The Mindset Mentor - How To Turn Your Emotions Into A Superpower!
Episode Date: March 5, 2021In this episode, I am going to teach you how to take one of the hardest emotions in the world and turn it into your superpower! Subscribe to my YouTube for inspirational videos: https://www.youtube.c...om/robdialjr 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 am your host, Rob Dylan.
If you have not yet done so, hit that subscribe button since you never miss another podcast
episode. Today, we're going to talk about emotions. We're going to talk about how to
take your emotions and turn them into your superpower. And one thing we're going to talk about very, very deeply today is vulnerability.
Yep, we're going to go there.
Why? Because we're so afraid.
Every human is afraid of vulnerability in some sort of way.
And the reason why is because in people's heads, we think of the word vulnerability
and we think vulnerability as weakness.
We think it's a dark emotion. We think vulnerability at its core is fear and anxiety and shame and disappointment and
the most difficult emotions that exist.
But also at the core of vulnerability is love and joy and happiness.
And it's hard nowadays because we see all of the ads on TV that tell us that we're not
good enough. We see, you know, little girls nowadays see magazines that show them what
perfectionism actually is. People get on Instagram, children get on Instagram, teenagers get on
Instagram and they see everybody photoshopped in some sort of way. It is so easy to edit yourself
on your iPhone right now. And so what do we do?
Because of the fact that we look around us and we think,
oh, everybody else is so perfect.
That person's not, I'm not.
We numb ourselves.
We numb vulnerability.
And we don't want to open up because we don't want to be disappointed.
We want to stay in our armor because opening up makes you feel naked.
And it makes you feel like you're coming out of your skin. And it's only gotten harder with social media because obviously everything's
so edited and then people are looking at how many likes they get. And if they don't get as many likes
as somebody else and they don't feel like they're good enough and all of advertising and social
media makes us feel like we're not good enough. We're not good enough. We're not pretty enough.
We're not smart enough. We're not fit enough. We're not pretty enough. We're not smart enough. We're not fit enough. We're not successful enough. We're not thin enough.
And it makes it so hard because then we're looking at our imperfect selves because everybody's
imperfect. And we're comparing ourselves to standards that are basically impossible to
achieve unless you have a computer to fix it, right? Women see ads and people are unattainably
skinny. And through Photoshop, they have perfect
skin, quote unquote, perfect skin because they can edit everything out. So then they start comparing
themselves and comparing their lives to near perfect standards, right? And then you watch
movies and you see marriages and love stories and rom-coms that have these perfect lives and
these perfect love and these perfect marriages that ours could never compare to, to how great they are on the big screen. So what do we do?
We hide. And we try to make ourselves not be seen because we're not that. We're not that perfect
person in the advertisement. We're not that perfect person that's on Instagram. We're not
that perfect relationship or that perfect love that we see in all of the movies. So what do we do? We hide from everybody, from ourselves, from our friends, from our family, from our significant
others, because it's easier to hide. So we hide behind an armor and we never let anybody see the
real us. We hide all of our blemishes. Women hide their blemishes behind makeup. Men hide all their
bald spots, but behind hats. And we get into
relationships and we get into friendships and all of them are just surface level and they never grow
and they never become deeper and really deep relationships or really deep friendships because
everyone is just afraid of possibly letting somebody in and possibly being let down. And
it's easier just to hide than it is to hide and to never be let
down than to truly open yourself up for possibility in what could be and then be let down. So we don't
even enter the race because we're afraid that we might lose it. So we close off and we close off
and we close off more and more and more as we get older. But here's the problem with that.
And we close off more and more and more as we get older.
But here's the problem with that.
In order to experience the best emotions as a human,
we have to experience vulnerability. In order to experience true love, true joy, true happiness,
true hope, true authenticity,
we can't experience those without allowing ourselves to be vulnerable.
But the problem is this.
We see vulnerability as weakness. We see vulnerability as weakness.
We see vulnerability as weakness. It shows us being weak. It shows us being imperfect. It shows
us not being as good as everybody else. But when you're open and you're honest and you're vulnerable
and completely emotionally naked, do you want to know what people actually think of you? Think about it for a second. They think, wow, that
person's courageous. I don't know how they just did that. I wish that I could open up. So what's
interesting is though, we think courageous, stepping out and being vulnerable is weak.
Other people view as courageous. And I think that one of the main problems with being vulnerable is weak, other people view as courageous. And I think that one of the main
problems with being vulnerable is that it leaves us open to uncertainty. Most people are uncomfortable
with uncertainty. Most people want certainty. They want definites in their lives. You know,
what if we love someone and we open up to them and we show them our true selves, who we truly
are behind all of the armor, and they see it and they don't love us back? Or what if
they judge us? That's what we worry about. Shit's too risky. We don't want to open ourselves up
and possibly be hurt. That's just going to hurt even more. So we stay close. We keep our armor up.
And it's not just love and relationships. It's many things. You know, vulnerability is many
things. Vulnerability is starting a business. Vulnerability is finding your passion and following your passion.
Vulnerability is doing what other people think that you shouldn't do.
Sharing an unpopular opinion.
Calling a friend who might have cancer.
That's vulnerable.
Saying I love you first.
Saying, you know, that you have art that you want to share with someone.
Sharing your music with somebody.
Trying something new. Exercising in public when you're overweight, being accountable,
having faith, admitting that you were wrong at some point in time, asking for forgiveness.
All of those are vulnerability as well. And the word vulnerable, just so you know,
comes from the Latin word, which means capable of being wounded, open for attack. And that's
what we feel like when we
think of the word vulnerable. I could possibly be wounded. I could possibly be attacked.
And we want to be strong. We want to be courageous. So we don't allow ourselves to be vulnerable. We
don't allow people to see that side of us. And we think it will open us up for some form of an
attack with the possibility of being emotionally wounded. And that sounds hard. It's emotional
exposure. We want to hide
behind that. We don't want to get out there and let other people see us. But in reality,
when you're vulnerable, you're not emotionally weak. You actually become emotionally stronger.
No one looks down on someone who's vulnerable. They look up to them. To be vulnerable is to
truly be alive. And it all starts when you're a child. When we come into this world, we're vulnerable. Children don't care what you think about them.
They don't care. They don't care about clothes that they wear. You know, Dean's child was over
here. He's a year and a half. He was over here this weekend. Kid was walking around my house
naked. Did not care about anybody seeing him naked. Didn't even pop into his head, right?
Children don't care. They are vulnerable. They're the epitome of vulnerable. But then as
they get older, they get reprimanded what they should and shouldn't do. They learn what they
can and cannot do in the world. And what happens is they realize what they can't do and what they
can do. And they start to close off because they're like, oh, that's who I truly am. I'm not
allowed to be that. So they close off. In elementary school, you get older. You share secrets with a
friend thinking that they'll never tell a soul. they tell people and then you get made fun of. So what do you do? You close
off. You learn to close off from these things because it's easier to close off than it is to
be made fun of. That's also why breakups are so hard, right? You find your first love. You show
them your true self because you don't know any better. You allow yourself to be emotionally
vulnerable with this person and it makes you so happy. It makes you over the moon in love with that person,
love and happiness and all of that good shit. But then you see that person kissing someone
by the locker and you feel like your heart's been ripped out, whatever it is, right? It's
emotional treason is what it feels like. So you learn to close off. I don't want to show my,
my true self anymore, right? So it's raw emotional years that we learn to close off rather than being hurt.
So we're certain that if we close off, that we won't be hurt.
So we want certainty over uncertainty.
A lot of times if we open up, it allows us to be hurt and possibly, you know, be scarred
by somebody else.
But everybody has to deal with vulnerability at some point in time, not just a few people. We all have to figure out that vulnerability is
something that we need to embrace or die without truly being seen as who we are. See, we're human.
We all struggle with feelings of not being good enough. We want to feel loved. We want to feel
like we're good enough. We want to feel like we're good enough and smart enough and pretty enough and
successful and happy and thin enough and fit enough, whatever the hell it is that you want.
We want all that stuff, but to be vulnerable is to be alive and to open yourself up to being seen,
to open yourself up to being happy, open yourself up to being loved, to open yourself up to possibly
being hurt. And if we want to truly be happy, then we have to figure out a way to embrace that vulnerability
so how do we invest how do we how do we possibly allow ourselves to be open to those things well
vulnerability is the only real thing that's going to allow us to set us free to love truly and to
be loved and typically we tend to run from it so we need to learn to be comfortable with letting
our armor down it's like anything else it becomes hard the very first time, but it becomes easier with practice.
As adults, we need to learn to be courageous, to follow what our purpose is, to find connection,
to feel what true love is, to see what true love is. And in relationships, vulnerability is the
last thing that we want other people to see in us, but it's the very first thing that we want to see in them.
Think about that one for a second. Isn't that interesting? It's the very last thing they want
people to see in us, but it's the very first thing we want to see in them. We want to know
the real them. We want to see the person that they hide from everyone else, but we don't want
them to think that we're weak. We want them to think that we're strong, right? But some people have been
wearing a mask for so long that they don't even know who they truly are. They don't know who they
are because they've never been that way in front of their friends, in front of their family, in
front of their kids, in front of their partner. So they don't know who the hell they are. But one of
the things that makes us so much more advanced than animals is our emotional capacity, that we can constantly expand that emotional capacity. And we can't worry about not being accepted. We have to step
out into the unknown. There's a quote that really works well with this, and it's, be the changes you
want to see in the world. You have to realize that in order to have true deep connection,
relationship with someone, that you actually might have to be the first person to open up.
You might have to be the first person to be vulnerable.
You're the one that's listening to this episode, not them.
So maybe you have to be the first person.
The first person that opens up, that's vulnerable in the relationship that you're in.
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Because you might not be where you want to say physically, but it doesn't mean that you can't
start looking at yourself as if you are fit enough right now and tell yourself that you are enough.
Because when you believe that you are enough,
it makes it easier to be vulnerable
because you truly believe that you're enough as you are
and you don't need someone else to accept you
because you are good enough as you are,
that you are worthy enough,
that you are comfortable with the way that you look,
that the way that you feel,
that you're comfortable with that.
And you learn to be more confident in yourself
and you don't need anybody else to tell you how you are, how you look, how you feel. That's one step to
getting more confident with being vulnerable is being confident in yourself. And when you look
at yourself, you can be happy with the way that you look and with the way that you look and you're
happy with it and you can be vulnerable and you're confident. You can be confident showing it to
others, knowing that you're perfect just the way that you are. You allow yourself to be happy and you stop hiding. Like when I first started
this podcast, one of the things that was so terrifying for me was that I remember writing
down on a piece of paper that I was going to be true and authentic and real and raw and vulnerable.
And that was scary for me because I never really practiced vulnerability. Like when my father
passed away, he passed away on a Thursday. I went back to school either Monday or Tuesday, right?
I didn't tell anybody.
I was 15 years old because what 15-year-old boy is allowed to show emotions, especially
around his friends?
I didn't tell anybody.
So I always struggled with opening myself up.
And when I started the podcast, I was like, you know what?
I'm going to actually talk about it.
I had so many friends that didn't know my father passed away, didn't know my father's
an alcoholic.
I never talked about it.
And I went, you know what? I'm just going to go ahead and start saying
it to people. If I can be open, honest, and vulnerable, then people maybe can listen to me
and go, you know what? Me too. Maybe I can connect. Maybe they can connect to my story in some form of
a, you know, some way or another. And in turn, it will help them deal with whatever it is that
they're dealing with. Right? What I can tell you now that I'm almost 900 podcast episodes in
is that having a podcast and saying these things out loud has been one of the most cathartic things
that I could possibly do. It was so hard to record podcast episodes though and say some of the shit
that I had really gone through my life. Say some of the really stuff that was really hard because
I hid it from everybody for years and years, for 15 years. Nobody knew any of that stuff. It was hard for me to be vulnerable. Guys aren't
supposed to be vulnerable. That's what we're told. Right. And I was reading a book called
Daring Greatly by Brene Brown. And I saw it and I was like, you know what? This is right. I do need
to try to actually try to be more vulnerable and to actually share what I thought was my quote
unquote weakness. And what was interesting about is as I shared my story, I started getting so many emails from people
that were like, oh my gosh, I love this. I connect my story with yours. Thank you so much for being
vulnerable and courageous and all of this stuff. And the funny thing was, is that people started
reaching out to me, these podcasts that I was so afraid to put out, so afraid to talk about, you know, my father's issues, my father's death. I did a podcast episode literally a few days after
my grandfather passed away. And I remember literally crying in the episode. And I was like,
I'm going to put it out anyways. And I was terrifying. And then I got so many emails
of people being like, thank you for just being vulnerable because it gives me the
confidence that I can go and be vulnerable as well. It shows me that a confident person can
be vulnerable, right? And some people don't even let anybody know that side of themselves. Some
people don't even know that side of themselves. Some people, joy is something that they don't
allow themselves to experience. Vulnerability is something they don't allow themselves to experience
in the happiest, most amazing moments in your life,
the happiest, most amazing feelings and emotions that you want to feel
are all being held back.
If you can't feel your lowest lows,
then you definitely can't feel your highest highs.
So you're restricted emotionally if you can't fully open yourself up ever.
Right?
And some people, the most joyous moments of their lives are held back because they're still
too worried about what could possibly happen. And they have armor up. Like a good example,
I always think of as parents, they see their kids on the first day of school and they worry
about when they're going to be 18 years old and leaving for college instead of just fully being
in that moment and thinking about their child going to school, right? Or they see their child going to school for the first time. And instead of being like,
oh my God, this is a beautiful moment. They immediately started thinking about, oh my gosh,
what if they're, what if they're bullied, right? Or they watch their kids sleep. I've heard this
many times. And they think about, instead of thinking about how beautiful they are and how
amazing that child is and how lucky they are to have them, they interrupt those, what could be
beautiful thoughts with worrying about losing them. So instead of having a moment of joy, that child is and how lucky they are to have them, they interrupt those what could be beautiful
thoughts with worrying about losing them. So instead of having a moment of joy, they have
that moment. They hold that joy back with worry of what could happen if that person's not always
around. They ruin great moments because they worry too much about being vulnerable of what could
possibly happen. They don't enjoy the moment too much because they think about what could maybe possibly
someday down the road happen with that person.
They don't let themselves fully experience joy.
They don't let themselves fully experience
those joyous moments and fully become alive
because they don't want the possibility
of somebody leaving them, dying,
something happening to them.
So once again, they put up the armor. You have to allow
yourself to be happy. You have to allow yourself to feel joy. You have to allow yourself to be okay
with where you currently are. You have to allow yourself to be vulnerable. Stop trying to be
perfect. As a self-admitted perfectionist in my past, that's a hard one for me to realize that I
will never be perfect,
right? And as quote unquote perfectionists, which really perfectionism, if you heard my
podcast episode not too long ago, perfectionism is just a mask that you're wearing to cover up
a fear or an insecurity. We believe that we have to do things perfectly. So we avoid and minimize
all of the things that could possibly give us judgment or shame or any of those things
because we have to be perfect, right? Perfectionism is not self-improvement. At its core, perfectionism
is trying to earn approval from others by looking perfect. Perfectionism is not the key to success.
It actually hampers your success. And it's correlated with depression, with anxiety,
with addiction because we try to be perfect,
but it's literally impossible to be perfect. There's no way to do it. Perfectionism is
self-destructive and it is an unattainable goal and it will hold you back from being vulnerable
because you're like, I'm not perfect, so I can't show people who I truly am. You will never be
perfect. Nothing that you ever do will be perfect. Nothing that you ever create will be perfect.
Remember this quote, done is better than perfect. Just do whatever it is you need to do. Another thing
you need to do in order to feel more vulnerable and to be able to open yourself up, stop numbing
yourself. What do I mean by that? I mean smoking. I mean drinking. I mean working too much, keeping
yourself too busy to actually feel the emotions that you feel. So many people work their asses off or work too much so they don't have to feel
feelings. So many people drink so they don't have to feel feelings. So many people smoke so they
don't have to feel feelings. So many people eat so they don't have to feel feelings. People smoke,
they drink, they eat to minimize the feeling that they have of just being this vulnerable object
that's floating through space on an organic spaceship
that's going to die one day. And I don't just mean like alcoholics. I mean the casual like,
oh, today was a stressful day. I need to take the edge off, take a drink or have a smoke, right?
I'll just have a glass of wine to relax. Think about that for a second. Why can't you just
mentally relax and you have to have some sort of substance to relax you? There's something going on behind the scenes or,
oh, I'll just have a piece of cake to relax. I deserve it after a hard day,
right? Sorry to say it, but that in itself is hiding. You're hiding from something. You're
running from feelings. You're running from emotions. Believe me, everybody does it. I do
it myself. I'm not perfect, but we need to be aware. Numbing the feeling of the real world
because the real world is too much for us to handle at the current moment.
So we can start by opening ourselves up. If we can start with these steps, we can start to feel a
real connection between us and other people because it's what makes us human. It's what
makes us different. You know, it makes what makes our species different than all other species is
the ability to make real deep emotional connections.
And we as humans, we're hardwired to want to feel those connections, to feel emotion, to feel spirituality, to feel physical touch.
We want to feel. We want to be seen. We want to feel heard. We want to be valued.
We want to give and receive without feeling judgment. But in order to do that, we have to learn to become vulnerable and realize that vulnerability is something that's going to be powerful for us,
not something that's going to open us up for harm. We need to learn that it's necessary. It's a
necessary thing to be truly happy, to allow yourself to be seen, to allow yourself to be open,
to allow yourself to be vulnerable. Believe that you are enough. Believe that you have enough.
Believe that you're perfect just the way that you are.
In order for you to make real, deep, lasting changes
in your relationships, in your life,
realize that somebody needs to be the first
to have courage to wake up, to open up, to step up,
and to be vulnerable and have the courage
to say what needs to be said.
Don't be afraid of being looked down on.
Being vulnerable is never a weakness.
Being vulnerable is always a strength. People always look up to someone who's vulnerable. People always want to think, want to
be courageous and want to be vulnerable as well. So if you're going to change your life, you're
going to have to realize you are going to have to be okay with letting your armor down because
letting your armor down is the only way that you're truly going to feel what you need to feel in this world. So realize that vulnerability is courageous.
Vulnerability is power and vulnerability will never, ever be weakness. So that's what I got
for you for today's episode. If you love this episode, please share it on your Instagram
stories and tag me in it. Rob Dial Jr. R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R. And I'm going to leave you the
same way I leave you every single episode,
make it your mission, make someone else's day better. I appreciate you. And I hope that you
have an amazing day.