The Mindset Mentor - How To Make The Right Decisions
Episode Date: May 31, 2024It's time to talk about the art of making the right decisions to create the life you’ve always wanted. Life is all about the choices we make, the decisions we commit to, and the actions we take—ev...ery single one shaping our future selves.We’ll explore how every action you take is a vote for the person you wish to become. From deciding to get up when the alarm rings to choosing between scrolling on Instagram or reading a book, these decisions define us. It’s not always easy, but understanding the impact of our choices can help us make better ones.We’ll also talk about how our unconscious habits and fears can lead to bad decisions and how recognizing these can set us on a path to success. Plus, we’ll discuss the difference between immediate gratification and delayed gratification, and why taking the harder route now can lead to a more fulfilling life later.Let's break down these concepts and give you practical tips to make the best decisions every time. Want to learn more about Mindset Mentor+? Join the waitlist to be the first to learn about it here 👉 http://mindsetwaitlist.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 Want to learn more about Mindset Mentor+? For nearly nine years, the Mindset Mentor Podcast has guided you through life's ups and downs. Now, you can dive even deeper with Mindset Mentor Plus. Turn every podcast lesson into real-world results with detailed worksheets, journaling prompts, and a supportive community of like-minded people. Enjoy monthly live Q&A sessions with me, and all this for less than a dollar a day. If you’re committed to real, lasting change, this is for you.Join here 👉 www.mindsetmentor.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.
I put out episodes four times a week to help you understand yourself, understand your brain,
understand your nervous system, your psychology, your childhood development, so that you can
grow yourself.
Because when you can learn yourself, you can grow yourself. When you can grow yourself, you can improve your life. So
if that interests you, hit that subscribe button so you never miss another episode.
Today, I'm going to be talking to you about your decisions and how to get to the point where you're
making the right decisions in your life to get you to eventually wherever it is that you want to go.
And we're going to talk a little bit about the psychology of taking action,
but how to notice when you have a choice in front of you,
how to notice what the right choice is,
and then make the decision to take the right action.
Because when you look at it, when you zoom back,
like life is very simple.
It's simple, but it's not easy at all.
It's challenging, that's for sure.
And it can really be, life can be boiled down into a series of choices.
We all have choices in our life.
Sometimes it's just a small choice.
Sometimes it's a big choice.
Sometimes it's a choice that will change our life.
Sometimes it's a choice that really won't change our life at all.
But our life can be boiled down into choices that we have in front of us and then decisions
that we make.
And with those decisions, we have in front of us and then decisions that we make. And with those
decisions, we take some sort of action. Now those decisions, they can be conscious or they could be
unconscious. And those decisions, whatever decision we make, have consequences. Every
decision has some sort of consequence. It could be good or bad. And at every moment of your life,
you're taking action. You're always taking action no
matter what it is that you're doing. Even if you're asleep, you're still sleeping. That's
still an action. Even if you're just watching TV on the couch, you're still laying on the couch
and watching TV. Both of those are actions. And so you're still always taking an action.
The question is, is that action that you're taking in that
moment going to get you closer to or further from the goals that you have in your life?
And so there's choices, there's decisions, and there's actions. And that's really what it boils
down to very simply. When you make decisions in your life, you are deciding who you want to be.
That's what it comes down to. You know, there's a
great quote that James Clear says. He says, every action that you take is a vote for the person that
you wish to become. Every action that you take is a vote for the person you wish to become.
So your alarm goes off and you decide to get up when your alarm goes off. In that moment, a choice has to be made.
Am I going to wake up or am I going to hit the snooze button?
So there's a choice that has to be made.
There's a decision that is right there.
So there's choices in front of you.
There's a decision that has to be made.
And then there is some action.
So if you decide to get up, you have made this, there's a fork in the road.
You've decided I'm going to get up and you take that action. On the other side of that, there's a choice where you don't have to get up.
You can hit the snooze button. So let's say the decision is you hit the snooze button. There's a
choice that's in front of you. There's a decision that you've made and there's an action that you're
going to do. It's simple. It's not really hard, but our entire life, it comes from what decisions
we end up making. If you decide that you want to
scroll on Instagram, there's a choice where you can scroll or not scroll. There's a decision of
what you're going to do. And there's an action that you decide to make. If you decide to read
a book, instead of scrolling on Instagram, there's a choice that's in front of you. There's a decision
that you're going to do. And there's an action that you're going to take. Your entire life is made up of choices, decisions, and actions. You are made up of all of your
decisions and all of your actions that you've decided to make over the course of your life.
Every action that you take is a vote for the person that you wish to become. If you decide to
go to the gym, you're just deciding to be the type of person who goes to the gym and cares about their fitness. If you decide to, you know, eat fast food, you've decided that you're a person who
decides to eat fast food instead of making a choice that's healthier for you. That's what
it comes down to. And there's no good or bad or judgment or guilt or shame in this entire thing.
I'm just speaking very objectively. That's just the way that life is. The problem is a lot of
times what we do is we make bad decisions. We usually make the bad decisions unconsciously. Like we're not
even really paying attention. We've been doing it for so long. We just continue to do them. So if
you go back to the example of like fast food, right? It could be almost an unconscious thing
where it's just like, you've been just eating fast food since you were a kid, whenever you
were hungry. So it's like, I get this craving.
I get this, I'm hungry.
Instead of waiting an extra 20 minutes and going to a place that might be healthier,
I decide to go off and get something that's unhealthy for me.
And a lot of times it's kind of unconscious. So we need to bring the unconscious choice, decision, action to the forefront of our mind
and actually start to work through and see if it's what we want.
And so today that's what we're going to really dive into.
We're going to talk about how all of those decisions shape our mind and actually start to work through and see if it's what we want. And so today that's what we're going to really dive into. We're going to talk about how all of
those decisions shape our lives and how we can make sure that we start making good decisions
and change the bad decisions. And so, you know, when you look at an action,
this is what's really crazy about people. And I love people. I love thinking about people and
seeing how they became that person and all of that and how they decided to make that choice. An action, when you look at an action of like, oh, I decided to wake up.
Oh, I decided not to wake up. They seem really straightforward, but that's just surface level.
Beneath the surface, there is a whole computer system that's running in the background. There
are a ton of really complex cognitive processes
that you have to go through. You know, with each choice that you make, you have filters
of your life, in your paradigm, in your worldview of who you think you are, who you think everyone
else is in the world. It filters through all of your traumas. It filters through your successes,
your failures, your relationship with your parents.
And so it's not just like a decision. It's not just an action. This decision comes through and filters, you know, when you have a choice, the decision that comes in has to filter through
all of these things that have happened to you. And that's what's crazy about it. And so like,
I'm going to dive really deep into it. So you can kind of see what I'm seeing, but,
you know, the decision comes through,
goes through a filter and you decide to make that decision. But you know, when you look at your conscious and your unconscious mind, your conscious mind is only about 5%. So you can
consciously want to make the right choice. And we all want to make the right choice,
but 95% of us in our, our, our thoughts and our programs, programmings and conditionings and all
that stuff that, that exists from the moment we were born and our programming and conditionings and all that stuff that exists
from the moment we were born and became conscious and started having memories to the moment that
we're at right now, 95% of our cognitive processing is unconscious. It is below the
conscious, the subconscious mind. And so for instance, like it's really interesting. Like
if you want to really dive deep into it, right. I love diving deep into people. If you decide to scroll on Instagram, instead of focusing on your business
growth, like, you know, doing cold calls or knocking on your doors for your brand new business
that you have. And you're like, I know I need to make some calls. I know I need to knock on some
doors. And then you just start scrolling on Instagram instead, doing instead of actually doing the
thing that you need to do to grow your business.
Your decision might not really necessarily be driven by a lack of ambition or being lazy,
which we would think on the surface, oh, I'm not taking that action because I'm lazy.
Oh, I'm not taking that action because I don't have ambition.
Right.
We might think that, but instead it might
be a subconscious attempt to get away from potential rejection or criticism. So you might
be afraid of being rejected. And so in that millisecond, when you have the choice, your brain
automatically just decides to scroll instead of putting yourself out there. And you might be completely unaware of this decision that was just made, but we must become
aware of our decisions.
And maybe if you were to go back and back and back and back and back and you say, okay,
damn, I am noticing I'm afraid of rejection.
That's why I decided to scroll on my phone.
I am afraid of rejection.
Why am I afraid of rejection?
Maybe you're afraid of rejection because you start to go back and back and back. When was
the first time I felt rejected? You know, what did one of my parents make me feel rejected? Oh my God,
my dad used to do X, Y, Z, and it made me feel rejected all the time. And so avoiding putting
yourself out there and growing your business is avoiding the rejection and that's a way to protect yourself
and so our minds develop these defense mechanisms and it'll try to steer you away from situations
that you perceive as threats and try to steer you towards like safer territories and a lot of times
the craziest part about it is we don't even fucking recognize it that's the crazy part is
it just happens and we're like why don't i have recognize it. That's the crazy part is it just happens.
And we're like, why don't I have the life that I want?
Because most of our life is being lived unconsciously and we're not really going behind the surface.
So that means when you really look into it, that each action, whether it's conscious or
not, contains some sort of goal, right?
More often than not, that goal is aimed at self-preservation.
So scrolling, instead of putting yourself out there, is actually a way of you protecting yourself.
Do you see that? Because you don't want to be rejected. But you're thinking, oh, well,
I'm just lazy. Well, you might not necessarily be lazy. It's not that you don't have ambition.
It's that you're actually trying to, it's a way of self-preservation. You're trying to protect yourself because you were,
felt so rejected as a child by your father. And then, you know, maybe something happened where
you were, you had your, your, your love of your life in high school when you're so in love and
she ended up cheating on you and you felt rejected again. It's like the example I was giving to
people to kind of distance yourself and take yourself out of it and take humans out of it
is if you look and you see an aggressive dog that every time a human walks by, they bark at it,
they get really aggressive. That dog was not born aggressive. That aggressiveness is a defense
mechanism that it had to create early in its life to survive and to protect itself against something
that looked like us, some other human that ended up doing something bad to that dog.
It's the same thing as the last example, being afraid of rejection, right? So it's really
interesting. We start to dive into it and you go, oh my gosh, with every action that I take,
whether it's conscious or unconscious or some sort of goal. And so my goal could be, I really
want to grow my business and that's what I need to focus on. But unconsciously, it's self-preservation.
I don't want to be rejected.
And so we'll talk about how to work through these things.
And so let's dive into those goals and really talk about them.
I don't mean like the goals in your life or the big, huge goals.
I mean like the hidden goals in your choices and your decisions.
Every choice and decision that you have carry some sort of little hidden goal most of the
time.
So let's say that you're presented with a choice. You can either work out or you can skip the
workout and you choose to exercise. Well, that goal is to lose weight, to improve your health,
to live longer. Great. That makes sense to us, right? Let's say you have another choice. You
can either read or you can scroll on Instagram and you choose to read. Great. Okay. Well,
that goal is to become
more intelligent or to hold better conversations because the more you know, the further that you're
going to go in life. Okay, cool. That makes sense. Okay. Let's say we have another choice. Let's say
you can either watch Netflix or we can sit down and create a presentation for work and we choose
Netflix. The goal usually in that situation is self-preservation. Why are we not doing the
thing that we know we should be doing? Like what's, what's really behind that?
We're afraid of public speaking. Okay. Why are we afraid of public speaking? I don't want to
screw up at it. Why don't you want to screw up at it? Because I don't want to look like a fool in
front of my boss. Okay. Why don't you want to look like a fool in front of your boss? Cause I'm
afraid that I'm going to get fired. Okay. Why are you afraid that you're going to get fired?
Cause I remember when I was younger, my mom
got fired from our job and we almost lost our house. Holy shit. I'm on Netflix because I'm
afraid I'm going to lose my job, right? Like this is a really tedious process to start to understand
yourself. But when you start to backtrack, you really start to see how your, your unconscious
worldview creates these little tiny decisions. And you realize, oh my God, I'm not just watching
Netflix. I'm trying to avoid this big, huge future that I'm creating in my mind
that doesn't really exist because of the time my mom was fired and we almost lost our house when I
was a kid. Oh my God, there's so much behind it, isn't there? And then you realize your choices,
your decisions are way more complex than you actually think they are. So what do you do?
You procrastinate. You watch trashy reality TV, distract yourself from the uncomfortable feelings
of creating the presentation. And you realize it's not that you're just afraid of public speaking.
It's afraid that you could make a fool of yourself and lose your job. Wow. It's a lot
deeper than you thought it was, right? Let's say there's another choice, right? You can either
learn to get better with money or you can act like it's something that you don't want to learn.
And you're like, ah, I don't want to learn that. And so you decide, you choose not
to learn how to get better with your money. Okay. What's really behind that? Okay. I don't want to
put in the hard work and I don't want to learn. And it's uncomfortable once you know, like how
much there is to learn. And so you just decide not to skip it. You know, you decide to decide
to skip it. You decide not to, to learn how to be good at money,
and you don't have any financial freedom. Or it could be even behind that even more.
And so I love working through people's psychology around money. Maybe it's that you have an
unconscious negative connotation around money. Like for me, I consciously wanted to make money
for a long time. And I did it. And it hard and I was I couldn't push myself to do it
And then I started making money and I started spending all of it and I was like man, why am I like this?
And I started going back and I started going back and started going back
And I was like, what are my first memories around money?
What do I remember and I remember like one of the things that popped up in my head is my mom
Was a realtor when I was a kid and I remember every time tax season would come around She would get so stressed out. I remember I can still see her in my head as my mom was a realtor when I was a kid. And I remember every time tax season would come around, she would get so stressed out. I remember I can still see her in my head,
sitting at the dining room table, papers all in front of her, doing her taxes, being so stressed
out about money. And so if something makes anything in this world, as a child makes my mom
stressed, would a child say that's a good thing or a bad thing? A bad thing. And then there's many other memories that I have of me thinking that money was bad.
And so naturally, when I wanted to make it, I would stop myself from making it.
Naturally, when I started making it, I would get rid of it.
You know, I had another example of this.
I had a client one time, and she said she had a hard time saving money.
She would make all of this money, and then she had a really hard time saving it.
She had these very specific rules that she set for herself, and she would break all of this money and then she had a really hard time saving it. She had these very specific rules that she set for herself and she would break all of those rules.
And then we started working on each other. I started working on her. We were working with
each other and I was like, hey, what's behind this? What do you think of money? What are your
first memories around money? We started talking about it. And she eventually just blurts out,
she goes, I think I think money's evil. And I was like, OK, you think that
it's evil. Tell me more about that. She's like, well, I think it's evil. I remember my mom saying
this when I was a kid. I remember my dad saying this as a kid. I remember both of them fighting
when I was a kid. And I remember them getting in these heated debates about money. And I just I
think I just unconsciously placed a label of money being evil. Well, of course, she's going to have trouble saving money and making
money because you're always going to avoid something that you actually think is evil.
And so there's all these hidden goals that are like these invisible threads that connect choices
that we have to the decisions, to the actions that we make. And all of those things, depending
on what it is that we have, are going to change our behavior. They're going to change our lives.
They're going to shape our lives.
And normally we think of goals as a good thing.
And they are good things.
You know, we have a goal if we want to set a goal for the month or a goal for the year.
But goals can also be these little tiny hidden goals of self-preservation.
You know, like people say, like, Rob, I need to get over procrastination.
I procrastinate too much. Like Like procrastination is my problem. And I say, no, no, no. Procrastination
is not your problem. Procrastination is the symptom. There's something behind all that.
You know, it's like the downstream effect. There's something upstream that is making it,
making you want to procrastinate. There's something upstream that is a thought pattern.
There's a self-preservation.
There is a future that looks terrible in your future that you want to avoid. Procrastination is never the problem. Procrastination is a symptom. The main problem is what we're trying
to get back to. Maybe you're procrastinating because you want to avoid rejection. You don't
want to look stupid. You don't want to make yourself uncomfortable. You're afraid of being seen.
You don't want to be judged by other people, whatever it might be.
And so we tend to avoid as much discomfort as we possibly can.
And when we avoid discomfort, what we do is we usually go towards immediate gratification.
Oh, I want to eat right now.
Oh, I want to scroll right now.
Oh, I want to watch TV right now. Those are immediate gratifications, and they give you a little bit of dopamine, a little bit of a dopamine hit every single time.
But when you go for immediate gratification, it almost always turns into bad results long-term.
And you've heard me say, if you listen to this podcast before, your life is either easy now
and hard later or hard now and easy later. You know, we have many choices throughout the day and we need to become aware of
when these choices present themselves. And we need to consciously and intentionally make the right
choices for ourself and take the path of more resistance, which is usually harder now going
to make us uncomfortable now to make our life better in the long run. You know, it is natural for a human to take the path of least resistance. It is. Once again, least resistance, not hard now,
that means self-preservation. I'm trying to protect my energy. I'm trying to not do the hard
thing because I don't want to get out of my comfort zone because I don't know what's outside
of my comfort zone. And if you decide to do what's easy now, it will 100%
make your life harder down the road. If you decide to do what's hard now, it will make your life
easier down the road. It's just the way it goes. Like Jim Rohn has a great quote around this. He
says, we all must suffer one of two things, the pain of discipline or the pain of regret.
The pain of regret is way worse than the pain of discipline. I promise you
that. One of them gives you immediate comfort. That's the, hey, I'm choosing the easy way.
That's immediate comfort. The other, although it's a challenging for you initially, it usually
creates a way better life, longer lasting rewards, whatever it might be, right? Like deciding to go to the
gym right now. It's uncomfortable. It hurts. You're going to be sweating. It's going to be
harder than sitting on the couch. But long-term, if you do it over and over and over again,
your life will be better. We all know that. So it's about seeing when we get to this moment
in our life where we have a choice and making sure that we start making the right decisions.
If we choose the easier route, it's pretty much always temporary relief and instant gratification.
But the path often leads us to way more significant challenges in the future, whether that's with our relationships, deciding not to talk about the hard things.
Your relationship is going to be harder.
Your health and your fitness, when you decide not to take the hard route, it makes your life's going to be harder. Your health and your fitness, when you
decide not to take the hard route, it makes your life harder later on down the road. In your
business, in your money, in everything, single aspect of it, if you decide to take the easy
route now, it will be much harder later on down the road. You know, if you decide to, like a simple
example, right? You decide to binge watch a series instead of studying for an exam.
That's an immediate pleasure.
Makes you feel better now.
But it could result in a lot more stress.
It could result in poor grades.
It could be, you know, academic problems later on.
You don't get as good of a job.
Maybe you don't graduate.
You drop out.
But if you decide, okay, I've got this choice in front of me.
I'm going to decide not to watch TV. I'm going to decide to study. That can be hard right now. It's a lot of discomfort right now. I hated studying when I was in college. That's why I dropped out of college,
right? But it will make the exam way easier and it'll eventually lead to better academic
performance, less stress, potentially better career opportunities later on down the road.
So when you're met with the choice of instant gratification versus delayed gratification,
you have to learn to become conscious in that moment. Not to be unconscious, but to become
conscious and choose the hard now. Choose the delayed gratification. Instant gratification
is always easy. Delayed gratification is always hard. Instant will make your life harder down
the road. Delayed will make your life easier down the road.
Your future is just a series of choices that are placed in front of you, decisions that
you make either consciously or unconsciously in the present moment, and actions that you
have to take, which will lead to some sort of future.
But you have to decide the harder route that will create the life that you want, that lines up with the
future you're trying to create. And if you do that, I promise you this, your life will be way better
in the future. So that's what I got for you for today's episode. If you love this episode,
please share it on your Instagram stories. Tag me in it, RobDialJr, R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R.
Also, if you love this podcast, you will 100% love this thing that I have called Mindset Mentor Plus that's coming out very
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going to be a whole bunch of other bonuses.
If you're interested in learning about it, go to mindsetwaitlist.com right now.
The first people who sign up, the actual founding members are going to get a discount.
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I'll send out an email to just the waitlist before I announce it on social media, before I announce it on the podcast, and you'll be able to see what the discount is.
So if you're interested, we'd love to see you in there. We'd love to connect you. With that, I'm going to leave the same way I 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.