The Mindset Mentor - How to Rewire Your Brain to Stop Procrastinating
Episode Date: February 13, 2026What if I told you your procrastination isn’t a personality flaw? In this episode, I’ll show you why you’re not lazy — your brain is just running old survival wiring that treats discomfort li...ke danger. That’s why hard things trigger anxiety, avoidance, and self-sabotage. I’ll teach you how to retrain your brain, flip your fear response, and make growth feel safe — so you stop choosing comfort and start building the life you actually want. 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 to you about how to rewire your brain so that you stop procrastinating.
because what if I told you that your procrastination isn't a personality flaw? It's more so an old
broken circuit in your brain. So your brain is literally wired to avoid discomfort because at some point
in your life, in your childhood, you learned that discomfort meant danger. So now every time you
try to do something hard, the same survival pathways light up in your brain like you're in
like you're being chased. And so your heart rate will shift. Your body will tighten. And your brain is
going to scream danger. Do something else. Do anything else. And it's not that you're lazy.
It's that you're actually running outdated wiring that is misfiring. And so the problem isn't that
you need more motivation or more willpower. The problem is that your brain has been trained to crave
relief instead of growth. And if you don't consciously rewire those circuits,
which is what I'll teach you today, you will keep choosing comfort for the rest of your life,
even though comfort is costing you the life that you want. And then you will self-sabotage
for the rest of your life. So today I'm going to teach you how to retrain your brain so that your
brain actually wants to do what is hard. And it wants to do what is good for you in your future.
So let's dive into it. See, most people think that there's something wrong with them. They think,
oh, I'm lazy, or I have no discipline, or I have no willpower. I'm just inconsistent. I can't
stick with anything. I never follow through. But what's really happening a lot of the time is that you're
not lazy or undisciplined. It's that you're actually unconsciously trying to protect yourself.
And so your nervous system is running old programs that say something like, if I try, I could fail.
And if I fail, I could be judged. And if I'm judged, I could be rejected. And if I'm rejected,
I'm not safe.
And it sounds dramatic until you realize that your brain is just running ancient software.
And it's staying in the tribe equals survival mindset.
Like, I need to stay in the tribe.
I need to be in the tribe.
And if I get kicked out, it means danger.
So it's running this old ancient software that you need to consciously update.
And that's why something that's like as simple as your boss sending you an email saying,
or you free at 4 o'clock can spike your anxiety instantly because your brain goes straight
to threat forecasting. That's what your brain is really, really good at, is threat forecasting.
So when you go to do something that is challenging for you, that is out of your comfort zone,
your brain doesn't evaluate it through like a logical lens, like a logical adult would.
It evaluates it like, does this feel safe in any way?
and if the answer is no it doesn't feel safe it pulls away and so procrastination most people are like
oh i have procrastination problem unless i need to get better with willpower i need to get better with time
management it's neither one of those procrastination is a threat response you're procrastinating
because you're afraid of something and so that's why doing hard things feels like danger
And so let's get really specific around this.
Hard things like doing something challenging outside of your comfort zone
tends to activate three different threat categories in some sort of way.
So threat number one that's very common for a lot of people is incompetence.
What if I'm not good enough?
What if I fail?
What if I suck at this?
What if I look stupid?
Right?
Threat number two is that's very common for a lot of people as well as rejection.
What if they judge me?
What if they don't like me?
what if they all have all of their opinions of me? What if I disappoint somebody? So that's
threat number two that's very common. The threat number three that's very common for a lot of people is
loss of control. Like what if I can't handle it? What if all of this gets overwhelming? What if I end up
messing all of this up? And so the truth of all of it, though, is that your brain, when it starts to think
of these, the loss of control or starts thinking of rejection, it starts to think of incompetence in some
sort of way. It doesn't need proof in this moment right now. It needs a pattern from your past.
And so if at any point in your life, trying hard led to some sort of pain of being rejected or
failing or feeling like an idiot or loss of control, your brain is going to connect the dots.
And then later, as an adult in this moment, you're not just avoiding a task. What you're really
avoiding is the old emotional memory that that task wakes up from your past. Are you picking up what I'm
putting down? So it's not like the thing in the moment. That's actually the problem. The problem is
that your brain is thinking of something that happened to you in the past and predicting that the
same thing is going to happen to you now. And so I always say the pain in your past creates the fears
in your future. And so whatever happened to you that had some sort of painful feeling in the
past, without being made fun of or left out or looking stupid or being heartbroken, it's going to
create the fears in the future. And that's what's actually holding you back is the threat prediction
in your brain. And so somehow your brain probably learned if you're procrastinating, it learned
that effort feels unsafe, that effort is unsafe in some sort of way. And so this is where we can go
deeper than just surface level than just like most people are just like, ah, just do it. Just force yourself to do
it. We've all forced ourselves to do things before, haven't we? And we could do it for a little while,
but can we do it in long term? No. We always fall off if we're just forcing ourselves, right?
Many of us learned that, you know, if you were criticized a lot as a kid, like your brain learned
that, you know, trying equals getting picked apart, or effort equals humiliation, or mistakes
equal pain. You know, if you felt maybe that love was conditional as a kid, your brain learned,
well, I'm only safe when I perform, or I'm only loved or accepted when I perform, or it's unsafe
if I fail, or I must not mess up or I won't be loved. You know, or if you had chaos or
unpredictability in your house, your brain probably learned like, hey, don't speak up. Don't add more
difficulty to the house. Stay low, stay quiet, don't risk it. And we will be right back.
And now, back to the show. And so we have all of these things that happened in our past or all
these different painful moments in our past. And so now your adult brain, it wants success. It wants
to push itself. You want to get out of your comfort zone, but your nervous system wants
predictability. And it wants to say safe. And predictability often looks like comfort,
in staying the same. And that's why people want growth. That's why you want to grow and you want to get
better, but you'll choose familiar suffering instead because familiar suffering feels safe in the moment.
And so what we need to do is we need to actually flip what is safe and what is not safe in our brain.
We need to flip what we get pleasure from and we need to flip what we get pain from
because your brain always craves what is safe, what feels safe to it.
And so if we make this all super simple, your brain craves what it knows.
Your brain craves what it can predict.
Your brain craves what has given it relief before in the past.
You know, so like if you had a really hard day at work at one point in time and it was just
stressful and you're like, I just want to scroll on my phone.
I just want to click out and just disappear from my brain, right?
Maybe it's a, you want to just calm down after that stressful day.
then if your brain at any point in time in the past got relief from scrolling on your phone,
then your brain is going to crave scrolling over your phone most cases overtaking action
because it gave you relief at some point in time.
If snacks or overeating at one point in time or eating a tub of ice cream gave you some sort of
relief, then your brain is going to crave that in the future.
if avoidance avoiding the actual painful conversation or avoiding, you know, the chaos at the house, whatever it was, if avoidance had given you relief, then your brain is going to crave avoidance.
Your brain is going to crave whatever has felt good before, even if it ruined your life long term.
Because your brain is not focused on the long term. Your brain is mostly focused on like short term right now, reduce the pain right now.
And when I say pain, of course it could be physical pain, but more than anything else, it's
usually some sort of psychological pain.
And this is why willpower almost always breaks over time.
Willpower is you trying to overpower your nervous system, which you can do for a little while,
but eventually you're going to lose.
It's like trying to wrestle a bear, right?
You don't want to wrestle the bear.
You want to retrain the bear instead.
And that's what we need to do.
And we need to basically flip, like I said, what we get pleasure from and what we get
pain from in our brain. And so this is the skill. Hard things, we want them to become cravable.
Like we want to want to do hard things, right? So hard things become craveable when your brain learns
that effort and taking action will create safety later on in life. Like I will be more safe from
taking this action, not less safe because we think, oh, less safe out of my comfort. So no, no, I need to
rewire to my brain that actually taking action outside of my comfort zone will create more safety
later in life. That doing hard things and will actually, you know, I want to train my brain that doing
hard things in learning that discomfort is actually a good thing and not something that I should feel
pain from, but something I should feel pleasure from because it equals progress. And I can think about
how that progress is going to make my life better. I want hard things to become craveable.
and for my brain to learn that challenges equal reward.
And so how do we go about doing it all that?
Well, definitely not by yelling at yourself,
because one of the things that I find with most people is that you'll do the thing
that you need to do, like go to the gym,
and then you'll look at yourself in the mirror and be like,
oh, you're still fat.
You didn't work out hard enough.
You should have worked out longer.
You could have gotten an extra 10 minutes on the treadmill.
And so you do the thing that you wanted to do,
and then you beat yourself up for it anyways.
Or you guilt yourself or you shame yourself or whatever might be.
So what you need to do is when you finish a task, what you need to do is you need to celebrate
yourself because most people are, you know, just assholes to themselves, even after they do
the thing they want to do.
You could have done better.
You could have stayed longer.
You're still not where you want to be.
And with that, you kill the motivation.
And so the rule is very simple here, okay?
We pair discomfort with safety and meaning and reward.
right so discomfort going to the gym getting out of your comfort zone making cold calls whatever it is
it's discomfort to you we pair it in our brain we start to actually pair it and think of it as a way of
creating more safety and more meaning and more rewarded our life and so this is how you flip the wiring in
your brain okay you need to retrain your brain to think different about effort and challenge
and discomfort instead of associating with pain we must associate those things with pleasure
you must associate it with the pleasure in your life that you're creating and celebrate it in the
moment so that there is immediate feedback to your brain so that it knows your brain knows the thing
that you just did was a good thing the thing that you just did you want to do it again and basically
what you're doing is you want to think of training your brain or i guess you could say retraining
your brain from this moment forward the same way that you train a dog think about this right you train a dog
and when it does what you want it to do, what do you do? You give it a treat. Why do you give it a treat?
Because that treat tastes good, it releases dopamine and makes the dog feel good, and that is positive reinforcement.
And that positive reinforcement, because the dog got a treat, because they got dopamine and it got positive reinforcement,
the dog now wants to keep doing that thing over and over and over and over again so they continue to get treats.
And it continues to get more dopamine.
Like most people train their dogs with positive reinforcement and it works and then they try to train themselves with negative reinforcement and they can't figure out why it's not working.
You have to train your brain the same way you train a dog.
Little treats, little positive reinforcement, little celebrations for yourself.
Dopamine rewards as much as you possibly can.
And so when we retrain ourselves, we basically need to do it in three different layers.
okay. First one is through your body. The second one is through your mind. And the third thing is through
a dopamine reward. Okay. So layer number one is your body safety. Whenever you start to do something out of
your comfort zone, your body is going to scream at you. Don't do it. Don't do it. Do it. Do it.
It's going to say, do this instead. Do this instead. Do this instead. So you need to teach your
nervous system. I can be uncomfortable and still safe. I can. I can.
be uncomfortable and I can still be safe. Otherwise, it will always fight you. And this matters
way more than I think people realize. Most people try to do hard things while their body's just
like screaming at them. And then they eventually self-sabotage and they wonder why they're not doing
what they want to do. And so you want to just give yourself 30 seconds to signal safety to your
body before you do anything else. When you feel your body resisting discomfort, not wanting to get
out of your comfort zone, making you feel fears and worries and limiting beliefs and all that stuff.
And it's trying to hold you back from doing the hard thing. Pause for a second.
Drop your shoulders. Take a deep breath. Unclench your jaw for a second. And then slowly inhale
through your nose and make your exhale through your mouth longer than you inhale. And do it a
couple times. And then just say out loud to yourself, I am safe. It sounds, listen, I get it. It sounds
stupid. It sounds like it does nothing. This will rewire your brain. Trust me when I tell you this,
right? Say to yourself, I am safe. Say to yourself, this is just discomfort and that's okay.
Here's the key. Your body can't tell the difference between something that is hard or something
that is dangerous unless you teach it. You have to teach the meaning to your body. Right?
And so what this does is this interrupts the threat loop. And if you can stay regulated long enough,
your brain updates the file.
Oh, that wasn't dangerous.
You know, it turns the emergency alarms off.
Now your body's on board with it.
It takes just a couple minutes.
The second thing you need to do is you need to pay attention to the meaning that your mind is giving it.
You change the label and you change the experience.
The brain responds to meaning for everything.
And so this is called cognitive reframing in cognitive behavioral therapy, right?
you tell yourself, this is not dangerous. I'm okay. Fear, this feeling of discomfort is not a stop sign.
Fear is just the feeling of standing at the edge of my comfort zone. I want to grow. So it is a good
thing that I feel this way. This is not a bad sign. You see how I'm taking the feeling and I'm
talking to myself so I can change the meaning of what's going on and what I think about it and tell
myself, this isn't a bad thing. This is okay. It's okay to feel this way. You're not in danger.
And so I'm first changing my body and then I'm changing my brain around it and I'm rewiring it.
This discomfort is proof that I'm on the right track. If I'm not feeling the fear, I'm not growing.
Okay? And I'm trying to get my body on board first and then I need to get my brain on board by
changing the meaning of the feeling. And then layer three is a dopamine reward. Your brain
repeats what is rewarded. So it wants you to do what has given you some sort of relief or dopamine
before in the past. So when you take a small action in the direction of the discomfort, don't beat
yourself up like you have in the past. Celebrate yourself out loud. Say, I am so proud of myself.
That was hard and I did it anyways. This is who I am. This is who I'm building myself into.
I am building myself into someone that I love and I respect. I'm trying to live. I'm trying to
literally celebrate that and that will release dopamine in your brain because dopamine is subjective.
You can release it whenever you want to based off of making yourself feel good. And dopamine
creates repetition. It's like the treat to the dog. You're going to want to do it again.
You want to get yourself to want to do it. So if you do this, you're rewiring your fear and your
pleasure and your pain associations in your brain. And you don't rewire this through like one heroic day.
you rewire it with repetition. You pick one hard thing and you make it small enough to feel safe.
Just small enough to feel safe. You regulate the body first. You do the thing. You tell yourself and you put the
meaning inside of your brain and then you immediately reward yourself after. Right. And you're rewiring your mind by doing it.
And so what you're doing when you do this is you're shifting yourself deeply, internally. You're teaching your body in your brain that fear or discomfort does not
equal danger. You're teaching your brain that effort leads to the life that you want. You're
teaching your identity of who you think you are, that this is the person that I am becoming. And over
time, if you do this enough, you're craving of what you pleasure and the pain you're trying
to avoid flips over time. So now you're not trying to avoid discomfort. You're trying to actually
run towards discomfort because it's pleasurable because it creates a life you want because
you've gotten dopamine over and over and over and over again and it feels good.
And it's not going to happen immediately. It's going to happen through reps of doing it over and
over and over and over again. And you'll eventually be able to take the actions you've always wanted
to. Not because you're a superhuman because you have massive amounts of willpower, but because
you trained your brain and body correctly. You updated the software. 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.
Rob Dial Jr., R-B-D-I-L-J-R. R-R. B-D-I-L-L-J-R.
And if you want to learn more about coaching with me outside this podcast, you can go to
Coachwithrob.com. Once again, coach with rob.com. And with that, I'm going to leave you the same way
and leave you every single episode. Making it your mission, make somebody else's day better. I appreciate you.
And I hope that you have an amazing day.
