The Mindset Mentor - Self-Awareness vs Self-Consciousness (Most People Get This Wrong)
Episode Date: September 17, 2025Want to understand yourself on a deeper level? In this episode, I break down the difference between self-awareness and self-consciousness and I’ll show you how to develop true awareness without fall...ing into guilt or shame. 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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lives. So if you would do that, I would greatly, greatly appreciate it. Today, we're going to be
talking about self-awareness, and I'm going to be teaching you how to understand yourself better.
And I'm going to be talking about the difference between self-awareness and self-consciousness.
And if you've been listening to my podcast for a while, you probably notice that self-awareness
might be the main thing that I promote more than anything else. I feel like almost every single
podcast I'm talking about self-awareness, self-awareness, self-awareness. When I go on to other people's
podcasts, one of the questions that, you know, people always ask to have like a, you know, they have a
lightning round and they have fun questions and sometimes they ask the question of, hey, if you could
give everyone in the world a superpower, what would it be? And I always say extreme self-awareness.
And the reason why is because if people were more aware of themselves, all of the problems in the
world would disappear. If they were aware of how when they do that thing, they affect other people,
good or bad, if we were all more self-aware, the world would be a better place. And the phrase
ignorance is bliss is probably the most true thing in the world. Because I'll tell you this,
it's way easier to just not be aware of yourself. It's way easier to just blindly go through life
and just do whatever it is that you are doing. It won't lead to a fulfilled life. It won't lead to a
happy life, but it's way more blissful just to not be aware of yourself. Because once you
become self-aware, you start to notice the things that you need to work on. And a lot of times,
when you become aware, self-aware of the things that you need to work on, you start becoming
self-conscious. And we're going to talk today about the difference between the two of them.
And we're going to talk about how to improve yourself and go on this journey of self-development
without judging yourself, without shaming yourself, without feeling guilty for doing the things
that you do. And so let me real quick before we dive into self-awareness. Let me give you the
difference between self-awareness and self-consciousness and being self-conscious. So as far as
self-awareness goes, that is basically the recognizing and understanding of your emotions, of your
motivations, of your thoughts, of your feelings, and your behaviors. It's the recognizing and
understanding of them. It's like if I've never been self-aware, it's like I've been driving a car for
35 years, 37 years, and I'm like, you know what? I'm kind of curious what's under the hood of this
thing. And you decide to pop the hood open and look at it. So when you become self-aware,
you start getting curious about looking under the hood, figuring out what makes this thing run.
And so being self-aware means just really having, developing clear perception of your personality,
of your strengths, of your weaknesses, your thoughts, your motivations, emotions, every aspect of you,
the traumas that happened to you in your past, how your relationship with your parents, your mom
make you who you are, how your relationship with your dad make you who you are, how your relationship
with your brother and sisters, make you who you are. And it really, once you start to become
aware of yourself, then you start to become aware of other people. And you start to become
aware of how other people start to perceive you based off of how you act. You start to become
aware of your attitude. And you also start to become aware of your responses to other people as well.
And you really start to learn who you are. Because you might know yourself, but learning,
but the difference between knowing yourself and learning yourself is knowing yourself is based
in the past. Learning yourself is based in the present. It's a journey of, let me go on a journey
of self-discovery and find out who I am and why I am the way that I am. So why would you
want to get better at self-awareness, well, it can make, I mean, it helps you a lot with better
decision-making, with emotional regulation, and really helps you with more fulfilling
relationships because you will start to understand why, how the way that you are, changes
the way that other people are around you as well. And so it also helps you decide what you want
to work on, what you want to get rid of, what you want to strengthen yourself, all of that.
So that's self-awareness. Being self-conscious is excessive awareness of yourself.
self. It's a really acute awareness of yourself, especially in your relationship with other people
and how other people view as well. And to be too self-conscious, really it can be beneficial. And I'm
going to tell you about it in a minute of how being self-conscious to a point can be beneficial.
But being too self-conscious can make you feel really uncomfortable in a lot of situations,
really uneasy. And you're judging yourself too much. You're guilting yourself. You're shaming yourself for
who you are. And a lot of times when we become self-aware, we now notice things that we want to
fix, but we're human, so we're going to screw up again and again and again and again and again.
So we do screw up. If we become too self-conscious of it, then we start to guilt ourselves.
Damn, and I thought it was past this. What the hell's wrong with me? Man, I'm still fucked up.
I'm always going to be this way. And the self-awareness shouldn't turn into judgment and it shouldn't
turn into shaming of ourselves. That's when you start becoming too self-conscious. And so,
So being self-conscious turns into being overly preoccupied with how other people perceive you.
And it can really lead to feelings of unease, discomfort, embarrassment, awkwardness.
And sure, there's definitely a certain amount of self-consciousness that can be good,
like making sure that you act appropriately in certain situations in public.
but to be excessively self-conscious can be really debilitating because you're thinking too much.
Oh my gosh, what are people thinking of me? Am I doing this wrong? Am I screwed up? Do they look like an
idiot? Oh my gosh, I just said this thing to her. Did she take it the wrong way? I didn't mean it
that way if she did take it that way. And it can lead to social anxiety and really prevent you
from acting as your true authentic self. So that's the difference between self-awareness and
self-conscious. Let's dive into self-awareness and really how to get better at it. Because at its core,
Self-awareness is basically like having a clear internal mirror.
The more that you become self-aware, the more that you're able to understand yourself a little bit more
and look into the mirror and start to see why you are the way that you are.
You become more introspective and allows you see your strengths, allows you to see your weaknesses,
your desires, your fears, your aspirations.
And the more self-aware that you are, the more that you can start to understand your emotions.
and this is really important for people because I think a lot of people are not myself included as a child
was not taught to understand my emotions and so I would get really angry or sad and I'd be like
where the hell did that come from? Why do I don't understand why I feel this way. And so I just,
oh, it's easier just to push emotions down, act like they don't exist. But really what we're trying to
do is we're trying to understand ourselves. I feel an emotion come up. Huh, okay. Where did that come from?
What am I thinking about? What am I feeling? And then as you start to learn yourself a little bit more and become more self-aware, you can also start to anticipate emotions and notice them before they come up or notice that if I put myself into this circumstance in this situation, I will probably have this emotion come up. You know what? I'm just going to avoid that. I don't need to be part of that. And then we can also start to manage our emotions better as well. And so how do we develop this thing? It seems so weird. It's like very nebulous. You can't really grab on to self-aware.
awareness, right? Well, let's talk about how to develop self-awareness. The first thing I think is
really important is to start trying to implement reflective practices. And by reflective practices,
I mean like looking into a mirror, not actually physically into a mirror, but looking into a mirror
and saying, hey, Rob, what's going on here? You got some shit you're trying to work through. Why are you
this way? And doing it in a very objective way. Hey, this guy seems to be really angry. Speaking about
myself. This guy seems to be really angry. Why is this guy angry right now? Versus being like,
oh, I'm angry. Why am I angry? Fuck that person. She shouldn't have done that to me. Getting some
it's just like, hey, interesting. This guy's noticing some anger inside of them. What is this anger?
So how do we start to get reflective practices? The first one, which I know you've heard me say
before, is journaling, right? Some of you are like, if you guys have been listening podcasts for a while,
you're like, damn, is this dude talk about journaling again? Yes, because are you journaling every single
day? No, okay, I'm going to keep talking about every single episode, right? Sometimes you need to hear
something a thousand times before you're actually like, all right, fine, I'll go ahead and do it.
Journaling is really just writing down your thoughts, your experiences, your feelings, your emotions to
try to start bringing clarity to them. And the reason why pen and paper is so easy is because your
brain is so complex and there's so much happening behind the scenes. There's your conscious thought,
you know you can journal through or you can kind of think through, which is 5% of what's going
on your head. And then there's your subconscious thought, which is subconscious is below the
conscious thought, which means you're basically unconscious of it a lot of times, which is 95% of
what's going on in the programming behind the scenes. And so if you're not aware of the 95% and
you're only aware of the 5%, you don't really know yourself. So it really comes down to taking a pen and
paper and jotting them all down. You're so complex that to try to figure yourself out in your own
head sometimes is just not going to happen. And so I always give the example, like if I said,
hey, what's two plus two? Everybody listening can say, oh, that's four, right? Yeah, you got that one.
But if I said, what's 374 plus 17,614, most people probably can't figure it out in your head,
but you could figure out if I gave you a pen and paper. You can go back to second grade or third
grade and you can start to figure the problem out. Why? Because when it's on paper and you can write it
out and you can visually see it, it's very easy to work through as opposed to inside of your head.
You're a million times more complex than that math problem. And you're trying to figure out what's
going on in your head and why you're acting the way that you are and why you are the way that you are.
So journaling is really the act of taking a pen and paper. And it's not like sitting down and saying,
Dear diary, today I went to the grocery store and I bought some apples. That's not, it's not a diary.
I'm talking about journaling and the fact of writing down.
man, I'm really freaking pissed off right now. Why am I so pissed off? And you write the question,
why am I so pissed off? And then you answer the question. I'm so pissed off because this,
this, this, this happened. Okay, and then go a little bit deeper. Okay, why is that bring up such a
strong emotion in me though? And I only answer the question, okay, is there any way that maybe this
isn't my true self and whatever it might be? And you start to journal through it, what's really
interesting if you actually do this. There's a reason why I preach this so much is journaling yourself
is you will start to figure out who you are way more than you ever knew.
And one of my favorite things when I used to do one-on-one coaching a lot was when I would
work with clients and I would teach them how to journal and make them journal every single week
and about two months into working with me, they'd always come back and say like, oh my God,
I thought I knew myself before I started with you.
I didn't know myself at all because you're not really aware of these things because
they're subconscious, they're under the conscious mind.
And so you try to bring them to the service and work through them.
So the first thing to be really good at reflective practices,
is to journal. The next thing, which I feel like I talk about almost every single episode,
is meditating, right? So meditation is not just about calming your mind. It can be that,
if you like, but it's also about learning who you are. The amount of times, we just ran an event
this weekend, and some people are like, well, I just don't meditate. I don't meditate. I'm not good
at it. I'm bad at meditating. I'm so bad at it. I can't get my mind to stop. And back in 2017,
my wife and I, we traveled and we traveled for six months. And one of the times, one of the
place we went to is Thailand. And we went to this place called Chang Mai in Thailand. And there they have
a lot of monks. And there was this really cool experience where you could go and you could spend
a day with the monk and just kind of see what they do. Ask them questions, meditate with them, all of
that. And one of the things I'll never forget is that monk who was there said meditation is not
about having no thoughts. Meditation is about watching your thoughts. And so if you think you
struggle with meditating, you're not good at it because you're thinking too much, you're doing
it right. You're just supposed to be watching your thoughts, not trying to resist your thoughts.
So meditation, what it is, is it's the state of doing nothing so that you can watch your
normal state of mind throughout the day. Because if your mind can't stop during meditation,
I guarantee you, I'm not a betting man. I would bet all the money that I have in the world
saying that if you can't stop your brain and meditation, your thoughts and meditation, if you can't
stop overthinking meditation, I guarantee you. That's exactly how it is all day, every day for you.
So if you sit down to meditate and it's stressful and you're like, I can't do this, I can't do this,
I'm not good at it. The reason why it's stressful for you is because you cannot run from it.
So a lot of people would be like, I'm going to meditate for 20 minutes. And then six minutes,
then they're like, fuck this. I can't do it. I'm terrible. There's no possible way. Right.
That's what most of us think. It's the reason why meditation could be so stressful
for some people is because they're they're getting their normal state of mind heightened and you can't
run from it because normally we try to keep ourselves so busy throughout the day that we don't pay
attention to our mind and over time meditation you get up as we become more attuned to what we're
thinking our internal states it absolutely can help you calm down but really what it comes down to is
like what's going on in my mind all day long like that's what I want to know I want to be like
the Indiana Jones of figuring out what the hell's going on in the crevices of my mind.
I want to be an explore and figure out what's going on.
And it really comes back to being curious about who you are.
Another thing that's really important too, as far as self-reflection and starting to learn
yourself, is start to pay attention to your thoughts.
Start to pay attention to what's going on your head.
If you start to feel a certain way, usually what there was is there was a thought that came
before that feeling.
So if you feel like a whole lot of sadness and you're like, why?
do I feel sad right now? You take a step back, in incognitive behavioral therapy, they say to ask
this question. The question is, what was I just thinking? So if you feel a bunch of sadness, you're
like, why do I feel this way? You ask yourself the question, what was I just thinking? You start to
pay attention to your thoughts. Pay attention to when you get triggered. But a lot of times what's
interesting is about when we're triggered is we're triggered, not by that person. We're triggered by our
programings, but a lot of times we're triggered because we notice our self in that person. And there's a
part of our self that we hate. And we just have that person be a mirror for us to say, hey,
yeah, you can hate this person and you should want this person to be different. But why don't
you try being different first? If you want the world to be different, you have to be different.
If you want the world to change, you have to change. If you want other people to be different,
you have to be different. Get off your high horse and realize that you're not perfect. And if you
want the world to change, you have to start with you. And so you ask yourself, what was I just thinking?
How was I just triggered? She said this to me and then I blew up. Why did I blow up? What was I thinking in that
situation? You start to really pay attention to your thoughts. And you start to notice your programming.
Once again, I've said this many times in the podcast. Being triggered is a gift. It is a absolute gift
because it is the universe coming to you in the form of another person to trigger you to show you
where you are not free. And we want to try to get free from all of our problems.
circumstances, things that were stuck in, places that were stuck, all of that. So you ask yourself,
what was I just thinking? So the next thing is to pay attention to your thoughts. The next thing
is to pay attention to your feelings. You ask yourself, why am I feeling this way? I'm really
angry right now. I'm going to go ahead and just feel the anger for a second. And then I'm just going
to ask myself, why am I feeling angry? What is it about the circumstance that's making me feel
this way? Because it's really, it's really interesting. Like if you look at life as simply as possible,
you're born, you have a bunch of sensory experiences for your entire lifetime, and then you die.
That's like the 100,000 foot overview of being a human, right? You're born, you have a sensory set of
experiences and things that happen to you, and you're dying. How you choose to interpret the things
that happen to you, completely up to you. So you ask yourself, I'm angry. Why am I angry right now?
Why am I feeling this way? You start to really interested, interested and curious.
more anything else. I'm feeling freaking amazing today. Like I feel amazing. I'm so happy. Why do I
feel amazing today? Oh, you know what? I actually got eight hours of sleep and you start to notice
patterns in yourself. Oh man, I'm feeling really sad today. I'm feeling really sad. Okay.
Why am I feeling this way? What could have possibly happened? Next. After you go through that,
your thoughts, your feelings. Now what we also want to start to pay attention to is our beliefs.
And one thing that I would really recommend for everybody here is to challenge and question all
of your beliefs.
Because your beliefs are that make you who you are at this point are just a blend of cultural
upbringing, personal experiences, trauma, societal norms.
And it's learned from you.
You learn it from your parents.
You learn it from what part of town you grew up in.
You learn from your religion.
You learn from your nationality.
There's so many aspects. There's a million things that have happened to you every lifetime that have made you who you are. And really like beliefs are great because it gives you, you know, a worldview in a way to look at the world. But beliefs are very, very limiting. And so what you need to do is to actually start identifying your beliefs and challenge the hell out of them to see if you want to keep them as your beliefs or if they were programmed into you. And so you start to think about one, right? You start to think about what are your core beliefs? What do you believe in? And then you ask yourself,
these three questions. Number one, where did I learn this belief? Number two, is this my belief
or one that was programmed into me? And number three, from this moment forward, do I choose,
what do I choose to believe? So it's, where did I learn this belief? Is it my belief or one that
was programmed into me? And then, last but not least, from this moment forward, do I choose to,
what do I choose to believe? And so let's say, for instance, you come up with the belief of,
I believe that we should treat every person with respect. Okay, cool. We can work.
with that one first. Where did I learn this? I learned this for my mom. She's always very respectful with
people. I also learned it from my grandfather. He never commanded respect. He never tried to make
anybody feel a certain way. He just acted very respectful and I never saw him ever get mad or talk
down to anybody or about anybody. Okay, cool. So I learned it from them. I probably learned it from
other places too. Was this programmed into me? Maybe. Maybe it was programmed into me. Maybe it was
something I was told, but it was also something that I witnessed and I saw. So a little bit of yes,
a little bit of no. What do I choose to believe? I actually choose to believe this. I actually
choose to believe that every single person should be given respect. Perfect. Cool. I'm going to keep
that one. Let's say I have another belief and I start to notice my money mindset. I believe that money's
a root of all evil. Hmm. Okay. Interesting. Where did I learn this? Maybe you say I learned this for my
father. He was always talking about, you know, people have to screw people over to become wealthy
and all of the evil comes from people who are, who want money. Okay. Was this programmed into me?
Yes, absolutely. What do I choose to believe? Hmm. Do I choose to believe that money's the root of all
evil? Actually, I don't choose to believe this anymore. This is not my belief because I know some people
who make a bunch of money and they do amazing things in the world with it. So money can't be the
root of all evil if some people can use money for good, right? You could take it. You could take it.
that money, you can donate, you can make $10 million and donate all $10 million to a
foundation to feed the hungry. Clearly, that's not the root of all evil. So making money and
using it for good can actually cause a lot of really good stuff. So do I choose to believe that
money is the root of all evil? No. Could I screw people over to make money? Sure. Do I have to?
No. I don't believe that. Okay. I'm going to go ahead and I'm going to let go of this one.
And what you start to do is you start to learn yourself and notice yourself more. The key to becoming
self-aware is to become interested in yourself, to become curious about yourself, to start to learn
yourself, but don't let it go too far down the road that you guilt yourself, you shame yourself,
you hate yourself, you get pissed off at yourself, because that's when self-awareness turns into
being self-conscious. And self-conscious, if it goes too far down the road, can turn into
anxiety, social anxiety, questioning yourself, and never wanting to actually be around people because
you think they might screw up. And so it's a fine line, but it's going, you know what? Self-awareness is
learning who I am and going, you know what, I want to keep learning myself. I want to keep
improving myself. I want to let go of things that I don't like. I want to keep things that I do
like. Self-conscious is where I start gilting myself and shaming myself. That's not the route I want to
go. And so that is how you grow your self-awareness and start to learn who you truly are.
Because once again, knowing yourself is based in the past. Learning yourself is based in the
present. We're trying to go from the present into the future. We're trying to figure out who you
are and how you can improve. So that's what I got for today's episode. If you love this episode,
So please share it on Instagram stories. Tag me in at Rob Dow Jr. R-O-B-D-I-L-J-R. And if you want to learn more about coach you with me outside of the podcast, you can learn more at coach with rob.com. Once you can coach with rob.com. And with that, I'm going to leave you the same way. Leave you every single episode. Make it your mission to make someone else's day better. I appreciate you. And I hope that you have an amazing day.