The Mindset Mentor - The Power of Delusional Self Belief
Episode Date: September 24, 2025Have you ever felt like you lost yourself in life? In this episode, I talk about why we all lose ourselves at some point, how society and relationships shape us, and why the path back to your true sel...f is the most important journey you can take. 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, if you have not yet done so, hit that subscribe button so you
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And if you're out there and you live in the U.S. or Canada, and you want to get some
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text me right now.
512-5-80-9305.
once again, 512-580-9305. In today's episode, I'm really going to talk to you about why you really
as a person and as someone who has an identity and develops a personality, why you actually
need to lose yourself in your lifetime so that you can come back around and find yourself,
hopefully find yourself in your lifetime. Now, the reason why I say this and the reason why I
am hopeful for you is because you have now become aware. If you're listening to this podcast,
you're somebody who's into personal growth, you're into self-discovery, you're into personal
development. And you've gotten to the point where you realize that in order to make your life
better, in order to improve your life, you need to work on yourself. One of the things that you'll
find is that it's actually really, the path of self-development is really the path of self-discovery,
of rediscovering who you truly are and becoming more and more of your truest self. Because when you
look at the journey of life. You are in your truest form at birth. That is a perfect human.
Obviously, you know, the baby has nothing. They're as far as like knowledge or knowledgeless about this
world, but they're perfect. They haven't been changed. They haven't been told that they're not good
enough, not smart enough, not pretty enough. They haven't developed thoughts because thoughts come
from language and they haven't developed any of that. So they are kind of in it, their purest form
as a human. As time goes on, we are changed from our truest self. We are changed by our parents.
We are changed by society. We are changed by our peers. We are changed by ourselves comparing
ourselves to other people. We're changed by seeing advertisements in thinking to ourselves,
damn, I must not be good enough. So I need to change myself so that I look more like hers.
They look more like him. Oh, my body doesn't look good enough. And really, it kind of
of turns into this situation where we mold ourselves into somebody that we think we need
to be in order to fit in and in order to be accepted. So we're conditioned and we're socialized
to fit in. And that's from, once again, everyone from our parents to every single interaction
that we have, things that we see, things that we think, all of that stuff. And so we're conditioned
and socialized to fit in, aka we are domesticated, right? And so what happens is in this case,
we break from our true selves, and we break away from the truest version of who we are.
I don't think that there is any other way.
I don't think that there's a way to raise a child that doesn't break from their true self.
If they're going to be in society, if they're going to be around other people, if they're
going to, it's just natural for all of this to happen.
And it's also natural for us just to compare ourselves to other people.
And I believe that it is the one of breaking away from your true self,
childhood, and going off of this path of your true self, I believe actually is the most important
part to eventually, hopefully being able to identify who you truly are and going on that path
of rediscovery. I believe this is how you find yourself, because you cannot find yourself,
your true self, and work towards that every single day unless you have lost yourself first.
this is just the way that life goes
and for me
since I became aware of this
and got so far off track of who I truly was
one day I became aware of this
and hopefully you're starting to become aware of this
and hopefully this episode helps to become more aware of it
is now my path is not
how do I become the best version of myself
how do I become better how do I make more money
how do I do all of this stuff my thing is
how do I start going more and more on the path
to become my truest version of myself, not the path that I, not who I think I should be,
not who other people have told me I should be, not that I was conditioned to think that I should
be when I was a child, but like how can I be my truest self no matter what? And I am not there
yet, but I have been on this path for years now to try to get back to my truest self. And I think
that if I look at myself and you could probably look at yourself as well, I can think of many
times throughout my lifetime where I lost myself. You could probably think of many times in your
lifetime where you've lost yourself. You know, I can think of many times where I thought that I should be
somebody else and I should be someone that I maybe didn't want to fully be just so I could fit in.
You know, I remember, I've said this before on the podcast, I can remember in middle school
the exact moment on the school bus where we were
and the exact moment when I said something
that was really mean to another kid on the school bus
and I said it because I thought that other kids would think it was funny
I still feel terrible about it because I was like damn
that was such a shitty thing to say you know I was like what 11 years old
12 years old and I said this thing and I'm like man I can't believe I
still feel bad about that and I said it because I just wanted to be accepted
and I didn't feel accepted.
Why did I want to be accepted?
Well, I think if I look at myself and how I was subconsciously as a kid, I think I probably
didn't feel accepted by my father fully because he was an alcoholic and because he would not
be around and there was some emotional neglect that came from that.
And so because of the fact that I didn't feel fully accepted there, I wanted to be accepted
somewhere else.
And so I think that happens for all of us.
We all lose ourselves in so many ways.
our life and we lose ourselves to then have a moment of, is this who I am? Is this who I want to be?
Or do I want to be somebody else? You know, we get into relationships and we fall for people who
end up hurting us in the long run, right? I'm sure many people listening right now, I've personally
done it, have gotten into a relationship with somebody and we have a pretty good idea. This
ain't going to go very well. And they end up hurting us in the long run. And sometimes we change
ourselves. Like so many people change who they are in a relationship with somebody in order to fit in
in order to feel like that person accepts them. And a lot of times people want to change the person
that they're in a relationship with. And so we try to change other people. They try to change us.
And we kind of become these like chameleons where, you know, I'm this way in front of this person.
I'm this way in front of my mom. I'm this way in front of my girlfriend. I'm this way in front of my
friends. And if we're constantly being somebody else, depending
on who we're around, that's not our true self. Our true self would be, and this is why it's the path
of rediscovery, we find out who we truly are, and we are that person in front of every single
person, no matter who they are. Like, it's not like, oh, you know, I've got to be this way in front
of her. I've got to be this way in front of him. I've got to be this way in front of this
group of people. Oh, I'm on a podcast. I've got to be this way. It's got to be, I need to
figure out who I am. And once I figure out who I am, I need to try to stay as firm in that person
that I can possibly be. Because we change ourselves. So think about that. Have you ever lost yourself
in a relationship? I'm sure many people have. And so what happens is we lose ourselves in the
relationship. And then the relationship ends. And then we're like, wait, who the hell am I?
Like I have a friend specifically. She was dating a guy years ago. And he was really into Star Wars.
And she got really into Star Wars. And she went and saw all of the movies and had all of the movies and had all of
these things and they were together for like three or four years, whatever it was. And they went
through a breakup and she was like, I fucking hate Star Wars, right? But she went to all of the
things and she acted like, and she tried to make herself like Star Wars and she never actually
like Star Wars, right? And so how many of us do this in so many ways? How many of us, you know,
when we're in middle school, we're in high school, we change ourselves and mold ourselves and make
ourselves, you know, we're like a chameleon, like everybody else, we wear the same things as
them, we talk the same way, we have the same interests as them in high school and middle
school so that we fit in with a group of people so that they will once again accept us.
You know, like in high school, I used to smoke a lot of weed, even though I never really liked
the way that I felt. Because I hung out with all of the surfers and everybody did, right?
And so I was like, all right, I guess this is just, I guess this is what we do, you know?
And so I did it, even though I didn't really like how I felt. So I was me.
like just putting myself and saying, hey, I'm going to be this way. Can you guys all accept me?
Right? And then I took that smoking and drinking and all that stuff and I carried it into college.
And I was drinking and partying like crazy because that's what everybody did.
When in reality, I think what I was really just doing, and I think this is what a lot of us do,
in reality, I was just drinking and partying to numb the fact that I didn't feel like I knew who I was anymore.
I was numbing the fact that I think a lot of us numb and struggle with self-acceptance because our truest self that's deep down below all of that conditioning that we've had, our truest self doesn't accept our conditioned self. So like our conditioned self is who we've grown our self into. Our true self is who we truly are from birth. And we know this person's behind the scenes. It's like that voice that's in the back of your head, that intuition. I think the truest self is actually doesn't accept our condition self.
So what happens a lot of times is we numb ourselves in all of those things in life. And there's so many
of them that happen over and over and over again, thousands of times throughout, I'm sure,
our childhood, adolescence, you know, college, high school, all of that. All of them are super
freaking hard. Like they're incredibly hard to go through those, to go through some of those.
But the important thing is, is they are incredible lessons if we allow them to be. The problem
is that I don't think most people understand this. I don't think most people understand that all of those
tough moments where we do lose ourselves, where we do get kicked out of the crowd, where we do get
made fun of for being a certain way, whatever it might be. I don't think enough people understand that
those are lessons. And even if you didn't extract the lesson in that moment, like sometimes somebody does
break up with you, you realize you've lost yourself and you go, you know what, screw this. I'm going to be
alone for six months and I'm going to rediscover who I truly am. Sometimes we do do that. But sometimes you
go through and you might have been broken up with or had a terrible breakup six, six years ago.
And you can now look back and say, okay, it's been six years. How did I lose myself? Who did I
become? Do I want to be this person? Do I want to change this person? What is my truest self want to do?
I think that we need to get completely lost in order to find ourselves. And what we need to do is we need
to lose like every piece of who we are in order to build ourselves back up from scratch and say,
on let me let me let me just wipe this slate clean let me figure out who I am you know I didn't
realize this until I was in my 30s and most people are we just do what we're told you know we
we're in school and before school we just do what our parents tell us to do and we get into school
and in first grade they say hey you've you've got to get good grades so you can get into
second grade and then you got to get good grades you got to be a good boy and girl so you can
get into third grade and then you get into middle school and you've got to get it you've got to
get your grades in middle school so you can get a high school and you definitely got to get
great grades in high school so you can get into a college right and you can get into a good college
and then you've got to do really well in college so that you can do you know get a good job and then
once you get a good job then you can climb the corporate router so you got to do really good and we just
kind of we kind of just follow this path we kind of do what we're told and or do what we feel we're
supposed to be doing based off of what all of society is reflecting back to us and at some point in time
we wake up and we're like what the fuck am I doing with my life this is
this is where a midlife crisis comes from, is people wake up and say, what am I doing? How did I get here?
I don't want this. You know, they just wake up one day and they have a life that they feel like they
didn't want or create for themselves. They just kind of followed the herd. And that is a really,
really hard moment. But the moment is a moment of transformation if they let it be. And that's
when we really have to stop looking externally, and we really have to start searching internally.
You know, what parts of the old me of my conditioned self need to die? It's like, it's like,
you know, shedding of a skin. A snake needs to shed its skin as much as it possibly can.
You know, like I remember, and I've told this before on the podcast, one of the most life-changing
conversations I ever had was with one of my first mentors, Matt. And I was running,
an office for this company that had 700 offices. We were the number one office in the United States.
We were killing it. The company was like a $250 million year company and we were number one out of
700 and some odd offices. I was 21. I thought it was just hot shit. I thought I was killing. I thought
I was awesome. And he calls me up. He's like, hey, can we go get lunch? I'm like, yeah, we meet at
Chipotle. We sit down and like immediately he wasn't, he was very short to the point, but said it
with love. He's like, hey, I don't know how to tell you this, but a lot of people don't like you.
I was like, what?
Like, in my mind, I'm killing.
I'm like running in a newborn office.
I thought I was great.
He's like, a lot of people don't like you because you present yourself in a way that is not
who you truly are.
Like, this was a conversation where he made me realize I was not being my truest self.
He's like, I know your heart.
I know who you are.
And you don't present that to other people.
And I think it's because you're afraid of being vulnerable.
And so my whole thing was I would show, you know, I would say things that were a little bit
more brash and would kind of cut people deep so that therefore they wouldn't come back and
cut me because I was so vulnerable and so weak and so afraid of being wounded that I was like,
I'm going to hurt you first so you don't hurt me. And I was protecting myself because my sense
of self-worth was so fragile. And I started thinking of like, oh my God, do I want to be that person?
How did I get this way first off? Like I was thinking that. I was like, how did I become this way?
Is that who I truly am? Is this who I want to be? No, like this part of me needs to shut off.
I need to get rid of this, right?
Because I was 21 of the time.
So that's 21 years of building up.
And so I'm slowly still shedding it.
And, you know, it's crazy how many ways we lose ourselves.
You know, so many of us lose ourselves to and become somebody that we need to be for our parents
and for society.
And so many of us lose ourselves in romantic relationships and, you know, become somebody that
we're not hoping to please the other person.
And you lose yourself.
And then you have to refine yourself.
And it's all of this is just a path of rediscovering who you truly are.
You know, have you ever lost yourself in a relationship with a family member where
you have to act a certain way with your mom because you know how she's going to react?
You have to act sort of way with your dad.
And you make sure you don't cuss in front of grandma and all this.
Have you ever lost yourself in friendships where you become a chameleon to everyone else around
you?
And then you end up not liking yourself or you become a chameleon in a job and you've got
to be a certain way so that you're accepted.
And you have to make sure you get a certain job title like that actually matters.
or you go and get a degree that you don't want because your parents told you to or because
everyone that looks like you has the same one or if you don't if you're not a doctor or a lawyer
you're a failure or you know you're a guy so you should do this or your female show you should
do this and we have all of these things of what we think we should do and think we should be
versus actually just checking in with ourselves and saying who am I truly and who do I want to be
And so really the way that you actually start to to find yourself is to first off, the first way, like if you're driving your car, the first way to realize and start to get on the right path is to realize, oh my gosh, like I'm way off course. I need to get back on course.
So the first thing you need to become aware of is like, have I lost myself in some ways? And if you have, okay, great, you know, we can work through that. We can start to, it's a process, we can do it. And you start to ask yourself, like, how have I lost myself? Have I changed myself for other people?
And then in reality, who do I truly want to be, you know, and start thinking about it, like, if I were to be able to be at my funeral and I were to see what's being said about me at the eulogy, what would I want people to say about me?
What would I want people to say about my, not about what my job title was or what, how much money I made or how much I did, you know, had cars or clothes or whatever it might be, houses in certain locations.
You don't want that.
That's not what you want people say about you at your funeral.
Well, none of that matters.
What are the characteristics?
What are the habits?
What are the traits?
How did you make people feel?
And start to develop this version of yourself of like, hey, this is who I feel like I truly am.
These are my values.
These are my characteristics, my traits that I say, this is who I know.
It feels true inside of my body that I truly am.
And then what you do is you wake up and you look at that list and you become more of that
every single day.
And if you do that every single day and you become a little bit more, a little bit more, a little bit more,
eventually you'll fast forward in five or ten years from today, and you'll actually be the person
that you want to be, and be the person that you truly are, not the person that you've been conditioned
to be. So that's what I got for you for today's episode. If you love this episode, please show it
on Instagram stories, tag me in at Rob Dow Jr. R-B-D-I-A-L-J-R. And if you're out there and you love
this podcast, you want to learn a little bit more about coaching with me outside of the podcast. You can go
ahead and go to coach with rob.com. Once again, coach with rob.com for more information.
And with that, I'm going to leave the same way I leave you every single episode.
Making sure mission makes somebody else's day better. I appreciate you. And I hope that you have
an amazing day.