The Mindset Mentor - It took me almost 40 years to realize this…
Episode Date: September 18, 2025What if your suffering isn’t about what happened, but about how much you’re fighting it? In this episode, I’ll show you the real source of stress, sadness, and anxiety and how to let go, accept ...reality, and finally find freedom. 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 teach you something that took me my entire life to understand.
And once I got it, it completely changed everything for me.
And it is this, you are not suffering because of what has happened to you.
You're suffering because you keep fighting what has happened to you.
Let that sing in for a second.
Your pain in your life isn't the problem.
Your resistance to it is.
And until you see this, you will stay safe.
stuck in a prison with the door wide open. Your stress, your anxiety, your sadness will be in
direct proportion to how much you're resisting the way that the world is. And the key to unlocking
everything for you is to learn how to accept. And so let me drop this on you just so you can
kind of understand it. You don't resist something because it's painful. It's painful because
you resist it. I want you to hear that again. You don't resist something because it's
painful. It is painful because you resist it. That's the difference between pain and suffering
in your life. Pain is inevitable. You can't get through this life without at least a few scars.
Your breakups, your heartbreaks, your parents' absence, the death of a loved one, all of those
things, they're going to happen in some sort of way. That is pain. It's going to happen. It's inevitable.
But suffering on the other side, that is the remix that your mind plays on loop over and over and
over and over again. And the majority of people in this world are not going through pain.
What they're doing is they are creating their own internal mental suffering.
And that is where all of their problems are coming from. Suffering is your internal
wrestling with reality. It's your wrestling match with reality. It's your late night
why me monologues. It's the clinging to what should have been or what you wish would have
happened in your life. It's the grudge against other people because of what they did to you
or the grudge because life is unfair in some sort of way. And the craziest part of all of this
is that so many people are suffering, but suffering is completely optional.
And so let's talk about it real quick.
Your brain is wired for survival, not happiness.
Its job is to scan for threats, to replay old hurts,
and to predict the worst that could possibly happen
so that you're, quote, unquote, ready and prepared in case the worst ends up happening.
and this ancient software in our brain still runs today.
And so the pain is your nervous system saying,
hey, hey, something's happening here.
Like, there's something that we should notice.
You have your hand on a hot stove?
Hey, there's a problem.
You need to make a change really quick.
Suffering is your prefrontal cortex of your brain refusing to let go.
It is trying to protect you from future pain in some sort of way,
but it keeps old pain on replay
so that you don't do the same thing again
thinking that it's keeping you safe
but in reality what it's doing
is it's just really driving you crazy
and it's holding you back from creating the life that you want
it's like I'll go to the example that I just gave you a second ago
with burning your hand on a hot stove right
imagine burning your hand on a hot stove
that pain that's that instant sharp pain that you feel
and once all of it is healed, that pain is gone.
But five years later, you're still mad about how your sister bumped into you in the kitchen.
If she wouldn't have bumped into you in the kitchen, you wouldn't have touched that hot stove.
That's the suffering.
That's the resistance.
That's wanting it to be different than it is.
That's trying to change something that is completely unchangeable.
And so, resistance is the amplifier of your...
your pain. And if you can learn to let go of resistance and you can learn to accept reality
as it is, your life will be a million times better. I want you to think of resistance as like
the Chinese finger traps. Do you remember those little Chinese finger traps? You put both your fingers in
and then the more that you pull the the tighter it actually gets. Well, it's kind of the exact same
thing. You know, the harder that you pull to free yourself, the tighter that it actually grips on
you. The resistance inside of it where you're actually resisting and trying to get loose of it is literally
what creates the tension in the Chinese finger trap. The more that you wish reality was different
in your life, the more that you actually feel stuck. The more that you want your wife to be different
or your dad to be different, or your sister to be different, or your mother to be different, or your husband
be different, the more that you wish that they were different than they are, the more that you actually
suffer in that moment. When you stop fighting the finger trap, you're released from the finger
trap. So when you stop ruminating on the past, that is when you're released from that suffering.
So the pain is the thing that happened to you. And the suffering is the rebuttal.
play, the loop that you're stuck in, 10 years down the road. There's a lot of people in this world,
there's a lot of people listening to this podcast that are still trapped in the quote unquote
Chinese finger trap of life and they're not free of it. You know, they're 35 years old and they're
still fighting how their dad didn't show up for them the way that they wanted to when they were a kid.
They're 50 years old and they're still resenting their mom for not giving them.
them the love that they wanted. They're 45 years old and they're still mad at the kids that
bullied them when they were 12 years old. They got out of a relationship two years ago,
but they keep wanting to be back in that relationship with that person. And so the pain happened
in the past, but the suffering is continuing to happen in the present because of our resistance
to what happened. Oh, I just, I wish my dad would just be different, right? Like it could be in the
past, but also could be right now. So many people are like, my dad is not this way. I want my dad to be this
way. But he's not. He's not that way. He is who he is. I was on a call, a live session that I had
for Mindset University. And one of the ladies that was in there was like, I just want my dad to be
different. He's always doing this, this, this. I'm like, how old are you? And she's like, I'm 41.
I go, how long has he been this way? And she's like, my entire life. And I go, he's not going to
change. You have to understand that. The only problem is that you're not.
accepting that that's the way that he is, and that is causing a struggle within yourself.
And so if you don't actually start to accept things, you're going to live your adult life
on pause, basically arguing with ghosts of the past. Do you really see what I'm saying here?
Like, you're suffering. Your stress, your anxiety, your depression, your sadness, your grief
comes from resistance. It is a prison that you are stuck in, that you built, and that only you
have the key to get out of. Do you see it? And the cost? Anxiety, depression, sleepless nights,
and don't even get me started on your poor nervous system. Like your poor nervous system
is locked in permanent fight mode against an opponent
that doesn't even exist anymore.
Your nervous system is constantly in fight or flight
just thinking like, what if it happens again?
What if this happens?
I've got to constantly keep myself on guard
so that I don't get hurt again.
Like your nervous system is just so locked in
against an opponent trying to fight it
when that opponent doesn't exist anymore.
And so, what do we do?
Well, this is where it gets really hard, everybody. It's such a simple thing to say, and it's also
such a hard thing to do. But we can become better at it. What do we do? We learn to accept.
Now, I want to be very clear when I talk about acceptance. Acceptance does not mean it doesn't
equal approval, right? Accepting what happened to you in the past or accepting the way that
somebody treats you in the present doesn't mean that you're saying it's okay. It doesn't mean
that you're saying, that was fine. It means that you are done carrying an extra 200 pounds of
resistance strapped to your back. You're letting go of it so that you can save yourself. You're releasing
the burden that you've been carrying with you for too long. And I want you understand that acceptance
is not a weakness. Because a lot of people think, oh, if I accept what my dad did to me or accept what
that person did to me. It's a weakness. No, no, no. It's not a weakness. It's a strength. It's you sitting
there saying, listen, I can't change the way they showed up. I can't change my childhood. I can't
change how our relationship went. It was messy, but I can stop letting it ruin my present moment.
I can undo the breakup, but I can end the story that I keep telling myself, which is I'm unworthy
of love or that relationships are scary or that love equals pain. In the moment that you stop
resisting reality, reality stops being your enemy. And so what do you do? You've got to have actual
practical steps to break free from this. So hopefully at this point in time you're starting to see,
okay, my pain and suffering and anxiety and sadness and grief and all of that stuff comes from me
not accepting. It comes from me resisting. And the more that I resist, the more that it persists.
I'm the one carrying it with me into tomorrow. So here's what we need to do. The first thing is you need
to become aware of it. You need to notice your resistance. You need to become very self-aware of
when you catch yourself in the loop. Because just because you've had the awareness that you don't
want to suffer anymore doesn't mean that you're not going to suffer anymore. You've got years and years and
years of habits and patterns built into your brain. And so when you catch yourself in the loop of
this shouldn't have happened, or if only it would have been different, or I wish they would
have done this for me instead. When you notice yourself in that loop, just take a step back for a
second. Take yourself out of the jar. I always say when you're in the jar, you can't read the
label. Take yourself out of the jar, look at yourself, look at your life as a third person,
and gently just become aware of the resistance and go, okay.
Yeah, that's the resistance right there. So become aware of it first. And then the second thing you want to do is you want to shift from this like, why me type of victim mentality to now what? Why me is focused on like it's focused on the past. It feeds your suffering. Oh, why did this happen to me? I wish it would have been different. All of that. And you switch it to now what? Now what is present focused. And it frees you because you're in the present moment. Look.
at it and now you can come up with a plan. I want you to understand that no matter what happened to you
in your past, no matter what it was that happened to you're in your childhood, it might not have been
your fault, but it is your responsibility to do something with it. Like when I look back in my
childhood, it's not my fault that my father was an alcoholic. It's not my fault that my parents got
divorced. It's not my fault that my father passed away when I was 15 years old from liver
from being an alcoholic. It's not my fault, but it is my responsibility to do something with my life
because of the fact that that's just part of the hands that I was dealt. So I might as well play
this hand the best that I possibly can't. And so that's the second thing, is to start to shift from the
why me past victim-based thinking to now what? Now what can I do with it? It's not your fault,
but it is your responsibility. Number three is to practice radical acceptance.
think to yourself, hey, it is what it is. I can't change it. I can't change it. It is what it is.
And then just ease into accepting it instead of fighting against it. Take a couple deep breaths and say,
hey, you know what, I can't change it. I can't change it. I can't change it over again. I can't
change it. I can't change him. I can't change her. I can't change what happened. I can't change it.
I can't change it. It's okay. I'm going to change my life from this moment forward.
and you start practicing radical acceptance of it. I accept it. I can't change it. I will be better because of it. I accept it. I can't change it. I will be better because of it. So you practice this radical self-acceptance. And then what you do is you actually start to use these things to rewire your brain. A couple of things that I recommend. Try to have some sort of gratitude practice around what happened to you. Part of my, you know, when I talk about being grateful for stuff and having a gratitude practice, it's not just about like, hey, thank
for how amazing my life is and for my house and my family and for my health and all that
stuff. That is important. But part of my gratitude practice, every single day is to say how
grateful I am for my challenges for my hardest moments in my life so that I can look at them
in a light that is more positive versus being the victim of them. Because they gave me lessons.
They made me who I am. I am a stronger person because of what happened to me. So I'm going to
start being grateful for the things that I thought were my worst enemy years ago. So that's the first
thing is gratitude practices. And the second thing is journaling around it. Write a new script.
You've been thinking of this old event 17 years ago in an old way. Oh, I am this way because she
treated me this way and I'm unlovable or I'm not smart enough or whatever it might be that was
your script that you had. And you're going to say, this is the new script. From this moment forward,
this is how I am going to perceive what happened to me
and the meaning that I am going to give what happened to me.
You have to remember, neuroplasticity is real.
What we're talking about with these two things of gratitude practice and journaling
is to train your brain to learn to let go
and to actually rewrite the script on things that you've been using
to hold yourself back on accident.
And so the hard truth is that your suffering
will always be in direct proportion to how much you resist the reality.
The less that you resist reality, the less that you will suffer.
The more acceptance that you have in your life, the more peace that you have in your life.
You cannot control 99.9% of the things that happen to you in this world.
But you can control whether you fight it and cause yourself suffering or you flow with it and you create something with it.
And so the truth of it is acceptance is not just the end of suffering.
It's really the beginning of your freedom.
Because when you stop wrestling with what should have been, you finally get to live in this
present moment with what is.
And that's where your joy, that's where your creativity, your happiness, your love, and
your true power live.
And so stop resisting the way that the world is and start accepting it.
And if you do that, you will be a happier and much better person.
So that's what I got for today's episode.
If you love this episode, please share it on Instagram Stories, tag me in at Rob Dial
Junior, R-O-B-D-I-L-J-R.
And if you're out there and you want to learn more about doing some coaching with me,
you can go to coach with rob.com.
Once again, coachwith-rob.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.