The Mindset Mentor - This Is Why We Suffer
Episode Date: February 2, 2024In today's episode, we're understanding the difference between pain and suffering.  Pain, my friends, is part of our journey – it's those unavoidable bumps we hit along the road of life. But suffer...ing? That's a whole different story. It's more about how we choose to react to these bumps. Let's explore this together!We'll take a little trip back to our childhood days. Remember when we were kids, just being our goofy, authentic selves? But as we grew, things changed. We learned to adjust ourselves for acceptance, love, and to fit in – both with our families and society. It's kind of like putting on different masks to match different stages of our lives. But here's the catch – in doing so, many of us lost touch with who we truly are.This episode is all about rediscovering and embracing our true selves. Whether we've tried and failed to be someone else, or even succeeded in it, the real victory lies in accepting and loving our genuine selves. It's not just about the shiny, happy parts, but also those quirky, not-so-perfect bits. Because guess what? That's what makes us wonderfully human!I'm here to guide you on this beautiful, lifelong journey of self-discovery and self-acceptance. It's not a sprint; it's a marathon with no finish line. And it's all about learning to love every part of ourselves – the good, the bad, and everything in between. 📺 Watch this Episode on Youtube If you like this episode… Make sure to share it with someone that needs to hear it and help us get the message out there so that together we can help make people’s lives better and make the world a better place. And BY THE WAY: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.Within its pages, you'll discover powerful insights and practical steps that will revolutionize the way you approach your goals, personal motivation, and mental focus.📚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: https://www.instagram.com/robdialjr/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@robdial?lang=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/themindsetmentee/Or visit my Youtube page that is designed specifically for anyone desiring motivation, direction, and focus in life: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHl3aFKS0bY0d8JwqNysaeA 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, the number one mindset podcast
in the entire world.
If you're out there and you're looking to work on yourself and improve yourself, go
ahead and hit the subscribe button so that you never miss another podcast episode.
Today we're going to be talking about the reason why you suffer,
the reason why we all suffer. I am not immune to this in any sort of way. Today, we're going to
talk about where most human suffering comes from. Before I do that, I want to talk to you about the
difference really quickly between pain and suffering because we kind of put the two things
together, but they're two completely different things. So pain is basically life.
There is pain. Pain is inevitable. And pain is not always in your control. So things happen in life.
You know, people get in car accidents. People you love will die. People will get sick.
There's many different things that will happen throughout your life that are painful.
And pain is inevitable. And it's not always in control,
but suffering is in our control. Suffering is our decision. It's usually an unconscious decision,
but it's actually our decision where we continue to suffer. And there's a couple of reasons why
we suffer. And the reason that we kind of suffer, I'm going to start way back in childhood.
the reason that we kind of suffer, I'm going to start way back in childhood and I'm going to kind of give you my idea and what I've noticed about people. Because for me doing what I do now for
18 years, so literally almost half my life basically, I'm always thinking like, why are
people this way? Why is it that so many people have this feeling deep down inside them, this
paradigm, this identity of
I'm not enough. I'm not good enough or smart enough or pretty enough, or I'll never be successful,
never make enough money. I might not be able to support my children. What if this happens? What
if that happens? And so if we go back to childhood, when you look at a child and you look at a young
child, they're their true selves. Like if you ever see like a one-year-old, a two-year-old, a three-year-old, they are their true selves. And you know, things happen. And you know,
if you're changing a baby's diaper and they are six months old and you have your coffee next to
you and their leg kicks the coffee and knocks it off the table, you're not going to yell at the
child. They're six months old. They don't know what they're doing. Same thing might happen. Maybe they're a year old. They're starting to
learn how to walk. They go and they knock coffee off the table. You're not going to yell at them
because they're still not really knowing what they're doing. But at some point in time, that
exact same thing or something like it, this is just an example, could happen to a three-year-old
or a four-year-old. They can knock something off and the parent will yell at them. Or, and it's like, they should know better. It's kind of the way that they're treated, right? Or a
child is being too loud. They're screaming in a restaurant and the parent ends up, you know,
hushing them. They're, they scorn them for it in some sort of way, or they're, they're running
around public and they're being, they're loud and rambunctious and truest version of themselves.
And they get yelled at to stop
running, to be quiet. The average child is reprimanded eight times more than they're praised,
which means that the average child thinks to themselves, I am not enough, eight times more
than they think that they are enough. And the problem is, because of children's perception,
they think when they're being yelled at that it is a retraction of love from their
parents. And so they want to get their parents' love. So they start thinking to themselves
subconsciously, we all think this to ourselves, we've all been through this process most likely,
I need to change myself for me to not be reprimanded as much so that I can get my parents'
love. Right? You following me? And so
what we do is we change ourselves. We're not as loud. We're not as rambunctious. We become who we
need to become in order to fit in. And so what we have done is we have, in a sense, at some point in
time, all of us abandoned our true self in order to fit in. And so we learned that our true
self does not fit in with our parents at first. This is our perception of it. Even if your parents
are just very loving, but they're an average parent, which is reprimand a child eight times
more than their praise. And sometimes you got to reprimand children. They're crazy. They want to
jump off of a wall and they could injure themselves. And so they're thinking to themselves,
like, I'm not smart enough. I don't know what I'm doing.
I'm not good enough. My parents are retracting my love. And all of this is subconscious.
But we learn, first off, that our true self does not fit in with our parents is kind of what we
think. And then we get old and we realize that our true self doesn't fit in with society.
And we've got to change ourself and mold ourself, we think, to fit in. And so there's a guy named Soren Kirkland,
I'm hoping to say the name, Kierkegaard, I can't pronounce his last name, it's a heck of a last
name. He's a Danish philosopher. And he basically broke down the way that most people kind of go
through and become someone that they're not. And so what happens is we get to this point of
unconsciously we think to ourselves, I wish to be someone other than I am, right? So as children,
we change ourselves from childhood to fit in. First, we change from our parents. Then we change
so that we fit in with other children. And then we go into middle school. If you guys remember,
middle school is really hard and you have to fit in with all the other kids and try to be part of a crew and be like them and act like
them. High school is the same way. And then we go and we go to college and we either do what our
parents tell us to do, we do what we think society wants us to do, or something that we can do to
make money so that we can keep up with the Joneses. All of it is some different disguise of fitting in.
And fitting in basically means abandoning our true self, not being our truest self and being
something that we think we need to be in order to fit in. So we become what we think we need to
become in order to fit in with other people, with society, with other children, with our parents
as a child. And this is also why so many people become people pleasers as well.
We are like, you know, as someone's a people pleaser, like I'm going to abandon my true self
so that I can please this person. And so when you decide, usually subconsciously, especially as a
child, and then as you get older, it can be actually a conscious thought. I want to be
different than I am. I want to be someone different than I actually truly am. I want to be different than I am.
One of two things happens. Number one, we try to become someone else. And so we become someone
else. And we try and we try and we try. And we fail at becoming someone else. And we realize we
can't become someone else. We are the same that we've always been. And then what we do is we
despise ourself for it. We get kind of mad at ourself been. And then what we do is we despise ourselves for it.
We get kind of mad at ourselves. Why can't I change myself? Why can't I be someone else?
And this will all make sense as I pull it all together. But I fail at becoming someone else,
and I despise myself for not being able to do it. I despise myself for failing. I despise myself
for not being who I want to be. Why can't I just be different? Why can't I be different than I am?
Why can't I be more of this or more of that? Or why can't I look more like this or more like that
or less like this or less like that? We want to change ourselves. The foundation of this thought
is I don't want to be who I am. So we can either go and we can try to change ourself and we can fail at trying
to be someone else or the other route, we could succeed at becoming someone else and we abandon
our true self. And so we become someone completely different than we truly are. I lose myself in a
character that I have to play. And it's kind of like, you've heard me say it over
and over again. And I talk about it in my book level up where I talk about Jim Carrey, when he
ends up being a method actor and he ends up playing Andy Kaufman and he loses himself in the
role in months down the road, after he stops playing Andy Kaufman, he's like, I don't remember
who Jim Carrey was. And that was like the, the awakening, his spiritual awakening of like,
he realized that Jim Carrey was just a character that he was playing. It wasn't his true self. And so we can succeed at not being ourselves and we can succeed and abandon our true
selves and be someone else. And we lose ourself in a character that I have to play. But the
foundation of that is exactly the same as the foundation of the other one. The foundation is I don't want to be who I am.
I don't want to be who I am.
Either way, I lose my true self.
And this is where you really start to see and the pieces start to come together.
Either way, I lose my true self.
I disconnect from who I truly am.
That little boy that's inside of me that I was when I was
two years old and three years old. And I would go on a walk with my mom and I'd pick up flowers for
her. I'd pick up rocks and I'd give it to her. I disconnect from who I truly am. We lose that
version of ourself, which is our truest version of ourself. And we disconnect from who we truly
are. Either we disconnect from who we truly are and we become somebody else or, you know, pretend like we're someone else, or we try to become someone else
and we fail at it. And then we despise our true selves for it. And when I disconnect from who I
truly am, that's never going to make me happy. It will never bring me true peace to not be who
I truly am. It will never bring me true peace to be someone other than I truly am.
Resisting your true self is the thing that causes so much turmoil inside of you.
And so we get so far away from who we truly are that we don't really know who we are anymore.
And you might be listening to this podcast because you've started to become aware of that.
It took me years to become aware of like, who the fuck am I?
Like I've been playing this game to be somebody else and acting like I want to be this.
And I don't want to be who I am, but I want to be my true self.
And I don't know who my true self is.
And I don't know who I've been pretending to be.
And it can be a rude awakening.
And a lot of people can have a midlife crisis of like, what did I, what is this?
This life that I built isn't even a life
that I truly want. It's like a life that I felt like I was supposed to build. And so we get so
far away from who we truly are that we don't really know who we truly are anymore. And maybe
I have to, you know, make myself tough because the world is tough and it will beat me up. But
really deep down inside, I'm just that soft, emotional being that just wants love. Like one
of the things for me that I realized years ago, I kind of woke up to the fact through a rude awakening. And I've
told this story many times before, but one of my mentors took me out to lunch, to Chipotle. We had
burritos. And, you know, I was like 21 years old. I was running the number one office in a company
that was, you know, had 700 offices. And he's like, hey, man, I don't know how to tell you this, but a lot of people don't like you. And I was
like, what are you talking about? Like, I thought it was hot shit. I was, I was awesome. I was
running the number one office in the United States in this $200 million company. I thought it was
great. He's like, a lot of people don't like you. I was like, what do you mean? And he's like,
the person that you present is not who you truly are. He's like, I've known you for a couple of years now. I know
your true self. I know who you truly are. And you're really not the same person that you present.
And I was like, what do you mean by that? I started to realize that I was presenting
this really brash, aggressive person. And I would, you know, try to cut you first. So you would never
try to cut me because I was so
weak and so afraid of being vulnerable that I wanted to essentially keep people at a distance
so that you couldn't see my true self, right? Because I didn't know who my true self was.
I was afraid of my true self. And so deep down, it's like, I would try to hurt someone first and
keep them at a distance, keep them at arm's length, right?
When really deep down, I was just that little boy, that soft, emotional being that just
picked flowers for his mom, right?
And the only way that you will find true peace is to be who you truly are, to stop resisting
all of the ways that you truly are, to stop trying to be someone that you're not and to fully accept
who you truly are. Because ultimately, we all get lost. And the only way to really truly find
yourself is to lose yourself. You cannot find yourself if you don't lose yourself first. So
if you are the type of person where you're out there and you're listening to me and you're like,
oh my God, I'm so lost. This makes sense. I don't know who the fuck I am. You're in the perfect
position because you have to lose yourself to find yourself. To escape despair, anxiety, depression, all of that that we
can get from it, I must accept my true self. And, you know, Soren, the philosopher, said that
despair vanishes when we stop denying who we are, who we really are, and attempt to uncover and
accept our true self. Despair vanishes when we stop denying who we really are and we attempt to
uncover and accept our true self. So we must go on this path of self-discovery. And it's not like
an overnight thing. It's probably the rest of your life. It's a year long, years and years and years.
It's a journey to rediscover. You know, I'm about to be 38 years old, right? I've had 38 years off the path. It's
going to take me at least 38 years to try to find myself back on the path, right? So what is that,
76? Hopefully I'll find myself fully by 76. But it's a journey. There is no destination to it.
And so we must all go on the path of self-discovery. And now when I say to you,
accept who you truly are, I mean, and I really mean who you are, every aspect of you and the
quote unquote good and the quote unquote bad, both of those, there is no good side of you and
there's no bad side of you because the title of bad makes us want to resist it, makes us want to get rid of it.
But in all aspects, I mean the whole organism of who you are. The labeling of the good and bad is part of the problem. So accept that there are sides of you that are great. Once again, I'm
labeling, I understand. There's sides of you that are great though. There's sides of you that are
sweet, sides of you that are loving. There's sides of you that are great to be around.
There's sides of you that are really nice. And some people get to see that, right? You've got to accept those sides of you.
But if you're going to accept those sides of you, you've also got to accept the sides of you that
are just a little bit shitty sometimes, right? We're all a little bit selfish. We're all
judgmental. We're all arrogant in some ways. We all can be brash and rude and, you know,
thinking of ourselves, all of that stuff. So there are great parts of you.
Once again, I'm labeling and I understand that the labeling is just not helping here,
but I'm just using it as an example.
There's great sides of you and there's shitty sides of you.
The path is really accepting the good sides, but more than anything else is really accepting
the other sides of you.
The lack of acceptance in them is what's causing the internal resistance. To see the
selfish side of you and be like, I don't want to be that anymore is actually causing even more
resistance. But when you see the selfish side of you and you say, yeah, you know what? There is a
selfish side of me that exists. That's okay. Cause that's just part of being human. There is a
judgmental side of me. That's okay. It's part of being human. There's an arrogant side of me. It's okay. That's part of being human. And it's kind of like a
symphony, you know, like there's a symphony of aspects of different parts of ourself. But,
you know, the selfish side doesn't have to be, you know, doing a solo in the symphony all day long.
Well, I could come up sometimes and go away sometimes. Sometimes there is benefit in being
selfish. Sometimes there's not. Sometimes there is benefit in being judgmental. Sometimes there is benefit in being selfish. Sometimes there's not. Sometimes there is benefit in being judgmental.
Sometimes there's not.
And so it's about accepting every single aspect of ourself.
Now, really what it comes down to is when we look at the basis of the real problem,
the foundation was, I don't want to be who I am.
And that's what causes all of the problems.
So if I don't want to be who I am is
what causes all the problems, what mindset would fix all the problems? I love myself as I am.
The love and acceptance that you're searching for from other people in this world is actually true
the love and acceptance that you're searching for in yourself. I love every part of me,
the amazing Rob and the shitty Rob, right? As Alan Watts says, the scoundrel. You have to
love every single part of you. Now I know what's coming up in some of your minds because this
happened to me is if I accept myself, if I love myself, will I lose motivation? Won't I get lazy?
What am I just going to sit around and just pure bliss? I don't, nothing's going to become of my
life. No, no, no. You won't lose motivation. If I love myself, will I get lazy?
Like that's pretty wild to actually think about, right?
As if we have to hate ourselves and who we currently are in order to be motivated.
That doesn't make any sense.
It makes moving, in all honesty, the motivation doesn't change,
but it makes moving through this world so much easier
because you don't feel like you have a backpack that's just this weight on your back all day long.
And it just makes, when you just decide to love and accept yourself, every aspect of
yourself, it doesn't make you less motivated, but it makes it so much easier to move through
this world.
So instead of feeling, instead of feeling like life and success is like pushing a boulder up a hill
and all of that, it's just kind of like, you know, it feels a little bit easier. It's like
jumping in a river and letting the river just kind of take you. It's full alignment and it's
picking up the great things in life that pass you along in the river becomes much more effortless.
Life becomes much more effortless because there's not that internal resistance fighting who we are
at all moments. And we think, you know, and I've caught myself here before, we think that becoming
successful will make us feel better. It won't. I promise you that. There's many successful people
that end up killing themselves because it doesn't make them feel any better about themselves.
Nothing changes depending on how much money you have in your bank account. Money in your bank account is just a thing. Just like I'm wearing a, you know, a white colored shirt right now.
That's just a thing. It's not, it doesn't make me who I am. So the white colored shirt doesn't
make me who I am just as far as the money in my bank account doesn't make me who I am.
So becoming successful, we think will make us feel better, but nothing changes.
You know, buying the house that's all big and nice, we think will make us feel better, but nothing changes. The car, the clothes, the millions of
dollars in the bank account, all of those things, nothing changes. You still feel the same internally.
Nothing you could ever do or achieve can make you more or less than what you currently are.
Are you more of a human now or less of a human now than if you made a million dollars in a year?
No. A million dollars isn't going to make you more or less of a human. It if you made a million dollars in a year? No. A million dollars isn't
going to make you more or less of a human. It just happens to be a thing, right? Are you more
of a human when you buy a house? No. And like there's a meditation I've brought in quite a
few times. It's from a guy named Mooji, M-O-O-J-I, that I've done. It's like a 20-minute guided
meditation I used to do years ago. And one of the things he used to always say is you have no pockets.
meditation I used to do years ago. And one of the things he used to always say is you have no pockets. You have no storehouse. And what he means by that is that you are this naked human with
nothing on you. You have no pockets. You have no storehouse. When you came into this world,
you were naked. When you leave this world, you're going to be naked and you will not be able to
bring anything with you. You have no pockets to bring with you into the afterlife. You have no
storehouse to bring with you in the afterlife. So nothing that you could do will ever make you more
than what you currently are right now. So, you know, if you'll die naked exactly as you came,
that means that nothing could ever add to you or take away from you, which means that as you
currently are, you're already perfect. The only thing that's actually missing is your acceptance of yourself, which ultimately is what
it comes down to. Acceptance of yourself as you are, all aspects of yourself, no matter what.
Listen to this one again. Try it on for size. That's what I got for you for today's episode.
If you love this episode, please do me a favor. Share it on your Instagram stories and tag me at RobDialJr, R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R.
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512-580-93051.
Again, 512-580-9305. Again, 512-580-9305.
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.