic and gangs. It was just a lot of, a lot of intensity. And when I had an opportunity to go to the Bay Area, I just like, you know, got into Berkeley, went there without seeing Berkeley. I just needed, I needed a physical change. My pops used to have this joke.
Starting point is 00:10:16 He was like, I think you're sort of like the enemy of books. I read Cliff Notes. Yeah, remember those, the yellow ones with the black and the outside of the yellow and black things? I got to Berkeley, I had to take remedial English because I was just like only doing cliff notes. Somehow I got, you know, my grades on the SAT and I got in and I got out and I was in the Bay Area. And frankly, I needed that change. Started parting a little bit too much and a couple of other crises.
Starting point is 00:10:44 He's mounted at that time. And I had to amputate something in my life. I mean, there was, there was threat. And then there was, my mom developed breast cancer at that time. She was doing great. I was 19. And I just realized the thing that I had to cut out of my life was cool. That sounds like a weird thing coming from the 53-year-old accomplished version of you.
Starting point is 00:11:07 That in your 19-year-old brain, your mom is going through breast cancer. you're partying a little too much. You've got a whole new chapter in front of you. You're at a really prestigious school. And in your mind, pops, I know what I need to do. I need to amputate school. Right, because the two things that we were dealing with at that time, we had a neighbor who slowly became a neo-Nazi.
Starting point is 00:11:32 Later, he would end up in prison and, like, in the Aryan Brotherhood and that sort of thing. So that was five feet from our front door. Oh, my God. And then my mom was, you know, dropping hair. She had chemotherapy. And so like it was that. And then so out of those three, then you could see where every resource was for crisis management. I mean, I think that's the essence of what we're talking about is you don't know what's around the corner.
Starting point is 00:11:59 So I'm trying to, I'm trying to share with the world an approach no matter where you're at because we don't know what's around the corner. And in that, at that point, I think now you could see like out of those three. things, if you're exhausted and you've got nothing left and when you've got you've got a marshal and deploy all your energy that it's going to go to those two things dealing with threat. And I think a lot of people deal with threat. I think everybody does on some level. And I love this. It's a very surgical procedure to take a step back and say my life isn't working. And I need to amputate something because I've got to be able to pull all my resources to focus on what's important. And if you've got a neo-Nazi psychopath living next to you and your mom's going through breast cancer, I can see how that's a very
Starting point is 00:12:52 intelligent and strategic decision to say, school can wait, this needs my attention now. Nobody understood. And nobody understood, but I understood that rather than getting these three things kind of right, I need to get these two things 100% right. And that was the first time I noticed where I was like, okay, I'm driving my life because that was a bold move. And then for two years, I was working in a cafeteria as a security guard. It was great because those other two priorities. Your mom and your family's safety. Correct.
Starting point is 00:13:31 They were flowing in the right direction. She was getting better. She was getting stronger. the, you know, when you have breast cancer, they check your lymph nose to see if it's partially escaped. Those lymph nose came back negative, so that raised her chance of survival. And then the threat, you know, was dampening. He moved away, you know, later from prison, a decade later, he would write letters that he's getting out. So the threat never went away, but it was, then energy returned. And then I took a, and then I said, I got to deal with this remedial English.
Starting point is 00:14:08 So I went to Compton Community College. And that move, I met my mentor there. And then so that energy blossomed. And as that energy blossomed and those other things got more in control, the sort of the ecology, the harmony of all the pieces of my life started to blossom. But at some point, I just needed to hunker down and deal with some heavy stuff. and school had to go. And only I knew that.
Starting point is 00:14:39 I love this. And I want to stay right here because I sense that as you're listening, there's somebody in your life that you're already thinking they need to listen to this episode. And I'm only a couple minutes into this thing. Because we all have somebody in our life or we are currently going through a chapter in our life where there's just too much. There's too much going on. And I really resonated with what you said about the fact that all three of them, these things I wasn't doing very well, and I realized I had to make a decision. I had to make a
Starting point is 00:15:13 decision of what I was going to amputate. And when you put it in that context of it's my family safety, it's my mom who needs support because she's going through breast cancer or at school. And everybody just saw that like, he's failing, he's dropping out. And I was just bracing through a storm, right? I wasn't, only I knew that when I get through this, you know, there's something on the other side from me, but I can't get through these two things just half-ass partially. What I also love that you said
Starting point is 00:15:43 is that making the decision that other people judged, oh, he must be, he must be a dropout, he must be failing, he must be this, he must be that. Making that decision, though, you said, felt incredibly empowering because you felt like that difficult decision, getting out of Berkeley, going back home,
Starting point is 00:16:03 working as a security guard, that was one of the first times you actually felt in charge of your life. What do you mean by that? I feel proud that I took a bold step when the optics weren't right. Because so much when you're a teenager, you're doing it for pressures that aren't internal.
Starting point is 00:16:19 They're placed upon you. And that's okay. We need to raise children. I've got three adult sons. I understand putting expectations on children and trying to raise them. But, you know, I mean, I was like one week I'm in class with them,
Starting point is 00:16:33 and the next week I got an apron on and I didn't feel any shame, you know, because I knew that inside my skull, inside the sort of the mental workspace of my mind and my imagination, all these things that happen when we close our eyes and all the things that are inside us that we don't share, we don't fully understand, things felt right. I would love to have you talk to the person who's listening who probably had this conversation texted to them by somebody who loves them. and they need to amputate something.
Starting point is 00:17:10 They need to make a tough decision and get their life back on track and it's going to go against what people think they should do, whether it's getting divorced, whether it's living your life a certain way, whether it's converting to a different religion, or just going back to school,
Starting point is 00:17:30 something that people are going to judge you for. I would love to have you talk to that person who has received this conversation and is at that moment that you were at where you're like weighing, I'm half-assing all this stuff, something does not feel right for me, I have got to take control. What do you want that person to know? The reason it's a difficult choice is because it's an unclear path, right? It's not going to make sense to other people. That's why you're at this crossroad. But as long as it makes sense to you and you've given it thought and you know, know what's important to you in your life and how you're trying to steer this ship slowly,
Starting point is 00:18:11 like turning a massive ship. It's not a sudden change. It's a redirection of the journey of your life. That as long as your peace with what you're doing and you're not hurting somebody else, don't let other people laughing at you change what you're about to do. Go for it. Well, isn't it funny that if you really think about it, any time you've been at a crossroads in your life,
Starting point is 00:18:31 it's probably because you've been making decisions for other people. a lot of the time. Yeah, or for me, sometimes it's been that I've got my head in the wrong place. And that often is trying to please other people, you know, or doing it for other people. But sometimes, you know, we can fall down a ravine of negative thinking that isn't necessarily placed upon you. So there is responsibility. You know, they're the choices we make with the world outside of us that are constructive and destructive, but they're also choices we make
Starting point is 00:19:05 with the world inside our minds that are constructive and destructive. And I just think, you know, I just think we'll both have to be paid attention to. So let's go back to you working as a security guard after you drop out of college. You end up enrolling at Compton Community College. And what happens next in your story?
Starting point is 00:19:29 I met my mentor there. He was their English professor. Okay. Oh, yeah, that's right, because you're going to Compton Community College. To address my remedial English. Yeah, brush up on the English. Yes, okay. He wrote, and I still have it,
Starting point is 00:19:43 I know you'll do well, but I hope you do good. Oh, whoa. And so that hit me just like that, and I caught fire. But that wouldn't have happened unless I went to Compton Community College. So you can't just wait for, like, inspiration and mentorship and things. to like land on you, you know, you have to put yourself out there. And by signing up for Compton Community College and taking that class, and at that time my mom had cancer, and I remember saying,
Starting point is 00:20:20 I just worried about her, you know, feeling pain and all these things. And he's like, what if the pain is a welcome reminder that I'm still alive? He would say things like that to me. I was like, ah, you know, but later on, that would be. guide me. And so, so I found my mentor there and the doing good thing would serve me later as I had many other crossroads on what to do, plastic surgery, cancer surgery, you know, getting the way of somebody that wasn't doing things that were fair or not. You know, you're going to hit crossroads. And again, it's going to look like a terrible option. It's going to come with a lot of cost.
Starting point is 00:21:00 And what my father taught me, as long as it doesn't come with moral injury. right? Because you can succeed, but if you absorb, if you let yourself choose or accept moral injury, you'll never be a peace in the private moments of your life. So you are now one of the most awarded, renowned, and impressive brain surgeons and neuroscientists alive today. How did you go from there to where you are now and what made you want to become? a cancer surgeon. I get that question from my students and what I would say is knowing what you want to become is kind of like knowing what's all what's out there and there's no way to do that, right? Because it's a massive world and you're just a kid, you know? And so I didn't want to be a
Starting point is 00:21:51 cancer surgeon. I didn't want to be a nurse surgeon. I didn't even know I wanted to be a physician, you know, but after Compton, when I came back, it felt like I had more firepower. I had, I had more potential and Mr. Jet helped with that. And so I just put my next foot, you know, I just looked at the opportunity in front of me and that was that was applying to medical school and there were these tests and such and I got lucky on the test and it opened doors and I went up at USC medical school and I hated it because it was classrooms and I was like, oh man, this is boring, you know. And then the third and fourth year you do rotations and I went to LA County Hospital. and then I found it, you know, because all of a sudden the classroom's gone, the nerds are gone,
Starting point is 00:22:38 and it's just like the biggest aquarium in which to study humanity. I loved interacting with people all walks of life, and the hospital gave me that classroom, you know, and then that was something I was like, then I caught fire, and then I saw, and I had never seen a surgery, and when I saw my first operation, I was like, wait, this is physical. I can do physical. So, you know, I could smart and physical. to do. And it was such ownership. When somebody trusts you to take you, take them back into a room, make them unconscious and work inside them for hours, that's a bond that I respected.
Starting point is 00:23:17 The surgery thing, it brought me, it woke me up. It wakes me up when I operate. So that's how that evolved. Well, what's interesting about you is that you are talking about a playbook and what you're describing is not really knowing where it's leading, but paying very close attention to how things feel right now. And those moments when something brings you alive, in your words, that kind of fire inside you lights up. Well, specifically, it was avoid moral injury, and then the step I remember doing was a minus one plus one.
Starting point is 00:24:00 What is a minus one plus one mean? that I got rid of one bad habit and then I put myself out to do something. Like, it was a combination of close this box and open up another box. Not the massive crossroads we're talking about, but on a daily level. So give me an example. So at that time, you know, we were parting too much and I just closed that box. It didn't mean I stopped. I just pushed it to the week.
Starting point is 00:24:23 I mean, I dampened the indulgences. Yep. And then I started volunteering at San Francisco General Hospital. I'd take the BART, met some different people on the BART. It was a small change this way, small change that way. And at a neuroscience level, your brain is generating this electricity. It's never calm. The measurement is always on.
Starting point is 00:24:44 So either it's going to go this way or that way. It's got to be directed. Oh. It's not just going to rev down. I know a lot of people are going to say, no, I feel calm and clarity. But electrically, it's on. So I was just shifting it from indulgences to still something. captivating from one habit or practice to another. So that was some knobs I could turn that got me,
Starting point is 00:25:10 you know, out of, out of that pattern I was in that needed to change, which was, you know, growth mindset really for me. So is there a mindset that the person who's listening right now could start to build or practice that could help them go after more or shift things in their lives? So part of the playbook in my mind is first to be aware of what's going on in your life. So I think there's a lot of good advice out there, but there's like advice and real real world scenario mismatch. So you have to know, am I in a storm? Am I in a crisis right now? So there's advice.
Starting point is 00:25:52 And Mother Nature is like that. You know, there's a winter and there's a springtime. You've got to know where you're at. And so there was a time where I was just like, felt like I was drowning. And it's a crisis. Now I'm in crisis management mode. And my patients have that when they hear the C word. I had that.
Starting point is 00:26:11 And so there are some rules around that. So that's a mindset. And then there's a, okay, I'm not in crisis. Now I've got bandwidth. And now I want to take chances. I want to dare. I want to grow. I want to bring in these practices, whatever it is, meditation, taking walks,
Starting point is 00:26:26 all those things that I hear about, those are practices. They're not going to help you in a crisis. So this crisis is maneuvers. Amputation. Amputation. What can I get rid of? Survival. Breathing techniques to not freak out.
Starting point is 00:26:45 So the mindset is first asking yourself, am I in crisis or am I where I need maneuvers or is it springtime where there's some relative stability? and I need to come up with some practices that make me better for when the next crisis hits or for the changes I want to make. There's too much. Like, you know, when the crisis at that time with the neighbor and my mom, that's not a time for me to start taking up a meditation practice. You know, there's, or for patients, for my patients, it's not when they're diagnosed
Starting point is 00:27:15 or the first few weeks of surgery. It's survivorship. I had cancer a few years ago, but I can't stop thinking about it. So there's a different mindset for survivorship. and practices, and there's a different mindset for crisis and maneuvers during that time. I think that's the way to think about mindset is to first know where you're at. Otherwise, that flood of information, you don't know where to apply it, you know. I actually love that because I think a lot of times we skip over that step
Starting point is 00:27:47 and don't slow down long enough to just say, well, let me just even ask myself, what am I dealing with right now? Right. Because advice is going to be useless if you have no time to apply it or you are in crisis management mode. And you can come back to that. No, there's so many people who live and threaten their own home. You see, you know, when people get hurt, they come to hospital. I don't work in a clinic.
Starting point is 00:28:10 I work in a hospital. And it's, I think it would surprise people how many of us live. And you can't tell. It's rich, poor, you know, it's not like, you don't know. And so, again, that person has to identify. It looks like I got it all, but I'm under serious threat right now, and I need to have crisis management techniques, rules for survival rather than rules for self-improvement. Yes, that's very true.
Starting point is 00:28:39 And you've got to be very careful about what you decide you're going to amputate in those situations. Because it's easy for somebody who's not under threat to say, just get rid of the threat, but it's not so easy at times. Because it won't grow back. I mean, I went back to college. but those amputations lead to changes that are permanent for most people, whether there's relationships or careers and that sort of thing.
Starting point is 00:29:01 What would you say to somebody who feels very lost right now? And they're kind of thinking about, well, am I under threat or am I just kind of in this mode where I need to understand I got to make some intentional changes? I would say if you're feeling lost, I've been there, you know, and not in the distant past, you know. That's a place you'll find yourself often at life, especially if you want to engage life fully. I'm 53.
Starting point is 00:29:35 I've been working in a hospital since 25, 26. I have felt lost when I have searched for an outcome, like, rather than an opportunity. if you hitch your mental health or your self-worth or the story of your life to outcome, it's going to be frustrating. Either you're not going to be aiming high enough or you just kind of be constantly looking at it the wrong way. And so I saw that in Nicaragua where another friend of mine is the head of children's brain surgery at San Diego. we were doing surgery down there. And mom had taken a bus for like 20, like, man, I can't remember. Brought a kid with no shoes on.
Starting point is 00:30:27 And once she got her child just across almost like the threshold to the hospital, in a later conversation she would tell the nurse that she did it. That was the opportunity. It didn't matter what the outcome. That kid did well, but a lot of kids would cancel. don't do well. But she wasn't like, and if my son lives forever, and if my son is cured, in her mind that she had brought her child to a hospital, were brain surgeons from America. You know, America is a light. It had come to, and that she got her child in Nicaragua,
Starting point is 00:31:09 Nicaragua, two brain surgeons from America plus. And then so what I learned from there is don't count the wins, count the shots, you know. And so if you want to be unstuck, take some shots, but don't, you know, don't anchor yourself on the outcome if the shot goes in. Dr. Jondial, I am so grateful you're here, and I'm particularly grateful that you are with us right now listening or watching. Whether you're the one going through a difficult time or not, you know somebody who is. This episode is a life-changing resource, a reminder and frameworks for the people that you care about to be using right now. Please, while we take a short break, be generous.
Starting point is 00:31:54 Text the link to this conversation to your family group chat. Share this with friends of yours who are going through a difficult time because we all deserve to be reminded that we have within us the ability to use the tools that Dr. John Diole is sharing with us to get through the difficult moments. there is so much more that Dr. John Diel will teach us when we return from this short break. So stay with me. Welcome back at your friend Mel Robbins today.
Starting point is 00:32:32 You and I are learning frameworks and tools for how to get through some of life's most difficult moments with one of the most renowned cancer surgeons in the world. His name is Dr. John Dial. And I'm so thrilled that he's here. And I'm also excited to talk about some of the things that your patients have taught you about what's important about life. So one of the things that's interesting about your career is you have treated and operated on thousands and thousands of patients with a cancer diagnosis, with a life-ending diagnosis. What are some of the biggest takeaways about how to live a happy, fulfilling life that you've learned from your patients?
Starting point is 00:33:18 Yeah, so just for your, I love what I do, you know, I chose to do this when I had opportunities to take care of less sick people. You know, when you're a medical school, you choose sick or not sick, and then you choose procedure or not procedure. I do big operation. They come to me for operations, and they're extremely sick. and I take care of patients who have stage four cancer. And what we're trying to do is, is, you know, land this crashing airplane. And so it's, I don't have,
Starting point is 00:33:57 I don't have patients that I still know because they're gone. And so from, what, 2004 or five, I don't know, 25 years, I was younger than them, than I was the same age as them. Some of them are younger than me. I was growing up. I was raising three sons. They're in their 20s.
Starting point is 00:34:18 And I chose cancer surgery when I had an option of different types of surgery to do. And I know I'm a neurosurgeon or brain surgeon, but in my heart, I'm a cancer surgeon. And most cancer cures begin with surgery. And it's just so visceral. Like he's a, well, I love for my sons to be like father and cancer surgeon. And what you see during that process, in the beginning, you just try, you know, you're taking, you want to, you want to be the best of what you do. And you have to realize that this, you can never get the risk to zero. There will be turbulence on the way of the moon.
Starting point is 00:34:54 This is not a flight to San Francisco on Southwest where you expect to land it every time. You know what I'm saying? Like, so, that's, I know. You're like, he just went there. No, that's, that's, that's, but that's, that captures you're like, there will be turbulence, you know? And so you want to. And so what I realized is that, you know, I hurt people the least that this, this operation will have a 3 to 4% complication rate. And I'm trying to get it to 2.
Starting point is 00:35:20 I can't get it to 0, which means we'll have complications. And that you're still doing a service. I had a hard time wrapping my head around that because when you meet somebody and then they wake up and they can't talk, they can't move, you know, that it's been difficult, especially with children. And it's not an oops moment. You can't get it to zero if you're going to fly to the moon. You know, you will crash and burn sometimes. It's not a mistake. And so...
Starting point is 00:35:48 Well, the tumor you're trying to remove is done the damage. Right. And the art there is to get as much of the tumor out as you can, but not injure the person. See, that's the art of surgery is you're reverse sculpting. There are people who can take it all out, but the patient doesn't do well afterwards. And then there are some people who just go in there and don't take enough of it to give them the best lifespan.
Starting point is 00:36:13 We call it peek and shriek. They look at it. They're afraid that they pull back and that's okay. So the patient's perfect, but the cancer surgery hasn't been done to the highest level. And some people get all the cancer out, but then the patient wakes up injured. So there's a lot going on there. But complications for me were difficult because, you know, in children particularly because it felt like a failure. I didn't have the scale to understand that I'm going to try to help thousands of patients.
Starting point is 00:36:39 I've seen 15,000 operate on 5,000. And I'm trying to, I'm trying to be the best I can for that whole group of patients. I can't tell which one's going to have a complication or not. It's not an oops moment. That took me some time to wrap my head around that. And I only remove myself from that, whatever all of that caused me. first I was overly competitive or I was emotional. It was just a lot there. Until I started to see that maybe all of this was an opportunity for me to understand humanity,
Starting point is 00:37:14 to understand patience, to understand life, to understand suffering, and to write about it. So this thing that we're doing now in the last five, six years is what has helped me not get PTSD from all these sick people I've been taken care of is that they're sharing. their life with me as part of a fabric I'm stitching to share a story with other people. What has your patients who are near the end of their life, who come to you as a cancer surgeon taught you about living life now? More time with family, pursuing things, you know, reconciling, not reconciling. But what I'm seeing, what I have seen is that all of that is external.
Starting point is 00:38:03 And in the end, if they start talking and they say, I wish I had, they're not coping well. And then, but some of my others, they say, I'm glad I did. They're coping well. And I started to see this pattern that some of the ones doing the best in my mind. I'm like, you're doing great compared to some of the other people I'm saying. But their brain was stuck. their life story was stuck with, I wish I had. I wish I had gotten screening earlier.
Starting point is 00:38:37 I wish I had gone to a different place. I wish I had not smoked. I wish I had. And then there were others who weren't doing as well. You would think the people doing well are going to be like, I'm glad I did. But there's a mismatch there. It's a perspective on your life. It's your own, the story you write for yourself.
Starting point is 00:38:58 Well, Dr. John Diole, I want to really. unpack the mindset you just taught us. And I want to make sure as you're listening or watching that you didn't miss it. And it's the difference between having a mindset where you say, I wish I had, versus I'm glad I did. Can you just talk more about the power of that? I'm glad I did and what that means. Well, what I'm learning, yeah, and from my own life too, you know, that things haven't gone smoothly for me, but I'm glad I did drop out of college. I'm glad I did have a marriage.
Starting point is 00:39:41 I'm glad I did go into cancer surgery. And it's not because all those decisions went well, man, some of that stuff was painful. But, and it took effort because in those, it's not like I'm born with this disposition. I'm actually, I don't like school. I didn't like reading. And I always took a negative angle on everything.
Starting point is 00:40:05 And I was competitive and I felt easily slighted. I didn't begin with this, you know, I'm no sane. This is not about that. It's that it's been just a dial. I'm turning for a quarter century and choosing experiences that built my identity. But what I want people to know is those cancer patients are not false. into like, oh, posy disposition says, I'm glad I did. They're fighting for that. Their fight is not just with the cancer, but the fight is with the way we think about our world, our life,
Starting point is 00:40:43 because you don't know what's around the corner. There is no moment of arrival. There's only being prepared, having some strategies, some coping skills, right? So we're maturing through life. And then having the ultimate, ultimate gift is to write your own story in your own. own mind and not by other people. And that's what they're doing. Everybody's like, oh, how are you doing? You have cancer. They hate it. They're like, oh, if another person asked me about my cancer, you know, they wear wigs to hide all of that stuff. But in their mind when I see them, I can see the wheels turning that they're taking this imperfect life. And they're like 40s and 50s with cancer. Of course, that's, that's, that's, that feels like the worst look. But they don't, they don't come in
Starting point is 00:41:28 depressed. If you went into this, you would think, oh my God, it's got to be the saddest thing in the world. They're heroes. They come in, they come and dressed up. They're telling jokes. They found a way with a cancer diagnosis through effort, through faith, through spirituality, through friendship. They're directing their life story this way. Because if you don't, you're just going to spiral. And that's the responsibility, I think, that we have. in our position is to equip people with that, that there's no shortcut, but it's possible. There's no secret steps. Cancer patients have taught me that it's a direction of your psychological energy to write the story of your life as you want it told.
Starting point is 00:42:19 And more importantly, as you really embrace inside your own mind. Well, it's also, and I love that phrase, the direction of your psychological energy, both of the story that you want to be told, but also of the story you want to experience as it is unfolding. Because what you're also teaching us is that when it comes to things that are out of your control, and I think we can all agree, all of the decisions that we have made in the past are over, the cancer is here, the divorce has happened, the school has been dropped out of, the drinking for however many years of the, whatever it is, you cannot control what has happened, but you can control how you talk about it and how you look at it. And so even the framework that you use through your own life, you could have said, I wish I had never dropped out of college. I wish I had not gotten a divorce. I wish I had this. I wish I had that. Or you can say, I'm glad I did. I'm glad. I'm glad.
Starting point is 00:43:23 I'm glad I did because in that reframing, I'm glad I did. You have to force yourself to see either the lesson that you learned from it or the experiences that you could have only gained in it. And it's an active process. It is your prayer. It is your cognitive behavioral therapy. It is the argument you must make to yourself. And it's, I'm glad I did and then populate that with because of this good thing. happened. Then I met Mr. Jet. Then I met this. Then I did this. Or because I learned this.
Starting point is 00:43:58 Or I learned that. Right. Yes. You know, so it's not just four or five words or whatever. It's like it's, it's an approach to thinking. And so when you talk about cognitive behavioral therapy and that, you know, cognitive restructuring to looking at perceiving and looking at things. So these, these are consistent things between Marcus Aurelius and meditations and stoicism where people are talking about, you know, you feel what you allow. yourself to feel, or you have Buddha and Eastern philosophy, or you have cognitive behavioral therapy where it's cognitive restructuring and monitoring. It's all the same thing.
Starting point is 00:44:33 You're controlling the direction of your psychological energy. Either you are focusing on something and focus, like holding your breath is a skill that you can learn, or you are learning to be non-judgmental and let all these experiences pass you, like little boats on a river and not biting on everything. For me, it was both. I was biting on too much when I was young, wilding out, reactive, impulsive. So I had to learn that there's a temporal nature. Like, I know something's coming up that I can't deal with, and I need to brace myself for it.
Starting point is 00:45:06 So there are strategies directing your focus. I wish I did in filling that bucket. And then also using that focus to actively monitor but not judge. These are Buddhist and behavioral therapy techniques. This is, so all, what I'm seeing is all of these different things that the people are hearing in the wellness community, on a practical level, my cancer patients are doing it. And it all comes down to the direction of your psychological energy. And amputating something from your life is another tool. Because if you are filling your life with too many things. Absolutely. I always say, if everything's important, nothing is. Well, that's what we talked about. Yes. Amputating something.
Starting point is 00:45:52 thing pulls the direction of your psychological energy toward the things that matter. Because your psychological energy is limited. It's not infinite. And it has to be matched to your real world scenario. If everything's good, distribute all of that juice to all the good stuff. But sometimes you've got to brace for the storm. When I operate, sometimes I'll come around a corner on a tumor and there'll be a blood vessel. And I know there's four more hours of work that just kicked up and there's a risk for the patient. And I got to. I got to go into escape the free fall mode. So this is a very practical thing.
Starting point is 00:46:28 Whether you are a Navy SEAL or complex surgeon, or you get that email that says, we have layoffs and I need to see you tomorrow. You know when it hits you, the best thing you can do is control your breathing. And what you want is at that time just to pace your breathing. Okay. So that's what I do in surgery. that's what Navy SEALs do. That's what deep divers do.
Starting point is 00:46:56 And that's what people, that's the built-in resource. The simplest way that I had somebody explain to me, it's like, oh, so you don't hyperventilate and panic because hyperventilation leads to panic. So at that time when you want to panic, and what you're doing is first, you're directing your psychological energy to controlling a reflex that's called
Starting point is 00:47:21 breathing. And so you're practicing your focus, your ability to focus. It's a skill. Attentional power is what I call it. And then number two, what you're doing is you're relying on a physiological mechanism that prevents hyperventilating and those slow, deep breaths. The whole science that I can explain is going to keep you from having hyper-excitability of your limbic system. The point is, do not let you. yourself breathe too fast, when you blow off the carbon dioxide, you will panic. Then you will not be able to deliver your maneuvers. So for me in surgery, or whenever you're about to go into a difficult situation, maybe you've got in a fight, you know, you've got to talk to a lover about
Starting point is 00:48:06 breaking up or whatever. Just coming with pace breathing. And it's a few seconds in, it's a few seconds in, it's a few seconds out. Now, what I will tell you is, if you think you're going to do that when you get robbed, it's not there for you. Because you haven't rehearsed. seeing it. You haven't made that ritual. So when I parked my car in my spot, and so that's the mindset, that's the playbook for when the crisis is. Well, Dr. John D'all, what I like a lot about what you said, there's a lot to unpack, is this concept of controlling the direction of your psychological energy and attentional power. And the power that you have, even in the storm around you, whether that's a patient that comes to you
Starting point is 00:48:53 and gets a terrifying diagnosis, or it's the email that you get, that layoffs are coming and there's a meeting tomorrow, or the sound of somebody saying, I don't love you anymore, this is over. Like, so many moments. What I really appreciated about what you said was just simplifying it down to slow,
Starting point is 00:49:21 down your breathing, don't worry about technique or seconds or just in slowly, out slowly. And I also loved that you are suggesting that there are moments throughout your day that you can leverage attentional power and settle yourself and calm yourself or even create an intentional transition, whether it's before you get out of the car, you're just going to breathe in and breathe. And there's nothing going on. Five minutes. Yeah, that's it. There's nothing going on before you walk into the house. Before you walk into the room, you're just going to breathe in and breathe out. And what you're saying is if you start to leverage this little tool in your life before it's going sideways. It'll be there for you when shit goes sideways for real.
Starting point is 00:50:05 Yes. Because we all know the more emotional and reactive we get, the more screwed we are. Yeah, you got to practice. Game time is not going to be the only time, right, that you want to run those drills. So it's practical. And again, cancer patients are doing it. Navy SEALs, and it's there, it's free, it's universal, it's for all of us. And there is a, just briefly, you know, there is an anatomical connection that sort of mediates
Starting point is 00:50:31 all of that. It's not, it's not woo-woo. I mean, we- What's happening? Like, at the highest level, what's happening when you breathe in and you intentionally, like, control the direction of your psychological energy by suddenly? You're releasing your own, the pharmacy in your mind. You're releasing your own volume and your, it's an anxiolytic. So we always hear about, Just to get a little science to you right, we hear about a lot of neurotransmitters, but it's a big cocktail up there. And a lot of neurotransmitters will actually depress the electrical energy of your mind a bit. They're excitatory, but there are also some that are the depressive, and that's called GABA.
Starting point is 00:51:08 It's used in Valium to actually break seizures out of control brain, electricity. And so what is clearly demonstrated out there, whether you tickle the vagus nerve here, or you control it naturally with pace breathing, you're increasing the release of GABA that's sitting there already in your brain and mind. That's the science behind it. It's not even exotic. It just hasn't been explained. That's super cool. Thank you for sharing that. And I want to thank you for spending time, listening, or watching this right now because I know that everything that Dr. John D'all is sharing with you and me has the ability to change your life. So thank you for being here. Thank you for sharing. this with the people in your mind that keep popping up and don't go anywhere. We have so much more
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Starting point is 00:53:27 Mel, plus there's a 30-day money-back guarantee. Welcome back at your friend Mel Robbins. Today, you and I have the extraordinary honor of spending time learning from Dr. John Deall, and he's teaching us all of these frameworks that he's learned as a cancer surgeon about getting through some of life's most difficult situations and really leveraging the power. of your attention to focus on what truly matters. So Dr. John D'all, I would love to have you share what you have heard your patients talk about in terms of what matters most about life when time is limited and what kind of comes into focus that people wish they had prioritized more.
Starting point is 00:54:19 They're on a mission. Many of them have children. They're not even thinking about a cure. they have said to me, and it's been my experience. I understand a lot of cancer surgeons out there, doctors, a lot of patients. I'm just telling you what I'm seeing, their prayer is just that they make it to where the kids finish high school and get out of the home because they don't want their children to see their mom pass away while they're in high school. It's a specific finish line that they're going for. You would think, no, they don't want to cure.
Starting point is 00:54:49 They're just like, this is what I really need. The older ones, when the kids have moved on and they've got their own. lives and, you know, they forget to call on Mother's Day or Father's Day and you have that fuss, whatever. Their perspective is more that, again, when it didn't hurt anybody, that they wish they would have been more bold with their hunches and their instinct, that maybe I should change my direction. Maybe I should, this isn't working for me.
Starting point is 00:55:18 Maybe, maybe, all those maybes that were like, you know, that were almost like a 50-50 or a 60, 40, it's a choice because it's unclear. Do you want to win the lottery? No choice. Thanks, I'll take it. You know, it's not choices are because it's a crossroads and it was unclear. So it's not so much the amputation I talked about because that's more of crisis choices. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:41 It's more of the subtle meandering through life, you know. Maybe I should have lived here rather than there. Maybe I should have done this rather than that. They felt like they weren't, they could have been more bold in pursuing. their hunches and their instincts. They never say, who, I'm glad I was practical and conservative. I mean, maybe not never.
Starting point is 00:56:02 But you know what I'm saying, though. I know what you're saying. Because then they look back and they say it's a short run. I should have taken a few more chances, as long as they're not like, you know, hurting other people or, you know, gambling it all the way. But it's the subtle navigation in their life.
Starting point is 00:56:17 They wish they were, at all the pivots, they wish they would have been a little bit more emphatic and bold. That's my, that's what I'm seeing. So I would love to have you speak directly to a family member who may be listening or a loved one who has somebody in their life who is dealing with an illness. What do you want the person who's the caretaker to know Dr. John Diel? That if you find yourself in the most trying and difficult situation, you're not a lot of hard. alone. Now, the person next you may not have been there, but they will in the future. And the person next to you might look like they're coping, but they could have endured that in the past. And that
Starting point is 00:57:09 our struggles and our triumph at the level of the brain are quite similar. So you're not alone. And there are resources for you to get through this with support, with love, with direction, but ultimately is those private moments in your life that you only share with yourself that you need to prioritize. I would imagine that given how much surgery you do, how many patients you've treated with cancer, that you've just seen extraordinary resilience. What have you learned about resilience and that human beings are so many times just so much stronger than they think they are? So it's a word that's been bugging me for a long, bugging me for a long time because it's not what it's throwing off. It's just throwing around.
Starting point is 00:58:01 Like, I don't even know what it means anymore, you know, but. What does resilience mean to you? Well, there's an engineering definition, which is the ability to return from deformation or like a bridge shifts and it comes back. Then there's a psychological definition that is, that's more appropriate. And that's, resilience doesn't mean just coming back to what you were. it means coming back stronger, more fortified. And so in the psychological sense, there are two types of resilience,
Starting point is 00:58:29 and they're systemic and processive. Systemic means what you're bringing to the fight because of all those, the cyclical nature of crisis and springtime, crisis and growth, struggle and growth, that you've banked, that you've rehearsed your skills on. So now you're bringing something to the next fight,
Starting point is 00:58:52 the next struggle, But then there is also a processive resilience, which is what the fight brings out in you. They're not tough until they get hit. They're not tough and resilient until they face the cancer diagnosis. And I've seen that. You think people are like, oh, they're going to fall apart inside your mind. And the crisis brings out something in them. I like to feel like that's what happened in my life at age 19.
Starting point is 00:59:23 And that's a tricky thing to say because I don't want cancer. I don't want these things. None of my patients do. But it's what you bring the fight. But if you're not doing well, this fight is training you. So you're not lost no matter how you're dealing with your life. Either you're practicing and feeling good about coping or, hey, this is rocking your world and teaching you a lot that's going to prepare you for what's coming up. Dr. John Deal, what are the best recoveries that you've seen in terms of like the things that they have in common?
Starting point is 00:59:59 Or even if it's not a recovery, the best meeting of the moment. So sometimes cancers and injury will paralyze, like Christopher Regal paralyzed, or sometimes your legs are paralyzed, but they have their arms. The injuries like around their belly button and the brain can't talk to the legs and the legs can't send sensation up to the brain. and some of those injuries are either total and there's no chance or some are partial. They've got flicker of movement. And the lesson there for patients and people is it's in the first three months that they get the bulk of their function back. The ones that get it back the most are the ones that are sitting there trying to move
Starting point is 01:00:44 their leg and the leg isn't moving. They are sending electrical signals through the damaged spinal. cord landing on the muscles ready to go, it's just not getting the spark. So they are directing their psychological energy towards moving a leg that won't listen. And they do it and they do it and they do it. And there's nobody there. It's not when physical therapy comes in. And then I, because I see them in gaps. And all of a sudden, they're coming back with movement. And it's all of that work they did when they saw no result. Just imagine just trying to flicker your foot. And it doesn't. And it doesn't move.
Starting point is 01:01:21 And you're still trying. You're still trying. You're still trying. So the recoveries that impress me are not biological. It's, and I was telling them, you're training for the Olympics. This is boot camp. This is the window to go for it. Things won't look like they're moving.
Starting point is 01:01:39 But the continued effort is the only way you will spring back to life in your legs. And so those are the kind of things I wish people would know is, There's a lot out there. And the inspiring thing is if the injured brain can heal. And I don't mean heal like some magical thing. I mean, and it doesn't regrow. It's not liver. You don't pop up a new part of your brain.
Starting point is 01:02:02 But if the injured brain can recover, but what about our healthy brain? So, Dr. John Diel, after watching people recover, like you just described, from a devastating brain trauma, What do you wish everybody understood about how change truly happens in life, in the brain, in general? Well, I think we can go backwards. We can talk about it in the brain and therefore life.
Starting point is 01:02:32 Sometimes children will have seizures so ferocious from both sides that they have to be on a ventilator. Otherwise, they can't live. And the only option, exhausted through everything else, is to remove nearly half of their brain. It's called people can look it up. It's a hemispherectomy. And usually it's on the right side because language is on the left. So you take the right side. The surgery is done.
Starting point is 01:02:56 They're able to wake up because you took the right side, the left arm and left leg is out. It's paralyzed. And then, you know, it's a large part of the brain that you've removed. You're removing a hemisphere. It's like, and this has been going on for a long time. So I'm bringing insights from all different facets of my life and things that I'm reading. Then a couple of years later, an extreme example to set the precedent, they'll come back walking. It happens in children, do more difficult in adults. And what's interesting there is
Starting point is 01:03:31 when you take a brain scan, it's hollow. The part that you cut out is just filled with brain fluid. It didn't grow back. The leftover neurons repurposed. The dance. The dance became the soldier. It's the neuron, you didn't grow. So I always get thrown off when people are like rewire plastic. I don't understand what that means because these kids, they don't regrow that part we took out. It stays hollow. What's left over does a new job, does takes on new functions and such. And the way that happens is with this thing called myelination. So the, when we're going to get into that, why how change happens is if you have a sudden, if you do something, once, you know, the way it works is, you know, why change for that? Because it's unlikely to
Starting point is 01:04:21 happen again. But the constant direction of psychological and energy will make the original effort not have to, will not have to be as strong once you deposit myelin. So just stay with me for a little bit. So the neurons are like molecular microscopic jellyfish here. spraying electricity at each other. And the way, once you think a certain way, once you behave a certain way to reduce the energy usage, they'll start wrapping omega-3s as fatty sheets like insulation around the tentacles. Okay, so think of it as like if you keep going down the same groove from the top of a mountain and you tend to fall down that groove, well, there's a cellular basis for that. And the brain will do that as a response because it wants to now, you know,
Starting point is 01:05:23 have this action occur without using up so much fuel, efficiency, neural efficiency. Otherwise, we're using up so much fuel just to tie our shoelaces. At some point, you want to tie your shoelaces. Not really think about it. And when people get Alzheimer's, they can still tie their shoelaces. They can still ride a bite, right? Because it was efficiently deposited. So change. change takes constant but moderate effort. It's not like one big effort. It's not 10 hours to throw on the baseball to learn it. It's better to do 15 minutes a day.
Starting point is 01:05:55 And those are the molecular cues for the omega-3 fatty acids that we all want to eat from salmon and brain diet to take the positive habits that you built and make them more likely to occur, to shift from the bad grooves down the mountain to the mountain to the new grooves that you've made, that shift takes effort, but it's not lifelong effort. You put in a hard couple of months to make that change. Now, that change gets easier to do. Then you take on another change. You do another minus one plus one like we talked about incrementally. What's one like big epiphany from all the brain surgeries that you've done that has changed the way you see human possibility. I will tell you the recently it's not it's not from brain surgery.
Starting point is 01:06:48 You know what when your heart stops beating there's still another couple of minutes where your brain is sparking electricity spraying neuro transmitters it's still going that last surge gives it enough glucose and oxygen and when your heart stops After cardiac death, there is not electrical silence in the brain. And those one or two minutes, the brain isn't like whimpering, like, the last thing the brain will do is launch all of its electricity and chemicals and a giant salvo fireworks and then stop. So it's not like other organs where they go down, there's not like a,
Starting point is 01:07:33 it's not like decremental. Slowly the heart stops beating, slowly the liver. slowly the liver turns, changes color. The brain, when it gets its last pulse of blood, will just fire off. And a lot of that electricity looks like dreaming and expansive memories and that sort of things. And that might explain why if those people come back, they all share the same film strip of their life.
Starting point is 01:07:55 That's cool. And that's a measurement. That's not my opinion. That's super cool. Yeah. That's super cool. I would love to talk more about some of the things that you personally, do every single day. You know, you are a cancer surgeon. You're a father of three adult boys.
Starting point is 01:08:17 You've had so many, like, just unbelievable twists and turns to your life. You're one of the most decorated cancer surgeons around. What are the most important daily rituals to you that really help you? Or what's the single most important daily ritual that you have? The single most important daily ritual I have is that at several times in the day, I rehearse my attentional focus by pacing my breathing. It trains my mind to focus and it trains me to get ready for that what's around the corner. Because when it arrives, when crisis arrives, it's not when you really want to pull something out of your rusty toolkit. You know, you want to have that sharpened. And why I think that's important is when I can cultivate my attentional power,
Starting point is 01:09:10 then that attentional power is useful for other things. And I'm able to shift it. Like when I'm driving, I'm like, okay, I'm thinking about my next book. I'm going to listen to some music and to rock out a little bit. I'm going to deliver attention to this. So that five minutes of directing my attention, pacing my breathing, you know, keeps the reins on where my mind is headed and that way I can deploy it in a strategic fashion. I want to have you walk me and the person that's listening or watching right now through how we could start this five-minute practice ourselves because it makes a lot of sense to me that I think most of us go through life probably on autopilot feeling super distracted, our attention pulled all over the place, putting fires up. How do we
Starting point is 01:09:55 implement this today? What do we do? Step one, try. You know, step two, it doesn't, have to be some private place because a lot of your crises and a lot of your tension is is stolen when things are wild right it's not going to be in a yoga studio or in a quiet room so randomly at times during the day where you think you're stressed out or about to be stressed out or walking into a stressful situation just sort of set a timer in your mind it could be a song like i like i like to go for there's a certain song i use or it could be a timer on your phone and just through your nose, it doesn't have to be one nostril. I mean, all of that, it's all going in the same place. And through your nose, just try to breathe in for three, four seconds, hold, hold for a few
Starting point is 01:10:41 seconds, and then slowly exhale, and then pause for something, and then do that again. Let's see if you can get 10 of those. See if you get 20 of those. And if you're in public and stuff, and you don't want people to know you're doing that, like in surgery, like, because my mask, my mask will fog up if I use my mouth. I wrote about that. that. Like, in the beginning when I was learning, I was like, I was like, and we wear these glasses that are magnifying glass. It's like fogging up and the nurses would tease me. They're like, hey, you're freaking out over there. I was like, no, I'm not. So I, you know, I only use my nose. And what I'm trying to tell you is this overlaps with Buddhist meditation, pace breathing,
Starting point is 01:11:24 directing, you have to try. You're directing your attention to do this. You're pulling your attention from something that's been spiraling and driving you crazy. So already you're redirecting your psychological energy to something positive. And so the attentional power is really a skill you can cultivate. People can learn to hold their breath. You can learn to hold your attention. I want to make sure that you got that. And so I'm going to translate it. And if I miss something, you tell me. Okay. So basically, it's as simple as it sounds. Practicing and building the skill of attentional power is simply at any moment. And you could do it right now.
Starting point is 01:12:05 You could do it sitting in your car. You could do it lying in bed in the morning. You could do it sitting at your desk. You could do it before you walk into a room. Attentional power is bringing your attention to your breathing. And you just recommend in through the nose. Out through the nose. Out through the nose.
Starting point is 01:12:23 It's not as easy as you think. When I first started, like four breaths later, of like, do something. So that is what... Try 10. Try 10, you're saying. Try to do it 10 times. Like, you could do it standing in line at the grocery store.
Starting point is 01:12:35 Yeah, especially standing in line in the grocery store, or whatever it is. But here's what you're going to notice is that as you're standing in line at the grocery store and like, okay, I'm going to practice attentional power since I just heard this. And I'm not going to look at my phone. I'm just going to practice intentional power. You can only pay attention to one thing at a time.
Starting point is 01:12:54 And so by focusing on your breathing in, pause, out, pause, in pause, this is how you build the skill. This is how you, and controlling your attention is a part of meditative practices from Eastern philosophy. It's a part of when people say get therapy, when you see your therapist and they talk about cognitive behavioral therapy, you know, you have to divert your attention to argue against the life narrative you're writing. you have to divert your attention to do non-judgmental monitoring, they call it, don't react, don't react. All of it takes attention. And so this skill, push-ups will help you open a heavy door, focusing on your breathing like this and your private moments during the day, will help you with all of the other things you're trying to do because it harnesses your attention. Could you speak directly to the person who's with us right now who's going through an extraordinarily difficult? moment. So they're in the crisis mode. Dr. John Diel, what do you want them to know? You're not alone.
Starting point is 01:13:58 Crisis hits our brains and minds in a similar way, and there are approaches to dealing with crisis that we've talked about today in the moment, as well as when you go home, set your guardrails. Don't make a decision tonight in crisis that you can't take back. And then the next day is when you have to sort of turn to others to come up with a plan to get through this difficult moment. How has what you do for a living and the patience that you've treated changed you? I'm a lot less judgmental, you know. I just, you know, when you're younger, you place your emotions on other people. you think you know what other people are thinking or you feel underestimated and all of that stuff and it just feels foolish and immature to me now because after this many patients and all
Starting point is 01:14:58 these all of their stories what I've seen is that don't judge the rich don't judge the poor you don't know what they're going through you don't know what's what's happening in their lives they're in line with you next to you you don't know cancer patients have taught me that It's not what you think when you care for them because a lot of times they don't share. A lot of times they keep it inside. I just think somebody on the freeway is probably short with them or something. They have no idea they're just driving home right now after hearing. They got cancer.
Starting point is 01:15:34 If you had to just distill everything that you've shared with us today from this playbook, the mindset frameworks, the attention. intentional power, directing your psychological energy, some of the real truths about life, into the most important takeaway for the person who's listening, what would it be? You know, there is no final moment of arrival. This life is not linear. It's cyclical. And, you know, in the springtime of your day or your life relish it.
Starting point is 01:16:16 enjoy it. And during the difficult times, there are strategies and approaches that can help you cope and help you survive. It's not you alone in the dark, you know, trying to grab for a life vest. People have been here and they've left their mark by guiding us on how to deal with that as best as we can. Well, I really appreciate you leaving your mark. and guiding us in an extraordinary way. Dr. John Diel, what are your parting words? Life is beautiful because it's difficult. It's nothing guaranteed, nothing promised.
Starting point is 01:17:02 Make the run you can. Relish the good times too. That's also a life skill. Yes. Well, the good times are the average Tuesday. Like if you can't enjoy an average Tuesday, then you miss the good times. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:17 Well, this was extraordinary, and I'm going to borrow from one of your really powerful frameworks and say, I am glad you did get on a plane and you did come here. And you shared all this because I know that my life will be forever change and I know that I speak on behalf of the person that's with us and everybody they share it with, their lives will be changed too. Yeah, I'm glad I did too. Thank you, Mel.
Starting point is 01:17:47 Thank you. And thank you for taking the time. You put your attentional power to something that is going to help you create a better life. There is no doubt if you take anything from this and apply it, and I hope you share it with people that you care about. You will be able to manage the very difficult seasons of your life, and you will be glad that you did. already in case nobody else tells you i want to be sure to tell you as your friend that i love you and i believe in you and i believe in your ability to create a better life and when you do i know you'll be glad that you did i'll welcome you in to the very next episode the moment you hit play i'll see you there god it's amazing how dirty they get because i don't ever recall touching them it's like they're snaring it it's wild just like where did that slick come from i i didn't i didn't touch the lens. Is that what I'm walking through the air into? Spindrift is colored? I didn't know that.
Starting point is 01:18:51 I guess I always drink it out of the can. I've never poured it in glass. I don't mean to stare at you in a creepy way. I'm trying to like hold so they have a little more room to cut. Trying to do my job, Cameron. Thank you, Mel. You're welcome. If our past don't cross again, I really, uh, valuable last hour and a half. Well, I, they're going to cross again. What do you mean if? Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper.
Starting point is 01:19:21 This is the legal language. You know what the lawyer's right and what I need to read to you. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist. And this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it?
Starting point is 01:19:47 Good. I'll see you in the next episode.

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