The Mindset Mentor - How to Calm Your Anxiety
Episode Date: May 5, 2025What if you could break your anxiety cycle with just one question? In this episode, I walk you through the exact journaling method I use to calm my mind and reset my focus. Reveal the hidden pattern...s shaping your choices, habits, and success. Take my FREE Identity Quiz to discover who you really are and how to break through to the next level.Join here 👉 https://www.identityunlockquiz.com/ My first book that I’ve ever written is now available. It’s called LEVEL UP and It’s a step-by-step guide to go from where you are now, to where you want to be as fast as possible.📚If you want to order yours today, you can just head over to robdial.com/bookHere are some useful links for you… If you want access to a multitude of life advice, self development tips, and exclusive content daily that will help you improve your life, then you can follow me around the web at these links here:Instagram TikTokFacebookYoutube
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Welcome to today's episode of the mindset mentor podcast. I'm your host Rob Dial. If you have not
yet done so hit that subscribe button since you never miss another podcast episode. Today,
I'm going to be talking about the strategy to help you get yourself out of your anxious thinking
whenever you find yourself ruminating or stuck in a
loop of anxious thoughts.
This is a strategy that I've used with many of my clients and in fact the reason why I'm
talking about today is because it's a strategy I literally had to use for myself last night.
So last night around 3, 3.30 ish my wife woke up she went to the bathroom when she went
to bathroom she accidentally woke me up and I could not fall back asleep.
I had one thought and then another thought, another thought, another thought, another
thought, and I had all these thoughts and you know a lot of them are business and once
I get into business I start thinking about oh my gosh we got to do this and this thing's
coming up and I start thinking about other stuff and so you know even though I am the
mindset mentor there's no way I'll ever get rid of anxious thoughts popping up or stressful thoughts
popping up at some point in time.
And to be honest with you, I was up for about an hour and a half last night just sitting
in my bed.
And then I was like, it's not working.
My brain just is not turning off.
I don't know if you've ever been in that situation before where you're like, how in the hell
can I get my brain to turn off?
Because I had so many thoughts.
Then what's interesting about humans is that when we have a thought, that thought is like
spread out.
It's like a mind map when you have just like one thought and then it spreads out and there's
all these other thoughts that could possibly come up.
And so one thought turns into another, turns into another.
And so I had to actually get out of bed and I went and got my journal. And
I was like, okay, there's a lot of stuff that's happening in my head right now. There's a
lot of stuff happening in my life right now. And that's just the way that life is. And
I've got a lot of stuff coming up. I'm really busy right now. And clearly my brain is stuck
in this loop right now and it's not allowing me to go to sleep. And so what I'm going to
do is I'm going to get out of bed. I'm going to go grab my journal. I'm going to go to living room and I'm going to start to work
through what's going on in my head. And I have worked with many people who have anxious thoughts,
anxious feelings, and this is one of the best strategies that I have found. And it's a strategy
that I work on for myself. So the first thing that's really important is awareness. I was aware
that I had some anxious thoughts that were coming into my head. And one of the things that's really important is awareness. I was aware that I had some anxious thoughts that were coming
into my head. And one of the things that's really important about having anxiety or having anxious
thoughts that come into your head is it's not a chemical imbalance, which is good because if it's
not a chemical imbalance, you're not stuck with it. It means it comes from your thoughts and you
can work through your thoughts. It's something that you can work out for yourself. It's a pattern that usually comes
into a loop. And I noticed the loop happening last night when I was sitting there for an hour
and a half. I noticed the loop where it was like, I would start at the top and then I would go back
down again. I would start at the top and I go back and it's just the loop of these thoughts coming
through. And so the first thing that's the most important is really the awareness. What are
the thoughts that are going through my head? Sometimes you guys might have thoughts about,
oh my gosh, I've got so much to do tomorrow. I've got to go to work and I've got to take the kids
to school and I've got to then pick up Johnny and take him to soccer. Sometimes those anxious
thoughts can be, oh my gosh, I've got a presentation tomorrow and I don't know if I'm going to have it
done before presentation time. Sometimes those anxious thoughts are and I don't know if I'm going to have it done before presentation time. Sometimes those anxious thoughts are, I don't know if I'm
going to be able to pay my damn bills this month. And so I've worked with many people
who have anxiety. I've worked with some people who have had so much anxiety that they can't
leave the house like crippling anxiety. And the important thing I want you to realize
with your thoughts is that our thoughts are
so ridiculously complex and you have your thoughts in your head.
You have every emotion you have.
You have all of your programming's everything that you've picked up, all of your beliefs,
all of these constructs that build this reality that you happen to see.
But then you've got your relationships to every single person, what you think has to
be done, how they're supposed to show up, what you want to say to them, what you want
them to say back to you.
Oh my gosh, if I say this thing to them, they're going to probably say this thing back to me.
And so when your thoughts are in your head and you try to work them out in your head
as I was for a good hour and a half last night, it usually doesn't get you anywhere.
It's usually like trying to work your thoughts out in your head is a lot like trying to grab
water. It's hard to grab water. You might grab a couple drops,
but you're not grabbing the entire bit of water, right? And so it's really important
to work through them. If you can talk to somebody, I recommend talking to somebody as well. And
you know, whether that's a therapist, whether that's a friend, whether that's a spouse,
talking to someone saying like, Hey, there's like, don't wake your husband up and be like, Hey, I have anxious thoughts.
Let me tell them my anxious thoughts.
But if you notice that you're being you've been really anxious, maybe been on a high
stress level for the day, and you come home, just talk to your spouse if you can, or talk
to your call your sister up on the way home or call your mom or talk to somebody about
it.
Talk to your therapist if you have one and saying, Hey, listen, I'm noticing myself in this thought pattern. Can I just talk it out with you?
I don't need you to solve any of my problems. You can help me if, and if you want their help,
ask for their help. But if you just want to say, Hey, I just, can I just tell you this? And you
can just let me know what you're seeing. Maybe they'll be able to actually help you see patterns
in your thoughts that you are not able to see. A lot of times another person and talking to another person is like a mirror for you
or sometimes just speaking it out loud starts to make the connections.
Sometimes somebody else hearing this and knowing you, they can also help you make the connection
as well.
So it can be really important to talk to someone, someone that you trust, someone that loves
you.
But I know some of you guys don't want
to talk to someone. And the reason why you don't want to talk to someone is because you don't want
to be judged or because your anxious thoughts are around that person. And so if you can't talk to
someone, can you talk to yours? Can you talk to someone on a piece of paper? And that person would
be you because when you're trying to fight it in your head and you're trying to figure it out, it's like trying to fight someone in the dark.
It's really hard to figure out where they are.
And so here's what I did. Last night I got up and I was like, all right, damn it. Looks like my brain doesn't want to turn off.
So I wrote down a bunch of questions. The questions were, what am I feeling anxious about?
And I wrote down what are the thoughts that are making me anxious right now?
Then I started writing down what's the worst that could happen because all too often we start thinking about all the worst things that could happen
So I want to play out all of the worst things that could happen because if I can see all the worst things that can happen
Now I can make a plan to make sure that those things don't happen, right?
So I asked myself what's the worst that could happen? I worked through all of those things and I looked at it and I was like, hmm, it's really
not that bad.
It's pretty okay, right?
Then I asked myself, what's the best that could happen?
And then I started looking through it and I was like, oh damn, there's actually a lot
more good than bad that could come from this.
I was stuck on all of the bad, which we tend to do as humans.
We stick on the bad, we stick on the stressful things, we stick on the worst thing that can
happen when in reality usually ends up a whole lot better than we think it's going to be.
And statistically, 85% of what you worry about will never happen.
This is found out by psychologists and out of the 15 remaining percent, that out of the
15 remaining percent of the 85, you know, a hundred minus 85, 15, the 15 remaining percent out of the 85, you know, 100 minus 85, 15, the
15 remaining percent, 12% of it doesn't happen near as bad as you're imagining it, which
means only 3% of what you actually worry about happens as bad as you think it's going to.
And so you ask yourself, what's the worst that could happen?
And you play out all of the worst scenarios so that you can then make a plan against how
to making sure that those things don't happen.
Then you ask yourself, what is the best thing that could happen?
And you're like, oh man, there's actually a lot more positives that can come from this
than I was thinking.
And then you ask yourself, what I asked myself is what is my next best step to make me feel
better?
What's my next best step to make me feel better?
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
And then so you look at it and if it wakes you up in the middle of the night, you look
at it and you write, what's my next best that's make me feel better.
Usually that thing can't happen at three o'clock in the morning.
And so you go, okay, well, that's what I need to do, but I can't do it right now.
So I'll do it when I wake up.
And a lot of times that just allows your brain to release it because ultimately what you're
trying to do is you're, you can work on all of those things when you're awake and conscious after you've had your coffee.
But you don't want to work through them at three o'clock in the morning, four o'clock
in the morning.
And so you write down the question.
So first question, let's go through it is what am I feeling anxious about?
Or what can I not stop thinking about?
Now we've turned the lights on.
We've identified the party that we're fighting.
We've identified what is making us anxious. So we're no longer trying to fight someone in the dark.
We can see, oh, there's the person that I'm trying to fight. So there they are. I can see them. I can identify them, right?
Usually just identifying the thing that's making you anxious gives you some sort of sense of relief.
And you're like, okay, I've identified what it is because sometimes we get anxious about
the fact that we don't know what's making us anxious.
And so if we can identify, hey, this is the thing that's making us anxious, we can start
to work through it, right?
Because lots of times we don't even know what's going on in our heads and it's just, it's
we have anxious feelings, but then we have anxious feelings because we don't know what's
making us feel anxious
Right and so a lot of times it's just about the awareness flipping on the light switch. What's going on in my head?
Next question when we dive into it, what's the worst that could happen?
like I said a lot of times we make things to be way worse in our heads in
97% of the time it doesn't end up being that way last night when I was writing out what's the worst that could happen, I was like, this
is never going to happen.
I'm looking at them like this isn't going to happen.
I know it's not going to happen.
So why am I wasting my time?
Why am I wasting my energy?
Why am I wasting my freaking time that I could be sleeping?
By thinking about this thing when in reality, I'm looking at the worst that could happen,
I'm going that's not going to happen.
There's no way that that's going to happen. Okay, next question. What's the best
that could happen? Let's look at what could happen positively. It probably won't go as bad
as you think it's going to go. It's probably not going to go as good as you think it's going to go,
but a lot of times it goes way better than the worst that could happen. And then the last
question, what's my next best step to make me feel better? What action can I take to make me feel better?
Maybe in that moment, you know, maybe you weren't woken up and maybe you just start
feeling anxious at 2pm and you're like, oh my God, I can feel this anxiety inside of
me and I'm looking at what's making me anxious.
What's the thoughts going through my head?
What's the worst that could happen?
What's the best could happen?
What's the next best step?
You know what?
Maybe I can just take some really deep breaths.
I've heard that Rob Dial guy say that six deep breaths can change our state.
So I'm going to do six deep breaths in through the nose, out through the mouth.
And I'm going to try to calm down my nervous system because my nervous system just seems
to be really agitated right now.
It might be agitated because the thoughts that you have, it might be agitated because
you had too much coffee today as well.
It might be agitated because you haven't eaten today
and your blood sugar's low.
There's many things that can make you feel this way.
And so maybe what we need to do is just calm the body down,
calm the nervous system down,
and just figure out a way to just do some deep breathing.
If after six deep breaths you feel better
but still not as good as you could feel,
go to 10.
Go to 20, you don't have to stop at six.
But I do know that when you take deep breaths
into the nose, out through the mouth,
and your exhale is longer than your inhale,
I usually say try to exhale through your mouth
like you're breathing out through a straw,
that long exhale actually slows your heart rate down
and it releases extra carbon dioxide from your body
and from your muscles, which allow you to relax more.
And so it's really important to do this breathing exercise. Then you start to change your focus.
So you can say, okay, I have these anxious feelings, no big deal, they're there. I want to
come at these anxious feelings from a better state. And so I'm going to focus on something
I could be grateful for. What is someone something, anything that I can be
grateful for right now in this moment? What can I be grateful
for? And you can switch maybe it's meditation, maybe it's
breathing, maybe it's gratitude you work on. Maybe you need to
have a conversation with someone maybe that can make you feel
better right now. Maybe you're like, you know what, I'm feeling
it's such a heightened state. I just need to go for a freaking run.
I need to go for a run.
I need to move my body.
I need to get my heart rate up.
I need to just not listen to any music, but just be completely with my thoughts.
And maybe that's what you go for.
Completely different for every single person.
Figure out what works for you.
Maybe what you need to do and the thing that's going to make you feel the best right now
is to call a friend.
Call your friend, talk to them about it,
ask them to come over. What I don't want you to do is go, I need to have a glass of tequila,
because that's just numbing your feelings versus actually working through them.
Because it's going to come up again and again if you don't work through it. And so you've identified
my anxiety culprit, the one that's there, you shine the light on it. You've identified what
could happen, the good and the bad.
So I'm aware of both so that I can figure out which actions I need to take to make me
feel better, which is what's the best action I could take right now.
And doing this made me feel so much better.
I was like, oh my gosh, this is what was going through my head.
It wasn't anything crazy.
Like, it's not like doom and gloom, but it was just like, for some reason, my brain was
just stuck in a loop and I couldn't get it out of it.
So I put it all down and I said, okay, do I feel like I'm done with with journaling?
Yeah, I feel like I'm pretty done.
Okay, let me see if I can relax my body.
And so what I did was I put on a meditation and I breathe consciously, inhaled, exhaled,
and I just instead of doing 60 breaths, I did the exact same thing.
20 minutes or so.
I wasn't trying to think about anything.
I was just thinking about calming my body.
And instead of my mind going to whatever I was anxious about, my mind was going to, I'm
going to relax with every single deep breath.
Every time I breathe back out, I'm going to just relax my body.
And what happened?
I was gone, passed out eventually.
Right?
And so woke up, did my morning routine,
got my journal, did my reading, started knocking out things that were on my list that were
making me feel anxious. And so what it comes down to is I want you to realize that sometimes
people say, Oh, well, I just have anxiety. And sure, you might have anxiety, but it doesn't
mean you can't work through your anxiety. Doesn't mean you can't make positive steps
towards it to just say that, Hey, I've've got this and there's no way I'll ever get past it. There's no way I'll ever be able to
work through it. It's not going to help you in any sort of way. It's not something that you have to
be stuck with forever because anxiety comes from your thoughts. It's not like depression where
number one, first off, about 61 to 80% of people who are diagnosed with depression are actually
misdiagnosed. There's stats on that. you can Google it if you like. But depression can be a chemical imbalance inside of your brain.
Anxiety is not a chemical imbalance inside of your brain. It's just a pattern of thoughts that you
continue to keep going down. And you can just decide that you're going to interrupt this pattern
of thoughts and put something else in instead, which is ultimately comes down to you and what
you want to do. And that's what's important.
It puts you back in the driver's seat and in control of your own mind.
So that's what I got for you for today's episode.
If you love this episode, please share it on your Instagram stories and tag me at RobDialJr.
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And with that, I'm gonna leave it the same way,
I'll leave you every single episode.
Make it your mission to make somebody else's day better.
I appreciate you and I hope that you have an amazing day.