The Mindset Mentor - You Think You’re Self-Aware? Think Again.

Episode Date: April 18, 2025

Have you ever stopped to question if what you're thinking is actually true? Your brain might be tricking you with cognitive distortions. I break down the 6 most common distortions and show you how to ...identify and rewire them so you can see reality more clearly and create the life you truly want.Looking for daily motivation? Get free inspirational messages straight to your phone, plus exclusive podcast recommendations and updates on my free workshops so you never miss out. It’s simple: just send "Quotes by Rob" to this link here 👉 https://my.community.com/robdial   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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to today's episode of the mindset mentor podcast. I'm your host, Rob Dial. Hope you have an amazing day. If you have not yet done so, hit that subscribe button so you never miss another podcast episode. I put out episodes four times a week, every single week for the past almost 10 years. And so if you're ready to learn and grow and improve yourself and you want some short to the point, no BS podcasting, to improve yourself, this is it. Hit that subscribe button.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Today, we're gonna be talking about how what you perceive in your life usually isn't 100% of the story and how perception is not reality and how you have these things called cognitive distortions that actually are a mental filter on your brain that actually change reality in front of you so that you see reality in a specific way.
Starting point is 00:00:57 I want you to understand that there is no such thing as your perception being full 100% reality. If you look at it, subjective perception is subjective reality, not perception is reality. People are saying like, oh, perception is reality. No, no, no, no, no. Subjective perception is subjective reality. Your perception is not absolute reality. In fact, your perception usually isn't reality at all. Because like I said, your brain filters and distorts everything that comes in through your five senses.
Starting point is 00:01:32 So all of these billions and millions of bits of information come in through your five senses. And then your brain has to make some sort of sense of it. It has to put things into boxes and labels and hopefully try to make as many things as possible fit into these boxes. And so what it does is it filters everything that goes through your senses through conditionings, through the way you were raised, through millions and millions of experiences that you've had in your life. These little distortions in
Starting point is 00:02:01 psychology are actually called cognitive distortions. Cions cognitive distortions are biased ways of thinking that reinforce thoughts beliefs and emotions and They're really common in many mental health conditions such as depression such as anxiety But we all have them. They're not just an anxiety and depression We all have them even if you don't have any sort of mental health diagnosis at all. And so understanding your cognitive distortions is one of the most critical steps
Starting point is 00:02:35 in improving your mental health and also creating better self-awareness and overall a better life. Let's talk a little bit more about them real quick so I can really talk about how to fix them. What are cognitive distortions? Cognitive distortions are irrational, biased thoughts that perpetuate negative thinking patterns that you have. And so if you think, oh, the world's out to get me, you're going to see all of the ways in which the world is out to get you or that all men are cheaters. You're going to see all of the ways that men
Starting point is 00:03:03 are cheaters or this type of person is bad. You're gonna see all of the ways that men are cheaters or this type of person is bad. You're gonna see all the ways where that type of person is bad. They're basically errors in your thinking that distort your perception of reality. And these distortions are basically automatic. They're unconscious most of the time. Usually if it's a person who doesn't work on themselves
Starting point is 00:03:24 and they're not very self- aware, they just don't even notice in the first place because they're so deeply ingrained. They often occur without us even being aware of them. They go unnoticed unless you pay more attention. And that's why I always say this and this is really what they say in cognitive behavioral therapy is to question the validity of your thoughts. When you have thoughts that are getting in the way of the life that you want to create You've got a question to see is this actually valid and that's where
Starting point is 00:03:54 Questioning the validity of your thoughts comes from is because cognitive distortions will come in Change reality in front of you. You think that it's real reality and then you've got to go Hold on is this valid or is this just me? And so I'm going to give you a few different types of really, really common cognitive distortions. I think I got like six of them for you. Okay. Number one is one that's called all or nothing thinking. This is also known as black or white thinking.
Starting point is 00:04:18 This distortion tends to see things in very absolute terms. For example, if I'm not perfect, I'm a total failure. That's all or nothing thinking. Or I didn't get an A on the test, so I must be stupid. I miss a deadline at work, now I'm never gonna get a promotion. And maybe you're working on your fitness and you eat bad one meal,
Starting point is 00:04:39 say I'm never gonna hit my fitness goals. And so it's like all or nothing. And if you think that way, it tends to derail you when you're trying to get better. If you think, okay, I eat bad one time, maybe you have 17 days of really good fitness and eating really healthy, and then you have a little bit too much ice cream one night.
Starting point is 00:04:57 And you're like, I'm never gonna hit my fitness goals. And you're focusing on this one moment where you ate a lot of ice cream and you're not even paying attention to the other 17 days where you did really well and so you just give up. I'm never gonna hit my finish goals You see how that's a distortion. It's distorting reality in front of you So that's the first one is is all or nothing thinking the second one is over generalization And this involves broad conclusions based off of a single event
Starting point is 00:05:22 It is very similar not exactly the same thing as all or nothing thinking. For instance, I failed this test, so I'm gonna fail all of my tests. Or I felt awkward at this party and I'm always awkward in social situations. Or I failed this exam, so I'm gonna fail all of my classes.
Starting point is 00:05:41 And so what happens is we take one event and we just put a broad stroke over all of the rest of the events that are going to be happening in the future. That's overgeneralization. The third one is called negative mental filter, which is another way of calling it negativity bias is what it is. The distortion involves focusing solely on the negative aspects of a situation and then just ignoring all of the positive. So for an example, I made a mistake on my presentation, so the whole presentation was a disaster. Or you get a work review and it says,
Starting point is 00:06:17 great job here, great job here, great job here, this needs improvement, great job here, great job here. And then all of your focus goes to needs the improvement. Like you don't pay attention to any of the great jobs. The one thing that you focus on is needs the improvement. Like I remember when I first started putting content out online about nine years ago, I remember I had one video that did really well
Starting point is 00:06:41 and it was on Facebook and I had like a thousand positive comments and there was one negative comment. And like two hours later, I'm walking around my house and I'm ruminating and thinking about that one negative comment. I'm not paying attention to any of the thousand positive ones. I'm focusing on just the one negative one. You know, it's like, you can have a, maybe you go out to a party. You have a great time at a party
Starting point is 00:07:07 And I don't know if you've ever done this I've done this many times you say one thing a little bit weird or You say something it might be just a little bit different You don't get the reaction that you want to and you go home and you dwell on that one Negative that one thing so negatively and you think, oh my God, everyone must think that I'm so awkward. I hope they didn't think that what I said meant X, Y, Z. And so you're focusing on just that one thing. And so that's the negative mental filter.
Starting point is 00:07:36 The fourth one, which is very common, is discounting the positive. We do this a lot, people do this a lot. I see it all of the time with people is what you're basically doing is you're dismissing the positive experiences by insisting that they don't count. And the reason why is because they don't really line up with your filter of yourself and what you think of yourself. So you want to dismiss them. So an example of this be like, I only did well on the assignment because it was easy. You know, I'm sure everybody did well on it. You know, you think you're going to fail something, you get an A.
Starting point is 00:08:09 You know, like, well, yeah, I only did that. I only got an A because it was easy. Not because I'm smart. Not because I did well. I'm sure everybody else did well. Or, you know, maybe you will go back to the presentation of work. You do a presentation of work and everyone's like, oh, great job, great job. And you're like, well, they only said great job because they feel bad for me. And maybe you, uh, this one happens all the time. I see this one more common than any of the other ones. You get a compliment and you're like, Oh, they're just being nice. They don't think I actually look good.
Starting point is 00:08:37 Like so many people, it's really, really hard for them to take compliments from other people because it doesn't line up with what they actually think of themselves. And so they're like, oh no, no, they're just being nice. They just, they don't actually think I look good. If you have trouble taking compliments, discounting the positive could be a cognitive distortion that you might have. The fifth one is labeling and it evolves attaching a negative label to yourself or even to other people as well.
Starting point is 00:09:03 So for example, let's say you mess something up and so you're like, I'm such an idiot. Or you fail a math test and you say, I'm terrible at math. Or you screw something up at work and you're like, I'm terrible at my job. Or once again, you say something weird at a party and you're like, oh, I'm just so awkward. Or you lose your temper one day after having a hard day
Starting point is 00:09:23 in front of your children, like I'm a terrible parent. Or you sleep in one morning and you're like I'm just lazy and we will be right back. And now back to the show. What you're doing is you're labeling yourself and attaching an identity to a behavior. So you know the behavior was you mess something up. I'm an idiot. That's just a behavior right? You screw something up at work, that's just a behavior. I'm terrible at my job. And so what you're doing is you're making a behavior and turning it into an actual label and identity for yourself, which is very dangerous to do.
Starting point is 00:09:56 So that's the fifth one. And then the sixth one, which is very common as well as catastrophizing. So this cognitive distortion is where a person expects the worst possible outcome in almost every single situation. So they just imagine the worst that could happen no matter what. And it leads to, you know, increased anxiety, stress, and like a sense of helplessness because you really can't control the majority of stuff that happens in your life. You know, like let's say you make a small mistake at work and you think, oh, well, I messed up this project.
Starting point is 00:10:25 I'm going to get fired. That doesn't really make a whole lot of sense. But what happens is a tiny little thing turns into this big explosion, catastrophizing. So you're making a catastrophe out of something that's small. No, you just messed up a work project. Doesn't mean you're going to get fired or, you know, going back to say something awkward at a party. It's like everyone must think that I'm an idiot. They never want to talk to me again. Right. That's catastrophizing.
Starting point is 00:10:49 Maybe, you know, you're you're in a relationship with someone and your partner doesn't reply to your text message for a few hours. And you're like, they must be angry with me. They want to break up. Right. That's that's what catastrophizing looks like versus just looking at the reality of being like reality is they haven't text back in a few hours, they're out with their friends, maybe they're having fun, maybe this phone died, maybe whatever, but you're like catastrophizing a small event. And that's how you can see reality gets distorted. And so why do we have cognitive distortions?
Starting point is 00:11:18 That's really what pops into my head. Why do we have these then? It comes down to something that's actually called secondary gains. And so it's actually doing something for us believe it or not even if we don't know that it is Really what it is more than the thing else is it is a defense mechanism in some way and It can keep us in our comfort zone so that we feel safe. That would be the secondary Gain that we get out of it. It can make us not wanna get into another relationship so that we don't get hurt. That's the secondary gain. There's always some sort of secondary gain
Starting point is 00:11:52 that comes from these defense mechanisms. It's protecting you in some sort of way. Maybe, yeah, that can be good sometimes, but the problem is in the long run, it means us not having the life that we truly want. And it can make you feel safe or right or whatever it is in the short run, but in the long run, they can make you miserable unless you start to actually see reality for what it is. So in the short run, what I'm saying is it's the defense
Starting point is 00:12:20 mechanism, right? In the long run, it becomes part of your personality and it can throw your life off course, it can cause depression, it could cause anxiety, or it could just be something as simple as just not reaching your potential because, you know, short-term avoidance turns into long-term suffering. Whenever you're avoiding something that you really want and you're avoiding and avoiding the feelings or the emotions or whatever it is, it turns into long-term suffering. And so how do you get past these cognitive distortions? So maybe you're at the point where you're noticing,
Starting point is 00:12:52 oh, you know what, that one cognitive distortion that he just said really hits home for me. Well, how do I get past that thing? The first thing is, as always, it's always the first thing for me is awareness. You need to become aware of yourself. You need to start becoming more aware of your thinking. And so when it pops up, write it down,
Starting point is 00:13:10 get really clear on like, okay, I was just, I just did this thing. Is that absolute reality? Probably not. Okay, so what happened? I'm gonna write it down. I'm gonna get really clear on what actually happened in reality and how I distorted reality
Starting point is 00:13:24 and start thinking about that. Right. So that's first thing, become very aware of it and writing it down helps you get more clear because you have to put it on paper. Second thing is to ask yourself what short-term benefit of thinking that thought would be. And so find the secondary benefit. Are you, is it defending you from something? Is it protecting you from feeling a certain way? Is it trying to make me feel safe? Is it me trying to be right? Oh yeah, I'm just, I'm always bad in math, right? Or is it, you know, trying to reinforce an identity or a label that you already have of yourself? Oh, they're
Starting point is 00:13:59 just being nice. They're giving me a compliment because they actually think I look terrible and they want to make me feel good, right? That's reinforcing an identity of, oh, I'm ugly or I'm unlovable or I don't look good or I can't lose weight or whatever it might be. Remember short-term safety, long-term consequence. And so then you got to ask yourself, what are the long-term consequences of me believing this thought that I'm believing? So that's the second thing.
Starting point is 00:14:24 Number three is to learn to challenge the distorted thinking. So you look at it, and I do this with people all the time when I do one-on-one coaching sessions and like Mindset University and stuff like that, where I run weekly coaching sessions and I work with people live, and I'll notice someone has a cognitive distortion.
Starting point is 00:14:44 And I'll be like, is what you said absolutely true? And they're like, well, it's true. And I'm like, no, no, no. Is it absolutely true that you're terrible at math? Is it absolutely true that you're unlovable? Is it absolutely true that you screw every single thing up in your entire life? And what happens is most people, it's not true.
Starting point is 00:15:06 It's true to them, but it's not objectively true in reality. So I say like, what would a friend say? Would they believe the exact same thing that you believe or would they have a different perspective? So you do the exact same thing for yourself. Is this absolutely true? This thing that I'm believing, is it absolutely true? Or is it just like true to me, but not objectively true?
Starting point is 00:15:26 If I brought one of my friends in here, what would they say? Would they believe the exact same thing that I'm saying? Or would they might, maybe they have a different perspective. And so then you've got to ask yourself, so that's step number three. Number four is you've got to do opposite thinking,
Starting point is 00:15:40 which is what's the exact opposite of what I'm thinking? And how would my life be different if I believe this thing instead? So if someone says, oh, I look really good and it's like, well, I don't think that I look good. I think that I look terrible. I think that I look ugly. OK, so what's the opposite of that? Well, that I actually do look good. OK, well, how would my life be different if I did believe this instead? And so you start testing the boundaries, playing a little bit devil's advocate
Starting point is 00:16:04 with opposite thinking. And then what you do in the part of it, number five is to replace the thought with the thought that you'd prefer. So if you're saying, okay, does this thinking, if I were to keep it for the rest of my life, would it help me get to where I want to go in life? This cognitive distortion, I bet you it's probably not going to help you out. I'll put it that way. If I were to be able to have a magic wand and to just replace this thought with a thought that would help me out, what would it be? And that's what I'm gonna do. When I start noticing the cognitive distortion pop up,
Starting point is 00:16:32 I'm gonna place a new thought. I'm gonna place a new thought. I'm gonna place a new thought. And you do this over and over and over again, you start realizing, oh my God, like I'm lying to myself all the time. I'm distorting reality all the time to make me feel safe, to keep
Starting point is 00:16:46 me small, to keep me in my comfort zone, to reinforce what I already believe about myself or my identity or the world. And so you've got to start challenging yourself, start thinking differently and realize that you're distorting reality hundreds of times a day. And the more that you start realizing that your perception is not reality, you start realizing, oh my God, like I can kind of let go of some things. Realize that the way I see the world is not absolutely how reality is. And if that's the case, maybe I can change the way that I'm distorting it. I would rather distort reality for my benefit versus my demise. And so if we're distorting it, let's try to distort it for our benefit more than anything else.
Starting point is 00:17:25 And if you do that, your life will be better and you'll start to actually create the thoughts and the beliefs and the actions that you need to to create the life that you want. So that's what I got for you for today's episode. If you love this episode, please do me a massive favor. If you've never done it before, but you've listened to 20 or 30 or a hundred of these episodes, please share this podcast however you listen to it, help us pay it forward so that more people can find this podcast because hopefully we can impact more people's lives. And if you do that, I greatly appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:17:53 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.

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