The Mindset Mentor - How to Push Yourself to Be Happy Even When Life is Hard
Episode Date: November 12, 2025Ever feel like life keeps throwing punches and your mind joins in to beat you down? In this episode, I share how to rewire your brain for resilience and happiness even in chaos. You’ll learn how to ...stop your mind’s negative spiral, reshape your brain through gratitude and perspective. This isn’t toxic positivity, it’s neuroscience. 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.
If you have not yet done so, hit that subscribe button so you never miss another podcast episode.
And if you're out there and you want to get some inspirational mindset tips and tricks sporadically to your phone throughout the week and you live in the U.S. or Canada, text me right now.
512 5809305 once again 512 5809305 today I'm going to talk to you about how to be happy
even when life gets hard do you ever notice how when life punches you in the gut your mind
starts attacking you to and suddenly you're not just stressed but you're spiraling and now
you're finding flaws in everything in your life in your job in your body in your future in
your own worth. But here's the truth that most people never actually learn. Happiness is not what
happens after the pain is gone. It's what you practice during it. When you only focus on what's
going wrong, your brain becomes a magnet for misery. You find more things to be miserable about.
And that's a really, really slippery slope. So what if you could actually rewire your brain to find
the good and everything, even if your entire life is on fire.
And if you can train yourself to search for even a sliver of good,
your entire mindset, and even your brain chemistry and your brain wiring will start to shift.
And so let's dive into it.
Let's just call it like it is, right?
Most people, very good people in this world,
completely cave when things go sideways in their lives.
if bills start to stack up they shut down if the relationship starts to have a little bit of stress
they spiral out of control if they get bad news they start finding everything that's wrong in their life
every single little teeny tiny thing it's kind of like as soon as like one thing just goes wrong
the brain is like see i told you your entire life was trash it's like just this you know it's like
this little teeny tiny house of cards and you just give it one little flick and the entire thing
falls apart. Does that sound familiar? Well, you have to understand that if you don't actually start
to work on your mindset around this, it's only going to get worse and worse and you're going to
start to develop patterns to find the bad and everything. Like, you probably know somebody. I have
somebody in the top of my head right now that I can think of that is negative all the time. They can find
negative. You could win the lottery. And they'd be like, oh my God, do you know how much you're going to
have to pay in taxes. They can find the bad in everything. And they're that way because they
have accidentally, I'm sure they didn't do it on purpose, they've accidentally wired themselves to find
the bad in everything. But people who really actually become resilient and develop a really
resilient mindset are different. The people who have done the inner work and worked on themselves
and worked on their mindset and worked on their trauma and worked on their past and everything,
they see life differently than everybody else.
Like those who have spent time going and finding the things that's going on,
like in the trenches, in their mind and in their life,
the ones that are doing the real inner work,
they don't collapse when things get hard.
Why is that?
Because they've trained their brain to find the good,
even if it's hidden under layers and layers and layers of chaos.
Now, I want to be very clear.
I'm not talking about toxic positivity.
I'm talking about you finding good in anything that's happening
so that you can become a better person thinking better to work out of whatever negative
thing is happening in your life.
This is called neurological resilience.
It's like you learn to internalize the truth behind the yin and the yang,
which is within every hard thing, there is something good.
And even if it's tiny, if you search for it, you can find it.
You just have to be willing to look.
And so I want you to remember this phrase the rest of your life.
Happiness is a choice.
Now, that phrase, when I put it on Instagram or I talk about it on an Instagram reel,
pisses a lot of people off.
It triggers a lot of people because they're like, well, you don't know my life and you
don't know what's happened to me.
It's, you have to understand not some like feel good slogan.
And I'm not being all woo-woo and I'm like, hey, happiness is a job.
choice. Your life is on fire. Act like it's not on fire. What I'm saying, it's not a feel-good
slogan. It's neuroscience. Your brain is always rewiring itself. Always. And every time that you
try to find something good, which means that you are not being on autopilot anymore, but you're
actually taking time and energy and intention to find something good, you're actually strengthening the
part of your brain that is responsible for positive pattern recognition. Now, on the opposite side
of that, if you are actually looking for the bad in something, you are strengthening the part of
your brain that's responsible for negative pattern recognition. And so in neuroscience, there's a thing
called Hebs Law, and they say neurons that fire together, wire together, which means at any time
that you think something a certain way, that wiring becomes stronger. And if you decide that you
want to think differently, you're going to actually start to wire together new neurons that
have never been together. And so when you practice happiness and gratitude and finding the good
in things, especially when you don't feel like it, you're actually literally reshaping your brain.
You're doing three different things. You're strengthening your prefrontal cortex, which is where
your decision making and your optimism comes from. You're soothing your amygdala, which is where
your fear and your threat detection comes from and you're building more dopamine receptors in your
brain which is where motivation and pleasure comes from so over time this actually will become your
new default setting so you don't even have to try to find the good in things you'll actually just
start living that way and i can tell you from a hundred percent in my own anecdotal story trust me
I was the definition of a negative Nancy when I was younger.
I could find the negative in anything and I could give excuses and I could tell you why I was
screwed over all the time and why life wasn't working out for me and other people always
had good luck and I had bad luck.
But now my default setting is to find the good and everything.
But I also do just so you know have the overall, because now that I've been living my life
now for a while and I've seen things happen for my benefit even when I didn't think they were
going to be in my benefit. I truly believe and I have this like just thought over my entire life
that with all 40 trillion of myself, I believe it, that everything that's happening in my life
is happening for me. Not happening to me because if it's happening to me, I'm a victim. If it's
happening for me, then it's actually happening for me to learn or grow or get better or to have a better
life. And I believe that to my core. And so let's actually tell you with research. So I gave you
my anecdotal, oh, yeah, this is what happened in my life. But I don't want to just give you fluff.
I want to actually talk real studies for those of you guys that want proof, right? So there was a study
that was done at Indiana University where they used fMRI scans to show participants who practice
gratitude. And they showed that the people who practice gratitude showed more activity in the medial prefrontal
cortex of their brain, which is the area that's linked to learning and decision making. They studied
them six months later, and they actually found that the effects lasted over six months after the
study ended, which means when you train yourself to look for the good in something, your brain
eventually starts doing it on autopilot. Now, I don't want to give you just one study in case you're
very, you need a lot of studies and really a lot of proof to believe me. There was actually a study that
was done by Dr. Martin Segelman, who is considered the father of positive psychology, and showed that
people who practice optimistic reframing, so whenever something happens, you find the optimism
in that situation, were more likely to recover from setbacks and experience less depression
in their lives over time. And then the last one, Harvard psychologist Dr. Sean Acker,
found that five minutes a day of positive journaling
and finding the positive in their life
significantly increased happiness
and reduced stress hormones like cortisol in somebody's brain.
So this isn't, like I said, toxic positivity.
Like, oh my God, the house is on fire.
I'm just going to act like it's not on fire.
It's not toxic positivity.
It's neurological facts that your brain actually starts to change
and rewire itself for the good
and finding the good when you actually take time,
and intention to find the good in anything that's going bad.
And we will be right back.
And now, back to the show.
And you have to understand that the rewiring is not something
that just happens instantly.
It's not like you do it one time.
But if you stay consistent, it will be inevitable.
The way you like to think of,
the way you should think of your brain is kind of like a big cornfield, right?
Like think of your brain of like this giant cornfield
and this new, maybe even negative your entire life
and you're just trying to figure out how to be more positive.
Every time that you choose to find the good,
even when it's buried, even when it's in the middle of a bunch of chaos,
it's like walking a new path the very first time in that cornfield.
Is it going to be hard to walk through a cornfield?
If it's a brain new path, yeah.
But the next time you do it, it's going to be a little bit easier.
And the next time you do it, a little bit easier.
The hundredth time you do it, it's going to be way easier.
Eventually, that path becomes clearer.
It becomes easier for you to walk down.
a.k.a. to start to think through. And it becomes a road that you actually will start to take in your
brain over time, even without thinking after a while. But the truth that most people avoid in this
situation is you do have to push yourself. Like you have to push yourself sometimes to when you
see shit hitting the fan, be like, okay, I've got to get on my victim mindset. I've got to stop
being so sad and I've got to figure out what is the good that could possibly come from this.
How could this be working out in my favor? What lessons can I get from this? It's like happiness
just doesn't float down from the clouds and it's not delivered to you by a unicorn, right? Like,
you don't just wait for something to make you feel happy. You have to decide that my natural state
will be happiness. So you have to sit there and say, I'm going to find one thing to be grateful for
today. I will shift my focus, even when if my brain wants to catastrophize everything and think that my
life is in shambles. I'm going to stop feeding this victim story in my head, and I'm going to find out
how the world is working for me. Because if you don't, your brain will just keep collecting evidence
that your life sucks. And that's a natural part of our brain. It's called the negativity bias.
It's like this way in almost every single person. I've done entire episodes on that negativity bias.
you can go back and listen to. So your brain will always look for and collect evidence that things
are going wrong as a protection mechanism for you. And so you know who also collects evidence?
Your subconscious mind. And whatever you think about a lot and whatever you repeat the most,
it will believe. So if you say stuff like, oh, I'm stuck or I don't have any good luck or nothing
ever works out for me or life is just hard and I'm always screwed over, guess what? That is actually
going to become your truth. And so what you want to do is this. When something becomes hard,
acknowledge it. I'm not saying, don't be like, oh my God, no, this is, yeah, no, it's completely
fine. I'm not saying that you need to, you know, spray perfume on a turd. What I'm saying is
clean up the turd and then make the, make the floor that it was once on shinier. Find the good in that
thing. So acknowledge. Okay. Yeah, this is tough. This is really hard. I really do feel it. Then you
want to just breathe through it, right? Because when stuff is really hard, your brain's usually all over
the place and when your, you know, your emotions are how your logic is low. So you breathe. Anchor
yourself in the present moment. It might be two minutes you need to breathe or if shit's really
hitting the fan, it might be 10 minutes. And then just ask yourself to try to see, you know,
change your perception in some sort of way from this is so bad, this is so bad, this is so bad.
And doom and gloom, ask yourself, what can this teach me? Like, what's one good thing that could
come from this? Like how can this circumstance possibly make me stronger? Or like if everything is
happening for me, that must mean that this thing's going to make me better. So what lessons can I pull
from this? And it might be like, you know, I'm actually learning to ask for help or this pain that's
happening is showing me that I need to figure out new boundaries. Or, you know, it could be even
I'm still here and that's something. And you can find the good and the fact that you're still here.
And that becomes your access point for starting to rewire. So it's like, what good can come from
this? What lessons can I pull from this? How can I make, how can this make me stronger? What can
this teach me? And you start to actually ask yourself these questions because when you ask yourself
a question or ask anybody a question, you're framing their perception. And you're framing your
own perception from something's wrong. This is not good to what can I learn from this? How can I get better in
And so I want you to understand, in your life, happiness is a choice.
It really is.
And if you're going to have a great life, if you're going to be happy in your life,
then you need to make the choice that no matter what happens,
you're going to end up having a great life,
that everything in this universe that happens around you is happening for you,
for your greater good.
You're not the story of your past.
You're the narrator of it.
And you're the person who gets to reframe everything that's happened to you, to reinterpret everything
that's happened to you, to rewrite everything that's happened to you, and to see it from a different
perspective.
And like, life gets hard.
You're not going to go through this life without at least a decent amount of pain.
But when you're hardwired for growth, you push yourself.
You smile through the tears.
You laugh in the middle of chaos.
and you keep finding the gold that's hidden inside of the dirt.
Because every single time that you do,
what you're doing is you're building yourself and your brain
neurologically into a stronger, happier,
and more powerful version of you.
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 Dial Jr., R-O-B-D-I-L-J-R.
And if you're out there and you want to learn more
about coaching with me outside of just this podcast,
you can go to coach with rob.com
you can coach with rob.com and with that i'm going to leave the same way 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
