The Mindset Mentor - How to Quiet Your Anxious Mind
Episode Date: November 19, 2025Have you ever felt like your brain is working against you? In this episode, I explain why anxiety shows up, how it’s an outdated survival system, and how to turn the volume down using simple, scienc...e-backed tools. You’ll learn how to be calm, take back control, and feel grounded again. 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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512 5809305. Once again, 512 5809305. Today, I'm going to talk to you about how to quiet and calm your anxious brain down. Have you ever felt like your brain was just working against you? Like it's hardwired to imagine the worst, to feel unsafe for no reason, or to spiral over things that haven't even happened yet. And if you've ever been stuck in the situation,
you're not broken. You're just stuck in an ancient survival system that hasn't been updated for the
modern life that we live in. Your brain, as crazy as it might feel, is actually doing its job.
The problem is it's actually doing its job too well. So the problem here isn't fear, isn't anxiety.
It's the volume level. It's the control that you don't have over your brain. And so today's
episode will show you how to turn it down with science-backed tools and a few perspective shifts
where you'll learn how to reclaim the calm that's naturally inside of you without pretending
like everything's fine. Okay. The first thing I want you to realize with anxiety is that anxiety is
actually natural. Anxiety, believe it or not, is a really good thing. Now, if it's all day long,
it's not a good thing. But your anxiety that you feel, every human has. It is a natural response
to stress, to uncertainty, and to perceived threats. Now, that phrase right there is the most
important part of today. Perceived threats. It's a good thing that humans have anxiety. Because
our brain, what it's doing is it is projecting a future and then telling your body to prepare for
possible threats. Now that's a really good thing when you're on the planes and you're trying to avoid
animals that could attack you like lions and tigers and bears. Oh my. But the core of anxiety is the
thought I'm not safe. And today, if you're sitting inside of your house and you're air conditioning
and you have food inside of your stomach and you've got water and you've got clothing and you've got
shelter and a few people that love you, you're probably not not safe. But you're still wired
to try to find all the places where you're not safe.
And so you have to understand your anxiety
is your brain and body going,
there's some sort of threat around here.
And you think, whether that's consciously or unconsciously,
that your safety is threatened.
Whether you believe that you actually are or not,
that's what your response is.
And so let me give you an example, right?
Like if you have public speaking that you have to do
and you're not really a big fan of public speaking,
how anxiety is going to show up inside,
of your body. It's going to show up with sweaty palms, a racing heart. You're going to stumble
over your words. But the fear behind it that is actually driving that anxiety is I'm not safe.
And I'm not safe because I might be judged. I might be ridiculed. I might be humiliated. I might be
fired from my job because my boss can be like, that presentation was so terrible. You're an idiot
and get rid of you. And so what's happening is it's showing up in your body, is showing up in your
brain, but the fear behind it is, once again, I'm not safe. If you get anxiety before you go to
social events, the way that it will show up when you go to a social event is you might avoid
eye contact, you might overthink all of your conversations, you might be quiet when you want
to actually speak up. And the fear behind it was once again, I'm not safe because you feel like
if you might say something wrong, you might be rejected, you might be humiliated, you might be
humiliated, you might get other people's opinions and judgments. So it's the feeling of, once
again, I'm not safe. If you have health concerns and you have like obsessive Googling and you do
body scans and you do frequent doctor visits, the fear behind it is I'm not safe because something
might be seriously wrong with me and I need to make sure that I'm going to stay alive.
You know? And so you have to understand all of these different things are some feeling of I'm not
safe. And that's what really anxiety comes down to it. So when you realize,
that anxiety is a projection in your mind to some sort of imagine future where you're not safe,
that's what we really need to work through. And so anxiety is a good thing,
but anxiety all day, every day, that's not a good thing. And so when anxiety becomes chronic
and it interferes with your daily life, that is when you really need to address it and realize
that you're not broken. This isn't something that can't be solved. It's something that can be
solved, but you're going to really have to really put some time and intention and energy and
effort in order to actually start to rewire yourself. And so I want to give you a few science-back
techniques to help you overcome anxiety and your anxious thoughts. Real quick, before you
dive into it, the actual definition of anxiety because so many people have like, what is anxiety
to you and you and everybody would give you a different answer is a feeling of unease such as
worry or fear that can range from mild to severe. And it is normal, essential,
emotion for humans that serves as an adaptive response to danger or challenges. And so anxiety can
show up in two different ways. Number one, it can be emotional symptoms, which is like worry,
fear, irritability, difficulty concentrating, restlessness, all of those things. And it could show up
in physical symptoms, which is where people usually recognize it first, which is like muscle
tension, headaches, trembling, rapid heartbeat, shortness of breath, any of those things. And so
the first strategy to overcoming this, which you, if you've been listening to this podcast,
if you listen to hundreds of episodes, which I know many of you have, the first thing that
you always got to go to is deep breathing. So the first strategy is you have to have some sort
of relaxation techniques to reduce your anxiety. Deep breathing is really the best one to start
with. Breathing is the very first thing that changes whenever your state changes. And so the
reason why you want to bring your breathing in is because when you're in a really heightened state,
when your emotions are high, your logic is low. You're actually not thinking very well. And we will
be right back. And now, back to the show. When you're really anxious, your brain and your body
tap into fight, flight, or freeze. And that's where the animalistic part of you, the survival part
of you turns on. The thinking, the processing, the executive decision making,
all turns off. The reason why is because when you're in a fight or flight or freeze moment,
your body's preparing to run and protect yourself from danger. And so it stops sending as much
blood flow to the prefrontal cortex of your brain, which is the decision-making part of your
brain. And so you've got to at least get yourself feeling a little bit better before we go
on to the next few strategies. And that starts with deep breathing. Deep breathing can help activate
your body's relaxation response, which is your parasympathetic nervous system, so that you can
start to calm down. And so it's really simple. You can just breathe in as deep as you can through your
nose, five seconds in, ten seconds out. Five seconds in, ten seconds out. Do it for a minute. Do it for two
minutes. What it does is it slows your heart rate down. It releases more carbon dioxide from your
blood and it reduces your stress levels. The first thing you need to do is try to bring yourself back
down to some state of homeostasis of calm, at least a little bit more calm, before you actually
start to do something different. So that's the first thing, which is strategy number one.
You got to do some deep breathing, calm yourself down. The strategy number two, what you need to do
is something that's called cognitive restructuring. So cognitive restructuring is a technique that
involves identifying and then challenging your negative thought patterns that are the things
that contribute to your anxiety. So a lot of times when people feel anxiety, they're not really
sure where it comes from because what happens is you're just stuck in an old animalistic pattern
that you've been stuck in probably since childhood,
you don't need to really know where it comes from,
but just know that it's a protection mechanism.
Anxiety is your body trying to protect itself.
And so what you want to do is you want to take a step back
and actually start to identify these negative thought patterns
that are giving you anxiety.
And so this approach of cognitive restructuring
is rooted in cognitive behavioral therapy,
and it's been shown to be effective to treat many anxiety disorders.
So here's the first thing you're going to do.
you're going to identify your negative thoughts or your fears or whatever it is that is the cause
of this anxiety. So the first step is to become aware of them. And then notice this is really what
happens is most of the time, once again, you don't notice a thought, but what you do is you notice
the feeling. So the first thing that we usually notice in this situation is that you don't feel really
good. And then so what you got to ask yourself is, what was I just thinking? And you've got to try to
bring yourself back to it. I've given this example before, but a few years ago, I was making
eggs in the morning and I had a great morning and I was sitting there making eggs in my kitchen
and I just started I felt like a flood of anxiety I was like what the hell is going on like I don't
know what's happening inside of me and I was sitting there I was like okay I'm noticing a feeling
if I'm noticing a feeling of anxiety what was I just thinking and I'd like kind of trace my mind back
and trace my mind back and I realized I was I had done the terrible thing of reading a YouTube
comment about me and somebody was talking a whole bunch of trash and I read it and I read it
and they're like, I'm going to make a reaction video
because this is, you know, what I had said
was, was you can use journaling
as like your own therapist. And the person was like, this is
stupid. This guy's saying, don't go to a therapist
in journal. I'm like, it's not what I said. And so I had
this feeling of like, I'm being misunderstood.
And then I was like, okay, cool, I shut my computer. And like, 15
minutes later, I felt like this flood of anxiety. And I was like,
what's going on? And I noticed, I had to trace my
thoughts back. I didn't notice the thought.
But what I noticed was the feeling.
And so I went back and I was like,
okay, there's the thought. So I had to identify
the negative thought first or anything else. The second thing you need to do after you identify
the negative thought is to challenge the negative thought. If you're going to believe the negative
thought, you also need to challenge it and see if you can poke holes in it to find out if the
opposite of this thing is true. So once it's identify, what you want to do is you want to evaluate
the accuracy, see if it's rational, and then try to see if maybe there's some alternative
explanations for this. Like how valid is you're a thought that's making you anxious?
You know, studies have found, psychologists have done studies,
they found that 85% of what we worry about never happens.
And out of the remaining 15%, only 3% of what we worry about actually happens,
which means that 97% of what we worry about doesn't even happen
or it turns out better than we thought.
So maybe we should identify our negative thoughts and actually start to challenge them, right?
That's number two.
And then number three, which is part of the cognitive restructuring,
which is replace your negative thoughts with the thoughts that you want.
after you challenge your negative thoughts,
you're going to realize they're not very valid.
They're usually pretty ridiculous.
Like most of the time when I challenge somebody's negative thoughts,
are like, yeah, this doesn't make any sense.
I don't know why I believe this.
And so what you do at that point is you replace them
with a more balanced and realistic thought
that can help you reduce your anxiety levels.
Okay?
So that's number two for strategy number two
to help you get rid of your anxiety.
Strategy number three is to do something that's called exposure therapy.
There's a proving technique called exposure therapy
that involves gradually and systematically confronting your fears with whether that be situations
or whether that be objects or whether that be thoughts about the anxiety until the anxiety itself
actually subsides. And so this process helps you learn that your fears are often really irrational
and that you can tolerate way more discomfort than you think that you can. And so what's really important
about this is you're like, well, how do I take my thoughts and how do I actually like do
exposure therapy with my thoughts. There's a thing that's called, we've all heard of visualization
before. We visualize the thing that you want. There's a thing in psychology, it's really,
really, like it works well, sometimes better than normal visualization. It's called negative
visualization, where you actually visualize everything that you are afraid of happening in real
time. And what happens, if you do this enough, with exposure therapy, it stops becoming something
that you fear. You start noticing, hey, it's not the big of a deal. I'm not going to die. I'll be
okay, and it has less and less power over you. The same way with exposure therapy, if somebody is
afraid of a snake, they take a snake and they put it in a box and the corner of the room and say,
hey, there's a snake over here. The person's going to freak out. The longer that they go,
the more exposure that they have to, the more is to calm down. They can bring the box closer and
closer and closer. And over a few days, that person can be holding the snake that was just flooding
them with anxiety before. And so what you do is you start to use exposure therapy to actually calm
yourself down by visualizing the thing that you think that you're so afraid of. And so when you
visualize and identify your anxiety and things that you're afraid of, over time, you're like,
it's not the big of a deal. It's kind of okay. Okay. Now, a few things that you can change in your
lifestyle to help you have less anxiety. One of them is really regular exercise. Physical activity
has been shown to reduce anxiety because it increases endorphins. It promotes relaxation. It improves
your overall mood and people who put themselves through something that's strenuous, usually
learn how to calm themselves down from that strenuous strenuous thing. So one thing that I like to do
when I work out, I'll work out really hard. And then in my 60 second break, I'll close my eyes and
try to get my heart rate back down as much as I possibly can. So it's like, I put myself in a
heightened state, try to call myself down. Highened state, call myself down. Highen state,
call myself down. And I'm actually improving that muscle of calming myself down when I do that.
next thing that's really important as well you should start paying attention to stuff that you're eating
you know like obviously if you're eating McDonald's every single day and you're drinking a whole bunch of coax and pounding coffee
you're going to have more anxiety than the average person will so try to eat more whole foods
another really important thing have less sugar and i'm sorry everybody less caffeine
excessive caffeine and sugar intake really can exacerbate your anxiety symptoms so try not to have as much
caffeine, try to have less sugar, try to stay hydrated. This is a crazy thing. Drink water. So many people
are just so dehydrated and it makes them more anxious. Another thing that really helps with it,
drink less alcohol. If you drink less alcohol, you will be less anxious as well. So your body
sometimes is responding not only to just like what you're imagining, but the fact that some people
listening just don't take care of their body. And your body's like, let me try to send out the
signal of you need to prioritize me. Okay. Another thing that helps with that, prioritize your sleep.
Quality sleep is a really important part of mental health and poor sleep worsens anxiety for a lot
of people. It makes your cortisol levels higher. And so having really good sleep hygiene will help
you with it. Establish the sleep schedule that makes sense. And then another thing that's just
really important for every single person is limit your screen time. There have been study after
study after study that shows that people who are in front of their screens more often have way higher
levels of anxiety than somebody who doesn't have a smart time. So spend less time in front of your
computer. Spend less time on your phone. Get off of the social media apps. Stop paying attention to Netflix
so much. Like just limit your screen time and your anxiety will go down as well. And so I want
you understand anxiety is something that is natural inside of every single human. And if your anxiety
levels are higher, there are steps that you can use, the exact steps I just taught you to help you
lower your anxiety. 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 at Rob Dial Jr. R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R.
And if you're out there and you want to learn more about coaching with me outside of this podcast,
you can go to coach with rob.com.
Once again, coach with rob.com.
And with that, I'm going to leave the same way to 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.
