The School of Greatness - How To Find Inner Peace That Lasts & Defeat Crippling Self-Doubt FOR GOOD [BONUS EPISODE Presented By BetterHelp]
Episode Date: May 21, 2023I got to sit down with BetterHelp therapist, Haesue Jo in a new bonus series I’m doing with BetterHelp. In this series, we talk about The Greatness Mindset and why therapy can help you in your journ...ey toward it.Discover your potential when you visit BetterHelp.com/lewis today to get 10% off your first month.In this episode you will learn,How therapy helps in understanding and finding the meaning behind past experiences and traumas, allowing for personal growth and inner peace.Negative self-talk and self-sabotaging thoughts can be addressed through therapy. It helps challenge core beliefs, identify automatic thoughts, and develop techniques to manage negative thinking patterns.Therapy explores the origins of core beliefs and confronts repressed emotions, providing an opportunity for healing and self-discovery.Shame and a lack of self-respect can contribute to allowing self-abuse through negative self-talk. Childhood experiences and emotional neglect may shape these beliefs.Therapy supports individuals in realizing that they are not inherently bad and helps in forgiving oneself, creating peace, and rebuilding self-value and integrity.For more information go to betterhelp.com/lewis
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode was sponsored by BetterHelp Online Therapy.
Big thanks to Hasu Jo, licensed therapist and head of clinical operations at BetterHelp.
Hasu Jo is not my actual therapist, and we are not in a therapist-client relationship.
Also, just because you might hear something on the show that sounds similar to what you're experiencing,
beware of self-diagnosis.
You'll want to find a qualified professional to assess and explore diagnosis
if that's important to you.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes,
a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
You understand why something happened.
Something that could be horrific or it could be little traumas.
There's big T, little t traumas.
There could be massive abuse or a death or a massive breakup or
breakdown. Or it could be someone just saying mean things to you continuously throughout your life.
Or you feeling neglected, or you feeling abandoned. Even when you had a family that was a home all
time. If we don't learn to understand the meaning behind it, and if we don't give it a meaning that supports and serves us in our present, then we can take action, we can work hard, we can get great results, but we still may not feel fully aligned and harmonic inside of us.
And I think that's what I want my listeners to understand, is this idea of feeling inner peace, of feeling a sense of calm, even when the world might feel
chaotic. And I'm not saying to, you know, that if you do react from time to time, there's nothing
wrong with that. Because maybe you do need to protect yourself from a fight or flight moment.
And maybe you need to run away or create a quick boundary with someone.
But in general, if we're constantly living in this chronic anxiety for when we don't have to, I think that hurts us.
And it's good to find the meaning of why certain things happen and how we can reinterpret them
and rewrite these stories to support us in our present and our future.
And a lot of it is for our future relationships as well. So we don't continue the generational
trauma that was passed down by our parents and their parents and so on. So we have the tools
to break that cycle. Another, you know, speaking about that cycle, another topic I talk about in
the greatest mindset is these self-sabotaging thoughts
that i just feel like so many of us either have or have had i'm raising my hand as someone who's had
these most of my life of just this thought of like you're an idiot you're a dummy you're stupid that
was that wasn't good enough how could you do that why did you say that that was a stupid thing to say kind of like these thoughts that I used to say for probably 25 years of my life
until I learned tools on how to catch myself um I feel like a lot of people resonate with that
by saying nasty things to themselves and hasu if we if we recorded the thoughts in our mind
and played them along on a loudspeaker to the world,
for most people, they probably put them in a mental hospital. If they heard the thoughts
they said about themselves. I know I would have gone to a mental hospital for most of my life
until I shifted it. And I think we would never allow someone to speak to us the way we talk to
ourselves at times. We would never allow our best friend or family members to speak to us
negatively over and over and over again. But some of us do
this, and it doesn't help us. I'm curious, how can how can
therapy really help us understand how to get a hold and
manage and control these negative thoughts that are on
loops and patterns every day for so many of us.
I'm not going to be able to answer that question for someone in the time that we have, but
an introduction to this is, you know, therapy is going to help you get down to something
called core beliefs or core schemas.
Sometimes that might be as black and white as I am unworthy, I'm not valuable, not important,
not smart.
And then all the other negative self-talk comes from these beliefs that you may hang
on to about yourself.
And so in therapy, you're really going to examine what are the origins
of these core beliefs. And you may start learning of ways to challenge these beliefs with evidence
from your life. There's little quick techniques that you'll learn from your therapist about how
to stop your own thinking, how to identify when you're having an automatic thought or an automatic response to
a trigger in your life um oh and i just thought of something you know you said the way that we
talk to ourselves we would not allow another person especially that's close to us to talk
to us that way we also would not speak that way to somebody that we care about the ways that we speak to ourselves in this negative
fashion. Like, sometimes I have clients flip it around and like ask them, so is that something
that you would say to so and so or, you know, I have them think of somebody, right, right, or
have them think of somebody that's loving and supportive in their life and ask them earnestly,
would that person ever say those things to you? Does that person think those things about you? So if the people that you care about deeply
and most in your life would never say or think those things, where does it come with for you?
Or where does it come from for you? And that's something that you explore very deeply in therapy,
which can be really painful because it means you're confronting a lot of stuff that you've been pushing away. You're coming head on with a lot of stuff that you may have denied in
order to protect your feelings and the ways that you are. So, you know, self-saboteur,
where does it come from? It comes from a lot of things that happen to us as children,
any negative event,
of course, it makes sense that we pay attention to pain because we want to be able to address
that stuff and bring healing. Um, so, you know, I think you're saying that because,
you know, if, if everyone did this thought experiment and said, okay, who's the person
in your life or in the world that you respect the most? I don't know. I'm just, you
know, is there, you know, a grandparent or your parents or,
you know, some athlete or a president of you know, something
that you really was like, I respect this person, if I met
them in person, I would only say kind of generous things to them.
I wouldn't say these negative things that I say to myself, is
this a matter of that we lack respect of self? And that's why we're willing to say these hurtful
things to ourselves over and over again, because we have no respect for ourselves? Or why do you
think we allow this abuse to happen to ourselves over and over and over? There's other people that
might have abused us in our past, but we're the abusers of today if we keep saying these nasty things. Is it because we lack respect
or is it because we haven't healed and create a wholeness inside of ourselves to speak more kindly?
I think for some people, it can certainly come from a lack of self-respect. I think for a lot
of people, it also comes from that core belief that I deserve this.
I deserve bad stuff to happen to me because I'm a bad person. So that's where we're talking about
shame. Shame is generally self-inflicted. It can be certainly added onto by different people.
But shame is the sense that I did this bad thing and I feel bad and I did it because I'm bad.
Guilt is a little bit different.
For guilt, it's like I feel bad about doing this thing because now somebody else feels bad like it wasn't whatever.
But folks that are experiencing guilt without shame, they're not also adopting the idea that they did this bad thing or this bad thing happened to them because they are a bad person.
So I think a lot of times we're allowing ourselves to continue this negative self-talk because
somewhere deep inside, we think we deserve it.
And that can come from a lot of stuff, especially childhood.
You know, little, little, tiny little kids, they're experiencing everything every day
for the first time.
They are shaping their worldview.
And if they have a childhood full of emotional neglect, overt physical or emotional abuse,
it only makes sense for them to try to make sense of that. Bad stuff is happening. It must be because I'm bad. There's no other explanation. This person, my mom, is supposed to love me more than anybody.
And if she's doing this terrible thing, it's probably because I'm bad.
There's no other way to make sense of that.
And to a five-year-old, that does make sense.
To that five-year-old turned into a 50-year-old that hasn't resolved all this stuff,
they're still walking around out there thinking that they deserve every bad thing that's ever happened and every bad thing that they do.
It's because they're a bad person.
So how do we, I mean, you know, obviously, obviously, online therapy and better help supports you in realizing that you are not a bad person.
Or getting to a place of creating amends if you've done things that you're not proud of, or if you are feeling guilty or shameful of things, allowing yourself to forgive yourself
and create peace and harmony. And it doesn't happen always in a moment. Okay, I forgive myself
for these things or treating myself this way or treating others this way. It's a process.
Healing is a journey. Creating this piece takes time. But over time,
you should create this alignment and congruence where your core beliefs of, okay, maybe I did
things I'm not proud of, but it doesn't mean I'm bad at my core. And now I'm going to rebuild
my integrity with myself. I'm going to rebuild my value with me, I'm going to
consciously make different decisions moving forward, so that I can harmonize that I can
build congruency with my who I am, where I was from my past and create meaning there,
and have more alignment of where I am today moving forward so that I feel good about me. So again,
if you're looking for a clearer direction in your
life, if you're looking for some healing, if you're looking for just more joy and freedom and
peace of mind, then I encourage you to go to betterhelp.com slash Lewis. Again, you get 10%
off the first month when you do that. So you can try it for a month and explore it, check it out.
You can find a therapist and you can switch, I believe at any time. So if you're
feeling like, ah, maybe this doesn't work for me, let me try someone different. You can do that as
well over at BetterHelp. They've got, again, online support. So if you have any questions,
you can ask them questions right on the website, again, betterhelp.com slash Lewis.
I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check
out the show notes in the description for a rundown of today's show with all the important links.
And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me,
as well as ad-free listening experience,
make sure to subscribe to our Greatness Plus channel on Apple Podcast.
If you enjoyed this, please share it with a friend over on social media or text a friend.
Leave us a review over on Apple Podcast,
and let me know what you learned over on our social media or text a friend. Leave us a review over on Apple Podcasts and let
me know what you learned over on our social media channels at Lewis Howes. I really love hearing the
feedback from you and it helps us continue to make the show better. And if you want more inspiration
from our world-class guests and content to learn how to improve the quality of your life, then make
sure to sign up for the Greatness Newsletter and get it delivered right to your inbox over at greatness.com slash newsletter.
And if no one has told you today,
I wanna remind you that you are loved,
you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.