The Mindset Mentor - How to Stop Making Yourself Anxious
Episode Date: January 5, 2026What if the chaos in your life isn’t coming from the world around you but from the thoughts running in your head? In this episode, I break down how overthinking and catastrophizing create unnecessar...y anxiety, why your brain constantly jumps to the worst-case scenario, and how learning to challenge your thoughts helps you step out of your head and back into a calmer, more peaceful life. If you want to be a high performer in 2026, click here: https://2026workshop.com/ If you want 2026 to be your best year yet then this video is for you. In just 30 minutes, I’ll help you build a clear, simple goal system so you stop guessing and start moving forward with confidence. 👉 Build your 2026 goal system here: https://www.goalmastery2026.com/lp1 High performers don’t wait for clarity, they create it. This Mindset University call will help you see your blind spots and your next level. Grab your spot here 👉 https://www.coachwithrob.com/mindset-university-call-rob 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 episode.
And if you're committed to making 2026 the best year of your life,
join my free two-day high-performance live workshop this January 14th and 15th,
where I'm going to teach you the real-life tools to stop procrastinating, to take action,
follow through and get the results that finally match the potential you know that you have.
You're going to leave with the mindset, systems, and habits to build the version of you that you know
that you're meant to be this year. So go to 2026 workshop.com to register for free. Once again,
2026 workshop.com. Today, I'm going to talk about the way that we take reality and we distort
reality with our minds and in turn hold ourselves back. And my goal is to help you identify
where you might be doing this in your life and then to give you some tools to get yourself out of it
when you find yourself there so that you don't hold yourself back. And this thing that we're
going to talk about today is called catastrophizing, meaning you become fixated on the worst possible
outcome for something in your life. Oh, if I don't pass this test, then I'm going to fail this
class. And if I fail this class, I'll fail out of school. And if I fail out of school,
then I'll be a complete failure for the rest of my life. Somehow, a test, and whether you do
or don't pass it, just became complete failure for the rest of your life. That's an example of
catastrophizing. So the anxiety of a test automatically turns into being a complete failure in
your life. And I want you understand that your brain is incredibly complex. It's a
incredibly amazing and it is really good at protecting you. And so what it does is you start thinking
about the test and it's 25 steps ahead of you and it turns into you're going to be a complete
failure if you fail this test. Another example might be you get into a fight with your girlfriend
and then you think well now she's definitely going to leave me. And if my girlfriend leaves me,
I'll be destroyed. And I will never be able to trust again. And if I'm never able to trust again,
I'll be alone forever. And so the anxiety of a fight turns into, I will be alone forever.
This is what psychologists call catastrophizing. Psychologists also call catastrophizing magnifying.
You're taking something that is small that you probably won't remember in five years
and turning it into something massive as a protection mechanism. You're making a mountain
out of an ant hill.
And so the natural question that we should ask ourselves in this situation is why do we do this?
Well, we think that it serves us, but it's actually what it's categorized by scientists and
psychologists as what's called a cognitive dysfunction.
It is a dysfunction that we have that goes on in our minds.
We think that we're protecting ourselves, right?
We think that we're protecting ourselves.
As my girlfriend leaves me, then I won't be as less.
let down because I was expecting this anyways. And so we think we're protecting ourselves in some
sort of way. If I fail this test, I won't be as surprised because I knew it was going to happen.
It also, in a way, justifies us not taking the right action or getting ourselves out of our comfort
zone or trying something new because we don't want to be let down. See? Protection mechanism.
It feels better in the short term, but in the long term, it feels terrible.
You know, you don't start your business because you think that you'll fail.
So you don't want to feel like a failure.
So in the short term, you decide not to go after building your business, but you'll never be
successful in the long term.
So it feels better now in the long term.
It's not going to feel very good.
You don't ask someone out because you're a friend.
afraid. And so in the short term, you won't be rejected, but in the long term, you could be
alone if you don't overcome that. And so catastrophizing at its core is an attempt to avoid feeling
something. The real question is, in where you need to start analyzing yourself, is what feeling
are you trying to avoid? And so you're imagining the worse. So something happens, right? Fight with
girlfriend happens. Then there's something that's called a thinking error that she is going to leave
me and that you'll be alone forever. So the best way to help yourself is to develop the awareness of
your thoughts, to start paying more attention to what you're thinking inside of your head. We usually
think that if we imagine the worse, we can prevent it, but that is completely false. Usually if we
imagine the worst, we create worse circumstances because what we pay attention to is what we
create in our lives. And researchers have actually found that catastrophizing actually worsens
both your physical and mental outcomes. So in other words, you will make the situation
ultimately worse than it originally would have been because you're seeing the worst
and that seeing the worst usually invites the worst,
and we usually invite in exactly what we're trying to avoid.
And so instead of thinking about the worst that could happen,
I'm just going to give you a little tip about what we're going to go into in just a minute,
is imagining, if you're going to imagine the worst they could happen, imagine the best they could happen as well.
So let me give you a couple of examples just so it kind of makes more sense.
Let's say someone has chronic pain and they think about the pain.
and they think about the pain
and they speak about the pain to people
their brain focuses on the pain
which makes it more painful
that's your brain focusing
on the problem which magnifies the problem
let's say I'll give you another example
that someone is misdiagnosed with ADHD
it becomes their story
and it becomes truth to them
the amount of times that I hear have heard people say
Rob, I have ADHD in the past three years is probably 10 times more than I've ever heard it.
And so they say, oh, I can't build a business because I can't focus because I've got ADHD.
That's my deficit.
And they get a job because they believe they can't focus.
And then they get fired because they can't focus.
And the interesting thing, I've done a lot of research on ADHD recently, ADHD diagnosis have gone up 30% in the past eight years.
And studies have found that at least 20% of people are misdiagnosed with ADHD.
And we will be right back.
And now, back to the show.
And for all of the people that I keep hearing say that they have ADHD, statistically,
only about 4.4% of adults actually have ADHD.
And so what I've really found is that a lot of people are thinking to themselves that they
have ADHD because they have concentration problems and they have concentration problems
because they're constantly being bombarded with their cell phone and with emails, and they have no
moment for their mind to rest. And so their mind is all over the place and they're all scatterbrained all the
time. And they either self-diagnose, oh my gosh, I have ADHD, or they go to a doctor who is not
as qualified. And they say, hey, here's what's going on. I can't concentrate because of all of the
stuff they're doing throughout their day that's making them not be able to concentrate. And the doctor's
like, oh, well, you know, then you have ADHD. Just do some research. If somebody has ADHD,
do some research on it and just see how wild it's got in the past.
years with doctors misdiagnosing people with ADHD. And the interesting thing about ADHD,
because I have so many people that come to me and say it, is that people with ADHD actually
concentrate better than people who don't have it. That's one thing that you don't hear.
Now, there is a caveat to that. It has to be something that they're interested in. If somebody
has ADHD and they're doing something that they're not interested in, they have a very low BS meter
for ADHD. And so the reason why I'm going off on this is because we can see how if somebody is
misdiagnosed with ADHD and they make it their story, then it actually starts to hold them back
even more. And so then we start to think, like, am I imagining the worst? I have ADHD. I'm not
going to be able to build a business. I won't be able to be successful. I might as well just get a job.
Oh my God, I can't focus on this job because I have ADHD. There's probably a problem with me.
there must be a problem with my brain. Oh, I'm probably never going to be successful.
And so that's what tends to happen I found with a lot of people. And you've got to ask yourself,
am I imagining the worse in a situation? And if I am imagining the worst than the situation,
I at least, if I'm on one side of the table, I need to at least go to the other side of the table
and imagine the best. I can't just allow myself to think only this thing is possible.
If I'm going to think that this thing is possible, that I'm going to have to challenge myself,
to think that this other thing is possible. So if I'm imagining what is the worst
that could happen, then I need to take a step back and they say, okay, if I'm imagining the
worst it can happen, I also need to take a step back and see and imagine what's the best thing
that could happen. Because usually it doesn't end up in either one of those. It doesn't end up in the
best. It doesn't end up in the worst. It usually ends up in the middle for most things.
So let me give an example of exactly what I mean, right? Let's say somebody has social anxiety
and they want to go out to the mall.
And so they imagine they go out to the mall
and then they get nervous
and they have a panic attack in the mall.
And they think about and they feel
how embarrassing that panic attack
would be in front of other people.
And then they think to themselves,
well, it would just be easier to stay home.
And so over time, this develops into a pattern
of never leaving the house.
All we did was talk about leaving the house
and going to the mall,
but they imagine the panic attack
and how embarrassed they would be and what it would feel like.
And so that's a version of catastrophing.
It's easier not to go through that.
So I'll just stay at home.
And if we do this enough, it turns into a pattern of never leaving the house.
So if I notice myself doing that, if I notice myself imagining the worst, then I must imagine the best as well.
So what is the best that could happen then?
Well, the best thing it could happen is I could go to the mall and everything is great.
and I get my shopping done and I buy what I need
and then maybe I'm walking by the food court
and I see a friend that I haven't seen in a while
and we decide hey let's go and get some coffee
and we go and get coffee and we catch up
and we have such a great time we decide that we want to hang out again
and go get some dinner next week
and I have an amazing day
all because I left the house and I went to the mall
and I come home with what I needed
and I feel great about myself
and I feel great about my trip
and I feel great about reconnecting with a friend.
I feel great about the fact that I'm going to see them again next week.
We might as well imagine both scenarios, right?
Either way, the future is completely uncertain.
We have to accept the uncertainty.
So what you want to do is start taking yourself out of the catastrophizing
because if you're catastrophizing, you're focusing on what you don't want.
And so many people have been trained to focus on what they don't want.
So what I want you to start doing is to focus on what it is that you want.
What do you want?
I remember watching a video a couple years ago of a guy that brought a lady on stage.
And he's like, I want to show you guys something.
So she comes on stage and has a chair on one side of the room and a chair on the other side of the room.
And he goes, I want you go ahead and sit in this chair.
And this is the do not want chair.
And I want you to tell me all the things that you don't want.
And she's like, well, I don't want this and this and this and this and this.
And she goes on for a couple minutes.
he goes, is there anything else?
And she's like, well, I don't want this and this.
He goes, okay, anything else?
And she eventually gets a point.
She's like, no, nothing else that I could think of.
It was, okay, I want you to go to the other chair that's across on the other side of the room.
And I want you to tell me what you want.
And she's like, okay, well, I want this.
And I want this.
And I want this.
And then she goes, but I don't want this.
And I don't want this.
And he goes, hold on.
No, no, no.
You're not in the don't want chair anymore.
You're in the want chair.
and the reason why this is important to bring up is because so many people are focusing on what they
don't want all day long that very few people actually know what they want because they never actually
focus on it and they think by focusing on what they don't want that they will get what they want
but that's not the way that it works you won't get what you want by focusing and trying to avoid
the things that you don't want you will only get what you focus on so if you're focusing on what
you don't want what do you think you're going to get more of what you don't want
so you've got to consciously understand my brain because it is a protection mechanism will focus
on what I don't want it will focus on the negative it will catastrophize sometimes that is a protection
mechanism that is how our species stayed alive but if you're trying to create a great life
you can't let your brain just run off to its own device you've got to be the one that's in
control of it and you got to wake up each morning and be very intentional about focusing and paying
attention to what it is that you want it's okay to think about what you don't want but it's
not okay to only think about what you don't want. You've got to also focus on what you do want.
If you're going to focus on the worst, you've also got to focus on the best. You've got to play both
sides. And so the first part of all of this is to become more aware. You cannot change anything
that you're unaware of. And so if this is hitting home with you in some sort of way, I want you to start
becoming more aware of your thoughts in the moment. If you notice yourself starting to feel bad,
if you notice yourself starting to shift, your body not feeling as good as it was, start feeling
anxious or worried. Something happened in your thought patterns. So you've got to ask yourself,
and this is what they ask in cognitive behavioral therapy, to ask yourself, what was I just thinking?
I noticed my body shift. I noticed myself getting anxious. What was I just thinking? I need to now
become aware of my thoughts. Now I'm becoming aware of my thoughts. Because if I can become aware of my
thoughts, now I can start to change my thoughts. So first piece is your awareness. The second thing you need to do is
you need to challenge your thinking.
When you notice, oh my gosh, I noticed myself thinking about this one thing that is making me anxious.
Okay, well, the next thing you need to do is call cognitive reframing, which is challenge what you're thinking.
Well, and that was the example I gave them all.
Well, if I'm thinking of this, then I need to challenge that and also see that this is a possibility as well.
Is it possible that I am just catastrophizing?
Is it possible that I could go out to the mall and I could have an amazing day?
Is it possible that I won't have a panic attack?
Challenge your thoughts and try to poke holes into the thoughts that you have to prove that they're not truth.
So that's the second thing is to challenge your thinking.
Number three is to start imagining the best.
Start taking time to start imagining the best.
Start thinking about what it is that you do want.
I'm going to start focusing more on what I do want because what I focus on I'll get so I'll probably get more of what I want.
and then the last piece of it that's really an important thing around catastrophizing is to accept
uncertainty life is uncertain most things are uncertain and uncertainty a unsolved problem to the mind
is a threat but as an adult listening to a podcast that wants to make your life better you have to
accept that uncertainty is one of the most constant things in life we cannot predict the future
none of us have a crystal ball that's going to tell us exactly what's going to happen.
We need to accept the fact that we don't know it's going to happen in the future,
but we need to trust in ourselves that no matter what happens in the future,
if we continue to keep working on ourselves,
we continue to keep working on our self-development,
continue to try to become a better person,
that no matter what does happen in the future,
we will be able to handle it.
And then we can start taking small steps in the right direction.
And so that right there is how you stop making yourself so depressed and anxious
by catastrophizing, and we actually start to change our thought patterns.
So that's all 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 Diald Jr.
And once again, if you're committed to making 2026 the best year of your life,
join my free two-day high performance live workshop on January 14th and 15th.
It's where I'm going to teach you the real life tools to stop procrastinating, take action,
and get real results that match your potential.
You'll leave with the mindset, systems, and habits to build yourself into the version of you that you know that you're meant to be.
So to register for free, go to 2026 Workshop.com.
Once again, 26Workshop.com.
And with that, I'm going to leave you 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.
