The Mindset Mentor - What Are You Addicted To?
Episode Date: June 28, 2024In today's episode, I'm taking a deep dive into how we can reclaim our brains from addictive living and stop numbing those tough emotions and past traumas. We’ll explore the fascinating world of our... nervous system, understanding the difference between the stressed-out sympathetic state and the restful parasympathetic state. I'll share my personal journey with addiction, the common ways we numb ourselves (hello, workaholics and Netflix binge-watchers!), and how to develop better self-regulation and coping strategies. Let’s increase our self-awareness and start healing from the inside out, so we can truly create the life we want.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 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to today's episode of the Mindset Mentor Podcast.
I am your host, Rob Dial.
If you're the type of person who is into neurology, psychology, early childhood development,
how all of those things come together to make you who you are, this podcast is something
you're going to be interested in.
You're going to want to make sure that you subscribe to this podcast because I put out
episodes four times a week so you can combine all of those things, understand about yourself,
how you became who you are, so that you can start to repattern yourself so that you can
create the life that you want.
So if that interests you, hit that subscribe button.
Today, I'm going to be talking about what you are addicted to and how to stop numbing
yourself.
Now, before we dive in, I understand the word
addiction can be very triggering for some people. And I get it. My father was an alcoholic. My
parents got divorced when I was 10 years old, and he passed away when I was 15 from being an
alcoholic. So I get it. But when I talk about addiction, I talk about addiction in the way of
numbing yourself in some sort of way. Most of us numb in some sort of way.
And I've done a podcast in the past about numbing.
But I want to go more in depth about speaking how the numbing works with your nervous system
and why we do it and how to get past it so that we can create the life that we want.
So when you look at the nervous system itself, your nervous system has two states. Neither one of them, before I dive into it, is good or bad.
They just are. Both of them are necessary for our survival. That's why they're both inside of us.
So when you look at the two different types, one of them is called the sympathetic nervous system.
And the sympathetic nervous system is basically when your nervous system is alert.
It has a lot of energy.
It goes into fight or flight.
Your heart rate will increase.
Your rate of breathing will increase.
Your pupils will actually dilate so you can see the world more clear.
It's really, really good when you're running from a lion.
The problem is a lot of people don't realize it,
but they're stuck in sympathetic nervous, their sympathetic nervous system all day long. This
was me for a very long time as I was in a stressed out state for so long, for years,
and it becomes exhausting. The other side of the nervous system is what's called your
parasympathetic nervous system. This is where you conserve and where you restore.
This is, you know, you have a decreased heart rate.
Your rate of breathing also decreases as well.
And so you have sympathetic for when you need to take action, when you need to move, when
you need to run, when you need to be in fight or flight, when stress is actually a good
thing. need to run, when you need to be in fight or flight, when stress is actually a good thing, and you have parasympathetic, which is rest, relaxation, conserve energy, restore, rebuild
yourselves, all of that. Now, when you look at this, and we talk about it from just like the
idea of numbing, why would somebody numb themselves? Why would somebody numb their feelings?
Well, there's a lot of different reasons. So maybe it's
to escape your painful emotions. Maybe it's your way of trying to cope with stress of what's going
on in your relationship or what's going on at work or things that are going on with your children.
It could be that you do it to avoid past trauma that is unhealed that you haven't stepped back and said, I
want to heal this thing.
So it's kind of unconsciously taking your energy in the back of your head all day long.
Maybe it's an unconscious pattern that you have.
Maybe there is unresolved emotional pain if things happen to you when you are younger.
Maybe it's a heartbreak.
Maybe it's being cheated on.
Maybe it's a death of someone that you love that's unresolved. You didn't give yourself enough time to grieve.
Maybe it's, you know, running from the fact that you're in a marriage that you've
wanted to be out of for the past seven years. I don't know the exact flavor of yours,
but almost everybody has one thing that they're kind of running from.
You know, I've been working on myself for almost 20 years now, and I don't feel like I'm anywhere near
healed. I've made a whole lot of progress, but there's just still so many things that I just
continue to keep working on. And that's what I see with everybody. I don't think we ever get
to a point where we're just fully a perfect healed being. And a lot of times what we do is we have
that unresolved trauma, the coping with stress,
the painful emotions, unresolved pain from the past. And what we do is we want to calm the
nervous system. It's like we are in sympathetic fight or flight for so long, all day long,
multiple days in a row. And our unconscious and our body is just like, dude, chill it out. Like,
just chill for a little bit. And we want to go from sympathetic to parasympathetic,
which is just basically like another way of saying that is like, I've been so stressed out,
I just need to calm down. Right? That would be the difference of sympathetic to parasympathetic.
a lot of people though lack the tools to mentally and physically to be able to do that and so what happens is they unconsciously go to something else that will do it for them much
faster so it could be drugs it could be alcohol it could be sex it could be drugs, it could be alcohol, it could be sex, it could be work.
Mine was absolutely work, how I ran from my trauma of everything that happened to me in my past.
I became a workaholic and worked 110 hours a week so that I didn't even have time to think about my trauma.
For some people, it's screen time.
It's watching TV for five hours a day.
It's Netflix.
It's doom scrolling on Instagram and TikTok and just turning your brain off while you're scrolling. And one of the most common ones and often
overlooked is food. And food's interesting because we actually need food to survive.
Like we have to have this thing to survive. But so many people are numbing themselves through food.
And so it's a really tricky one where it's
like you got to have it, but you also got to make sure you're not numbing yourself.
There's a study that was done in 1996. It was called self-regulation failure. And it showed
how people fail to control behaviors and emotions. And that led to issues like overeating and
substance abuse. So because they don't know how to control their behaviors and their thoughts, they started
overeating, they started having substance abuse.
And the study really highlights that stress, negative emotions, lack of coping skills,
and the pursuit of immediate gratification deplete your self-regulation resources.
And so long-term consequences of that numbing that they found through this study was
physical health problems, mental health issues, and strained relationships with the people who
didn't have coping mechanisms. And so really, when you look at it, they started building out
this system of like, what does it look like to improve your self-regulation? And what they came up with was you need to learn to
develop coping strategies. You need to set clear goals for yourself and your healing and stick to
them. And then try to work on increased self-awareness so that you can understand how and
why you feel the way that you feel. And so like I always say that the most important thing I think
for everybody in this world to have is self-awareness. And so it talks about how to increase your self-awareness and how
you need to increase it so that you can understand how you feel the way that you feel, why you feel
the way that you feel, and how to actually work through it. And so the study showed basically
how to find your addictions, how to better understand yourself, and how to work through
these negative emotions so that you can release them versus trying to numb the feeling with
immediate gratification.
And so this is very, very common for people.
But what it dealt with and what's really important is what I was talking about just a minute
ago, which is one of the most common things that we use for numbing and one of the most
overlooked addictions is food.
numbing. And one of the most overlooked addictions is food. If you have a problem with food,
this might make you really start to understand yourself. So I was speaking with a friend of mine and I was speaking with another friend of mine who was talking to him. And the other friend of
mine is a psychologist. And one of my friends has a problem with weight. He, you know, has been up and down and
up and down and up and down his entire life since he was a kid. And so what he does, it's really
interesting because he doesn't eat like all day long. He works and works and works and works and
works and works and works and works and works. So he doesn't eat much throughout the day. And then
when he's done working, so he like works
so much to not pay attention to his stuff that he needs to work through. He works, he's so busy all
day long. And then when he gets done, he just eats a ton of food that he knows he shouldn't. He eats
tons of fats and carbs and greasy stuff and just tons of cheese.
Cheese isn't bad, but a lot of cheese, especially processed cheese.
And so it's basically like a complete overload.
And my friend who was a therapist and I were both talking to him.
And what we discovered is my friend who was a therapist,
like what you're dealing with is very common,
is that so many people overeat just so they don't actually feel what they want, but what's going on in the background. You know, like, why does he do this?
Because he's in work, work, work all day long and sympathetic all day long, running from some things
that will go unmentioned in this podcast episode. Then he eats a ton of food and the mind has to
basically shut off and digest.
The body is like, you know what?
We need so much resources to eat all of this shit that he just put in.
We have to put so much resources to it.
Let's just turn the brain down for a while because digestion is the number one most energy consuming thing your body does.
And so what it does is digestion,
because it's so much that he's eating,
sends his body into parasympathetic,
which is calm and peaceful. Therefore, food becomes his comfort. So if you have the same
thing of like, you can't stop eating or you overeat or you have a problem with this, sometimes what
it is, is food becomes comfort because comfort allows you, the digestion takes so much energy that it takes away the energy
from thinking and the mind doesn't really have much energy to think about the trauma or the pain
or the fact that someone's in a relationship they don't want to be in, whatever it might be.
He basically, and we spoke about this in the three of us together, he does not have the mental tools
to calm himself down. So he unconsciously does it through food.
You know, other people do this too, like wine.
Like, I love wine.
There's nothing wrong with it.
But when someone's going, oh man, I need to have a couple glasses just to take the edge off.
I've said this in the podcast before.
Why is there an edge?
What is the edge?
If someone needs to smoke a joint because they want to take the edge off,
why is there an edge in the first place?
You know, most people would rather drink a glass of wine or two versus try to figure
out why there's an edge or think about their relationship they don't want to be in or their
childhood trauma or how their, you know, children are doing X, Y, Z.
And I get it.
At the moment, it's the easiest thing to do.
It's easy to just drink a glass of wine and say, ah, screw it. At the moment, it's the easiest thing to do. It's easy to just drink a glass of
wine and say, ah, screw it. It feels better, right? It's easier to drink a glass of wine
than it is to like sit down and try to heal your childhood trauma. I get it. Or, you know,
all the worries that you have about your children moving out of the house or whatever it is that
you worry about all day long, right? Or, you know, what it might be that you're running from. But I want you to understand this, and I say this phrase a lot, the cave that you're
afraid to enter holds the treasure that you seek. What you're looking for in your life is in the
cave that you're so afraid to enter. So in the cave that you're afraid to enter holds the treasure
that you seek. Once again, though, this numbing is just basically an unconscious act
to get yourself from sympathetic to parasympathetic, from stressed and anxious and worrying and fearful
to calm. But I don't know about you, I would much rather be able to do it without needing something.
I would rather try to develop the tools like breathing and meditation and journaling to be
in charge of the body and be able to work through anything that pops up, right? When you see like
drugs, that's easy to see. But most drugs put people into parasympathetic. When you see someone
that develops something like being a sex addict, sex is something that makes you so present.
And you have so many endorphins and so much oxytocin and so much serotonin, everything
going through your body that you forget about everything else. When you're addicted to working
out or you're a workaholic, all of these things are just a form of running, running from whatever
it is that the subconscious is doing to what the brain is doing, the mind is doing to put your body
into a stress sympathetic state. It's also the reason why so many people
have trouble being bored. Like for me, I was terrible at this. When I lacked the skills to
be able to cope with these things, I would go on vacation with my wife. She was my girlfriend at
the time. I would go on vacation to disconnect and I would not be able to disconnect. I had to
be on my phone. I had to be working. I had to be, you know, on Instagram, all of those things because I couldn't be bored.
And then, you know, you take a step back and say, what's wrong with being bored? Well, boredom is
just the absence of something to do. And some people go crazy when there's nothing to do.
Why? Because what comes up when you're bored your anger your frustration your sadness your trauma the
things that you've been running from what comes up is what's always there it's bubbling under the
surface now it just has an opportunity where you're not doing something and it's wanting to
come out so it's just bubbling up to the surface and you're like nope i can't do this i gotta
scroll on instagram we got to do something else i can't do nothing why why do't do this. I got to scroll on Instagram. We got to do something else. I can't do nothing. Why? Why do we do this? Why do we run from, you know, and the way I like to think of boredom,
replace the word boredom with relaxation. You know, like giving your mind a moment to relax
for 30 minutes or if you go on vacation for a few days. But why do we do this? Why do we,
why do we hate being bored?
It's because people lack the tools to calm their nervous system down.
And so I did an episode in the past called How to Self-Sooth.
I would recommend that you go back to that.
But we're never taught this.
I realized when I made that podcast episode is that for six, seven, eight months,
I was like, man, we're never taught how to self-soothe.
Babies know how to self-soothe. Children know how to self-soothe. We're not taught how to
self-soothe as adults. And so we become addicted to stimuli. We become addicted to running. We
become addicted to numbing in some sort of way to not feel these things. But what I want you
to understand is that there is short-term benefit in that moment. That's why we do it. Everything
that we do is towards some sort of benefit. So there's a short-term benefit of not feeling anxious, not feeling
stressed, calming down, whatever it might be, but short-term benefit, but long-term consequence is
what it is. Most people think of now and they don't think of the compounding effect of their
decisions over the next 10 years. And I want you to understand, I've said this many times in the podcast, time is either your best friend or it's your greatest enemy. If you're
in your late 30s or more, you have friends on Facebook that you've seen in high school,
from high school, and you can see who has made good decisions of taking care of themselves over
the past 10, 15, 20 years and who hasn't made good decisions? You can, can't you?
Like one of my best friends from high school never really stopped partying. You know, not a big deal
when you're in your 20s, but now that he's in his late 30s, he looks like he's 45. And so if you're
still in your 20s, you probably think you're kind of invincible, no big deal. Wait another 15 years,
20 years, and you'll start to see that time always wins and so
it's really important for you out there to understand that if you are numbing in some sort
of way it's really important to to write it down and identify where you're numbing and then ask
yourself a question write it down pen and paper why are you numbing so if you're the type of person
who can't stop scrolling on instagram why are you numbing what is if you're the type of person who can't stop scrolling on Instagram,
why are you numbing? What is it that you're numbing? If you're the type of person who has to have a couple glasses of wine every single night to quote unquote take the edge off,
what are you numbing? What are you running from? What is it? What is the cave that you're afraid
to enter? Because that holds a treasure that you seek. Your freedom is on the other side of working through that thing. Sure, I get it. There's many, food, wine, drugs, sex, working, all of those
things. Cool, great, amazing. But I promise you this, what you're really looking for is the freedom
from whatever it is that's constantly taking up that energy inside of your mind. And you have to
find a better way to soothe
yourself and bring yourself from a stressed out state to a calm state. You can go back to my
episode on self-soothing. You can listen to it if you want, but you've got to replace that numbing
with action that will help heal you in some sort of way and drive your life forward versus keeping
you in the exact same spot. 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 at RobDialJr, R-O-B-D-I-A-L-J-R.
Also, if you love this podcast,
you will definitely love Mindset Mentor Plus.
I designed Mindset Mentor Plus
to actively integrate every single one
of these episodes into your life.
And this is basically how it works.
Every episode that comes out
of the Mindset Mentor podcast,
Mindset Mentor plus listeners
will get a whole lot more.
You'll get multiple page detailed worksheets, effectively a tiny masterclass from every
single episode that goes much more in depth than just the podcast that comes with journaling
questions, that comes with challenges and assignments that's all printable so that you
can actually be listening to these podcast episodes, but actively integrating every single
one of them instead of just passively listening. We also do live Q&A sessions,
a whole lot more bonuses as well. So if you want to learn more about it,
just go to mindsetmentor.com. Once again, mindsetmentor.com. And with that, I'm going
to leave you 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.