The Mindset Mentor - 7 Simple Habits That Transformed My Life
Episode Date: November 3, 2025What if the biggest changes in your life don’t come from huge decisions but from tiny, daily habits? In this episode, I share the seven small, almost invisible practices that have completely transfo...rmed my life over time. Feeling stuck? It's time to take back control. If you're ready to master your mind and create real, lasting change, click the link below and start transforming your life today. 👉 http://coachwithrob.com The Mindset Mentor™ podcast is designed for anyone desiring motivation, direction, and focus in life. Past guests of The Mindset Mentor include Tony Robbins, Matthew McConaughey, Jay Shetty, Andrew Huberman, Lewis Howes, Gregg Braden, Rich Roll, and Dr. Steven Gundry. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Welcome to today's episode of the Mindset Mentor podcast.
I'm your host, Rob Dial.
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Today, I'm going to be talking about seven simple habits that transformed my life
because some of the biggest changes that I've had in my life didn't come from big decisions.
They came from simple, almost invisible habits that I started doing at one point in my life.
And then over time, they compounded and I didn't even really realize the impact of them.
And I'm not talking about trends or hacks or get rich.
quick type stuff. I'm talking about these subtle daily actions that reprogrammed the way that I
think, the way that I feel, and the way that I act in my life. So if you've ever felt stuck or
overwhelmed or like you're just surviving in some sort of way, these habits will change your
daily life completely. And it might just be the shift that you've been needing. So let's dive into
them. Number one is I check my screen time on my phone every single day. Now, I've actually
taking it one step further and I actually have it on my iPhone as a widget so it is the very first
thing that I see when I open my phone. So immediately when I open my phone, I see the widget that
says exactly how much time I have spent on my phone today and I have to swipe left to get past
it to see anything. And I want you to understand I'm not anti-phone. I'm not anti-entertainment. I'm not
anti-technology as I get older, and I realize that my life is getting shorter and shorter and
shorter, I am more pro-presence than anything else. I know that I will not get to the end of my life
and wish that I spent more time on my phone than wish I spent more time on Instagram or on
TikTok. And so I am trying to give myself tricks so that when I see my phone, when I use my
phone, I'm like, I need to get off this thing as soon as possible, and I need to go experience my
life. Because when I get to the end of my life, I am going to wish that I spent more time with my
wife. I'm going to wish that I spent more time with my son. When I'm in my deathbed, I'm going to be
thinking about the shit that I do today in wishing that I was back here. And so the worst thing that I
could do is spend my fucking time on my phone when at the end of my life, I'm going to wish that I was
right back in the day that I'm in today.
And so one of the things that's really changed me and reprogrammed the way that I interact my phone
is by checking my screen time every single day. And then for those of you guys that have iPhones
and you can do this, you might be able to do it on other phones, Android's as well. Make it a widget
so that you are consciously aware and presented with how much time you spent on your phone
today. And you watch that number go down, go down, go down, go down, go down, go down.
And I watch you go from five hours a day because I work on my phone a lot too, five hours to
four hours to three hours to two and a half hours, which means I'm getting a whole lot more
of my life back. So that's the first thing. First habit that's very important to me. The second thing
is this thing that I call never miss two days. A successful life, whatever you think success means,
it could be happiness, joy, money, success, accomplishments, whatever it might be. It's not usually
built on these big, massive, life-changing events. It's built. A successful life is built
from being consistent with whatever it is.
Working out or getting some form of movement every single day
is going to figure, you're going to figure out in some sort of way
how to actually start to lose weight and get into the shape that you want to
or how to gain muscle and get into the shape that you want to.
To be consistent and decide to do the hard thing every single day.
To be consistent and to make sure that you take time to be with your children
every single day without your phone or without distractions
and to give them your time and your presence.
sure that you take time and you're consistent with taking time with your spouse every single day
and giving them your time and your attention and your love. In some days, I understand a wrench can
just be thrown in our plans and you don't get the work out. You don't do the work that you need to.
You don't spend as much time with your children as you want to. You don't spend as much time
with your spouse as you want to. But the key to this is never miss two days. If I screwed up
yesterday, then I'm not going to screw up today, and I'm going to plan to make sure that what I
need to get accomplished in order to make my life better and to be more consistent happens today.
You know, you're going to miss days. That's just the way that it goes, but never miss two days.
If you start missing two days, what you're doing is you're building a new habit. And so if you want to be
successful in anything in life, it requires consistency. So what that means is that I can miss a day,
but I will never miss two days. And that's it. So that's number two.
Number three is I have, over the past few years, bookmarked my day with gratitude.
I used to be really big on having a morning routine.
To be honest with you, I think morning routines are great, but I'm not that big on morning
routines anymore.
They're great.
But, you know, if I have to wake up and check off 14 things on my to-do list to feel good
in the morning, if I have to rely on a morning routine to have a good day, then I'm building
fragility.
I'm making myself fragile.
If I'm going, well, I'm not going to have a good day today because I didn't get my meditation in
or I'm not having a good day today because I didn't get my journaling session in.
Like meditation, working out journaling, all of those things, they're great.
They change your life.
They're all amazing things.
But the one thing that is the most important to me that has had the biggest shift in my life
and my mentality is focusing on gratitude.
And so what I do is I spend five minutes.
That's it.
Five minutes every single day.
No phone.
in silence by myself thinking of the things that I am grateful for in my life because all too often
with our negativity bias that is built into the human circuitry of our brain we will find the things
to be wrong in our life the things that are not going the way that we want to and so that in turn
will make us very negative if we don't and so in order for me to overcome my own personal
negativity bias I spend five minutes every single day at least for the past few years
thinking about what I'm grateful for.
It can be little teeny, tiny things.
It can be really big things.
It's all over the board.
I do it every single morning,
and it's kind of like you can call it a meditation.
You can call it a prayer.
You can call it whatever it is that you want.
Five minutes focusing on what I'm grateful for.
And then the very last thing that I do before I go to bed
is focus on the things that I am grateful for
and say thank you for everything that I have to be grateful for as well.
Sometimes it's the same thing in the morning
and it's the same thing at night.
sometimes there's some different things in there, but here's what I have found in the way that
it's actually changed me. When I wake up and I focus on gratitude, I switch my negativity bias off
just a little bit in my brain. Instead of finding things throughout my entire day that aren't going
the way that I want to, that aren't, the ways that I'm behind are the things that I want that I don't
have. I'm actually starting my day focusing on what I do have and what I'm grateful for.
And then I go through the rest of my day and I just start noticing more things that I'm grateful for
that I have versus things that I don't have and my lack and my loss and my desires. And then when I go to
bed, I'm basically programming my subconscious mind because I'm about to go into sleep, you know,
the unconscious mind to think about the things that I'm grateful for and remind myself how great
my life actually is. And so the thing that I do every single day, no matter what, is I bookend
in the beginning and the evening gratitude. It's it. Very simple. And it completely changed the way
that I look at my life. So that's number three. Number four is something that I call the five
minute rule. The five minute rule is something that was taught to me when I was 20 years old by my very
first coach that I was working with. And basically, the five minute rule is this. It is when something
goes wrong or doesn't go the way that you want to, you have five minutes. You set a timer on your
phone to yell, to scream, to kick, to throw an adult temper tantrum to get a pillow and to
beat the bed as hard as you possibly can. And when that timer goes off, you're done. You go on
with the next thing. And the reason why this is good is because, number one, a lot of times what we do
if we have a victim mentality is we will find something that pisses us off and will be pissed off
for the entire day and for the entire week and for the entire month. This is basically saying you
have five minutes to throw an adult temper tantrum, do whatever it is that you want. Don't hurt other
people, obviously. But throw your adult temper transom if you want to. And then move on
with your life. And we will be right back. And now, back to the show. On the other side of that,
for the people who don't express their emotions, we have learned to push our emotions down.
And when you push something down, it's actually called depressing. When you depress something
that is you pushing something down. And we wonder why so many people have so much depression
nowadays because we have been taught to push our emotions down, to push them down, to act like
they're not there to brush it under the rug as if it's just going to go away. Emotions need to be
expressed. And if they're not expressed, they will be depressed. And that will help us become
depressed as well. And so the idea of this is with the five minutes is you get to express the
emotion, get it out of your body, and then get on with your life. And so the five minute rule,
you have five minutes when something doesn't go right to cry, cry, kick, scream, yell,
curse, throw your adult temper tantrum, when your alarm goes off, get on with your life. That's number
four. Number five is this rule that I've created that is called be bored for three minutes.
When I find myself being bored, which happens multiple times a day where I'm sitting there and I'm
like, I need to entertain myself. I need to get my phone. I need to go do this. I need to go do
some more work. What I will do is instead of just immediately going to my phone or to work is I will
take three minutes, and if I don't on my phone next me, I'll just guess three minutes, three minutes
to sit in boredom and do nothing. Because I want you to understand if I am noticing that I don't
want to be bored and then I immediately go and entertain myself, what I am doing is I am building
the muscle of being reactive. And so many of us are so reactive to other people, to other people's
emotions, to other things that happen to us that we're constantly just, we're just like squirrels
running around. We don't really have any place to go. We're here. We're left and we're right.
We're left and right. We're all over the place. So when I find myself wanting to entertain myself
or I need to make sure that I go do something for work, whatever it is, and I'm like, oh my God,
I go do this. Oh my God, I go to go do this. And like three minutes. Stop trying to be entertained.
if I'm, you know, if I'm sitting there, sometimes I'll go, you know what, I'm just going to
sit here and do absolutely nothing. Sometimes I go, you know what, I'm going to go for a walk for 15
minutes. And I'm not going to bring my phone. I'm not going to listen to a podcast. I'm not
going to have my headphones in. I'm going to listen to nothing. And I am going to build up the muscle
of being okay with being bored. And so be bored for three minutes is my habit around that.
The sixth thing that's a habit that's really changed my life a lot is to actually,
create phone hours. We all have like work hours. Okay, yeah, I work from 9 o'clock until 5 o'clock.
But very rarely have I found people set phone hours. They have boundaries with other people in their
life. They have boundaries with work. They have no boundaries with their phone. And so what I recommend
is that you actually have a time where you're, okay, you know, if I work from 9 to 5, then I can use
my phone between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. And then I have 12 hours.
where I don't and it might be you know different for you because you might not want to have
your phone most soon as you get home from work and be present with your family whatever it is
create your phone hours another thing that that's really important for me as far as my phone
hours go is I do not look at my phone for an hour after waking up my phone when I go to
sleep it's next to me but it's on airplane mode and I do not take it off airplane mode for at least
at least one hour after I wake up another thing that I built into my schedule and I've started to do
over the past probably six months is one day a week, absolutely no phone. So it's usually Sunday
for myself and my wife. We usually go to the same place for breakfast or one of the same three places
for breakfast. I know how to drive there. I don't really need to look at my phone for it. So I'm like,
hey, let's just leave our phones at home. It's me. It's you. It's the baby. We're going to go have
some fun. And we're just going to be present. And then after that, guess we're going to do. We're going to
go to a farmer's market. And guess what? I can pay with my credit card. I don't have to pay with my phone.
And so create some sort of phone hours so that you start to distance yourself from this thing that
everybody else is getting addicted to. So that's number six. And the number seven is every day I close out
my work day. I have realized that I have very crappy boundaries when it comes to work. And it's been
that way because I created my first business 20 years ago. And I just learned that work pours into
everything. I don't want to bring work into my family time and I don't want to bring it into my free time.
And so what I do is I mentally and physically close out my work day as if we're shutting it down
and we're done for the day.
So what I will do takes literally three minutes to do this is I will write down everything
that I accomplished for the day so that I can look back and see my wins for the day.
Okay, I did this, I did this, I did this.
Wow, that was amazing.
I did get a lot further than I thought I did today.
The next thing that I'll do is I will write down my biggest priorities for tomorrow.
So there's definitely almost all, like I've never gotten a to-do list done in my entire life.
just so you guys know. There's always something from today that carries into tomorrow.
And so I'm going to write down what are my three biggest priorities for tomorrow and the
things that I really need to concentrate on. And then what I do is I do this. I close my computer
and out loud, I say, and I say this out loud on purpose because it's like a switch inside
of my brain because I'm saying it, but I'm also hearing myself say it as I say, you know,
I write down all the stuff. This is what I accomplished. These are things I need to do tomorrow.
I close my computer and I say, I'm done with work for the day.
That's it.
And it's a mental way to be like, hey, work is done.
I have boundaries.
I'm not going to answer emails.
I'm not going to answer text messages.
I'm going to enjoy this thing that's outside of work and my phone and those things that
we could caught up in and emails and text messages and all.
I'm going to go enjoy this thing that we call life.
And so I am done with work for the day.
And so those are the seven things that I've been focusing on, these little
tiny habits that I've been doing for six months to years now that have completely transformed my
life. So that's what I got for you for today's episode. If you love this episode, please share it
on Instagram stories. Tag me in at Rob Dowell Jr. R-B-D-I-A-L-J-R. Also, if you're out there and you want
to learn more about coaching with me outside of the podcast, I have multiple programs that can help
you learn and grow and improve yourself. If you would like to learn more about them, go to coach with
rob.com. Once again, coach with rob.com. And with that, I'm going to leave the same way I leave you
every single episode. Make it your mission, make somebody else's day better. I appreciate you,
and I hope that you have an amazing day.
