The Mindset Mentor - The One Habit You Need to Reset Your Mindset
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Ever feel like you're running on autopilot, reacting to life instead of shaping it? In this episode, I reveal the ONE habit that will completely reset your mindset and break you free from limiting bel...iefs. It’s not a morning routine, a hack, or a trick—it’s something deeper. If you want more happiness, success, and control over your life, you need to start doing this today. 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'm your host Rob Dial. If you have not
yet done so hit that subscribe button so you never miss another podcast episode. If you're out there,
you want to get my new free morning mindset priming routine. It's a free video lesson with
worksheet that teaches you exactly how to set up your own
morning mindset priming every single morning to set yourself for who you want to be, how you want
to act in the world that you're trying to create. Go to morningpriming.com once again,
morningpriming.com right now and get it for free. Today, I'm going to be talking to you about the
one habit that you need in your life if you want to reset your mindset and make it the best you possibly can.
And if you're listening to this podcast, you're here because you probably know
you have an idea that if you gain more control over your mindset,
your life will be better in many different ways.
You probably understand that everything comes from your mindset,
what you think of yourself,
what you think of the world, what you think of other people, what you think is possible for
yourself. If you have some sort of fears, if you have limiting beliefs, all of those things come
from your mindset. And the better that your mindset is, the better your entire life will be,
the better your relationships will be, the more happiness, joy, success, money you'll make, all of those things, right?
Well, when I first started in self-development, it was all about how can I add more?
How can I become better?
How can I become smarter?
How can I learn the next tip or trick to get myself out of this place or to get better?
And so I was like, I'm going to get better.
I'm trying to get smarter.
And it was like adding more all of the time these tips and these tricks and these psychological
things to master my mind but there's one habit that I believe has the power to transform your life
at its core and it doesn't happen to be a productivity trick it's not a morning routine, it's not a discipline hack,
it's not a how to create habits in your life,
it's this one small thought process
that shifts your entire internal framework.
And it is this habit of self-inquiry.
It is the ability to turn inward and question yourself. It's to look at yourself in
the mirror, whether that's physically or just mentally, and to question yourself, to question
your assumptions, to question your beliefs, and to dismantle all of the subconscious patterns that
are shaping your reality. Because what it does is it shapes your perspective and from that perspective, it creates your
reality and what you see of reality.
It is this observation of looking at what's going on in your mind and seeing what's going
on in your mind, seeing what you're saying to yourself, seeing how you're labeling the
world, how you're labeling certain people
and labeling certain instances,
and then questioning everything.
Like what's actually going on here?
What is the reason?
Why do I really feel this way?
Is this truly what I believe?
Or is this something I learned from somebody else?
Is this my truth?
Or did somebody teach this to me
at some point in time in my childhood?
It's this ability to really take a step back
and observe yourself and question yourself
without judgment, without guilt, without shame,
but to just sit there and look at yourself
with true curiosity more than anything else. Now, why is self-inquiry
the key to basically everything in this case? Because most people live their life just reacting.
We've all done it. Where we basically come into this world with all of the hardware that we need,
the brain, the body, and then all of this software is downloaded from people that
we know, from our parents, from observing the world, from observing other people.
All of this software gets downloaded and it's not on purpose. It just kind of gets
downloaded from who we hang out with. There's nature, there's nurture, all of
that. And we just start reacting to the world based off of our software and
everybody else has different software than us.
And what do we do?
We just react to life based off of our software, based off of our old thoughts,
based off of our old habits, based off of our old self-limiting beliefs or fears.
And a lot of times what we do until hopefully we wake up at some point in time
is we live life without realizing that we've been running on autopilot.
We've just been acting out
a set of scripts that we never actually consciously wrote for ourselves.
And you know, you've heard me talk about it before, all of these scripts that we're just
playing out come from our childhood, all of the experiences that we've had along the way,
our cultural conditioning, our unresolved emotions and traumas,
things that your parents said to you,
things that your teacher might have said to you
in fourth grade after you messed up on something.
And just millions of little teeny tiny moments.
A lot of times people are like,
well, I wanna go back to the moment where all this started.
Sometimes you developed a habit,
you developed a perspective, you
develop the fear off of a moment that you don't even recall. It could have just been
a little tiny moment that just shifted your life completely. And this affects everything
in your life. And I mean everything in your life, from the way that you respond to criticism,
to the way that you handle relationships, to the way that you talk to people, the way
that you think about people, the way that you think about people,
the way you react to other people,
it has to do with your fears,
it has to do with your ambitions,
why you react a certain way to something
when another person could have the exact same thing
happen to them and they react completely different.
All of these come from this deeper subconscious context that people rarely explore.
And that's what I want to talk about with you today.
Self-inquiry is the habit of stepping outside of yourself, outside of this automatic reactive way of being and asking yourself questions.
What's really going on here? What belief is driving this reaction in me?
When did I learn this? Do I want to continue with this? Do I want to continue to believe this?
Or do I want to believe something different? And here's the key to it.
When you practice self-inquiry consistently, it dissolves your limiting beliefs. It dissolves your fears,
it dissolves your reactions, your unconscious programs. And so many people are like, give me
the tip or trick. What is the thing that I need to do when I'm in fear or when I'm overthinking
and when I'm in my limiting beliefs? As if there's like a shortcut to doing it. There is no shortcut. When you find
yourself there, that's what you need to do is bring in self-inquiry and start getting curious.
It is the first step to reclaiming your personal power. And so to develop this habit of self-inquiry,
you must train yourself to pause before reacting.
To pause before reacting.
I was running a call yesterday
on my year-long coaching group called Mindset University.
And one of the questions that was asked by a lady,
and she was asking a question,
and she was talking about how something happened in her life
and how she was triggered by it and how she reacted.
And all of her words, I had to pause and say, hey, can I just give you just honest reflection?
All of the words that you're using are making it sound like you're a victim, as if you have
no control over your reaction.
Oh, well, I couldn't do anything about it.
I can't control myself.
And I was like, are you telling me 100%? There is
absolutely no way you can control yourself. And she's like, well, no, but it's really hard to,
I'm like, okay, well, cool. Perfect. First thing that we need to do is admit that it's not 100%
impossible to control your reaction. Because if you're saying it's impossible, that's not making
you a victim. And if you're a victim, you can't change anything. In order for you to change it,
you have to take ownership and say, I am the person that's able to do it.
And so it was acting as if there was no moment
for her to be able to pause and to take ownership of it.
And as we started talking about it, she's like, yeah, well,
there was a moment where I was feeling myself
getting ramped up before I got triggered
and then I blew up.
And so it's this ability where we must train ourselves
to pause before reacting, instead of being like,
I can't control it.
Because if you say, I can't control it,
then there's nothing you can do about it.
But we all know that if your entire family's life
was on the line and you had to not react to something,
you wouldn't react. Or if the line and you had to not react to something, you wouldn't react.
Or if the person that you're idle,
that you look up to the most was in the room with you,
you probably wouldn't react the exact same way.
So instead of blindly following
our first emotional response,
we pause before reacting and we take a step back
and we observe ourselves and we start asking questions and getting really curious, right?
Don't shame yourself or guilt yourself or beat yourself up, but just take a step back
and act like you're watching somebody that you don't know and just be like, huh, why
is that person doing that?
Why is that person acting this way?
And so it involves basically three stages.
Okay.
The first one is recognizing the trigger,
the thing that triggers you.
The first step is to notice when you're emotionally charged.
Before you blow up or before you cry
or before whatever it is,
you can start to feel your body change.
Triggers can appear in anger, in anxiety,
in sadness, in defensiveness, in rage, any reaction or emotion, and this is good
or bad too, like you can use this for good. You know, if you get really happy about something,
what made me so happy? Why did it make me so happy? Can I bring more of that into my life?
So any reaction, good or bad, anytime you feel an intense emotional response. It's an opportunity to notice it and it's an opportunity to learn about yourself.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
And so that's the first thing is to just notice the thing that's triggering you.
The second thing is to just become curious.
So instead of getting lost in your story and getting lost in habit, you want to ask yourself
some questions to kind of distance yourself from the thoughts. What's the belief that's being
activated or what's the fear that's being activated? Have I ever felt this way before?
Where did it come from? Is this thought or belief universally true? Like if someone feels like
they're not good enough,
is it absolute truth that I'm not good enough?
It never is.
What assumptions am I making about this whole situation?
Oh, well, she acted this way,
so that must mean that this is what she was thinking.
What assumptions am I making about a situation?
What emotion is beneath all of this initial reaction?
What's the opposite of what I believe to be true?
Is it true that that opposite could also be true?
Because if it is, then that makes my thing not 100% true.
You know, how would I respond
if I wasn't attached to this belief?
And you can go and just ask yourself questions.
How do you ask yourself a question?
It's very simple.
Start a sentence with who, what, why, when, where, or how.
So how does this pop up in my life?
When has this happened before?
What do I want to believe?
Why do I think this way?
Who could I have learned this from?
Where did this originate?
Who, what, why, when, where, how?
It could come from anywhere.
And so it's just about really asking yourself questions.
And what you'll realize is that if you ask yourself enough questions,
you basically dissolve the belief, you dissolve the fear,
you dissolve the limiting belief about yourself, you dissolve all of these
because you kind of like back it into a corner and you realize that what you
thought was truth was just something you'd be thinking for a long time.
What happens is most of the time we have a thought and we have a thought for so long,
we believe it to be true, but it's not absolute truth.
We just think that it's true in our mind.
And so that's the second part of it.
Just become very curious and start asking yourself
a bunch of questions.
You notice a trigger, then you become curious
and ask yourself questions.
And number three is about reframing and releasing
whatever that thing is. So the point
here is to challenge your thoughts. The reason why a lot of people who have a certain belief system
don't like to hang out with people who don't have the same belief system is because people do not
like their thoughts or beliefs to be challenged. If your beliefs or thoughts cannot be challenged,
if you have a problem with that, that is something that you need to work on. You want to challenge your own
thoughts, challenge your own beliefs. The way to release yourself from old beliefs, old thoughts,
is to prove that they are not absolutely true. They're not 100% true. And to see from a different perspective than you normally do.
When you can see from a different perspective, usually that idea starts to dissolve.
That belief starts to dissolve.
This is what dissolves the belief because it doesn't hold as much value anymore.
It doesn't hold as much truth if there's another possibility.
And you keep doing this over and over and over again.
And once you uncover the belief that's behind the trigger,
you can challenge it and replace it.
If you're realizing that you have a deep belief
that I'm not enough, ask yourself, is that true?
Is it true that I'm not enough?
What if I am enough?
What if that's just BS?
So by you becoming dedicated to doing this,
you strip away the subconscious patterns
that have been running your life unconsciously.
And this allows you to see things with more clarity
than you've actually ever seen things in your entire life.
To see things more than anything else as they truly are.
And so like a couple of examples
of where this really will change your life
and change your reality.
The first one is
in your relationships
Because a lot of times we're not present in our relationships
We're projecting in our relationships
And so let me give you an example most conflicts that happen in a relationship don't come from the present moment
They usually come from past wounds being projected onto the present moment.
So like if a friend doesn't return your phone call, you might spiral into feelings of rejection
or not being good enough or whatever it might be.
Not because of the actual missed call itself, but because it activates within you an old
wound or feeling of being unimportant or maybe your fear of abandonment
that came from childhood.
Like, so for me, I'll give you a great example for me, right?
If I sent a text message, this was for years
and I couldn't understand it.
If I sent a text message back in the day to a female
and she never texted me back,
whether that was someone I was dating
or whether that was just a friend that was a female
and they didn't text back, it never bothered me.
If I text a friend that was a a friend that was a female and they didn't text back and never bothered me. If I text a friend, there was a guy friend,
didn't text him back, never really bothered me, no big deal.
But if I text somebody that was a man,
that was an older man that I respected,
that was doing amazing things in the world
and they didn't get back to me,
even if it was just a couple hours,
I would feel myself get triggered.
And I was like, this is so odd.
It's like, it doesn't matter with people that I know
or people that are my good friends,
but if I see someone that seems like
they're doing amazing things, that's out there,
and it's a man most of the time,
it's a man that's doing something well in the world,
I would be like, well, maybe I'm not good enough.
Maybe they don't have time for me.
Maybe I'm not worth texting back.
And I was like, where's all of this coming from?
So I noticed the trigger and I was like,
where's this coming from?
And I started getting really curious
and I was able to kind of play it back to,
I realized it came from my abandonment wound from my father.
So, you know, not being there,
my father would say that he would pick me up
and then he would go to go fishing and then he would go to a bar and he would get drunk and he would forget
about me.
So I had this abandonment issue specifically with men and I was projecting my wound onto
these other men.
You see what I mean?
It had nothing to do with them.
It had nothing to do with the situation I was in.
It had everything to do with an unhealed wound. Now, if I would have never asked myself questions and try to figure
myself out more, I would have never figured that out. And so self-inquiry allows you to recognize
the difference between reality and projection. And so instead of reacting with resentment,
whatever it might be, when that friend doesn't text you back, you can pause
and ask like, what meaning am I giving this? Is it really about them? Or is this some unresolved issue within myself? And this simple shift can turn tension in a relationship to more self-awareness.
These are the moments in life where you learn and grow the most. It's not from reading a book.
It's not from going to a conference. It's not from reading a book, it's not from going to a conference,
it's not from listening to this podcast.
All of those are great.
But in the moment where shit is hitting the fan
is life giving you your lesson that you need to learn from.
Stop running from it.
And guess what?
This is why being in a real long-term relationship,
like a romantic relationship,
is so triggering for so many people.
Whether you want it to happen or not,
your significant other becomes a proxy for your parents.
And everything within you that is unhealed
from your relationship with each parent
will 100% come up in your relationships
until you deal with it.
So why so many people will get out of a relationship
because of XYZ, they dump this person because of X, Y, Z,
then they get into another relationship and X, Y, Z pops up.
And they're like, oh my God, this is happening again.
Let me get out of the relationship with this person.
They dump them, they get into another relationship
and X, Y, Z pops up, whatever this thing is, right?
It's like, because no, it's not about them.
It's about you and this thing that you need to heal.
Oh, I wasn't attracted to the same type of person.
Well, I wonder why.
Right, so that's the first thing.
It'll really help you in relationships
when you start getting into self-inquiry.
The second place that'll really help you out a lot as well
is work, success, business, career.
You know, there's many people who chase success
as a way to validate their worth.
So they work tirelessly and they fear that if they slow down, they're going to lose their
significance.
And then they'll burn themselves out or they'll get anxiety or they'll have this sense of
emptiness even if they do succeed.
Like this is also another thing that happened to me, right?
I became a workaholic to prove my worth.
You know, that's what I was trying to do.
I'm going to be successful so I can prove that I'm worthy.
And then I realized at my core
that I was trying to prove myself, my worth, to my father,
that it passed away more than 15 years before that.
Right, so you're starting to see how it all stems back
to childhood almost every single time.
But you don't get to know this about yourself
if you don't take a step back and question yourself.
Other people, it's not that they're working too hard,
and that's what they're proving their self worth.
Some people have fears of starting a business,
fears of pursuing their dreams.
They're not good enough, they're paralyzed by fear.
There's fear of rejection, the fear of failure,
fear of success, the fear of not being good enough.
All of those things keep them stuck
and they so badly want to succeed,
but they're not succeeding because of it.
And so you need to identify these fears,
you need to reframe these fears.
Your mind is always constantly narrating
and judging and labeling and analyzing.
It's filled with all of these things that you should do
and should not do and comparisons
and habitual loops of thoughts that you have.
And so self-inquiry allows this space
between you and your thoughts
where you can step in a deeper awareness
and start to like distance yourself from your thoughts
and say, hey, hold on, let me take out of my own brain
and let me like, just look at this
as if I'm somebody else looking at this person.
So instead of identifying with every anxious thought
or fear, you can observe it and be
like, okay, hmm, that's very interesting, but I don't have to believe that.
And this is really a huge, huge game changer for people who want to work on their inner
peace.
In fact, there is no inner peace without self inquiry, because you cannot change something
if you're not aware of it.
And so most people don't want to do this though.
Hopefully you're the type of person that wants to do this.
Self-inquiry is not easy
because it requires brutal honesty.
It requires the willingness to face uncomfortable truths,
to go back and think of some of the hardest moments
in your life.
And that's why most people stay away from it.
But if it's important for you to change your life,
then this is one of the most important things that you can do. And so what I want you to do is to take this process and start to think to yourself, okay, if I am triggered,
let me take ownership of it. Why am I triggered? Once again, it's almost never because of the
present moment. It's almost always because you're projecting the past onto this present moment.
And as you start to take a step back, you start to question yourself, you start to be curious,
you'll learn more about yourself
than you ever knew about yourself.
And that is the real first step
to making massive, massive changes in your life
and in your mindset.
So that's what I got for you for today's episode.
If you love this episode,
please share it on your Instagram stories,
tag me in it, RobDialJunior, R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R.
Once again, if you wanna download
my morning mindset priming routine,
go ahead and go to morningpriming.com
to build your own routine out
that's gonna make you feel powerful
and amazing throughout the day.
So once again, morningpriming.com.
And with that, I'm gonna leave 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.