The Mindset Mentor - The Mindset That Changed My Life IMMEDIATELY
Episode Date: July 2, 2025Do you feel like you're missing the good in your life, even when things are going well? In this episode, I share a mental shift that changed everything for me—from how I view success, stress, and da...ily life. Reveal the hidden patterns shaping your choices, habits, and success. Take my FREE Identity Quiz to discover who you really are and how to break through to the next level. Join here 👉 https://www.identityunlockquiz.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/book Here 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 TikTok Facebook Youtube
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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 podcast episode. I put out
episodes four times a week to help you learn and grow and improve yourself. So if that's what you're
into subscribe because I put out episodes four times a week
for the past 10 years.
And that's what all we're really looking to do
is help you learn and improve yourself
so you can make a better life for yourself
and the people that you love.
Today, I'm gonna be talking about a mindset shift
that I had a few years ago that changed my life immediately.
And I mean like day one,
I noticed a huge, huge difference in my life immediately. And I mean like day one, I noticed a huge, huge difference in my life.
And it comes down to really the power
of what we focus on in our perception.
If you can really understand this,
it will actually change the quality
of your life dramatically.
So let me give you an example real quick.
First, before we dive into it, right,
imagine that there's two people that are stuck in a traffic jam.
Both of them are on their way to work.
Both of them are definitely going to be late to work.
But one of them is fuming.
They're pissed off.
They're gripping the steering wheel.
They're screaming.
They're cussing.
They're just griping about all of the wasted time, how their boss is going to be pissed,
all of that.
The other one, calm. They're listening to their favorite song. They don't want to be late, but of that. The other one, calm.
They're listening to their favorite song.
They don't wanna be late,
but they're gonna be late either way.
And so they're dancing along to their favorite music.
They're having a great time.
They're in the exact same situation,
but it's two radically different realities
that these two people live in.
Why is that?
Because of what they are focusing on in their perception of
what is going on. Because it is your perception, not your circumstances that creates your experience
and creates your life. Say that again, just so you can get it down. It is your perception,
not your circumstances that creates your experiences in your life and It all comes back to a quote that I heard a few years ago that really made it
Made me sit down and focus like okay. How do I feel on a daily basis?
How do I want to feel and what am I focusing on?
That's making me feel the way that I feel and if I want to feel differently
What do I need to focus on and it made me just try to change my perception of what I focus on.
And this is the quote.
The quote is, your mind can make hell out of heaven or heaven out of hell.
Your mind can make hell out of heaven or heaven out of hell.
And I realize sometimes when I'm just stressed out and having a bad day, I'm living in heaven, but mentally
creating hell.
And it's not just like a cute little motivational quote that's like, hey, buddy, feel better.
It's I mean, this idea of your perception is backed by a mountain of psychological research.
And once you understand how this works, how you can change your perception, how you can
change your focus, it you can change your focus,
it'll change your life as well.
And the reason why I'm talking about now is because this came from a topic I was talking
about with a coaching client of mine.
He's a extremely successful guy.
He has everything he's ever wanted.
He has a super successful business, makes a ton of money, has a nice house, has a great
family, and he's sitting there living the life
that he's always wanted,
but he's not happy as he wants to be,
and he doesn't feel as fulfilled as he know he could be.
And I've coached many people like this,
many people who have everything they've ever wanted,
or in a way better situation than they were five years ago,
but internally they just don't know how to feel better.
And that's one of the things that I help coach them through is that
how to enjoy the amazing life that they've actually built,
how to enjoy their family more, how to disconnect from working all the time.
And, you know, I might be talking about people who are extremely successful,
but the average person who is able to, you know, pay their bills,
save a little bit of money is in the exact same situation.
They're living a great life
and they're just missing all of it.
And they're sad and they're anxious
and they're not living a life
where they're living in what,
if you were to look at like what most people's reality is
in the world right now,
and if you were to go back 500 years,
yeah, most people nowadays are kind of living
in like heaven on earth for those people.
And so this isn't abnormal.
This isn't like a weird thing that some people do.
It's actually incredibly normal.
We all do this in some sort of way.
In order to really dive into this,
I want you to understand two psychological things
that will really kind of take us home, okay?
The first thing is this idea of negativity bias,
which I'll dive into.
And the second thing is the idea of the hedonic treadmill.
Okay, so when you look at the negativity bias,
we were not born to be happy, we were born to survive.
And I did an episode on the negativity bias months ago.
But when you look at it, our brain was meant to survive.
And survival means noticing danger,
avoiding pain, remembering things that went wrong in the past so that they don't go wrong again,
and keeping that pain and the bad in the front of our mind. Now, I want you to understand that
negative and positive and good and bad are just human labels.
But when we say the negativity bias,
it means that we're focusing on the negative,
which is just completely made up by us.
But we're focusing on things that didn't go the way
that we wanted to that we would label as bad.
And so we're naturally just focusing on the bad
more than we're focusing on the good
because that's what our brain is going to do.
And the negativity bias has been studied extensively. There's a study in 2001 in
personality and social psychology review by Paul Rosen and Edward Reusman and they documented
how negative events in our lives have a much stronger impact on our psychological and physiological states than the positive
ones.
So the negative ones are, have much more of an impact than the positive ones.
Your body and your brain want to remember and focus on the quote unquote negative, the
bad, the pain for protection in the future.
You know, this is the reason why, you know, we recall being insulted more than we remember compliments.
This is the reason why most people can't take in
compliments because it doesn't line up with the negativity
that they hold about themselves.
This is why we, we fixate on criticism.
This is why, you know, we can have a bad day
and we spiral after a bad day.
And then we can have a good one and we spiral after a bad day.
And then we can have a good one and we barely even notice the good day.
You know, even brain scans show it.
When people actually see negative images in a picture, their brain lights up and fires
way more than when they view a positive or a neutral one.
You know, our amygdala, which is that fear center in our brain, kicks into high gear.
And it's not because you're broken. I want you to understand that. It's not like this isn't
something that you can't start to work through. We're not broken in any sort of way. It's our
ancient wiring that says it's better to overreact to danger than it is to underreact and die.
And so the problem with that though is now the same brain that's trying to avoid tigers
200,000 years ago,
is the same brain that now lives in a house
with air conditioning and checks their emails
and sits in traffic and has passive aggressive comments
that they read on Instagram and they flip through
and they see the news about all of this terrible stuff
that's happening in other country,
but they're not dealing with tigers anymore.
But it still treats most of those things like the emails
or the negative comments or the traffic
as some sort of a negative thing
which into the brain means threat.
And that's how we end up turning these minor annoyances
in our life into like personal catastrophes. It's natural. We will focus on the bad more than the good
unless we are intentional about it. And that's how we can turn this heaven that we live in
into hell. So that's the first one. The second thing is this, this concept of the hedonic
treadmill, right? Where nothing ever really feels like it's enough. Let's say you land
your dream job. At first, it's amazing. You're energized. You're fulfilled. You're so excited
about it. You're excited to go to work. Then you fast forward six months and the excitement
fades. Your brain adapts and suddenly you're just like, I'm craving something else. You
want a raise. You want a promotion. You want a new title, you want to have more money.
It's the same exact thing where when you move
into a new house, you love the house
and it's amazing and it's great.
And then a year later, you're like,
well, we don't have a pool, it would be nice to have a pool.
And you start looking at houses on realtor.com.
This is this idea of the hedonic treadmill.
There's a concept that was first brought about
by psychologists, Philip Brickman and Donald T. Campbell.
And it describes that we have a tendency
to return back to a stable baseline of happiness.
And everybody's baseline of happiness
is obviously different depending on their life,
depending on the way they were raised,
depending on their parents, all of that.
But we kind of go back to this baseline.
No matter what happens to us,
whether it's really good or really bad,
we kind of go back to the same place.
There was actually a really famous study that they did
where they compared two very different groups.
One group won the lottery,
and the other group of people
had just become paraplegics.
And surprisingly, a year later,
when they followed up with those people,
the levels of both groups reported happiness paraplegics. And surprisingly, a year later, when they followed up with those people, the
levels of both groups reported happiness extremely similar. One group had won the lottery, won
millions of dollars, and the other became paraplegic. And their happiness a year later
was similar, very similar between the two, because the thrill of winning millions of
dollars wore off and the devastation of the accident that they had softened.
And so we kind of always return back to baseline every time
because our brains were built to adapt.
And so what was once amazing kind of becomes normal.
What was tragic kind of becomes normal as well.
Like I'm sure you probably have things in your life
that you wanted six months ago.
Or, you know, I'm sure
some people listening have a life right now that you dreamed about 10 years ago.
But you probably still feel the same. So that's the hedonic treadmill, which, you know, I want
you to understand we can change our levels of happiness based off of what we perceive and what
we focus on. But if that's the case, if happiness doesn't come from what's happens to us,
like somebody winning the lottery
or somebody becoming paralyzed,
where does it come from?
Well, it comes from what you focus on
and your perspective of what happens to you.
Your brain is bombarded with 11 million bits of information
every single second.
And your conscious mind can only take in 40 of them every single second.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
And the ones that get through are based off of, you know, your reticular activating system,
your reticular activating system deems what is important and what isn't important.
And it deems what is important and what is't important. And it deems what is important and what isn't important based off of what you focus on.
And so, you know, if you're focused on danger,
you're gonna see threats everywhere.
Like I have friends that were raised by parents
that are extremely fearful.
And it is just so hard for them to get past
thinking that they're in danger all the time.
They see threats everywhere.
They're always in states of fear.
You know, if you're focused on lack, you'll feel poor even if your needs aren't met. You'll always be in
scarcity. If you're focused on stress, you'll find more things to stress about. But if you decide,
hey, I'm going to shift my focus, obviously my brain's going to naturally go towards the negative
with this negativity bias, but I'm gonna intentionally shift my focus,
everything starts to change.
There was actually a study
that a lady named Barbara Fredrickson did,
and it was about positive emotions versus negative emotions.
And positive emotions actually broaden our perception.
And so people were shown positive images,
and people were shown negative images. And the people who were shown positive images and people were shown negative images.
And the people who were shown positive images
literally saw more in a visual task that they were given.
They saw more colors, they saw more shapes,
they saw more options, they performed better on tests,
which show that positive emotions don't just feel good,
they actually expand your perception
and they expand your mind and what you can see, which
means choosing to focus on something that might be positive or finding a silver lining,
even in the middle of chaos, isn't like being naive.
It's actually being really strategic of how you want to feel in your life.
And so what we need to do is we need to actually start to rewire our brain through neuroplasticity
by focusing on things to be grateful for.
I would tell you if you were to rewind 15 years ago
and tell me that I would be talking about being more,
focusing more on gratitude, I would be like,
okay, hippie, that's stupid.
But I can tell you after focusing on it
for the past few years, actually intentionally doing it,
it's not just a mood booster.
Like it's a neuroplasticity tool.
It's actually how you change your level of happiness on the hedonic treadmill.
It's a way to rewire your brain away from the negativity bias.
And so, you know, Robert Edmonds and Michael McCullough ran a series of studies on the
idea of gratitude journaling and
Participants that were in the study wrote down things that they were grateful for every single week
And some didn't write down anything the ones who wrote down what they were grateful for felt better in their lives
They reported they were more optimistic
They reported fewer physical symptoms than the group who didn't write down anything
that they were grateful for.
There was another study where participants wrote gratitude letters to other people, like
people that they were grateful for in their life.
Even if they didn't send the letter to that other person, they showed significantly improved
mental health outcomes weeks and months later.
Why?
Because every time you focus on something good
or you name something good,
or you think about things to be grateful for,
you're training your brain away from the negativity bias
and you're training your brain to notice the good,
which I know a lot of us, we don't notice a whole lot of good.
You're basically building a habit
of seeing light in the dark.
Our brain will automatically find bad.
We need to actually be intentional about finding the good.
And I've been focusing, and I've said this for a couple of years now, of how I wake up
every single morning and I focus on things to be grateful for.
And every single night I speak to or pray to
whatever might be creating this whole world that we live in
and talk about all of the things that I'm grateful for
before I do anything else when I go to bed.
And so we need to actually start focusing more
on the positive.
And we actually can make the positive things
stick in our brain more.
We need to stop just like going to the next thing
when something positive happens. We need to stop for a second, we need to stop just like going to the next thing when something positive happens.
We need to stop for a second and we need to savor the good.
There's actually a thing that psychologist Rick Hansen
explains that he actually says that we can install
positive experiences into our brain.
And the way that we do this is by holding them
in our awareness for 20 seconds.
And so this allows them to sink into your long term memory. And,
you know, let's be honest, I don't know if you're like me, I will accomplish something and I'm
immediately onto the next thing. Or I'll get a compliment and I'm like, yeah, whatever. Thank you.
Right. I'm not a say and I said that obviously the person, but I just kind of go on to the next thing.
So when he calls this, he calls it taking in the good. And it's really, really simple.
When something good happens, pause.
Like let it land.
Like feel it for a second, like really stay with it.
Because when something bad happens
and it's a shock to the system,
you feel it and you feel it deeply.
And that's why if I say like,
think about the worst moment of your life, you can recall
it immediately where you were, what you were feeling, what everything looks like.
It's because it was a shock to the system.
It landed.
And so when something good happens to you, when you get a compliment, when you have an
accomplishment, when you create an amazing paper and get a plus on it, you got to let
it land and you've got to feel it and you and you've gotta feel it and you've gotta stay with it
and you've gotta let your brain and your body digest it
for 20 seconds and you don't rush past it.
It's kind of like a mental rehearsal that deepens your joy
and it allows you to change your location
on the hedonic treadmill over time
because you're starting to really focus on
and feel the great things that are happening in your life like for me
Truthfully, I've been doing this a lot as a parent
like I know that my son is learning about life and how to be happy and how things are happening through me and so I am
consciously
slowing down myself as
many times I possibly can like when he smiles and he's in like full happiness,
or like, you know, we're dancing in the kitchen
or something like that.
I'm trying to take these mental snapshots
of how amazing life is right now.
And it's actually changing the way that I feel
when I wake up every single day.
And I'm also at the same time being a parent,
I'm trying to make his level of happiness
high as I possibly can from the start.
So hopefully, you know, as he gets older,
his hedonic treadmill, like his level of happiness
where he's on in the hedonic treadmill
is higher than the average person,
is higher than mine ever was.
And it really comes down to our perspective in life.
Like our perspective is a
choice and it requires practice. You know, the ability to choose your perspective, to reframe
situations is one of the most powerful cognitive skills that we have. Like you don't have to believe
everything that you think when you think something negative or think something bad about yourself or be fearful about it. Like you don't have to believe everything that you think when you think something negative or think something bad about yourself
or be fearful about it.
Like you don't have to believe everything you think.
You can question every single one of your thoughts
and you can change your perspective in the moment.
You can reframe, it's called cognitive reframing,
where you change your perspective
and your thoughts in the moment.
And you sit there and you examine and you challenge
and you reframe those negative beliefs,
you can change how you feel
and how you act in those moments.
You have to understand that reframing is not like
just lying to yourself.
It's not toxic positivity where everything's going to shit
and you're like, no, I'm really good.
I swear I'm really good.
No, it's like this idea where you sit back
and you have something happen to you
and you think to yourself like, what else could this mean?
Like what part of this is in my control?
What good can come from this?
How can I grow from this?
It's not just be like, no, I swear I'm okay,
even though I'm going nuts, right?
It's not toxic positive thinking.
It's more like mental jujitsu more than anything else.
And this is how you train your brain
to find things to be happy, regardless of circumstances,
because it's already trained to find the negative.
I want to at least train it to find more positive.
Is it always easy?
Hell no, right?
But I can tell you it has absolutely changed my life.
I've never been so happy as I am right now.
And it's not because of my circumstances,
it's because of me intentionally thinking
of how blessed I am every single moment.
And so when we look at everything
that happens outside of us,
we like to believe that our happiness and our peace
and our wellbeing comes from what happens to us
and comes from outside of us.
But study after study after study show that's not true.
It's not what happens to you, it's what you focus on.
It's your perception of your life. It's not how good to you. It's what you focus on. It's your perception of your life.
It's not how good your life is, it's how grateful you are.
You know, your brain is always interpreting,
it's always filtering, it's always narrating your story.
But you, if you're more intentional
and you don't let yourself just go to defaults all the time,
you get to shape that story.
So every morning that you wake up, you get to decide,
like, what is the world that I will live in today?
And how can I wake up in the morning,
focus on what is it I'm grateful for,
and actually start to notice the thing that's around me?
You know, believe me, it's not delusion.
It's really taking full ownership
for how you're gonna be in your life.
How you're gonna feel in your life,
how you're gonna act in your life.
And when you take full ownership of your perception,
that's when your life really starts to feel amazing. So that's what I got for you for
today's episode. If you love this episode, please share it on your Instagram stories.
Tab me in it, Rob Dial Jr. R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R. If you're interested in coaching more with
me outside of the podcast, go to mindsetmentor.com. Once again, mindsetmentor.com. You can see
the information there. And I'm going to leave it the same way I leave you every single episode. Make it your mission, make somebody else's day better.
I appreciate you and I hope that you have an amazing day.