The School of Greatness - How to Detach From Work Before It Destroys Your Life | Dr. Guy Winch
Episode Date: January 5, 2026Guy Winch reveals that when you're stressed at work, your partner at home can actually start developing symptoms of burnout themselves, even if they don't work. The most surprising truth? Your workday... doesn't end when you close your laptop. It ends when you stop thinking about work, and most people never truly clock out. He exposes why relaxation alone won't recharge you after mental exhaustion and shares the counterintuitive actions that actually restore your energy. This isn't just about surviving your job. It's about reclaiming the parts of yourself you've been amputating one by one while everyone around you suffers the spillover.Guy’s books:Emotional First AidThe Squeaky WheelHow to Fix a Broken Heart (TED Books)Mind Over GrindIn this episode you will:Break free from rumination that keeps you stuck in fight-or-flight mode hours after work by converting your emotional spiral into a solvable problem with a simple three-step processUncover the shocking truth about why relaxation is only 50 percent of what you need to recover from burnout, and what recharging activities will actually fill your batteryDiscover why your unhealed wounds are making you choose unhealthy relationships at work and home, and the exact moment you need to look in the mirror instead of blaming othersTransform how you think about stress by understanding that your job isn't stressful all the time, it has stressful moments, and this one reframe can dramatically lower your cortisol levelsMaster the psychological ritual that trains your brain to detach from work mode, using all five senses to create a transition your nervous system will recognize instantlyFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1872For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Caroline LeafMark MansonSimon Sinek Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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If you are stressed out at work, your partner, who might not be working, will start to develop symptoms of burnout.
Really?
That's how much the transfer happens. We think we manage it. We really don't.
Psychologist and author and host of his own psychology podcast.
His TED Talk been viewed by over 4 million people.
He's been working with individuals, couples. Please welcome Dr. Guy Wynch.
I've worked with many people who thought they had fallen out of Lavo, whose partner suddenly changed.
And I'm like, is your partner who changed, or is it you?
Is it your work stress that has become so chronic that you can't feel it?
How can time travel reignite love or passion in a relationship?
An exercise that I suggest to couples reenact.
One of the earlier dates you had in which you realized you started to have feelings for one another.
Try and go through that first magical moment.
Couples were able to do it, were able to really kind of take it on as a fun project.
And even in prepping for it, they were starting to get into the mindset.
Interesting.
Stress is entirely psychological.
The messaging is critical, which is super useful because we can actually do it.
Yes.
And it seems like a cheat, but it's not a cheat.
It's a cheat the other way when we keep using it in the negative way to stress ourselves
out.
What is one psychological way to manage our mind to overcome burnout in life?
So.
Welcome back, everyone at the School of Greatness.
I'm with the inspiring Guy Wynch, and he is an internationally renowned psychologist and
best-selling author, and his talks have been viewed more than 35 million times, and his science-based
books have been translated into 30-plus languages. Today, he's here to offer a guide to combating
the many stresses, modern work, and poses on our relationships. Guy, I'm so pumped that you're
here. And it's a thrill to be here again. It's exciting, man. I'm excited about this,
and I have a powerful first question for you.
A lot of people are struggling relationships today.
And I'm curious, is the biggest reason
that people are struggling in their relationships
and their work relationships, romantic relationships,
friendships, having to do with the person
they're in the relationship with or the wound
they haven't healed within themselves yet?
Ah, well, look, the wounds they haven't healed
within themselves are probably causing them
to make difficult choices in who they're in relationships with.
The two are related.
In other words, when you've healed the wounds within you,
you are more likely to choose more healthy relationship partners
and to form healthier relationships.
And that includes the romantic, the personal friendships,
and even work.
We don't like to stay in unhealthy relationships
when we feel healthy inside.
That's true.
So if we're unhealthy inside, we have wounds inside
and we have all these relationships already established
with years of history,
How do you start either unwinding those unhealthy patterns in those relationships?
Do you just eliminate all those relationships?
Or do you take a look in the mirror and say, oh, I've got work to do in this part of the relationship?
How do we start that once we're aware that we are having breakdown in multiple relationships?
Well, you have to start with looking within yourself.
And like, so what is it about me that's choosing these kinds of people or these kinds of relationships?
what is it about me that's tolerating,
staying in situations that are not great for me
and that I might not even like.
A lot of people are in relationships
that make them miserable, but they stay in them.
Why?
Many, many reasons.
They tell themselves that that's the best they can do.
It's a sunk cost kind of thing.
Well, I've already invested all these years,
and I don't want to start looking
because it's such a difficult marketplace out there, as it were.
I mean, it's very, you know,
people are very afraid of starting over
in that. So let me just stay where I am and then they find reasons to, oh, maybe this is not too
terrible today. So I guess it's okay when it might not be terrible today, but it's generally not
great. But when you start to work on yourself and when you start to change, two things will
happen. You will either start making different choices or you will start changing in such a way
that certain people will just drop out because you're not fun for them anymore.
They don't get away with their stuff anymore because you're starting to set limits.
You're starting to be more assertive.
You're starting to set expectations.
And so suddenly, this is not working for me.
I like running roughshod or I like being, you know, like the boss of this.
Or I like things my way entirely.
People will drop out.
They'll start to fade away.
Or you'll have so much conflict that you'll drop out.
You'd be like, ah, this just doesn't work for me.
It's one or the other.
But there is a cleaning house that often happens when people really start to change.
What age do people start waking up around seeing if their relationships in their life are working for them or not?
Is there a season of life that usually people are like, huh, you know, I'm 25 or I'm 30 now and like, oh, these high school or college friends, maybe I'm not that same person anymore or the relationship I've been in for six or seven years.
I'm not who I was when I started that relationship.
Is there a season that people usually wake up to recognizing if the relationships are working or not?
So when I was younger, there used to be this thing called like the midlife crisis, which was never a thing.
Yes.
But they called it a midlife crisis and it happened around 40, which is also not where midlife is, really.
But that was when people start to second guess.
But it's actually about circumstances.
So, for example, when there are external stresses that happen on the relationship, we saw it during the pandemic.
We saw it after 9-11.
When something big happens in the world that stresses the relationship, it forces a contemplation.
It forces you to start to think like,
is this working and it either brings people closer
or it pushes them apart.
Really?
How does someone create that artificially
without having, you know, a war or some pandemic?
How do you create that to see if you're with the right person?
You know, it's interesting.
When I used to teach couples therapy
and one of the things, one of the wisdoms of couples therapy is,
and family therapy,
therapy, it's the same thing because it's a system, is that they will not change unless they're in
crisis because they're too comfortable and change is uncomfortable. But in a crisis, you're already
uncomfortable, you're more likely to change. And so some of the wisdoms, if they're not in crisis,
put them in crisis as a therapist. Put pressure on them so that the crisis happens and they're
forced to examine. What are some ways you can put crisis on a relationship? So not as a therapist,
because I'm not suggesting everyone rushes to couple therapists and say, stress us out. We don't
that either. That's not the best use of it. But it's to actually self-examine. It's actually to
have a conversation. First with yourself. I mean, first get clarity within you. Is this working
for me? Is it not? And it's not a yes or no. It's like what is working? What isn't? Am I generally
happy? We, in a society today, we're all, you know, the part of the thing about the grind
is that when we're in the grind, it's work, it's everywhere. Our head is down. We just go from
thing to thing to thing, we don't pause to lift our head up and go, wait, is this working
for me? Am I happy? Is this where I want to be going? Is this where I want to be? We just
keep going in this autopilot mode. And when we're in autopilot mode, we often fly into the face
of the cliff. And so it's just lifting your head and starting to ask yourself the important
questions. That alone can start not putting you in crisis, but start alerting you. And then once
you start having those conversations with the other people, then you start getting somewhere
in terms of, do I have a partner here? Your book, Mind Over Grind, How to Break Free When Work Hijacks
Your Life, talks a lot about overcome burnout and kind of this stress that you just mentioned
where it's just like, you know, people are on autopilot of just working very hard, that it's
hard to have emotional space to have fun and have joy and love and peace and harmony. And
in your relationships outside of work, it sounds like, for a lot of people, if they don't know
how to create boundaries or structure or space or time away. Do you feel like work is one of the
biggest reasons why people are struggling in intimate relationships if they don't know how to
navigate work? Work has a huge impact on our relationships outside of work as well. And when I was
doing research for this book, I was so stunned by some of the research. And what it was saying,
Like there's research that shows that if you are stressed out at work,
your partner who might not be working will start to develop symptoms of burnout.
Really?
That's how much the transfer happens, the spillover into your home life.
When you are stressed out at work, your partner can lose their sex drive.
Because primarily, you're no fun to be around.
And I don't mean you personally.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But that's the thing.
We think we manage it.
we really don't manage it at all.
And so this grind is we just keep going
but without asking ourselves the question.
But yes, it's really impacting our relationship.
There's other research that shows
that when somebody is really stressed and pressured at work,
they will not only fall down on their responsibilities at home
with the kids, with their partners.
They will actively undermine their partner within their home,
unconsciously, not even being aware necessarily that they're doing it.
What does that look like to undermine their partner at home?
What are some ways?
Here's an example.
You come from work.
You had a very, very long and stressful day.
And, you know, the kids run to your partner and say, hey, can I have another cookie?
Can I watch TV?
Can I spend another hour on the iPad?
And your partner appropriately says, no.
Okay, and then they'll run to you.
hey can I have a cookie iPad hour etc and you'll be like yeah fine whatever
and it won't even occur to you like wait let me check with them actually what are the rules
what is the thing because you're checked out so you know you're you're doing that we
we bring home resentment sometimes from work toward home because home doesn't get our families
don't get how stressed out we are what we had to go through all day
Do you think people's lack of work-life balance then is causing them to feel stressed at home, or is work-life balance a myth?
Work-life balance is not a myth, but I think it exists primarily or needs to in our own head.
The work-life balance is how we psychologically think about, our work and our personal life, our professional identity, and our personal or family.
identity. Those boundaries get confused in our heads. And what happens is that when our work
gets very demanding, and by the way, this happens when we are engaged with our work, when we love
our work, when we're passionate about our work, we lose the boundaries between that and we start
to amputate aspects of ourselves one by one. We start to push them aside. We start to lose them. We start to
lose touch with them. And we become two-dimensional workers. We become true drones in doing
what we're doing and feeling, oh, but we're happy in what we're doing. But we're not, really,
because we just neglected entire aspects of our personality, our relationships, of our life
outside of work. And it happens gradually, usually. And before we know it, it's just that. Here's a
thought experiment that I suggest people do. If tomorrow work were taken away, something was erased. And
you had no work.
What would you do?
No, who are you?
Oh.
What's your identity?
Yeah, who are you then?
What's your light about then?
Interesting.
And for many people, they blink at me and they go,
because there's not much.
That's interesting.
What should people try to be if there was no work?
It's not about inventing something.
It's about who did you used to be?
What aspects of yourself are not coming to the,
the forer, not getting any oxygen. Yeah. What, what, you know, because people, you know,
in the book I talk about this one guy, he was a lawyer, and he was, oh, uptight, and he was so rigid,
and so, like, you know, like, he was like, he would sit like that. He was so, and it turned out
in college he did improv. He used to do improv, yeah. Yeah, and, which is like, spoiler alert,
that happens later, but, but I was like, there was not a shred of that. No joy. No fun, no joy.
I had never seen his teeth.
Never seen his teeth.
And so I'm like, oh, my God, that's how deeply buried that had become.
Yeah.
And clearly it was a part of him.
Why do you think people lose so much of their joy?
Is it tied to work stress or pressures of life or societal things?
Why is that?
Because we have so much joy.
Well, not everyone.
You know, some people have a lot of pain and suffering growing up,
but most people have joy and play in their life growing up.
and then work, they lose play.
Now, I get you have to have results
and you've got to make money
and you've got to create profits
on all these different things,
but why did they lose that?
Is it all related to work?
First of all, joy is considered a nice to have,
not a must have for a lot of people.
But for a lot of people,
it's truly a reality of our time,
of the current workplace, the current economy.
They are working, you know,
two jobs or they're working a very demanding job,
then coming home, taking care of their kids.
They have very, very little time for themselves.
There's very little time to breathe.
There's very little time to even take their temperature
and ask themselves, what do they feel like doing?
But they just don't have that autonomy.
They don't have that space to even question it.
And so there's so much they have to get done
that they completely lose sight of that.
Like if something can go, well, joy will have to go.
Yes, I liked doing that, but I don't have time to do that anymore.
But, again, it creeps up on you so that you at some point end up with just duty all day.
You're in duty mode, whether it's as a parent, whether it's as a worker, whether it's as caretaker, whatever the thing is.
It's exhausting, right?
Well, that's why burnout is peaking.
I mean, the interesting thing about stress and burnout is that awareness of stress and burnout has gone up.
the awareness of the importance of work-life balance has gone up
and yet at the same time the awareness has gone up
stress and burnout are peaking in an all-time highs
really yes why is that because they're not contained to the workplace
because that stuff spills over
into our life outside of work and the ways I get examples about
in terms of our relationships in other ways such that
you can't just it's not about oh let's let's do something at work
to make things a little bit easier you have to manage
to manage your mind. You have to manage the psychology of your mind. Because for many of us,
for example, who have either demanding jobs or again, we're passionate about our work,
they're desperate to switch off at the end of the day and they cannot. Because they have
more responsibilities at home. No, because they're ruminating about work. Because they're obsessing
about it. Because they can't let go of that really annoying thing that happened or that really
dismissive thing that somebody said or that somebody didn't show up for them when they
had showed up for that person over and over again and it was so hurtful and disappointing,
they can't let it go.
Really? Why do people hold on to the obsession of what happens at work when they're at home
so much?
Look, our unconscious mind thinks work is the most important thing in our life because factually
it's where we spend most of our time.
It's what pays our bills.
It's what fulfills our needs.
It's what, you know, just looking at it factually like that must be the most important thing.
So anything that happens there is considered very important, number one.
Number two, interpersonal slights are really stick with us.
Wherever they happen, when somebody's rude, dismissive, uncivilized,
let alone when you're being bullied or harassed, it is very difficult to let that go.
So we obsess about it.
We ruminate about it.
And it's, those are intrusive thoughts.
Those are not voluntary thoughts.
That's not something we decide, I'm going to go home and obsess about how my coworker, you know,
was rude to me in the meeting for the, all the evening.
It's not something we do, but it's something we want to do.
But it's something that happens to us.
And then we're sitting there and we're checked out and we're trying to be present,
but our mind keeps getting dragged back into this bombardment of intrusive thoughts.
And we don't have the mechanism.
we don't know how to switch that off.
I talk about how to switch that off in the book,
but it's something we need to do
in a very deliberate way.
What is one psychological way
to manage our mind to overcome burnout in life?
So just to explain something about burnout,
when we are at work all day
and we're in a stressful work environment,
again, stressful not necessarily
because it's toxic, certainly if it is,
just because it's demanding, it's pressured.
We are in fight or flight.
Our bodies and our minds are in a battlefield.
And our mind doesn't really distinguish well
between whether the battlefield is happening in the boardroom
or actually in a battlefield.
So we are in fight or flight.
When we come home,
that is when we need to give our systems
a break from fight or flight.
You can't be activated all the time
because that's when wear and tear will happen,
exhaustion and burnout.
So when people come home,
and they're still thinking about work,
they're extending that fight of light
until they go to bed,
and then they're never getting a break from it.
So one thing that people can do,
and it's a really, it's a trivial thing, sounds like,
but it's a critical thing,
is you need to detach psychologically from work
at some point after work.
You maybe can't do it, you know, at seven or at eight,
but at some point it's got to be,
because your work day, by the way,
It doesn't end when you leave work.
Your work day doesn't end when you shut your laptop.
Your work day ends when you stop thinking about work.
Interesting.
And unless you stop thinking about work, you're still at work.
So you have to detach psychologically from work.
What's the best way you've studied or seen people do
and how they can break their mind from thinking about work
once they're away from work?
So there are two things.
First of all, I believe that you have to have a ritual
to transition from your workday to your personal time,
family time, even if it's family time
and parenting duties and caretaking duties,
whatever the thing is,
but that you're in a different mode
because you don't have to be in fight or flight for that.
You do often at work.
So there needs to be a ritual.
And the point of a ritual is it's repetitive
and it trains your brain.
That when you start doing it,
your brain learns over time,
we're about to change our mindset,
We're about to relax.
We do that with kids when we're putting them to bed, right?
An hour before they go to bed.
We bring the lights down, we slow things down, we move the toys away.
We prepare them to kind of settle down.
We need to settle down as well.
And so you want a transition that will help your brain learn that now it's time to shift from work mode.
And that should include as many of the senses as possible
because that's a deeper resonance within the brain.
So sound.
So music, very evocative.
Have your playlist that helps you relax
at the end of the day that you can listen to.
Our clothing is very embodied as a cognition for us.
Take your suit off and put something else on.
Or your wear clothes, right?
Yes.
Now, I am pretty casual in my job.
And I know people who work in T-shirts and jeans.
but have the t-shirts and jeans that you wear at work
and have different t-shirt and jeans
that you don't wear at work, that you wear at home
because your mind will learn to associate
when I put those on, then I'm in a relaxed mode.
So there's, you know, there's the sight that light,
you know, change the lighting when you get home.
Yes.
In any way, it doesn't really matter in which direction,
but just something that symbolizes for you,
now this is about home.
Use scent if you can, you know,
use all the senses that you can.
to really, and use the same ritual.
It has to be repetitive
so that when you start doing it,
that's the end of your day.
Here's one other thing that you can do,
and again, this is going to sound stupid.
But our brain takes some things, unfortunately, seriously.
One thing our brain takes really seriously is calendars.
And most people, when you look at their calendar,
it's all booked up with different colors all through the day,
and then the evening comes, and it's just white space.
And so your brain is not told what to be doing
in the white space.
Right.
Family time.
Right.
Vege out.
Write something that tells your brain, my task now is to do something that's relaxing, that's
recharging, that kind of thing.
Chill mode.
Chill mode.
Right, chill mode.
But write something so your brain knows that's my task now.
Uh-huh.
Give your brain a task, even if it's to do nothing.
Yes.
Interesting.
Do nothing is a great title.
Yeah, do nothing for the next five hours.
What would you say are the common coping strategies that people believe or help?
helping them overcome burnout, but are actually hurting them.
Some of the things people think to do, and this is very, very common, is they come home,
and you said, you know, like, do nothing, veg out, and they were like, I am going to slouch
down on the couch and binge this series or doomscrow for three or four hours.
I feel drained.
So I'm just going to relax
And here's the thing about that
You will wake up tired
The next morning
No matter how much you relax
Really? Yes
Because relaxation is only
50% of the story
Our brain
Confuses physical and mental exhaustion
It doesn't distinguish well
So you are mentally tired
Some people have very physically demanding jobs
most don't. Most are sitting with a screen all day. So when you get home, you're not physically
exhausted. You're mentally drained. Yes. And then relaxing won't drain you further, but it won't
recharge you. It won't fill the battery. What will fill the battery is something active that
is recharging for you. So I'm sure that, just use you an example, you know, when you get home
at the end of the day and you haven't had a chance to work out, you're athletic.
you're an athlete, you know, if you go and you go to a practice session with handball
or you do something, you might feel like, no, there's a last thing I feel like doing right now.
But if you force yourself to do it, when you get back, you're going to feel more energized
than before you left, even though you expended a bunch of energy, to do it.
If somebody is creative, if they're a painter, getting up and painting for half an hour,
or doing something creative, if they're an organizer organizing, if they're extrovert,
going and socializing and forcing themselves to get up,
even though they feel drained,
they will come back feeling more energized,
they will sleep better because relaxing is 50%,
recharging is 50%.
And the biggest mistake we make for burnout is,
well, we're tired, so we're just gonna relax.
And the other problem with that is that our brain is just like,
you just spent the entire day looking at a screen.
Now you're gonna look at the screen for a few more hours.
So, sorry, what's the difference?
Like, you know, where's the, you know,
how are you preventing?
like it's just the same thing, even if you're watching something different.
So the idea is, like, do something recharging,
and that's very individual for you.
So you can't just lay down and veg and watch.
You can do both.
Yeah.
But if that's all you're doing, then no.
Then you're going to be tired.
You talk about, you know, in one of your previous books,
you talked about emotional first aid, which is something I loved.
You also talk about how to heal a broken heart.
Are there any new emotional tools?
that you've learned in the last few years
that have been really helpful for people that you work with.
So one of them is about this rumination stuff.
I spoke about it in my book Emotional First Aid,
but I've developed my ideas a little bit further.
How bad is ruminating for someone's mind?
Well, it's bad for their body as much as for their mind,
because when you're ruminating,
you are flooding yourself with cortisol.
You are literally putting yourself into stress.
when you're home
and you start to think about
how annoying your boss was
when they did this
and they said that
and you'll feel it
you'll start to
it'll start to feel like
that feeling of stress
wherever you tend to feel it
and your shoulders, your stomach
whatever your typical stress
manifestation is
you will feel that
and so you are literally
putting yourself into fight or flight
you're putting yourself into stress
and rumination by definition
is an unproductive form of self-reflection
in other words we're not trying to figure it out
we're just, you know, we're just thinking about it.
It's so annoying when they said that.
And then we do this thing where we have a fantasy conversation with our boss that we'll never have.
In which we tell them off, we have mic drop moments, I wish I want to go in and I would say this to him.
I'm going to give him the finger and I want to like throw this at them and they're like, you're not going to do that.
But even in fact, now it might feel satisfying in the moment, but you're actually getting yourself really worked up in that scenario.
And people can go through those variations for hours,
literally hours spent on that kind of stuff.
Now, what we ruminate about and what causes the rumination
is not so much the incident, but the emotion that it evokes.
And so then we start rumination surfing
because that was so unfair that happened at work,
which reminds me of the other thing that was unfair
that happened three years ago,
which reminds me of the unfair thing that happened five weeks ago,
then now you're remembering and like life is so unfair.
And suddenly it's this downwards rabbit hole, the spiral, that just makes you feel so upset.
And again, it feels compelling.
It feels like you're thinking about something important, but you're not thinking it through.
You're just replaying the crappy parts of it.
So what you have to do to break out of that is, A, understand that it's being fueled by the emotion.
And then B, you have to do two things.
shrink the emotion, and convert it into a problem that can be solved.
How does someone convert rumination into something that can be solved?
Okay, so for example, your boss said something really annoying, shot you down in a meeting,
whatever it is.
The problem is as follows.
And there are many different problems you can pose.
Do I need to do something about that?
Do I need to address it with the boss directly?
Do I need to understand why they shot me down?
Is there something I can learn about the fact
that I was suggesting something that they tend to not like,
et cetera, et cetera?
Were they just in a bad mood and I can let it go
because that was unusual for them?
If it's something I need to address, how do I address it?
How can I learn what to say in the meeting
that they will actually endorse rather than,
let me decide to pay attention to what their boss is going,
to when people are speaking.
I'll keep my eye on the bus at the next meeting,
see what they're nodding, and try and conclude from that,
what are the kinds of things they're like?
like to hear versus snot, etc. Once you have a plan, it eases the stress. You can stop ruminating
because you have a plan, you've figured it out. But unless you pose it as a question of what do I
need to do, if anything, and if I need to do something, how do I address it? And if I need to
address it, what's the most effective way to do it? Once you start asking those questions,
you're figuring something out. Then you're literally trying to get to solutions. You're cutting
through all the angst along the way.
There just seems to be a lot of work stress in the, in societal's, I guess, conversations
a lot.
People are stressed, people are getting laid off work, the economy, the uncertainty of the economy
in the future, rising prices everywhere.
If someone's in love in a relationship romantically, but they go through years of work
stress, is it possible they could fall out of love romantically?
because of work stress.
And the second part, is it the boss
and the work environment's fault, or is it their fault?
Okay, part one.
Yes, people can fall out of love
when they're really chronically stressed.
Because it's numbing.
Yes.
So it's not that they're falling out of love per se,
it's that they're not feeling much.
It's numbing.
Yes.
You're just dealing with the pressures,
you don't have time,
to think or feel about other things.
There's something that's useful about that
because if you were actually feeling
how depressing your situation were,
you might not be able to function.
So to numb yourself in order to get through it
has its advantages.
But that can, again, spill over outside of work
and suddenly you become numb to many things
and that can be including your partner.
I've worked with many people
who thought they had fallen out of level
whose partner suddenly changed
and became really annoying
or really this or that
and I'm like,
it's your partner who changed
or is it you?
Like, is it your work stress that has become
so chronic that you can't feel it?
And then when they do get a break,
when they do kind of use these tools
to kind of lower the stress,
then they start to just reconnect
to the feelings.
But also it's dynamic
because if you're the partner
and this person is
standoffish, you know,
they come home at the end,
of the day and when you go up to give them a hug they're stiff because they're still in work
mode at some point you're not going to be a fan either and then it starts setting up a difficult
dynamic between two people interesting right gosh so work is the enemy huh so again a lot of this is
happening in our head work is difficult I want to be clear work is difficult but it's how we
manage it that's responsible for a large chunk of what we're doing to ourselves because we're not
creating that separation because we're not creating the boundaries, because we're not
nourishing ourselves in the way that we need to, to be able to manage that. Now, there's a lot
work can do to make things easier for us, like exhibiting caring. Like there's a study that
chose that when there's layoffs about to happen, and unfortunately, you know, how these
things work, layoffs are announced, but they're six months in advance. So let's tell everyone
that they're, you know. Someone's getting laid off. In six months. Get to work.
people, you know, it's like it's so difficult.
And so, you know, it's so, now, the research is that if you're a personal manager
who doesn't have any more information than you do, who can't control necessarily the
budgets, who doesn't necessarily know who's getting laid off, if they exhibit caring
to you, if they just say, hey, I know how difficult this is, how are you doing?
That reduces stress by a huge percentage.
Right. Just caring.
Everyone's empowered to do that.
Every manager, every team leader is empowered, every coworker.
is empowered to exhibit caring.
And it has a huge impact in a great way.
If someone has fallen out of love, you know, from work stress or just pressures of life,
what would you say are a few steps that they can try to reactivate those feelings and emotions
to fall back in love with their partner?
You just have to lower the stress, right?
I mean, when you're trading water and the water's up to here, you need to lower.
the water first.
I mean, you need to get more breathing room.
Yes.
And there's a bunch they can do to get more breathing room.
Because again, a lot of that stress is spent on ruminating.
Stress is very psychological, right?
Like people say to me sometimes, like, what do I do about the fact that my job is just
very, very stressful?
But does it have to be stressful?
Can you change the way you think about it?
Yeah, yeah.
Let's say the job is typical, is comparatively stressful.
Yes.
you can do about that, stop telling yourself that your job is very stressful. Because what that
means is that... It's reinforcing it, right? Yeah. It's reinforcing it. But there are many moments in which
it's not. It's many moments in which it is. And there are many moments at which there's a lunch break
in which it's not stressful. There are a few meetings which aren't terrible. But you're telling
yourself that those two are stressful and terrible. So you're keeping yourself on alert and you're
likely to perceive any negative thing that happens there as, see, that's stressful too. And that's, so
you're poisoning yourself into perceiving things that are more ambiguous or not that stressful,
as stressful. So don't say my job is very stressful. Say my job has stressful elements. I use
firefighters as an example because I work with a bunch of firefighters. And is their job very
stressful? They run into burning buildings. Yeah. Those moments are very stressful. Those moments
are very stressful. There's a lot of downtime where they're just hanging out and just kind of relaxing and
sleeping and waiting. And they always say to me like, no, my job isn't very stressful. There are
moments that are but we are in the firehouse most of the time yeah and then it's stressful yeah
if it's my turn to cook it's stressful because people hit my cook it you know like that kind of thing um
but it's like it's a great lesson i took from them like yeah if they can describe their job as
intermittently stressful then that's true of most of us yeah and that framing alone makes a big difference
the framing of it is yeah it's finding ways to almost play a game in your mind when you go to work right
it's like, how can I make today fun, even though usually it's stressful?
How can I crack a little joke with a co-worker in between a stressful moment?
How can I shake it off in the bathroom and just kind of relax?
How can I listen to some music that brings me a little joy throughout the day?
How can I do something?
How can I prepare my favorite meal for lunch?
So I know I have something to look forward to.
Perfect.
Like every couple hours, like there's going to be joyful moments throughout my day.
How can I send a funny meme to a friend, whatever it is like,
How can I do something where my day becomes more enjoyable where you can actually enjoy work
rather than just be overwhelmed and stress by it?
And again, it doesn't mean there's not going to be stressful moments and pressure-filled
moments and responsibilities, but how can you reframe the way you think and act every day, work
and life?
Absolutely.
Find one thing to look forward to during the day.
And it could be what you just said is a great example.
I prepared my favorite meal for lunch, so at least I'll get 15.
minutes to have that and I look forward to that. As long as you say that to yourself and you frame that
to yourself, it immediately, it's amazing because people will think, well, that doesn't change
anything. It does. Stress is entirely psychological. It is entirely our tolerances and what we're
telling ourselves. The messaging is critical, which A, is super useful because we can actually
do it. Yes. And it seems like a cheat, but it's not a cheat. It's a cheat the other way when we
keep using it in the negative way to stress ourselves out. We can reclaim that and use it to
decrease our stress. What is the difference between two people who are going to the same work
environment where one person doesn't seem like a lot phases them, even though there's pressure-filled
stressful moments and the other person is always on alert and overwhelmed and overstressed? What is
the difference between those two people in a similar environment? Well, it's their mindset.
Because the overly stressed person has come, you know, anticipating the worst, expecting a very difficult day, knowing.
Now, by the way, if you have a very difficult meeting coming up, then you should prepare for it.
You should like raise your defenses and be like, take a deep breath and like, okay, I know this is going to be difficult.
You know what I can do?
I'm going to sit through it.
And then I'm going to text my friend to say, hey, can I call you for five minutes off towards just to be able to like complain about like, oh, no.
You know, like I can do something like that.
But they're setting themselves up
to experience all of the distressful
because they're like, oh, I hate this.
I hate my job.
If you say to yourself, I hate my job,
and you're not looking for another job, it's a problem.
Yeah.
Because you're just making yourself miserable.
Don't stay there.
Either change the way you feel about it
or don't stay there.
Or say, I hate certain aspects of my job.
I don't mind others.
I just be more tempered, be more realistic.
Yes.
what is the biggest challenge that you face personally with your psychological mind the way you think
after four decades of studying the mind in psychology what is your biggest struggle still
the biggest struggle I have is that I can't get away with much yeah you're like
dang it like I know here I know when I
I'm doing something incorrectly.
I know or I should be doing something else.
I know like, really, we're having a pity party now.
You know, that's not, like, I can't shut the voice up in the back of my mind that now.
Once in a while, I'll be like, I'm going to feel bad for myself for an hour.
I'm giving myself the hour.
Sure, sure, sure.
But it's, it's, it's, because look, emotional health in general and having the right mindset, you know this, it's actually really effortful.
it's so much easier to just go with the misery.
You know, that's the default.
Let me just give in to it.
Let me just, like, you know, succumb to it.
It's actually really difficult to have to go,
no, I know that's not the right thing to do.
I know I can get myself out of this mood
if I just do A, B, and C.
So, come on, do A, B, and C.
You know, or when I get home
and I, like, tired, and then I want to be just like,
I just want to veg out.
No, do something recharging,
even if it's 15 minutes.
Because you know the science, you know the research.
I know, and if I haven't experienced it yet, then I constantly come across situations
in life where I work with someone who had this three years ago, and I remember exactly
what I said to them.
Don't be a hypocrite.
So that's my, that's my story.
You can take it away with this stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
That's hilarious.
I want to have a practical question for you around relationships.
Is it bad for a couple to argue over text or email versus arguing?
or communicating in person?
There are some couples who are very explosive, number one,
and two, who miscommunicate or mishear.
Usually those things go together.
And they're just not very productive.
When they speak in person?
When they do it in person.
It escalates really, really quickly or like, wait, did you say this?
No, I didn't say that.
Yes, you did.
It's that kind of stuff.
You know, people, when they come to couples therapy,
it's remarkable.
We'll have two people in the same room.
We had an argument last night.
One person says one story, the other person's sending you a different story.
Now, it's not different perspectives.
They truly misremember one of them does or both of them do what was said, you know.
So for some people, when you're doing it over text or over email, two things happen.
Number one, you have to compose the text or the email.
So that is immediately bringing you down from the kind of amygdala activation kind of thing
into a little more of a calmer mindset
because you have to sit and write it.
You can, and it gives you the opportunity
to read what you're hopefully writing
and to amend it.
And it's a written record, so you can't say.
You didn't say that, yes, I did say that.
Well, now we kind of know who said what.
What a lot of people do today, by the way,
is they'll put it into an AI and say,
was this as hostile as I think?
Or do they really mean this?
Really?
Yeah, people said to me all the time.
I put all the text into AI, and AI thought I was right that that's a hostile thing.
And I'm like, if you tell AI, like, is there hostility here?
AI will say to you, yeah, yeah, I'll find it.
Sure.
But that doesn't mean, it necessarily was.
Anyway, but, you know, I mean, by the time we, you know, this comes out,
AI will have developed and we never know.
But the point is, like, for some people, it's more effective, actually, to do it.
And I know people who naturally do that, they literally will sit in a different room
and they'll be arguing, like, crazy, over text.
And A, it can be useful because the kids are like,
my parents never argue, I'm like,
because they're doing it over text.
Wow.
Interesting.
But you could also be explosive and mean over text as well,
but then you have a record of what you said,
and you're like, oh, it does.
I'm a jerk.
I'm the jerk.
Look at that, yeah, yeah.
It does kind of.
You can't delete that.
No, that's right.
And it does kind of prevent you from like,
I can't just say I set it out of anger
because I wrote it and then I pressed send.
So it's not it.
It's just going to still do that.
A lot of people say, like, oh, if I could have taken the words back when they came out of my mouth, you can.
You just don't present.
Exactly.
No, you mentioned AI.
Is AI, do you think AI is helpful or hurtful in intimate relationships?
The use of AI, people using AI in certain ways, or just AI in general.
Reviewing text messages and conversations, asking AI for help from romantic stuff, like, is this helpful or hurtful?
Look, I don't know what you hear.
hear a lot of different things. I rarely hear. I asked AI to find the most romantic date I can
for my partner. I told AI everything about my partner and asked, what can I do to delight them
for their birthday or for an anniversary or for a Valentine's Day? Like, I'm sure some people use it
for that, which would be terrific, but most people are litigating on AI. Really?
Yeah, the litigating, you know, like they're putting in all of this, like who's right,
who's wrong, aren't they terrible?
Are they not terrible?
It's for that.
And for a lot of people who are not in the relationship
but want to be in the relationship,
it's, well, do they love me?
Do they really care?
They're asking AI.
Oh yeah, here's the texts.
And, you know, like, but is, are they into me then
or are they not because I can't make it out?
And so they're like asking for a relationship advice.
And again, AI right now is still prone
to tell us what we want to hear.
And we're not very shy about indicating
what it is we want to hear.
So it's not the most,
you know, like, you know, real necessarily thing.
It'll give you a nice, sanitized version of what you might want to hear.
But that can be terribly useful if you're actually using it to generate ideas.
Like some people will, you know, do it for like, I need to talk to my partner about something
sensitive.
What's the best way to phrase that?
Yeah.
How do I bring it up in a way that's not hurtful?
Or here's what I'm thinking of saying.
Can that be offensive in any way?
You know, and if so, what can I do in a way that wouldn't be offensive?
Yes.
That's a great use.
Why is it so hard for people to start a relationship and tell the person they're into,
just getting to start in the relationship, that they're actually interested in them,
that what their intentions are, that they like them, that they want to create more with them?
Why is that hard for so many people to just say how they feel about the person they're starting to date or see?
Instead of questioning, does this person like me or should I say this now,
Why is that so hard for people?
Look, it's tricky, because there's some people
that if you say to them, hey, I like you,
they will, for some people, it will make them like you less.
Because if they have any kind of self-esteem issues,
then you're saying you like them,
and you don't know about their self-esteem issues
at the beginning, you saying you like them
makes them have an unconscious reaction to,
well, really already, I don't know what's wrong with them.
You know, like something.
Well, maybe they're not the right person then.
Perhaps.
I do think those things work out.
Collasically, like, wounded.
So, like, do you want that relationship?
True.
But they still think that, you know, they want that.
It makes you emotionally vulnerable, you know, for sure, because now you're saying, like,
and my issue with it is that if you're starting to date someone and you like them, you really
have to acknowledge that you don't know them well.
Of course.
At all.
So saying I like you without qualifying it.
True.
Saying like, hey, I'm really just getting to know you.
but so far, I like what I see so far.
Oh, I've enjoyed our first few dates so far.
I still know nothing about you.
Yeah, except for three days of hanging out.
But I think it's fair to say, you know, I still don't know you,
but so far I like it.
You know, like that seems more, you know, balanced.
Yes.
But then I love you.
You're amazing.
Yeah.
But here's another issue that I come across.
People because of social media today are learning incorrectly,
a lot of issues about dating.
So somebody showed me a text that they sent someone
that the friend said,
so this person had a date with someone, it was two dates,
and after that second date, they said,
hey, I really enjoyed the date, I really like you.
And then that person took a, other person took a step back.
and when they, not go so, but they took a step back.
Now, they pursued, and they did get to see that person again,
so they asked them at some point, why did you take a step back?
And that person said, because I showed the text to my friends,
and they all were like, oh my God, they're love bombing you.
Red flag.
They're love bombing.
Wow.
I liked you.
I enjoyed our dates.
I really hope you can get to see each other again, was considered love bombing, which obviously
doesn't seem like it at all.
It's not remotely.
But like they learned the term on social.
media so they misapplied it and then now that's a warning sign so so people are also misinterpreting
man that's crazy what do you want them to say uh just nothing no engagement or just say
see you next time like what you know what are you supposed to say hey i had a fun time when can i see you again
yeah that's it you can't say i like you you you you can't say i like you you you can but but this is when you get a
weird reaction to that understand it's not you it is not you should people be asking their friends
about everything the person did or didn't do
after the dates and asking them to interpret
when they're actually not love experts?
It's not only that they're not a love expert.
They have biases, right?
Are they happy in their relationships
and they're really happy for you to have one?
Or they unhappy in theirs
and therefore maybe not be entirely happy for you
to find love in yours?
Or do they have some jealousy issues?
They do not really express but they're there?
Or do they, are there,
in a miserable point, a jaded point in their dating life or in their relationship life where
they're just like thinking, all relationships are. Like, you know, everyone has biases. And you have to
account for the biases of the people you seek counsel from at any stage when it comes to relationships
because they will bring those biases to the advice. And when someone is getting into a relationship
and let's say they have unhealed emotional wounds, they haven't faced any of their emotional
wounds at all and they're getting into a relationship. What could you expect that relationship
to happen once they get into it? Based on what those wounds are, they're going to be some
issues that come up because it's not going to be smooth sailing. I mean, you know this. Relationships
take a lot of work and they take a lot of honesty and first of all with yourself and they take a lot
of mutual guidance, right? You're building something together. If you have certain, you have certain
emotional wounds, then you're not building something necessarily in the right direction or
correctly, or what you think is correct might not be, or what you saw at home from your
own childhood, from your own experiences, might not be a great model. And so, like, it'll tilt
things in a certain way. Now, it's never too late to get a handle on those. It's never too late
to understand what your emotional wounds are and how they might be impacting your relationship
and your feelings about the other person, you know,
and what you tend to assume, like, oh, this is my love language.
A lot of people, you know, love language is like, you know,
just avoid my wounds, and that's not a love language.
That's, you know, that's...
Yeah, don't do anything to annoy me.
Yeah, that's not a love language.
If two people get into a relationship
who have unresolved wounds or traumas,
and you could have, give them a game plan
on how to have a healthy long-term relationship,
What would be the actions they would both need to take to start healing those wounds,
assessing them, integrating the healing journey, what would that look like?
Because most people come to a relationship wounded.
We probably all have certain wounds.
Even if you've done some work on yourself, you'd probably still have something lingering
or something comes to the surface eventually again.
So what would be a good game plan together?
If, if, and I say if, because I don't know a lot of couples to do this,
if they could start,
by acknowledging to themselves and to one another,
acknowledging overtly,
hey, I have not been great in relationships in the past.
I have some stuff.
You have some stuff.
We both have some stuff.
But there's potential here.
Let's start with that acknowledgement,
that we have some stuff that might impact us along the way.
And let's keep an ongoing dialogue about how things are going,
what feels good, what doesn't, where our stuff might be rearing its head and what we can do about it.
Let's keep a spotlight on that, not every second because that's exhausting, but like let's intermittently do check-ins.
Let's intermittent and let's be open to that kind of feedback.
Not that you're bad, I'm bad, you did something wrong, I did something wrong, this is our stuff manifesting.
You could just use this neutral term of this is our stuff, these are our wounds manifesting.
How do we manage them in this context?
That's good idea.
I think acknowledging from the beginning,
I think I told you this last interview that when I started dating Martha,
I said, I want to commit to therapy in the beginning of our relationship
where I can personally grow, you can personally grow,
and we can grow together with whatever stuff we have going on.
And try to create more alignment, more agreements from the start,
rather than a year or two in, frustration comes about.
Now we have to kind of resolve something together
and create agreements later.
Let's start with it now.
For me, that was the best thing
that I've probably ever done in the relationship
just by, it just made us appreciate one another also.
Like, hey, we're in this together.
We both got to figure stuff out
and we've got to figure it out together.
That has been really supportive of our relationship.
And again, it doesn't make anything perfect or whatever,
but it makes it smoother.
Right.
And it makes the challenging times easier to manage.
Right.
And when something comes up,
you don't have to start with this whole preamble about look there's something a need to bring up
it's just like red there's there's there's an openness to absolutely yeah how can time travel
reignite love or passion in a relationship so a lot of times people will say to me like we've been
together for a while it's not that the passion is gone but it's like we're both a little fatigued
uh-huh with a relationship with each other and sometimes um an exercise
that I suggest to couples, which is a difficult one, and it's a production lift. But if you can do it,
it's remarkably effective. And that is like reenact, not just necessarily your first date,
but one of the earlier dates you had in which you realized you started to have feelings for one
another. And by reenact, I mean reenact. Go back to the bar or to the club.
the same kind of clothes that you wore you know go to and if the restaurant doesn't
exist find a similar one like literally try and set that it was a Christmas and
they were this and they were there go to the place do the thing like and and do
this long setup of when you're in the moment of you know because you're coming to you
know to a date so so you know start separately try and get into the mindset of how
you felt at the time like, wow, I, you know, this is a fourth date or a tenth date and I kind of
really like her, but da-da-da-da-da, or I really liked him, but-da-da-da, and then try and get
and then literally go through that date.
Really?
Again, it really helps you kind of remember how exciting it was at the beginning, how, you know,
how, like this new love that was starting to kind of, you know, appear and start, you know,
the infatuation that was starting to kind of take over.
Those are the really fun moments of dating, right?
The initial infatuation, and you want to make them linger,
and they don't linger that long,
but you want to try and make them do that.
But try and recapture that uncertainty of it.
You didn't know that you're going to end up together.
You didn't know that it's all going to work out.
So have the uncertainty.
I don't know.
I mean, I really hope this is the one, but I don't know.
And then try and go through that first magical moment.
And in prepping for it, it might take a lot of prep
based on where it was who it was who was there but but couples were able to do it were able to
really kind of take it on as a fun project and even in prepping for it there was starting to get
into the mindset interesting what have you seen by people who have recreated their kind of first
date moment with some couples it's interesting because they had to go back let's say 20 years in
fashion uh-huh yeah yeah yeah so they had to go to like vintage stores to kind of find the thing
that you know what it's like an adventure though right it's like a it wasn't a
but some of them chose to keep that clothing
and to wear the clothing every once in a while
because it reminded them, or to bring souvenirs back
that they didn't think to take at the time
or to have reminders around
to kind of remind them of that exciting kind of time.
In terms of the emotional first aid strategies,
what would you say is the most effective science-backed tool
that you've either developed or,
learned, that can help people reclaim, I guess, autonomy over their thoughts and emotions that are
keeping them stuck in life in general.
So to me, when people are stuck in life, it's because they're dealing with some kind of sense
of failure.
They're feeling unsuccessful in some kind of way.
Something's not working.
And they have some kind of story about it.
And that story is what's keeping them stuck.
Really?
Because the story is, like, I can't do this,
so this doesn't work out for me,
or if it's the workplace, well, the boss doesn't like me,
so I can't get ahead.
You know, there's some kind of story,
and they're stuck in the wound of it.
They're stuck in the feeling bad of it.
Now, I believe in this might seem very mechanistic
and cold in some way,
but I believe that in like limits
to how long you get to feel bad about certain things in life,
like failures or like unsuccesses.
And based on the level of that, give yourself an hour,
if it's small, a day, if it's bigger, a week, if it's very big.
But beyond that, if you're just feeling bad
or demoralized or helpless, you're not getting anywhere.
And I do that with myself.
It's one of the annoying things that I force myself to do, which I really...
You're like, I can't ruminate for days.
I'm going to do an hour.
But the point is, like, when it happens, I then determine how long I gave myself.
Because otherwise, I can keep stretching it.
Just one more day.
No, this is worthy of this much.
And then after that, there has to be a pivot.
And the pivot has to be an analysis that is self-critical free.
Because what really sabotages us is when we start looking at what's not working
and I'm an idiot, I'm, you know, like, I'm so stupid, why am I a loser?
Like, all that stuff, it has zero value.
It's not motivating.
It's not enhancing our self-esteem and it's certainly not helping our confidence.
Yes.
Right?
It's literally just like, oh, you know, it's choking us.
So it has to be a critical free analysis.
And the critical free analysis is what's not working for me, where are the obstacles,
and then you name each obstacle for,
example, boss doesn't like me so I can't get promoted.
You name each obstacle and then for each one, you start brainstorming, how do you get around
that obstacle?
Boss doesn't like me.
It's two things.
How do I change to another boss or how do I get the boss to like me?
Because you can change the boss's opinion.
So who does the boss like?
Why do they like them?
What are they doing?
What are they having?
You know, if, okay, the boss is like misogynist, he doesn't like me because I'm a woman.
Right.
Then I might need to change because I'm not going to be given the same opportunity.
here. So then I really need to shift my strategies, but then I'm starting to think about what are
my options. The minute you're starting to think how to get around an obstacle, then you're already
out of paralysis. You're already not stuck. You're already not demoralized. And we all know that
failure is the best teacher, et cetera. What people get stuck is they don't know how to implement
that because they start to look at the failure and they just makes them feel crappy. So they
stop as opposed to like, no, you're feeling crappy because you're beating yourself up as you're
doing it. Approach it like a detective. Don't have feelings about it. Just analyze.
I mean, it sounds like we're talking about getting self-respect. How important is having
self-respect in all relationships? And what are the fastest ways that you see people losing their
own self-respect? Well, one of the fastest way people lose their self-respect is by having this
internal voice of a bully.
I'm not saying harsh.
I'm saying bully.
They are the bully to themselves.
They are a major bully for themselves.
How bad is that?
How bad is that for self-respect?
Well, if somebody outside were, you know,
if somebody else were like constantly in your head,
because that bullying goes on a lot.
Like, I know people who literally
will call themselves loser 30 times a day.
Wow.
Can you imagine?
If you had somebody following you around in life
going, loser, loser, loser, loser,
you'd be like, this is torturous.
but we do it to ourselves, and many people do it now.
They say to me like, well, I'm trying to motivate myself.
I'm like, are you, though?
Because would that be motivating for anyone else
if you did it to them?
Well, no, but.
I'm like, there's no no but.
You know, like, well, I'm trying to be a coach.
I'm like, that coach will get fired right away.
Because a coach is trying to increase the confidence
of their players, set a high expectation.
Tell them they can do it, not tell them they can't.
You know, if you're like, oh, nothing works for me.
you know like I just things never break my way those kinds of thoughts then things never break
your way what's the point of trying it almost sounds like what we say to ourselves and how we say it
to ourselves is one of the most important things we'll ever do it is the most important thing
because look it's I'm all for you know hold yourself responsible hold yourself accountable
set a high bar set a high expectation but do not bully yourself to
not chastise yourself, do not name call yourself, do not focus on, like, I know so many people
who walk around going, well, I'm ugly. And I'm like, how is that possibly useful to you? And I don't
care what you look like. You should never be saying, I'm ugly. Find something you like about yourself
and go, I have beautiful eyes. The rest is not great. What have you seen psychologically
when someone says, I have negative self-talk all day long, or I say I'm ugly or I'm whatever,
or not attractive. I'm a dummy. I'm a loser. Whatever these are. How badly does that hurt someone
emotionally when they speak poorly to themselves? Like, what is the science or the research or the
stats around that? Do we have any of that? It's abusive. Really? It's the same. I mean, it's
even worse than when somebody does it to you externally, because when somebody does it to externally,
you can go like, you know what, screw them. But when you're doing it to yourself, you know,
I will screw me, right?
And so it's really toxic.
It's absolutely damaging.
And it's chronic for a lot of people.
And they come up with justifications
about why that's a useful thing
or why they deserve it.
Oh, but I deserve it.
Like, do you now?
Because you're that terrible a person.
And well, I am terrible.
Like, again, you have to drill down
to like what makes you so terrible
other than the fact that you're suffering,
other than the fact that you're really,
wounded other than the fact that you're really hurt whose voice have you internalized that
treated you this badly that you're continuing their work for them wow like it's it's terrible
it's absolutely terrible and and that's something that and it's a difficult habit to change
because it's habitual and it it's a running commentary right yeah running commentary of your entire
life but you have to get annoyed at it you have to see it as abusive you have to see it as some
kind of part of you that's bullying yourself.
You have to give it a face.
You have to give it a name.
You have to give it something that causes you
and you have to develop an antipathy for it.
You have to develop a disdain for it.
You have to develop an anger toward it.
But it's still part of you.
So you're putting an anger towards a part of you
that's been doing this thing, right?
Is it a part of you?
It's something you've internalized.
It's something that you've developed.
But is cancer a part of you?
Maybe it's not holistically part of you.
holistically part of you, it's attached to you.
It came from you.
It's in you, but it's not a part of you.
It's a part that should be exercised.
It's not the healed version of you.
It's a part that should be removed.
Yes.
I think if it is a cancer.
It's something you should remove.
Interesting.
And when we can start to do that with that voice on our head that's putting us down,
so many things, you know, unlock afterwards, right?
What is possible for people when they stop allowing the negative voice to take,
take over their mind and their life and they remove it from themselves and they start using a more
empowering voice. What happens for them after that? So if you've tied your legs together,
right, when the sack races we used to do as kids, if you're in a sack and you're trying to move
through life, you're not going to get very far. But when you step out of that, and again,
stepping out of a sack is much easier proposition than what we're talking about. But when you
free yourself up from those shackles, from that abuse, then
people are stunned because suddenly like their possibilities suddenly like it's almost like a
little scary because like oh I don't have excuses right now I know because sometimes it's excuses
it's like oh I'm terrible I'll never because now I don't have to try I don't have to fail
I don't have to be disappointed but you're miserable so what's worse not trying you know what I mean
but suddenly there's a freedom there's an anxiety that comes with that freedom but there's a sense
of freedom there's a sense of relief that comes when you really
start to like develop
and by the way, when I'm saying develop an intolerance
for it, that is a lot of mental
discipline. That mental discipline
you are literally doing cognitive
retraining. That's like
if you want to build a muscle in the gym, you've got to go to the gym
every day, you've got to go a lot and you've got to work out a lot.
This is 24-7.
This is 24-7 being on God
and you'll miss it at first and it'll be there at first
but just as soon as you catch it like, no,
that's not true. That's not a voice I want in my head.
it is not useful for me it is damaging it is abusive I don't want to live with a bully why am I
living with a bully yeah and you know I have compassion for people that maybe had their parents
were bullying them or they lived with siblings that bullied them and it became part of their narrative
so it's very hard to unwire I guess that narrative especially if you didn't have the tools
or the training or the support when you were younger so you may be in your 20s or 30s or 40s
and still living with that because you never had the tools 50s and 60s but look
I sometimes say to them, imagine someone you love.
And imagine you saying that to them all the time.
Yeah.
You'd be horrified.
You would feel so cruel.
That's what you're doing.
It's sad.
How can someone not beat themselves up for doing it to themselves for decades?
If they're hearing this for the first time and they know that they say nasty things to themselves,
they know that they say, I'm ugly, I'm fat, I'm a loser, I'll never amount to
anything, whatever it is that's in their mind.
And they've been the bully to themselves forever.
How can they not beat themselves up even more
and say, look at the life that I wasted
because I did this to myself for decades?
How can they, you know, let it go and not...
Look, you don't get to like beat yourself up
for doing something for decades if you're still doing it.
First stop.
Yes, yes.
And that's not an easy thing and that'll take you a while to get there.
And then hopefully you were successful.
Well, we can talk about like, oh, that's a shame
that I kept doing that.
for a long time. But if you immediately go to, no, you're right. I'm such an idiot for doing that to
myself. You're still doing it. You just found a different angle. Yeah. That's probably one of the
hardest things for people to do. For me, it took me a long time. It's extremely difficult.
Because most of my school days, I just had confirmation of why I was so stupid because I would get
bad test results and people would make fun of me and I was just like, I'm an idiot, I'm stupid.
And that was the narrative that I would say, right? And it took me years to try to give myself a little
more grace and say, no, maybe I'm not good there, but I'm good over here. Let me focus on
the good over here and keep compounding that good, you know, and find other things that I can
prove on and see the growth that I've had. Maybe I'm not where I want to be, but I'm not
where I once was. And it's focusing on the improvement, the growth, where I am improving,
things like that. You know, it took me years. There are, look, I'm a relatively intelligent person
and there are things that I am really stupid at.
There are very simple things
that I will get wrong all the time
that are so ridiculous.
My family even like they just wait for me to do them
because they just stand there and start laughing
like, oh my God, you can't do that.
How are you this smart over here,
but over here you're not, yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's, you know, very few people are smart everywhere.
Yes.
Right, there's emotion intelligence,
there's regular intelligence,
there's practical intelligence,
you know, like how you manipulate objects in the world intelligence.
So we all have our areas,
where we're not that strong
and our areas that we're strong.
So we can all find the thing
we're not great at
or that we're quote unquote
and obsess over it.
But it doesn't mean we're stupid.
That's a generalization.
It just means that I'm not great at.
School you weren't great at.
Many of the things, you are great at.
But again, it took you a while
to find that balance
and to realize the fact that I wasn't great at school
doesn't mean that I'm stupid
because I'm very good at some other things.
And it's true of everyone.
We can all find the thing
that makes us feel stupid,
but we can probably find lots of other things
that do not.
Yes.
And so don't generalize
and give yourself a label
because of the one or two things.
And just because you're not good at one thing
doesn't mean you're a failure in life.
You know, and you can just acknowledge,
oh, I'm not that good at that and that's okay.
Right.
And find the things you are,
emphasize those.
I don't have to feel bad
just because someone else is better than me at something
and I'm not that good at it yet.
You know, it's just like,
you don't have to make that your identity also.
Mind over grind, how to break free when work hijacks your life.
I feel like the next four years as we get into 2030, there is going to be a lot of challenge
and stress that could potentially come people's way if they're not prepared for it.
I don't want to put this on everyone and say that it's going to happen, but I feel like if people
are not emotionally and mentally preparing, the way you teach about in this book, the way
you've shared in this interview, and they just keep grinding through life.
They just keep, I'm just going to one step in front of the other, and I'm just going to
grind at work and grind at home, just get through it.
Eventually, they're going to collapse.
If they don't learn these strategies now, to be able to apply them now, when there are
pressure-filled moments in life, when pressure comes at them, whether it's work or the
environment or whether it's the economy or whatever, health challenges and family, like when
that pressure squeezes you, if you're not emotionally and mentally prepared to take that pressure,
it might break you. It might snap you and it might crumble your relationships, everything.
And so I really hope people get this book and I hope they rewatch and relisten this episode
and use some of these tools now because when 2020 hit, it broke a lot of people.
And I just have a sense that in the next four years, there's going to be something.
We don't know what it is.
Economically, work-related, hell, you know,
AI.
AI.
Who knows?
And I want people to be prepared.
And the best way you compare is within your own mind and your emotions.
And something we've talked about many times in the show, something you've talked about
in this book.
So I want people to get this book, check it out.
It's called Mind Over Grind.
And I want to acknowledge you, a guy, for constantly showing up and trying to serve people
the best way you can.
because you have been doing this for four decades.
You've gone through your own emotional mental challenges
and your own childhood in your life.
And you use that pain as part of your purpose to serve people,
to give people tools.
So hopefully they don't have to go through
what you've been through and other people have been through as well.
So I want to acknowledge you for your constant devotion
to serving people's minds and emotions
to feel more joy, love, and peace and life.
I've asked you these last couple questions before,
but I'm going to see where you're at right now
before I ask them.
People can follow you on Instagram, Guy Wynch.
They can also go get the book and your website.
I believe it's guywinch.com is your website.
Yeah.
They can go anywhere and get the book, mind over grind.
Check out your other books as well, which I loved,
how to heal a broken heart and emotional first aid.
Is that the other, the title of you?
Some great strategies in both of those.
But this one is called The Three Truths,
what you've answered before, but I'm curious with the wisdom you have now because you're
last day many years away from now. And you could only leave three lessons behind to the world.
What would those three truths be for you? So I think the number one, and it's going to be a
different answer than what I said before, but the number one thing, this is, I guess, from learning,
from writing this book, is that we cannot control most of what happens around us.
but we can control this.
We can control not just how we respond,
because that's the thing.
Yeah, we can control how you respond,
but you can control how you think
more than we actually allow ourselves to do.
So it's not just how we respond, but how you think.
That would be the first one.
The second one would be that we really have to look at
what our thoughts,
are dictating in terms of our reality.
Because our thoughts create perception,
our thoughts create stress, our thoughts create,
so our thoughts are actually dictating our reality,
and we have control over them.
Not entirely, obviously, but we do.
And most people like, well, I can't control what I'm thinking.
Like, you can.
And sometimes you can argue about the thoughts that you don't like.
For example, we spoke about this idea of like,
you know, the,
in a critical voice, it's going to appear,
but you can hang you with it.
You can silence it, you can shush it when it shows up.
So, you know, we are more empowered than we think.
And the third, which is going to be super trite in a way,
but the older you get, the more you see it,
is that what matters in life are two things,
your relationships and your experience.
And your accomplishments themselves matter less
than the experiences they afforded you.
You know, your success, you can make a lot of money.
But unless that allowed you to have certain experiences
or to cherish and cultivate certain relationships,
it's not what you will remember, you know,
on your deathbed kind of thing.
So relationships and experience
experiences are where it's at. And relationships and experiences don't depend on success.
That's true. And anyone can have them if you prioritize them and realize that's what it's
about. It's beautiful. And final question, your definition of greatness.
My definition of greatness is, and this might be similar to what I said last time, is
constantly learning about you, about the world. It's a constant curve of self-improvement. It's a
constant curiosity of what do I keep working on?
What do I keep improving?
What do I keep learning?
What new thing is there for me around the corner?
That desire to want to get better, to want to perfect, to want to make things.
And again, it's a shifting target because life throws all kinds of stuff at you.
So you might have to pivot and suddenly work on this rather than that.
But whatever the challenges are, to want to master them, to want to master yourself and your
responses to them, to want to improve and become the best version of you that you can be.
That's greatness.
Yeah, appreciate it.
Thanks for being here.
Thank you for having me.
Amazing.
I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy.
And if you're looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in
your life and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it easier.
You want to make it flow.
You want to feel abundant.
Then make sure to go to Make Money Easybook.com.
right now and get yourself a copy. I really think this is going to help you transform your
relationship with money this moment moving forward. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it
inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the
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told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there
and do something great.
