The Ryan Hanley Show - Ex-Marine Officer: Why Comfort is Quietly Destroying Your Life
Episode Date: April 28, 2026I help founders & executives generating more than $10M in revenue find their Easy Mode. Start here: https://ryanhanley.com/subscribeWatch to the video version of the podcast: https://youtu.be/t79t...P7_7rpYComfort is a trap. Former Marine Corps Officer and Positive Psychology expert Jill Schulman breaks down the exact science of why avoiding hard things is quietly destroying your potential—and how to rewire your brain for bravery.We dive deep into the psychology of fear, why "someday" is the most dangerous word you can use, and the Stanford study that proves your mindset about stress can literally change your blood pressure. Plus, we get into the weeds on peptides, longevity, and why the younger generation is using "mental health" as an excuse to avoid friction.If you want to stop hesitating and start attacking the day, this episode is your blueprint.In this episode, we cover:👉 Why your brain is wired to avoid success (and how to fix it)👉 The Marine Corps strategy to "Attack the Day"👉 Why motivation is completely overrated👉 The Stanford study that proves stress is actually good for you👉 How to stop pressing "snooze" on your life goals👉 Ryan's specific peptide protocol for rapid recoveryConnect with Jill Schulman:Website & Free Bravery Assessment: https://www.jillschulman.com/Book: The Bravery Effect: https://amzn.to/4d8X8fYThis show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I do not understand why so many people are willing to trade for a little bit of discomfort.
When people don't go after what they want because of discomfort or fear, it's not their fault.
We're twice as motivated to avoid what we fear than to move toward what we want.
If you want to have the most successful life, if you want to have the happiest life, you need to get uncomfortable and it's going to feel unnatural.
Like what's the thing that you really want that you keep saying,
someday. That is such a dangerous word. Instead of someday, we need to replace that with today.
I had this woman on, oh man, I'm going to forget exactly which one of the women that I interviewed it was.
But it was a few weeks ago. And she was like, fucking hate pink. She's like, I hate pink so much.
She's like, but when we post something, she's like, I have these analytics that like when we post something and I use pink in like the imagery, I get X more.
visibility or whatever.
She's like,
she's like,
it drives me nuts.
She's like,
so she's like,
we've integrated pink into our,
into like our brand.
She's like,
but it drives me crazy
because I hate pink,
but I can't deny that like
when I post something,
she would explain it better.
Obviously,
I'm kind of butchering it.
But like,
when I post something with pink,
it like gets more engagement.
So she was like in this philosophical battle
with her team over whether she should embrace
this color she hates or,
you know,
just throw it out and say screw it,
which I thought was really funny.
I guess maybe it's one of the times where the phrase embrace the sock.
Just, you know, it's not.
Just embrace it.
I will say, when you're creating content,
I just feel like you have to enjoy,
you have to enjoy what you're putting out.
I think you can tell over time the people who have maybe bought into the analytics
too much.
They're playing to the algorithm or whatever too much.
And you can tell, like, it kind of,
you can tell it's not authentic.
authentically them. And then everyone start sounding the same because if you allow what everyone
wants to guide you, then everyone's going to come to the same middle. So can you serve a smaller
set of people more deeply and make a bigger impact because you're being your authentic self
versus changing? So I'm with you on that. I definitely have a unique message too, but I think it's
what sets me apart in the marketplace, you know, because I talk about bravery. I want people to do
hard things. And I've studied positive psychology. So I am a happiness scientist, but the way you get
to happy, my research is through doing hard things and doing things scared, you know.
And I want to get into it because I'm philosophically like 100% aligned. And anytime someone
pushes back on, because I do the same thing, I test all kinds of stuff. Like if you look through
my social feeds, like every once in a while and probably more than every once in a while, you'll
see something to be like, what?
Why would he do that?
Like, why would he post that?
Why would you try?
And because I'm just trying different stuff.
Like, what do I like doing?
What resonates?
You know, that kind of stuff.
And I always go like,
Joe Rogan became the most popular podcaster
and probably media brand in the world.
High as a kite talking about ancient civilizations.
So which marketing,
which like marketing brand house would put in front of you
a proposal that says,
hey, Jill, here's what we're going to do.
You're going to get stoned out of your mind.
you're going to have this guy that no one's ever heard of on your podcast,
and you're going to talk about ancient civilizations as if they're real.
Yeah.
That's what we want you to do, right?
Like, you're like, get the hell out of here.
But the crazy uniqueness of it for whatever, space and time, that hit.
And now, you know, obviously he's who he is.
But, like, people forget that his show was kind of nothing until he did that Graham Hancock
interview.
And it was the Graham Hancock interview, which was so bananas that he would platform this
guy who talks about this thing that, you know, at the time was, I mean, today almost, it's like,
it's more science than not science. But, I mean, this was 15 years ago. And I need to listen to it.
I like, I know what you're talking about. So I'm like, oh, I should probably know. Oh, sorry.
Oh, so, so there's this guy, I mean, I'm nerdy as shit. So please take that with a grain of salt.
No, I'm a fellow nerd. So I love it. I usually listen to more the academic like podcasts. And so that's
why I don't, I don't, I don't listen to Joe Rogan, but I know who he is. Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
So he, you know, whether you like all of his stuff or not,
the one thing that I find the most intriguing about him is he will give these,
we'll call them alternative scientists the ability to tell their story.
Some of them end up being a little nutsy.
But in the case of Graham Hancock,
he is literally the guy who has pushed this narrative of there was a civilization before the last Ice Age.
So that was complete pseudoscience.
No one believed it.
He was laughed out of rooms.
And then he wrote this book called The Fingerprints of the Gods,
which will blow your mind if you're into history,
like ancient history, it'll blow your mind.
You don't have to believe it, but there's too much evidence for their...
Wow.
There's something there.
What is there?
We don't know, but there's something there.
There absolutely is.
And I could go down, I could do an entire four hour.
I'm so fascinated by this idea that there was this entire civilization,
which 11,000 years ago was essentially wiped out by a meteor hittering,
or, you know, whatever, meteor asteroid hitting the world
and creating the younger Gaius that thousand years
that brought the Ice Age back.
This dude is just this obscure out of nowhere,
you know, kind of wrote this book, which Joe liked,
but it's very obscure, hyper, obscure,
like deep, deep Reddit cut obscure.
And then Joe brings him on the platform,
and he's smoking a joint on the show,
you know, with this guy,
they talked for three and a half hours
about how Graham believes
there was a civilization before, like Mesopotamia.
Like we're taught, you know, we were all just shooting buffalo and running around in loincloths.
And then Mesopotamia happened.
All of a sudden we had writing and kings and rules.
And Graham's like, that's not the way humans work.
Like you don't go from no language, nothing written to, you know, to Hamarabi, like in the period of like 50 years.
Like that there's no way that that happens.
And so he's got this whole thing.
But my point is, like Joe's entire platform off of that episode,
was that was the first major leap.
And no branding specialist, no PR specialist, nobody would ever come to you and say,
this is the guy you should have on your show.
But because he did that, it separated him from every other podcaster and launched him
into the stratosphere.
You know, so that's...
Follow your heart.
Talk about what fires you up, even if it's not popular.
And then you get in an alignment because I feel like for me, I'm, I've never been
busier.
Like, I feel like I'm in the middle of a hurricane because there's so much going to
on. But I feel like in complete alignment with what I meant to do. So like I'm just, I'm going to
stay on the path. Like I just, I feel like now I know I am on the path and doing what I meant to do.
And it's fun. I'm not a psychologist. I had to cheat my way to a math major in college. So I'm,
as much of a neophyte on this, but I'd say I'm an armchair psychologist. Mostly I was raised
by a mother that liked to break people down
and I was forced to listen to her philosophical breakdowns
on all the humans in our lives.
So I became very interested in how humans tick.
I do not understand why so many people are willing to trade
what they really want for a little bit of discomfort.
Yes.
I mean, you just get to the heart of what I care about
and what I study.
And the reason for this is the way humans evolved is that we ran away from what was dangerous or what scared us or risk.
And it's what kept us alive.
So when people don't go after what they want because of discomfort or fear, it's not their fault.
It's the way that our brains are wired.
Dr. Daniel Kahneman, you know, did ground baking research in this area and discovered that we're
twice as motivated to avoid what we fear than to move toward what we want.
So that's why I'm so passionate about doing this work is I think people just do what's easy.
They'll be, they'll always, you know, in front of my office, I have all these things around my
office, but I've got the picture of when Hercules made the decision. Do you, do you have to,
you may have to make the choice? Do you live a life of virtue, which will be hard and filled with
challenges and discomfort, you know, and go this way? Or do you want to live a life of luxury,
of everything given to you with this beautiful woman, right? And he had to make that choice. So if we
just do what naturally comes to us, we're going to choose a life of comfort. And that's,
and not choose a life of virtue. But it's very short-sighted because in the short term, we're more
comfortable and we think it makes us happier because we want to do like what's going to feel
better. But in the long term, it makes you much less happy. So if you look at the Hercules,
if he would have gone down the life of, you know, of pleasure, you know, he wouldn't have had a
very fulfilling life, you know. So this is where I'm, you know, I'm trying to educate people on if you
want to have the most successful life, if you want to have the happiest life, you need to get
uncomfortable and it's going to feel unnatural. Like doing things scared is going to feel unnatural,
and that's the way it's supposed to be. And this is where so many people think, like, I'm just
not brave. It's just like, I can't do that. And like, that's, that is part of the way you're wired
that is making you freeze in the presence of fear, but you can overcome it. We can train ourselves
to be brave. So that's, you know, what I have to respond to that is, you know, because I want to give
people a little, and I want to give the benefit of the doubt. It's not that they're, their wimps or
they're cowards. It's just that this is what they're naturally doing is to avoid risk, and we are
wired to do that. But we can, you know, we can rewire our brains to do it differently.
It seems very counterintuitive that comfort shouldn't be the goal, right? That's the thing that
I always think about is like, I get why it's such a trap and I fall into it as well. I mean,
I think we're all guilty at different times of falling into it. Like, oh, had a long day, you know,
just, you know, instead of insert thing I've meant to do, you know, or, you know, so I'm a,
I've been divorced for four years. So single dad. So if anyone out there can feel this, then you
understand, I will sleep next to a pile of unfolded clean clothes for days because I,
I just have a million other things going on.
And because I'm sleeping by myself most of the time,
you know, a pile of clothes isn't a big deal on the other half of the bed.
And I'll get to it when I get to it.
And it's like, I look at that and I'm like, my reason for saying that is,
I just need to fold the clothes.
Like they're right there.
It drives me nuts.
Walk into the bedroom to go to bed.
I stare at them.
I'm like, I just need to fold those stupid clothes.
But that's a half hour of me doing something that I don't want to do.
And it's just much more comfortable to show.
shove that pile of clothes the other side of the bed and crawl in and I'll never know the difference.
And it's like such a stupid example, but it's like real life decisions like that.
Like every day and all these little micro decisions that we choose to go with the comfort
route versus like what we need to do.
So if we feel ourselves, like I guess how would you describe the tension?
So I make that decision and I get into bed.
There is a tension that I feel though.
It's a microtension because it's not like this is some monumental, you know,
nothing super negative is going to happen to me,
maybe a little bit embarrassment,
although I just shared it with 200,000 plus people that I do this.
Like, there is a little bit of microtention that I feel.
If, like, what is that signal?
How do you pick up on that signal to know I'm starting to make too many decisions
that are comfort-based and not what I need to do?
Like, it feels like you don't fall off this path, like in one big step.
it feels like a series of micro comfort decisions get to you.
Does that what you're finding?
Is that what you see?
I think what comes to me as you describe that is sometimes we allow decisions,
the decisions we make on what we do to be guided by our feelings or our motivation.
So I think that's where the flaw is.
Sometimes you're like, I'm just going to wake up in the morning.
Like, what do I feel like doing?
Well, I don't feel like working out, so I'm not going to work out.
and I don't feel like getting the work done,
and I don't feel like I'm not motivated to fold the clothes,
and motivation is overrated.
And as you talk about that tension,
you kind of know you should fold the clothes,
but you don't feel like it.
And so this is so central to,
and I'm going to cite a couple of researchers here.
So, you know, I'd say first,
I want to first cite Roy Baumeister, his research.
And he's done research on basically willpower, motivation, right?
And what he says is we've got a limited amount of psychological resources each day.
So imagine that you have a full battery in the morning.
And then throughout the day your battery goes down and then your battery is basically
on that red last bar before you go to bed.
And so your likelihood to do the uncomfortable hard thing, we have the best chance of doing
that first thing in the morning.
So one of the things we can do to overcome that resistance is really, this goes down
to the discipline of planning our days, of thinking.
about. So instead of just saying like, what am I going to do tomorrow? I'm just going to wake up
and just see what I feel like doing. But no, instead think about what are my goals, what kind of
person do I want to be, and let me plan what will I do tomorrow that is consistent with the person
that I want to be and will help me make progress on my goals. So what really helps, and this is also
Golwitzer's research that talks about implementation intentions. So don't just wait to see what you feel
like doing, but plan ahead of time. Like, I will do these things because they're the right thing
to do for me to achieve my goals. Right. So that simple thing, and then I always tell people like,
preload the hardest things, the things that you dread doing most, maybe it's folding the laundry.
Some people, it's working out. Like, if you love working out, then you might want to do that later in the
day and start writing the book in the morning. So whatever where you have the most resistance where you
don't want to do it, you really want to, I call it when I speak, I'm a keynote speaker around the world,
right? So when I'm on the stage, I call it attack the day because of my Marine Corps background. I'm
like, Marines don't get up and go like, what do we feel like doing? No, we have our battle plans the
day before and we wake up and we attack the day, right? You know, so, you know, have your,
your battle plans to be able to attack the day. And then sometimes it does have to feel like attack.
This thing I don't want to do, I'm like, oh, I'm just going to, I'm just going to jump in.
I'm going to attack.
I'm going to get it done.
But what happens is when you do the hardest thing, the first thing in the morning, how do you think
someone feels after they get that done?
How do you feel like when you fold that laundry?
You feel like, oh, gosh, I'm so glad I got that done.
You actually feel better.
You feel that dopamine hit.
So you see even this little example, you think, I don't want to fold a laundry because I just,
I don't feel like it.
I want to just be comfortable in the moment.
But if you just do the damn laundry and it takes you 20 minutes, you're going to feel like,
I feel so proud of myself, I feel accomplished.
So this is where I'm always battling.
There's so many things I want to bring up, but I want people to choose to do the things that
are going to make you feel better at the end of the day instead of feel good in the moment.
So just at, that's a really effective question.
Ask yourself this question throughout the day.
What does my future self, my 5 p.m., my 6 p.m. self want me to do in this moment to feel
proud of myself. So I'm making progress toward my goals. If you just develop a relationship with your
future self, your end of the day's self and listen to that end of the day's self, Ryan, your end of
day's self is and say, fold the damn laundry. You're like, all right, and listen to that future coach.
And the other motivator I can use as well is sometimes like we think of what do I want to do in the
moment? What is the risk to my comfort right now? But what we can do is we can try to amplify the future
risk. If I don't work out today, how will I feel later or how will that impact my goals? So this is Dr.
Cynthia Puri. She is a professor at Clemson University. She's a researcher in bravery. And she says when
people, you know, do brave things, usually in the moment they're scared, but when they try to
amplify the risk or what's scary if I don't do it. It really helps. So these are like these
little psychological tools. And a lot of them is just imagining like, what is the risk down the
road if I don't do this thing right now? Right. And if you do that, it'll help with that.
You know, you want to make yourself uncomfortable with the person that you'll be at the end of the day
if you don't do it. So if you think about that, it can motivate you to do the right things.
And what I really want is I want people at the end of the day to look in the mirror
with pride and feel good. Like, you know what? I'm proud of the day I had. And then that is when
you can rest. And then I want people to have comfort. But it's amazing when you work really hard
throughout the day or if you have a really good workout, how good it feels like to relax. But if I've
been sitting on my ass all day, binging Netflix, eating potato chips, and at the end of the day,
I'm relaxing on the couch, it doesn't feel good to relax. So if you work really hard,
it feels really good to give yourself a break at the end of the day, right? But if you work out your
body really hard. Like my favorite thing is I love really getting it after in the gym,
you know, and then like getting in, I have a massage chair in my house, right? And then getting in the,
oh, it feels so good. But notice like when I get in the massage chair and my muscles aren't very sore,
it doesn't feel as good. Yeah. There's such a mental reward to earning it. I think it's why,
you know, you see people who kind of, you hear these stories of like, came over here when they were five,
as with immigrant parents and built this business and, you know, all this.
And they just walk around.
You meet those people and they walk around with this sense of pride.
No matter where their business is, no matter where it ranks,
they're just a sense of pride and everything.
And then you can see the same person, but their parents had already been here.
Maybe it's the second generation of that individual.
They were given that business or they were given a portion of it.
They may even be high functioning, you know, in terms of, you know,
they may not just be complete slackers, you know, they, but there isn't that same sense of like,
I earned this. I went out and there's always that tension with the second generation. You can tell
the ones that like were forced to start down in the mailroom and the ones that walked right into
the C-suite, there is, the way they operate, talk, act, there is such a difference between those
two people, even if they've taken the business to the exact same place post them like taken over.
Yeah. That's that's so true. We,
as human beings, we are built to strive. Physically, that's why we have to move our bodies.
That's why we have to lift heavy things, right? Resistance training, like our bodies will thrive
when we strive. So that's kind of a little key term. Like, we thrive when we're striving to do more,
to get uncomfortable. So both physically, but also psychologically. Psychologically. So that's where I want people to challenge
themselves physically. That's really important. I'm into fitness, but also I want people to challenge
themselves psychologically. Like what's the thing that you really want that you keep saying,
uh, someday? That is such a dangerous word. Someday. You know, and if you wait until you're ready,
if you wait until you're confident, that day is not going to come. Also, you know,
I'm 45 and I think like, why wait until I'm older?
You know, my brain's not going to work any better than it does today.
I'm not going to be, you know, my body, although I also am very big into fitness and longevity,
you know, I'd like to believe my body is doing well.
It's not going to get younger.
You know, I may not age as fast, but we haven't yet determined how to turn aging around.
Have you done your bio age?
Like, you know how you can like test your bio age and you can actually.
actually being like I just had mine.
I'm like, I'm 42 years old.
I'm going to be 52, but like my bio age is like, you know.
That's amazing.
10 years is great.
I definitely don't have 10 years on my bio age.
I'm also about 42 on my bio age.
But yeah, now I'm not going to right there.
That's impressive.
That's amazing.
Where was I going with that?
You were saying like when people say someday and they wait and they wait.
Yeah, it's like what do we replace some
day with because I understand why people do it, right? Life is busy. Particularly, let's say you're in the, like,
where I got kids that are 10 and 12. I can hear one of them, my podcast studio I built in my basement.
I can hear him stomping around upstairs because they're off from school for some reason. I don't know why.
It's two days before Easter break, so I don't know why he's home, but he's home. So like, you know,
I can, there's all these excuses that I can use. Well, my kids have sports or, you know, I'm only a
single guy or, you know, whatever excuse I want to input. I'm ex-age. I wasn't born into
ex-family, you know. So someday the moon will be in the sign of Aquarius and the heavens will
open and everything will be perfect for me to walk down that path.
You know the horse or something? Is everybody here? It's a year though. Yeah, we're waiting
until the sign lines like line up like, yeah. Well, let me answer that. So what do we replace
someday with? I have an answer for that.
And the answer to that is today.
Instead of someday, we need to replace that with today.
And, you know, if I look at what is bravery?
So, you know, when we research bravery, bravery is defined as voluntary action in the presence of fear toward a noble or worthwhile goal.
So think about that.
Bravery.
Voluntary action in the presence of fear toward a noble, worthwhile.
wild goal. So someday is because we keep waiting like, okay, I want to wait until I'm not scared. Like
right now there's some, there's some fear, there's some discomfort, which is why I don't want to do it
today. Someday, someday, I'm waiting until I feel ready or the time is right. And you know what,
fear. So just notice that definition of bravery, fear is part of the equation. Once there's no
fear, you're not brave anymore because bravery is taking a step scared.
because something really matters. So what we're doing with someday, someday is we're just waiting
until the fear to disappear. So I tell people like, fear is not a bad thing. Fear is a signpost
usually pointing you to exactly what you need to be doing. But no, we feel fear and we run away
from it. So what I teach people to do is we need to stop hesitating because usually you know exactly
what you need to do, right? You know that I should get started on that project I always wanted to.
I should call that, maybe that relative, that sibling that we had a falling out and we haven't
talked in three years. Like I should repair that relationship, have that difficult relationship.
I should start the podcast I've always wanted to or start writing the book. Like all these
someday things, you know, instead of saying someday because of the fear, it's just we need to get started
today. So, I mean, that's really what bravery is. I try to help people to stop hesitating to do the
things that you know that you really need to do to achieve your goals and start doing them today.
And it's not that I want someone to say I've always someday I'll climb out Everest and I want you
to do it tomorrow or today. That's ridiculous. But it's starting to take a step today of saying,
okay, if I want to climb maybe Mount Kilimanjaro, right, if that's something that I want to do,
today I'm going to go out and I'm going to hike five miles. And I'm at least create a plan to be
able to like if I've always wanted to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, which I want to do, so I want to do it
in 2027. So now I got to plan a day. When am I going to do it in 2027? Let me plan when I'm
going to do it and let me back plan all the training that I need to do. And then what can I do
today? I can go out and hike five miles a day. But we have to start at least taking some steps
toward it. So take a little baby step. Maybe you at least come up with the plan on how you're going
to do it. That's your baby step today. And then tomorrow you start executing. So I sometimes have a problem
with people that talk about manifesting.
Because manifesting sometimes means to people that I'm just going to sit in my room and I'm going to dream and go,
I want to be famous.
I want to be rich.
I want a Lamborghini.
And I'm just going to sit here and I'm going to just think about it and want it and put it out in the universe, right?
That I want it.
And they just wait for it to happen.
So I do believe in mindset because my work is grounded in cognitive psychology.
So we do need to master the mindset, but we can't stay in the dreamer world.
We can't just be wishing for it or manifesting.
And some people that I've talked to about manifesting, they're like, no, manifesting requires you to take steps.
I'm like, then I'm okay with it.
So we can't just say like, I want this, I want this, I want this, someday, someday, someday,
no, I want this, I want this, I believe, this is where the cognitive psychology comes.
I believe that it's possible that I can do that.
that I can forge the path to accomplish it.
And I'm going to take a small step today.
So we need to move from someday being in a dream state to saying,
I will do something.
I'm going to take a step today.
And if each day we take little steps, you know, we don't,
I mean, you probably know like the power of habit, things like that.
We are what we consistently do, right?
If you want to write a book, that means you need to, what does a writer do?
They write every day.
So what are you going to write today?
Write 100 words today.
So we need to start saying,
today. And if you're scared, good. You should be scared because it means you're getting out of your
comfort zone. You're moving toward what you really want because it's really important. And the more you
you take steps toward what you want, even though you're scared, you'll get more used to it. You'll
build your bravery muscle. You'll actually do some rewiring your brain. Yeah, I'm with you on the
manifesting thing. I always thought it was complete nonsense. I read the secret. I was like, this is
insane.
And so I had a couple
manifesting experts on the show.
Okay.
That's the beauty of having a podcast
as you get to reach out to people
and have them explain stuff to you.
Have a good discussion.
Yeah.
And I'd say one of, for one thing,
two of them were the most engaged shows
in terms of like back and forth.
People are very,
people have a lot of opinions about manifesting.
I think if you're looking to pure engagement harvest,
any type of content, just make it all about manifesting.
You will get crazies from both sides going bananas,
which is fun in its own way.
That's not why I did it, but I wanted to learn.
One of them was very much like,
I'm going to call it the more ethereal,
foo-foo-y, the universe listens to you.
Okay.
And the other was very much grounded in like the practicality.
I call it.
Woo-woo.
Yeah.
And I thought, you know, I'll be honest with you, when I heard the argument for manifestation from a psychological standpoint, from how the brain actually works, you know, it's kind of, I always forget the name of this principle, but it's like when you buy a red car, all of a sudden you see red cars everywhere kind of thing.
Like that's what you're doing.
Like from a, if you're doing manifesting right, right, you are basically just giving your brain a signal to look for the thing that you want.
Like, I want to be a speaker.
okay, what do I have to do?
I'm looking for opportunities to speak.
I'm looking for event planners.
I'm looking for new pieces of content to fit into my, right?
So now your brain has a signal up.
That makes sense to me.
It's very hard for me to believe that the universe cares enough about us
that if we just think about something and sit in a,
with our legs crossed,
that somehow it's going to come to us.
I just don't know that it does.
However, here's a question I have for you.
How do we know that our,
that the thing we're sundaing is actually worth doing today.
Because I, you know, just again, from having enough people on the show,
I do know that a part of procrastination is an unconscious part of our brain saying
that thing is not worth the effort, right?
The juice isn't worth to squeeze.
There is a portion of procrastination, not all of it,
but a portion of procrastination that is like our body going,
I know you think you want that, but you really,
you really don't want that.
So like if we're trying to figure out,
I have these some days.
I someday want to be a professional speaker.
I someday want to be a bestseller.
I someday want to be an entrepreneur,
whatever that thing is for you,
or you someday want to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
How do we start to pick the some days that are worth taking action on today
and the some days that are not?
Yeah.
I would point to the research on self-concordant goals.
It's about making sure you're choosing the goals that are really meaningful to you, right?
Like, my husband thinks I'm crazy for wanting to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
He's like, why would you want to do that?
So, like, there's certain, I'm running Spartans.
I ran my first Spartan and I got bit by the bugs.
I'm doing another one in a couple of weeks.
Like, I'm like, this is so fun.
He's like, why would you want to do it?
So for him, he would say, I'm not going to go through this because that's not what my goal is.
But I, maybe it's my rink or background.
I think that stuff is fun.
have, you know, so you've got to make sure that whatever goals that you set, they're self-concordant,
which is basically means that they are aligned with your intrinsic motivators. If someone wants to be a
doctor, why do they want to be a doctor? Is it because it's a deep-rooted desire in them that
they love medicine, they want to help people, they maybe have a story of something that impacts
them. But if their parents tell them, like, you need to be a doctor, see the difference there.
So it should be intrinsically motivated goal. And I can, and I can share a story, too,
like I decided when I was in my teenage years that I wanted to become a Marine, right? And so I applied.
I got a full scholarship on the Marine Corps. And it was that self-concordant goal. And when I showed up in
San Diego to report into my naval ROTC unit to begin my training, so most people show up to
college to just get to know their fellow freshmen on campus and then have fun and party and then go to
school, right? But if you go to ROTC, you show up a week earlier for naval ROTC orientation. And then
the Marines do their separate thing, which is, of course, always harder because it's the few the
proud. So it's kind of like a mini boot camp. And like when I showed up, I was pretty confident
because I earned the scholarship. I had, I was physically fit. I had academic grade grades. I was a
leader in high school. I mean, I got the scholar. I was kind of struttening going like I got my
step going on. I was in for a rude awakening. Um, I was.
I showed up, first of all, did not make the best decision on my outfit.
I was an 18-year-old girl, so I put a laugh out in my outfit.
This is so funny.
I knew I couldn't wear jeans because Marine Corps officers cannot wear jeans.
And if you're an 18-year-old kid, what are you going to wear?
Because all you wear is jeans.
And I didn't want to wear a dress because I thought it would be too girly.
So I found the perfect, it was actually a hot pink outfit with white polka dots.
We were talking about pink before with little pink.
pumps, like, I showed up there and it was, it was a disaster because, like, I was, I did not look
like anyone else. There's only two females. The other one quit, like, halfway through the year.
And like that first day, I had, the guy I looked up to that was in charge of this, this, you know,
orientation on day one, it came up to me and he leaned over and said, you're never going to make it,
you know, as a Marine. So you think of it there, like, for me, like, did I, like, that was a really
hard day. And then it got harder. I mean, then I showed.
showed up to my first run. I thought I was in great shape. But I grew up in Minnesota. Like,
the little running I did was flat. I went to school in San Diego. Like, there are hills,
and that's exactly where they take Marines as to, we went and ran in the hills. So, like, my first
run, that first Friday, I couldn't keep up. And that is very shameful as a Marine if you
can't keep up. So I'm this 18-year-old, it was, it was miserable. But what I did is, I kept
showing up. And why did I keep showing up? Because it was worth it. For me to earn the title
of United States Marine, that was important to me. And you know another thing that motivated me,
too, because that jerk said, you will never make it. That motivated the crap out of me. Like,
sometimes I want to look into this, and I don't know the answer from a psychological, like I,
psychologically, I want to know why do some people hear something like that and believe it and their
self-belief goes down. And other people like me, you tell me I can't do something like, oh,
thank you so much because now I'm, and it took me, Ryan, it took me years, years to become that
top performer. It wasn't until between my junior and senior year, so like freshman, sophomore,
junior year, three years in college before I was at my, I was at the level where I was not only keeping
up, but probably outperforming a lot of the Marines. And because,
it was such a struggle, I think accomplishing and earning the title of Marine and getting my
lieutenant bars put on, it meant so much more, right? So it's really about making sure that you set
when you set challenging uncomfortable goals, I call them brave goals, because if you're not a little
scared, they're not really worth setting. So goals should be a little scary. Make sure that in,
there's going to be, there's going to be ups and downs to achieve your goal. Just make sure that you want it
badly enough. It's really important to you intrinsically so that when you have those days,
when you're in the downs, you're not going to quit. So hopefully that story helps.
You know, and my grandfather was a Marine, and I think part of my motivation, too, is I wanted,
the Marine Corps was my ticket out of the Midwest. I mean, I love being from the Midwest,
but I didn't want to live in the same small town. My dad was born in Prior Lake, Minnesota,
and he still lives there today. He's never moved out. But for him, that's what he wanted.
I wanted a ticket out of the Midwest. I wanted my college paid for, and I wanted a career
of something that really mattered and was meaningful. And so I, that's what motivated me. And I,
I was not, I guess what, that's what called to me, but I didn't feel like getting up and going
to run three days a week with my unit. In fact, that's the thing that I most want, I wanted to avoid
that. I hated doing it because I wasn't really keeping up for a very
long time. Now, I was a female keeping up with male Marines, but eventually I got there, you know? So
self-concordant, we just, and I can also quote Angela Duckworth. She wrote a book on grit.
She's at Penn as well where I studied. And what she says is you first have to make, if you want to be
gritty, if you want to have the grit, which is a long-term passion and perseverance in the pursuit
of long-term goals. She said, you first have to start off with that burning desire. It's got to be
something you really want. It's got to be aligned. If you don't have that alignment, it's really
hard to be gritty when it's something you don't really want. So you got to start off like,
what are you interested in? You know, what is something that you've always wanted to do? So a little
soul searching, too, of like, what do you care about? What do you, what is the impact you want to
make on the world? What is it you really want? And once you find that deep why, you're
really need to make sure you capture it because there are going to be timed where you want to quit.
And you got to go back to that why, and that's going to motivate you to keep going. And that's
really where the most growth happens. I know I'm all over the place here, but when, you know how,
like, when you go to the gym and you have the hardest workout ever and you're super sore,
like I did leg day and I haven't been able to walk for like the last three days, right? But I know
that my muscles are growing and getting stronger. In those hardest moments where you just really want to
quit and you show up anyway, it's the equivalent of having a really hard workout in your brain.
This is the part of the brain that you're giving a workout. Like your amygdala, the feeling part of
your brain is going like, I don't want to do this. This sucks. It's the part of your brain
trying to control your behavior and seek comfort. But when you're getting that really, really good
workout in, you're giving a workout to your prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that's our
executive functioning part of the brain, but also a little part of the brain in the back in the
anterior singular cortex. There's a little part in there called the mid-singular cortex, sometimes
known as the courage part of our brain. It's what really gets a workout when we do something hard when
we really don't want to, or we do something that requires that courage or that bravery. So that part
of our brain is getting stronger. And then our brain is also creating more neural pathways
between our prefrontal cortex and our mid-sicular cortex. So we see in the functional MRI,
that part of the brain working up. So that's where I think when I explain the mechanism what's happening,
at least for being a little bit of a science nerd myself, if I understand the mechanism of what's
happening, it motivates me more. So when I really don't feel like doing something, I go like,
this is like me doing like, you know, a max set of something at the gym and it really hurts
and I like, I savor it. Like I embrace it because I know it's going to make me stronger. The same thing
happens with us psychologically. So when you really don't feel like it, that's where it matters most.
that you keep that promise to yourself
and you do it anyway.
You're having the best workout
and you're helping rewire your brain
to do hard things.
First, we got to get you on some BPC 157
so your recovery is in three days
after leg day.
Okay, I need to learn from you on there
because I'm just doing creatine and glutamine
so if I need you doing more stuff.
Have you looked into peptides at all?
You know what?
I was just listening to a Huberman podcast.
I'm a huge, like I love geeky podcast
and so I was just listening to one
on my workout this morning,
and they were talking all about it.
And I know there's not a lot of evidence out there yet,
but it seems really promising.
And the podcast I was on, they're like,
it seems to be safe.
There's no harm in doing it.
And a lot of people's experience say it's great.
So just this morning, I was like, I think I need to try it.
So, yeah.
So I'm on a cocktail of peptide.
So I will test anything,
anything that seemed like that isn't completely out of this world.
But I'll test just about anything.
Because I feel like I've done enough damage to my body.
playing football and sports and all the various things that I did kind of in very similar but different
story my way of getting out of my shitty little small town that I couldn't stand.
Not that you couldn't stand your town, but I couldn't stand my town.
I need to get out of there as well.
Sports was the avenue that I took to get out.
So I got a college scholarship and that's how I got out of there.
But I had a guest on the show.
It was probably last year, but he was all talking about peptides.
And this is before the big peptide.
It may not even been two years ago now because this is before the big peptide craze.
Awesome guy.
Huberman talks about this stuff too,
but I know we're a little off track,
but I love to work out as well.
I love to get after it.
And my goal for this year is I want to pull 500 pounds on the deadlift.
My current PR is 463.
I did that two years ago,
or about it 18 months ago,
I down cycled because I kind of hit a plateau,
and now I'm working my way back
with a stronger base,
so trying to get back there.
And I just is something about being 40 plus
and pulling 500 pounds.
that just makes me want to look at every other guy like they're, you know, less.
I can't help myself.
There's a part of me that just looks at other people like,
there's only a few of you.
Everybody else in my gym is about 22,
so I'm pretty pumped that I'm here pulling with these guys, you know.
But one of the things that happens as you get older
is that you just don't recover the same,
no matter how you train, you just don't recover the same.
You just don't.
And what I was finding is that where maybe five,
to eight years ago,
if I did a heavy leg day or whatever,
but mostly legs are where I feel the longest.
Me too.
That's where I feel a disorder.
It's not as much for upper body, yeah.
So where I could do maybe a squat,
a pull, so deadlift,
and then do like more of a base leg day.
All the ancillary stuff is a third leg day every week.
Now I can only do two.
And if I go really hard,
maybe even one leg day a week.
So that was starting to bug me because it was impacting my ability to hit my targets.
So I started digging into these peptides and I found a cocktail of three that has been amazing for me.
I encourage everyone who is interested, you have to do your own research.
Your primary care physician will not know anything about this stuff and they will push you away from it because they don't know.
Trust me, I have tried.
You have to go find specialists and unfortunately most of those specialists are going to be online.
I would start with guys or gals of the Huberman class
and work your way down from there.
There are a lot of charlatans in well
who are just looking to sell you repackaged peptides
that are of low quality,
and you can find these things on websites all over the place.
You have to be very careful where you get your stuff from.
So find a professional, but it's most likely not going to be your primary.
If you go ask your primary, they're going to push you away from it.
That being said, if you are going to get after it in the way that you've discussed,
I take a micro dose of trezepitide, which is a GLP1, not for weight loss, but for inflammation,
for gut health, and for, I have fairly severe ADHD that as I've gotten older, has gotten
worse. It's a whole other story. And yeah, it really quiets your brain. It's a big time
brain quieter. It's not going to cure the activity, which is not what I want. I want my brain
to stay as active, but I want to have more control over what it thinks about. And I found
that there's appetite, particularly with food noise and other vice-related noises. So if you chew gum
or you chew your nail, whatever crazy weird vices you have, everyone has different ones,
it really reduces your brain cycles you spend on those types of things. So terseptide is one.
Tessimorlin is for muscle growth. Again, micro doses. Again, this is why you want to work with
someone that really knows what they're doing because if someone's just trying to sell you something,
they're going to push a full dose on you, which is expensive and more than most people need.
So microdose of tersepetide, that's like a growth hormone.
And then BPC 157 is a recovery peptide.
And here's where, here's my case study on the recovery.
So having deadlifted now for almost seven years, I picked it up in 2020 after COVID.
Like the day the gym opened, I was like, I want to do.
something new. I've never deadlifted, despite all my athletic, because I've always been told
it's too dangerous. It's not if you do it right. I want to try this. So I picked it up. Okay.
Well, once a year inevitably, I don't stretch properly. If my hamstrings are tight and I don't
properly warm them up, I'll pull and I'll get really, my back will lock up. And it usually
takes three to five days before I can get back into leg activities. Since I started taking BPC
BPC 157.
This happened about a month ago.
I was back in the gym one day later.
Wow.
One day later.
Because it just,
what it does,
and I'm,
if you guys are experts at this,
please go in the comments on YouTube,
let me know all the places where I'm off.
I am broad stroking this.
All the disclaimers that I am not advocating,
nor am I prescribing any kind of medication here.
However,
it naturally induces the body to produce
whatever the chemicals or blood cells are
or whatever,
which repair, which do reparative work.
So again, on a microdose level, taken on a daily basis,
what it's doing is just increasing the general amount of recovery molecules
or chemicals or whatever.
We're looking out to get stronger and healthier.
Okay.
Yeah.
And so I, not that we needed to take that quick diet try, but I will say.
I mean, it does relate though because we're talking about like challenging our bodies
and we want to recover, challenging ourselves,
psychologically and doing hard things. And there's the recovery side there. There's a lot of these
same agents like, you know, our brains use so much energy. You know, I am supplementing with creatine
now, not just for muscle recovery, because it has a huge impact on our cognitive function.
Right. So I just, I just sent it to my dad who's 76 years old, you know, because he's worried
about his cognitive function. I'm like dose 20 milligrams a day. I mean, it's just, it's protein,
it's good for you. So, you know, so just for you. So just for you, so just for you,
you to be psychologically strong to, you know, to make these decisions to set these self-concordant
brave goals and then be brave enough to take steps toward them each day. You know, a couple things
that come to mind too is it is really important for us to get really good quality sleep so that
when we wake up, we're not going to take action based on how we're feeling, but we take action
based on what we should do. So I always talk about if you really want to do brave things,
It doesn't start first thing in the morning.
It starts the night before.
So really think about, yeah, preparation.
And I always use analogies from the stage of like, you know, what do we do as Marines?
We know like what we know our mission we want to accomplish tomorrow.
We come up with our battle plans.
We know exactly what we're going to do.
And then we start preparing the night before.
So we need to think about the same way.
If you want to be successful in life, you want to feel proud at the end of the day,
the last thing you should do before you start relaxing or whatever is plan tomorrow, right?
When are you going to get up?
what are you going to do?
What is the first hardest thing, you know, to attack the day, the thing that you dread most,
don't have just meetings with people like, I like to preserve eight to ten to do your deepest work.
You know, so just plan your day and then think about like, now, what do I need to do tonight
to be able to jump out of bed and have the most successful day?
And usually that means that we're going to eat a healthy dinner, not drink too much alcohol,
not have our phone or our TV on in front of our face with all that blue light if you do wear
your orange glasses so that it's more like campfire and then go to bed, get that deep sleep,
and that way you can jump out of bed in the morning. And the last thing that just relates to this
and my kids are sick of hearing that because they're now like 18 and 20. But I always say like
never ever press snooze literally or figuratively on life. So snooze is like when you
you wake up and obviously you're like, oh gosh, I'm tired. I just don't want to get it. If you press
snooze first thing in the morning, you're starting off the day, breaking a promise to yourself.
And it is not a good habit to get in. Because isn't there that famous Navy commander that says
make your bed first thing in the morning? Like, sure, I don't even care if you make your bed,
but I want you just don't press snooze. Jump out of bed the second that that alarm goes off,
because you've already had a plan. You know, so self-care isn't sleeping in and taking the morning off.
self-care is keeping a promise to yourself.
So don't press snooze in the morning, get up,
and then don't press snooze on your dreams and your goals.
And that's what that hesitating is.
That's someday, someday, that's pressing snooze.
And the reason I care so much about this,
and this may sound a little woo-woo, but,
because I mainly like, you know, gritty Marine Corps Jill,
but there's a little woo-woo in there.
And the reason I care about this is the impact of your relationship
with fear and discomfort is,
is so, has such a huge impact on not only your success,
but how happy and fulfilling your life is.
If you allow fear to control your behavior
where you don't apply for a job,
you don't have a difficult conversation,
you don't share an idea in a meeting.
And it's not just big moments, it's little moments,
little moments day in and day out.
You have an option to be brave or to step back.
And if you have a relationship with fear
where you're like, okay, fear, it actually is a little signal that, oh, like, sometimes something's
important and it's something that I should do. And if you learn to move toward what you fear and you stop
hesitating, you do it. And imagine like over a year if someone stops hesitating and they move.
They do something today because it's that important thing to do to them. And so they do it
week in and week out over a year. Imagine where their career and life is at. Or imagine it five years
down the road, Ryan, or 10 years down the road, what would their career be like? And the reason
I talk about career and performance is because I get paid by Fortune 500 comes to come speak. So we
talk about performance and success at work, and that will come. But what I really care about
is it's life satisfaction. It's like when you look in the mirror, do you like what you see?
We have to change our relationship. Like stop allowing fear to control your behaviors because
then you're going to look in the mirror. You're going to go, like, I suck because I can't do it.
And I keep promising myself and I keep breaking the promise. Like, we need to change that.
And it's possible.
I'm completely with you. I wanted to look up to stat real quick.
I heard this on Chris Williams' podcast the other day.
45% of men between 18 and 25 have never asked a woman out in person.
45% of men 18 to 25. At that, I'll be honest, at that time, I was probably asked,
45 women out a week because you're just like spraying prayer, right?
You're just like, hey, you know, who knows?
Eventually I'm going to get a yes.
I mean, that was the way, you know, I mean, back then when there was no internet and no
cell phones, I mean, you had to like, you had no idea who anybody was.
You were just walking up to, hey, how are you?
What's going on?
You know, hey, you want to get a drink with me something?
I mean, that was the only way to meet people.
And today, 40, I mean, think of, I mean, and that took, you want to talk about fear.
Like, I know, maybe it's the same for women.
I don't know. I've never been a woman, so I don't know.
But I can tell you that there are a few things that are as scary as seeing a group of women in a circle at a bar and walking up to them and trying to ask one out.
That is one of the most fear-deriving moments of any young man's life.
That is rude.
Right.
So you think about that and you think, okay, like if they're not even willing to do that, then are they going to be willing, like you said, to ask the boss for a promotion or to, you know,
you know, reach out to the event they've always wanted to be a speaker at and give a pitch or
whatever that scary thing is, right? Like, we're talking about baser instinct stuff. We can't even
get past the fear of that. And we're going to start getting after the second level. You know,
I, I want to, if I can add on that. Yeah. Oh, yeah, please, please. So bravery isn't like,
sometimes the misconception is people think bravery is just like moments of heroism. Like,
would I run into a burning building to save a child? Would I, if I would, if I,
was a Marine, would I charge forward in the presence of danger? Like, you know, yes, though,
that is bravery. That is absolutely examples of bravery. But bravery is so much bigger than that.
It's all the little moments. It's, there's this girl at work, and I really want to ask her out,
but I'm scared, will I do it? Like you're saying. And so, you know, and just more research,
because I'm a nerd, when you look at all the research in psychology with experiential avoidance,
so experiential avoidance basically means running away from what you're scared or running away
from what's uncomfortable. There's a study that was published where they followed over
two thousand, there was two thousand four hundred adults and they followed them over four years.
And they were like 18 to 65, so all age. And they found that experiential avoidance
running away from what you're scared of or not doing it ended up leading to the development
and persistence of anxiety and depression. So let's let that sink in because I care about this
younger generation because I have two kids. They're 18 and 20, like this month, because it's April,
they're going to be turning 19 and 21. And I see the world through the younger generation. And they are so
chicken shit, scared of everything. And they allow, they use this word of like mental health. Mental health,
I don't want to do it for my mental health. It's like mental health is now an excuse to not do things. Or even like,
oh, you let a young person say,
that causes me anxiety,
so I'm not going to do it.
And so that I think people are confused.
They think that for my happiness and well-being,
I need to avoid things that make me scared
because the goal is to be happy
and to be comfortable in life.
But what they don't understand is that is a fast path
to mental distress.
Jill, it's also completely false.
Like, I talk to my kids about this, too.
So they're 12 and 10, two boys.
And we talk about it in the context of sports a lot just because that's, like, the most important thing.
And their world is small because they're, because they're younger, right?
But, like, I tell them, I'm like, guys, Michael Jordan had fear.
He had fear.
We're not talking about, like, the opportunity doesn't present itself when the fear goes away.
We're talking to you, these people perform despite fear.
So don't even set the expectation.
I feel like we've sold an entire generation of children that somehow there are certain
individuals who were born with zero fear and they're the ones who are able to do the exceptional
shit.
And all the rest of us who have fear, we can't accomplish anything.
And I'm like, no.
I'm like, you think I've done 400 and at this point, 425 plus keynotes, paid keynotes in
my career.
Almost every state, pretty much all of North America, some in South America,
I haven't been to Europe yet.
That's coming.
Maybe I can help you up.
Yes.
We can help each other.
I've been on stage quite a bit.
And I said to them, I go, I've been doing this for almost two decades.
It's the thing I love to do professionally more than anything else that happens professionally.
Yep.
And every single time before I go on stage, I feel fear.
Every single time.
Every single time.
I go, the difference is at this point, I know how to harness that fear into energy and excitement.
I've learned how to develop that.
But don't, I go, don't think that when you're walking up to bat in baseball
and you feel fear that you're wrong or bad or less than,
Aaron Judge feels fear every time he walks up and he's one of the greatest hitters
in the history of the game.
And he would even tell you that he gets that feeling every at bat,
every at bat, 162 games, every at bat.
I've heard him say in interviews before.
And it's like, so don't try to, we've like, miss sold that.
I get fired up on this topic.
No, I'm just, I'm so glad.
because this is exactly, this is my jam.
I mean, I am a bravery expert.
We need to change our relationship with fear.
You're right, and that is the big misnomer.
People think that if you're brave, you're fearless.
Oh, like, there's something wrong with me because I feel scared, so it means that I shouldn't do it.
There's something wrong with me.
No, that is, you're right.
It's exactly, it's misinformation.
So my TEDx that I just did, I named it fear more, not less.
Like, we have to change our relationship with fear.
And I love, you talked about the cognitive reframe.
So for your audience as well.
is, you know, first of all, if you're not a little scared, then you're just letting life take you by.
You're not, you know, I want you to chart the path of the life that you want.
Life is dictating to you. You're not dictating to life. Yeah, it's like you're just in, like, letting the life just carry you along the way so that life is just what it is because it comes to you.
Like, if you want to chart the path of your life, there's going to be discomfort, there's going to be fear.
And there's nothing wrong with you. Yes. And when you feel that fear,
We can do that cognitive reframe of really thinking about, like, what is happening when I feel
the stress or fear in my body? Like my heart is beating really fast now. This is actually my body
from an evolutionary point of view preparing me to get blood in every part of my body to be
able to perform at my best. This adrenaline, this is energy. Again, it's here to serve me so I can
do the best job possible. This is excitement. Excitement and fear feel almost
identical, right?
So I want to ask you this since I have you here.
So I use this all the time and I don't know if it's true.
I but I use it on my kids all the time.
I say when brain scans, look at your brain, they can't tell the difference between
excitement and fear.
Your brain lights up the same way when you're excited versus fear.
So what I say to them is what that means is it's a fucking choice.
It means you get to choose whether you're excited for this thing or you're scared of this
thing because your brain is operating the same way. Now, that's what I'd say. How much of this is actually
true? I don't know. Sounds good. I have to say, like, my background is I have a master's degree in
positive psychology from the University of Pennsylvania. So, like, I am not a neurologist. I'm,
obsessed with, I think my next book might be building a brave brain, because I'm really into
researching that. I love, but I'd say overall, based on what I know, that is,
a true statement. You know, the feeling of fear and excitement are almost identical, and we have the
power to reframe it. Like, I got to, I got to share one other thing because it's related, but I just love
how we're just going back and forth. This is awesome. So some of the most exciting research that I
love talking about is research by Dr. Aaliyah Crum out of Stanford. Oh, she is amazing. So she has
talked about something called a stress is enhancing mindset instead of a stress as debilitary.
or harmful mindset. So like this is another, you know, lie that we have been sold where people think,
like, stress is bad. Stress will kill you. Stress is horrible. You'll have a heart attack. Like,
if there is stress, you need to eliminate it. So she did this research on mindset on stress.
So what she found in her research is that if you believe that stress is bad for you, it will be
bad for you. What happens if you feel like stress is bad for you, you'll have a bad psychological
response. You'd be like, oh my God, this is horrible, it's horrible. And then you'll, it'll just,
you know, your response to the stress will make the stress even worse. Right. And then you'll
have a bad physiological reaction. If you think that stress is bad and you experience a stressful
event, what happens is inside of your vascular, inside of your lumen, which is the inside of your
veins and arteries, it will constrict. And then when it constricts, it will increase your blood
pressure. So if you, for a lifetime, think stress is bad. And guess what? In life, there's always
going to be stress, you will have a negative stress response psychologically the way you feel
and physiologically what happens to your body. But if you believe that stress is enhancing,
like, hey, being challenged, like, you know, this setback, this is going to make me stronger,
right? If you believe that stress is enhancing, then your body and your brain will believe you.
So from a psychological point of view, if you believe that stress or setbacks and challenges are good, like, you know what, we're going to learn from this, we're going to get through this. And all the other people, they're probably going to just tap out and we're going to get forward. So this is good, right? We're going to look at it as a positive thing. We're going to be more apt to be able to overcome the challenges and adversity if we think stress is enhancing. And also, she really looks at the physiological part of stress. If you believe that stress is enhancing your body,
believes you. So when the stressful event happens, you'll feel the, you'll feel like your heartbeat will go up,
you know, and you'll feel the endorphins in your body, but your lumen stays relaxed. So your blood
pressure doesn't go up. You know, and if you look at a lifetime of that difference, that can be the
difference between a premature heart attack at 55 versus someone living into their 90s. And so they have
this really amazing study, and I want to just talk about this study, because this is the one that blew
my mind. I do work mainly in organizations in the workplace. So they took this research on,
can we change someone's mind on stress? Can we educate them that stress is enhancing and does it
make an impact? So they went into a stressful workplace. This was in finance, like really high
stress. And they went in and they're the intervention. So you know, when you do an empirical study,
there's got to be the placebo where they get something, but it's not the actual
like treatment, and then you've got the people who actually get the treatment. So the treatment arm
was watching a three-minute video telling people that stress is enhancing. You know, we're built to
strive. Stress makes us stronger. It makes us smarter. It helps us grow. It's all scientifically
valid, you know, evidence, a three-minute video saying stress is enhancing. The placebo group,
they had to also watch a video. But what they did on the placebo video is they filled it with all the
headlines that you and I are used to seeing. Stress is horrible. Stress is going to kill you. So
avoid stress at all costs. So everyone got a three-minute video, and then they followed these people
over time. They looked at the impact on their performance and their job satisfaction, all these
different things. So they found the difference in performance. All these people had the same job,
same stressful job. The people that just were told that stress is enhancing ended up performing,
outperforming the other people that were told stress is horrible for you, and it was statistically
significant. They looked at job satisfaction, again, statistically significant. But here's where it's
really interesting. They also looked at the physiological response. There was also a huge difference
between the two. Actually, it was, I shouldn't say a huge difference. It was a statistical significant
difference in these two arms. And they looked at blood pressure, like we talked about just right there.
They also looked at DHEA, a hormone linked to resilience, was higher in the group that believed
that stress is enhancing by just watching a three-minute video. They watched the three-minute
video, I think, a couple times a week. But this is why I'm so passionate about this work is
I feel like people are sold lies. Stress is horrible, right? So avoid it. No, no. Like life will be
filled with challenges and setbacks and adversity and stress. And your belief about stress,
that's the thing that will kill you or make your life miserable. So the stress is enhancing
mindset. So, you know, in my book, the bravery effect, like we talk about the cognitive side
first, and we talk about the growth mindset, which you probably know Carol Dweck's work from
Stanford, like believing you have an ability to do hard things. It'll take work and effort,
but you can have a growth mindset. But I also teach the stress-enhancing mindset. Like, let's make
sure we, I want to give everyone the benefit that Alia Crum and Sean Acre and others did in that
study. And I want people to know that this is the truth, right? Stress is like a workout
for your brain. Just like it's, you know, weights are workout for your body. And when you,
when you stress your mind and you challenge your mind, you improve your cognitive function,
you grow and you develop. So it's just really exciting research and the fact that they did in
organizations and that simple intervention made a statistical significant difference. Like,
I'm on a mission to tell the truth. Stress is not bad. It's our beliefs about stress.
And fear is not something bad.
Fear is something we should, if you're not feeling fear, you're doing life wrong.
I want people to seek out fear.
And there's a difference between what I speak about and resilience speakers, right?
Because sometimes I get calls to speak on big stages because they're like, oh, we want a resilient speaker.
And I'm like, let me tell you, resilience is really about making sure that people can bounce back when something bad usually happens to them.
I'm like, I am the speaker that will tell people.
I want people to seek out.
I want you to proactively find things that will create challenges and adversity because
you're trying to climb that mountain toward whatever you want in life.
So instead of just passively like, okay, if you get knocked down, I'm going to teach you how to
get back up.
That's not what Jill's message is about.
I want you to be on the offensive.
I want you to be seeking things where you're going to encounter adversity and challenges.
I don't want to just wait until they happen to you.
Thank you for.
I feel like I was up on my.
on my pulpit for a while.
No, this has been absolutely fantastic.
I think this is a wonderful place to wrap.
I can talk you for another couple hours about this stuff.
I want everyone to buy the book, the bravery effect.
We're going to have that linked up.
So whether you're watching on YouTube,
listening wherever you do, just scroll down,
you'll find links to that.
Where else can they get deeper into your world?
Yeah, other than the book,
people can find me on jill shulman.com.
So it's my website, you know,
and it'll be in the show notes,
but Jill, last name is SC-8.
H-U-L-M-A-N. I've got a free bravery assessment. I have a free bravery blueprint. So if you go in and take
the assessment, it takes three minutes, and then they get a free bravery blueprint that really teaches
them how you can build this bravery muscle, right? And it's got cognitive workouts. It's the reframing.
It's got the behavioral psychology and social psychology, and it's all free. And then if you
choose to buy the book, I love the audiobook because it's a parable. I wrote the book as a
parable because I want people to actually read the whole thing. And I want the younger generation to read
So if anyone has any kids that are confused and they think that comfort, I mean, I really,
I dedicated the book to my daughters. And I'm just, I'm hoping they actually read it someday.
So we'll see. It's been out of the market for six months. I'm still holding my breath.
I don't want to task them to read it. But so you can find me just online, jill shulman.com.
My books, all anywhere books are sold. And then I'm getting out of my comfort zone. I'm on
Instagram. You know, I'm on Facebook. I'm on LinkedIn mainly. But I make a commitment because one of the parts of
helping us stay brave is to make sure that we fill our feed with the correct science and
information that will help you do the brave thing each day. So that's my commitment, at least three
times a week. It's like three to five. I commit at least three times. I have a post that will be
something that will motivate you to keep the promise to yourself and be brave every day. It's the
everyday moments of bravery. That has the profound compound effect of your life. So not just the brave
moments, but be brave for yourself each day. I absolutely love it. It's been my pleasure.
We're out of here, guys. Peace.
