How to Eliminate Self-Doubt Forever & Build Unshakeable Confidence
Mel Robbins
0:00 Today, you and I are going to learn all about this four-part [music] framework
0:04 that helps you build unshakable self-confidence.
0:07 There are four attributes.
0:09 We have acceptance, [music] we have agency,
0:11 we have autonomy, we have adaptability.
0:13 Self-acceptance is fundamentally accepting [music]
0:15 that you are a work in progress.
0:17 You don't need other people to validate your worth.
0:20 You are worthy just by existing.
0:22 Agency is that attribute [music] that allows you
0:24 to trust that you can do the thing.
0:27 And if you don't know how to do it, you will learn how to do it.
0:29 Autonomy is the belief that you have a degree [music] of control over your life.
0:33 Adaptability is actually so much more than what we think [music] it is.
0:39 Dr.
0:39 Shade is a behavioral researcher and best-selling
0:42 author with [music] a PhD in organizational behavior.
0:45 Some studies have found up to 82% of people
0:47 have felt like an impostor at some point.
0:49 And the beautiful thing about feeling like an impostor
0:51 [music] is it is a sign that you are growing.
0:54 You don't realize how you're keeping yourself stuck when you
0:57 complain [music] about the things you have no control over.
1:00 Show up for the life that you want now.
1:03 Don't wait for it.
1:04 Don't wait for permission.
1:05 Don't wait till you feel ready.
1:06 Don't wait till you feel worthy.
1:08 If you show up for the person that you want to be now,
1:11 your life will fundamentally change because everything will feel lighter.
1:16 Dr.
1:18 Shade Zahrai, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
1:21 Thank you so much for having me.
1:23 I am so excited you're here.
1:24 Thank you for traveling halfway around the world to be here today.
1:29 And here's where I want to start.
1:30 Your research around self-doubt, building confidence, feeling worthy.
1:36 It is so important.
1:37 We're going to dig into it.
1:38 And here's where I'd like to start.
1:41 Could you speak directly to the person who's with us right now?
1:45 And tell them what might change about their life if I take everything to heart
1:51 that you're about to teach us today and I apply it to how I feel about myself?
1:55 If you actually apply what we're going to be exploring today,
1:58 your life will fundamentally change because everything will feel lighter.
2:03 People don't realize how insidious self-doubt is.
2:07 And when you're living every day and you've got the insecurity
2:10 and those negative thoughts and the self-criticism
2:12 and the feelings of I'm not worthy, I'm not good enough, it is a weight.
2:16 It makes everything more difficult.
2:18 It leads to so much hesitation and second-guessing and missed opportunities.
2:22 If you can learn to recognize and you see the beauty
2:24 of this work is that you don't actually have to eliminate the doubt.
2:28 You just have to strengthen parts of yourself that allow you to move through it.
2:32 And then success becomes easier.
2:35 Fulfillment in your relationships becomes easier.
2:37 Happiness becomes easier.
2:39 And this is based on decades worth of research.
2:41 So it's so incredibly important and that's why
2:43 I'm so excited to have this conversation with you.
2:46 Well, I'm excited for you to teach us some
2:48 of the frameworks in your bestselling book, Big Trust.
2:51 And you know, in your work, you work with CEOs of Fortune 500,
2:56 150 CEOs in terms of who you are coaching, who you are advising.
3:03 But the journey to doing all this research began with you having
3:08 a crisis in your own confidence and feeling like you weren't enough.
3:12 So let's just start there.
3:14 How did you begin this?
3:16 So my journey with self-doubt is really the driver of why I do what
3:20 I do because I have felt the pain over the entire course of my life.
3:24 I mean, I'm still shedding the doubts that I developed early on.
3:27 And I think if I really reflect on where it started,
3:30 it started really early for me.
3:32 Okay.
3:32 So I would have been about three, four, or five years old.
3:35 And I am part of this beautifully supportive family.
3:38 And every Friday night we would have dinner at my grandparents' place.
3:42 And then after dinner,
3:43 there was this family tradition where the little kids would dance for everybody.
3:47 So I would hear Shadi Bayad Bedakse, which is Shadi is going to dance for us.
3:51 And you know, as a young kid,
3:53 I loved the attention and they'd put on the music and it made everyone so happy.
3:57 What then happened though is over the years as this became
4:00 just this regular thing that we did every Friday,
4:03 I started to feel less comfortable doing
4:05 that, being the center of attention as I
4:07 became a little bit more self-conscious about who I was in my body and you know,
4:11 I was maybe eight, nine, maybe 10.
4:13 But I saw how happy everyone was when
4:16 I was in this position of performing for them.
4:18 And I didn't want to let them down.
4:20 So I didn't know how to say no.
4:22 And it was around that age that I
4:23 internalized this belief that I am only of value,
4:26 I am only worthy when I'm making other people happy even if I'm not happy.
4:32 Mhm.
4:32 So for me, that was that early life
4:34 experience that instilled this sense of lack of enough.
4:38 And then that just kept becoming
4:39 a self-fulfilling prophecy when I was at university,
4:42 when I started working in the legal industry,
4:45 when I moved into banking and finance,
4:46 it followed me into every meeting, every conversation, every interaction.
4:50 I never felt like I was good enough to be there.
4:53 But I've also discovered over the last five
4:55 or so years as I've really deep dived into this, as I was doing PhD research
4:59 into this, almost every single person experiences self-doubt.
5:04 It is not uncommon at all.
5:06 And yet those who are able to truly succeed,
5:09 it's not that they eliminate the doubt,
5:11 it's that they found a way to strengthen who they are to move through it.
5:14 It brings me to a question, Dr.
5:16 Shade.
5:17 What drives self-doubt?
5:19 Okay, so I have been fascinated by this question for over a decade.
5:22 Even before I did my PhD research,
5:24 I was seeing self-doubt in action in the workplace at every single level.
5:29 Because I genuinely believed once you become a leader,
5:31 once you achieve a certain thing, you don't have self-doubt.
5:34 But I actually found that sometimes those at the more senior levels,
5:38 sometimes those who have achieved a lot,
5:40 they have even more self-doubt because they feel
5:42 like there's even more opportunity for them to fall,
5:45 more reputational damage if something doesn't go well.
5:48 So, I thought, what is actually driving this?
5:50 And that's when I started looking into the research.
5:52 What do the most esteemed minds have to say about this?
5:55 And I want to share with you one particular study which
5:58 I have never forgotten from the moment that I came across it.
6:01 It's from the late '70s, early '80s.
6:04 So, a psychology professor by the name of Robert Kleck at Dartmouth,
6:08 he conducted this fascinating experiment which really reveals
6:11 how self-doubt works and where it comes from.
6:14 He brought people together and with one group he drew a scar on their face,
6:18 on the right side of their face between their ear and their mouth.
6:21 This really noticeable, visible disfigurement.
6:24 Yeah.
6:24 He let them see themselves in a mirror.
6:26 Okay.
6:26 So, they can go, "Okay, I have this scar on my face." And then
6:28 he sent everyone out into conversations with strangers.
6:32 Now, after the conversations, he then asked everybody,
6:34 "How did you feel the conversation went?" The group
6:37 without the scar felt like it was a fine conversation.
6:40 Yeah.
6:40 The group with the scar reported feeling judged.
6:44 They felt like it was tense.
6:45 Their conversation partner was cold.
6:47 And they felt like they were treated differently because of that scar.
6:50 Now, that in itself would have been
6:52 a really interesting experiment on prejudice and discrimination.
6:56 Or perception of.
6:58 Or perception of.
6:58 Exactly.
6:59 And that's where we get to the interesting piece.
7:01 Because if I pause right now and I take you
7:03 back right before these people were sent into these conversations.
7:07 So, they've just seen themselves in the mirror.
7:08 Right.
7:10 Right before they're sent into it, the researcher said, "Okay,
7:12 I'm going to apply some moisturizing cream to the scar
7:14 to set it so it doesn't crack." Okay.
7:17 What was done though was the scar was removed entirely.
7:20 Whoa.
7:21 There was no scar.
7:22 These people went into these conversations believing they had a scar.
7:26 And they didn't.
7:27 They didn't.
7:27 And that led them to have an expectation about how people would treat them.
7:32 Which then led them to pay attention to things that objectively did not exist.
7:37 It changed how they showed up.
7:39 They created the reality they expected.
7:41 And this is called expectation bias.
7:44 We don't see the world as it is.
7:45 We see the world as we expect it to be.
7:48 Wow.
7:49 Now, when we think about what that means for us,
7:52 when you're thinking about this from your own perspective,
7:54 anyone who is watching or listening,
7:57 what kind of scars are you carrying into every single conversation,
8:02 every interaction, every meeting, every interview,
8:05 every conversation with your loved one?
8:08 How is that affecting how you not only show up,
8:10 but what you're interpreting and noticing that may not even be there?
8:14 Because until we're aware of these scars,
8:17 we don't realize just how much they're creating the world that we're living in.
8:20 Dr.
8:21 Shade, how do you rewire these moments of self-doubt?
8:27 So, I have an analogy that I love to share to help
8:29 us understand what we're actually rewiring when we're talking about self-doubt.
8:33 So, what I have here is two glasses filled with yellow water.
8:37 Okay.
8:37 Now, I want to narrate this because the majority of you listen,
8:41 and I don't want you to miss a thing.
8:43 So, Dr.
8:43 Shade is sitting here at the table for the podcast.
8:47 She has two two the brim bright neon yellow
8:51 glasses full of yellow water sitting on a tray.
8:55 And in one hand, you have a ping pong ball?
8:57 I have a ping pong ball.
8:58 And on the other hand, she has a bright yellow golf ball.
9:02 Okay.
9:02 Now, if I were to take the ping pong ball,
9:05 And what does the ping pong ball represent?
9:06 The ping pong ball represents self-doubt.
9:08 In fact, both balls represent self-doubt.
9:11 do?
9:11 And what's going to happen in the cups is
9:12 it's going to help us understand different approaches to self-doubt.
9:16 Okay.
9:16 All right, great.
9:17 So, so self-doubt might be Let's just take one we can all relate to.
9:21 We've all had those mornings where you look in the mirror
9:24 and you just go uh And because you've shared the scar example,
9:29 let's just go with this perception that how we look
9:34 has something to do with our value to the world.
9:39 And so the form of self-doubt that the ping
9:41 pong ball or the golf ball might represent is just
9:44 this belief that because you look ugly today
9:46 or your acne's on fire or maybe what's happening for me,
9:50 I constantly notice the jowls that seem to be forming and I don't like them.
9:56 And I feel a little bit of judgement and weight and I doubt myself.
9:59 Am I looking older?
10:01 Are people going to judge me for that?
10:03 And so is that what these represent?
10:05 Yes.
10:05 Okay, so we got a ping pong ball and a golf ball.
10:07 So if I were to take the ping pong ball
10:09 and place it on one of the glasses of water, what would happen to it?
10:14 I I think it would float cuz a ping pong ball is like, you know, kind of
10:18 Yeah, light.
10:19 airy airy So if we try that, what's going she it's just floating there.
10:22 So this is this thing that maybe you feel a little
10:25 doubt about and it's just kind of floating on top.
10:29 What happened to the water?
10:30 The water stayed the same.
10:32 What does the water represent?
10:33 The water represents how we see ourselves, our self-image.
10:37 Oh.
10:38 And so when we're talking about how doubt should be,
10:41 cuz the goal again is not to eliminate the self-critical thoughts.
10:44 That's too high a standard we're setting for ourselves.
10:46 we can't, can we?
10:47 do that.
10:47 That's the function of the brain doing what it does.
10:50 The goal is actually to allow the doubts to exist
10:53 but essentially to float on top of who we are.
10:55 And what Dr.
10:55 Shade is doing right now, she's basically you know,
10:59 kind of gently pushing the ping pong ball across
11:02 the top of the glass and it's floating there
11:04 like you might see a little sail toy sailboat
11:06 floating at a at a, you know, public park.
11:10 Just lightly drifting around.
11:11 And so is an example of that, you look at yourself,
11:14 you're like, not my best day, but no big deal.
11:16 Oh well.
11:17 Okay.
11:18 Exactly.
11:18 I'll just, you know, if I don't like the acne,
11:19 I'll I'll just put some foundation on.
11:21 No big deal.
11:21 Yeah.
11:22 Focus on what you can control.
11:23 Focus on what I can control.
11:25 Now what most of us experience though That's not what I experience.
11:28 No, and that's not what most people experience.
11:30 It's a lot more insidious than that.
11:32 And this is
11:32 you're holding a golf ball.
11:33 Now I'm holding the golf ball.
11:34 Now a golf ball is, in comparison to the ping pong ball, it's what?
11:37 Dense, it's heavy, it's got weight to it.
11:41 Yes.
11:40 And if I were to drop this into this other cup of water, what would happen?
11:44 It's going to sink.
11:46 Oh, not only is it sink,
11:47 like it's water just splashed everywhere and it sunk to the bottom.
11:53 This is what happens when we internalize self-doubt.
11:57 We allow it to mean something about who we are.
11:59 So rather than just floating on the surface, we acknowledge it's there,
12:02 we make it mean something about who we are.
12:05 So instead of the, oh, I feel a little ugly today.
12:08 Yes.
12:09 You would say, oh, I feel ugly today.
12:11 I am so ugly.
12:13 I am so unworthy of other people's time and energy.
12:17 I'm not valuable.
12:18 Everybody's staring at me.
12:19 I don't want to speak at work.
12:21 Everybody's looking at this thing that I don't like about myself.
12:24 And what's so stunning about the visual,
12:26 and I want to really describe this for you as you're listening,
12:29 is on the right, you have this like dopey little ping pong ball floating around.
12:34 Do do do do do do do do do do do.
12:36 It's there.
12:38 You haven't said you can't have the thought,
12:41 but it's not sinking into your soul and dragging you down like
12:48 an emotional weighted vest that then impacts every aspect of your day.
12:53 The other thing that I want to point out is that on the left, you know,
12:56 the heaviness of the self-judgment, I got some acne,
13:00 I'm short, my hair sucks today, whatever it may be.
13:03 I got fired from that job, therefore I am not worthy of a job.
13:08 You can see how it's just sitting there at the bottom of the glass.
13:13 And then, even more sad, Dr.
13:16 Shade, is the spilled yellow water all over the place because
13:20 what you get the sense of is as self-doubt weighs you down,
13:24 you lose a bit of yourself to make room
13:29 for carrying that doubt with you day in and day out.
13:34 And then what's even more worrying is even if you go
13:37 through the process of working on yourself Okay, now hold on.
13:40 She's taking her phone and she is now digging in and spilling more
13:44 water out and she is getting the golf ball out of there, right?
13:49 She's getting it out of there, okay?
13:50 So maybe our skin has cleared up.
13:53 Maybe we have a better hairstyle.
13:55 Maybe we have moved on from the job
13:57 or the breakup and now we are out there interviewing again.
14:00 So we took care of the thing or so we thought.
14:05 but has that water miraculously refilled itself to the brim?
14:08 No.
14:09 No, there's a piece missing.
14:11 And so what self-doubt does is it strips you of who you truly are Mhm.
14:15 because you're internalizing it.
14:16 You lose a part of yourself.
14:18 And even if you do the work, you enter what's called the void.
14:21 So now, okay, the golf ball is out and maybe
14:24 you are seeing that ping pong ball floating above.
14:26 Yep.
14:27 You're detaching from it.
14:28 But then you enter that weird middle stage where you actually
14:31 don't know who you are without the doubt because for so
14:34 long it has driven your behaviors and your think thinking
14:38 and your actions and the way that you show up in the world.
14:41 You've been acting to prove yourself to others or to seek
14:44 their validation and suddenly you don't know what your true instincts are Mhm.
14:48 and who you are in the world.
14:50 And so there's that really interesting little space
14:52 where you need to discover who that is again.
14:55 But it starts with changing how we see ourselves.
14:58 So when we talk about rewire self-doubt it's
15:01 actually not necessarily about the doubt at all.
15:03 It's about strengthening how we see ourselves by strengthening these four
15:07 attributes so that the doubt is no longer a golf ball,
15:11 no longer becomes internalized,
15:14 no longer infiltrates how we see ourselves and instead it's there.
15:18 Hey, okay, I can see you.
15:20 I know that you're that voice up there, but I don't have to listen to you.
15:23 I don't have to believe everything I think.
15:25 And that's so incredibly powerful when people both acknowledge
15:27 it and then take the steps to actually get there.
15:31 And I take it that what you're about to teach us
15:34 not only helps us become more buoyant with the day-to-day self-doubts,
15:40 but it also is going to help us fill that void
15:44 with new capacities with ourselves that self-doubt stole from us.
15:49 That's exactly what we're going to be doing.
15:51 Let's get this water out of here.
15:53 Dr.
15:53 ShaDay, you have this incredible framework based on research
15:56 that helps us break apart self-doubt and build self-trust and self-confidence.
16:01 Can you explain what this framework is?
16:03 There are four attributes.
16:05 We have acceptance, we have agency, we have autonomy, we have adaptability.
16:09 Why is having this four-part framework helpful to breaking apart
16:14 these moments of self-doubt and helping us build more confidence and self-trust?
16:19 Why do we need a framework?
16:20 It's because we misunderstand self-doubt as being one blob of worry,
16:24 insecurity, fear, and anxiety.
16:26 And that means then if it we think it's one thing,
16:28 we think there's one solution,
16:29 and that's why so many people are disappointed when they tried the self-help
16:32 route and they've tried this book or that approach and it's not working,
16:35 and it's because self-doubt doesn't operate that way.
16:37 There are actually four distinct elements,
16:40 and once you figure out which one is lacking in you, which one is weak,
16:44 then you know exactly what you need to focus
16:46 on, and then you can access the tools and the frameworks
16:48 to help you move through and strengthen that so
16:51 that everything in life just becomes so much more freeing.
16:54 Let's start with acceptance.
16:56 And so self-acceptance is fundamentally accepting
16:58 that you are a work in progress.
17:00 You don't need other people to validate your worth.
17:03 You are worthy just by existing.
17:05 Now, that doesn't mean that you accept that you will never change.
17:08 It's actually acknowledging that I can change, I can grow,
17:11 and be that work in progress knowing that self-improvement is possible.
17:15 So, it's a beautifully liberating state.
17:16 When you don't accept yourself, that is when you self-reject.
17:20 Mhm.
17:20 You self-reject before anyone else can.
17:22 But, how do you accept yourself if you don't like yourself?
17:25 You know what I mean?
17:26 Like, you look in like and I'm just going to stay
17:28 with the physical because every one of us has the example.
17:33 And when we start to get into psychological, I don't like myself because of X,
17:37 Y, Z that has happened or these things that I did,
17:40 it can get more complicated and I want all of us to just stay right here and be
17:45 listening for ourselves and listening for the people
17:48 in your life who struggle with a lot of self-doubt.
17:52 So, if you do look in the mirror and you're like, "Yeah,
17:54 and I don't want to accept that." So,
17:57 there are two things that I'd recommend you do, okay?
18:00 The first Well, actually there's three.
18:01 The first one is that you need to acknowledge that until you accept yourself,
18:05 nothing will change.
18:06 If you are someone who is saying, "I don't believe it." Yes.
18:09 In that case, what you want to do is use other strategies and tools Okay.
18:13 that allow you to strengthen the self-acceptance
18:15 in other ways that naturally will help you recognize that you are valuable
18:21 in spite of not believing that initially.
18:23 Okay, so the very, very first tool is very simple.
18:25 We call it the careless list.
18:27 What you're going to do is grab a sheet of paper, Yeah.
18:30 divide it into two columns.
18:31 On the left, I want you to write down
18:33 all the things you want to care less about.
18:36 Mhm.
18:36 I want to care less about my physical appearance.
18:38 I want to care less about what people in the street think of me when I walk by.
18:41 I want to care less about what my family keeps
18:43 saying about my acne or my weight or how I look.
18:46 Actually, acknowledge it.
18:48 Give it a physical outlet.
18:49 A lot of people don't actually want to acknowledge
18:51 their fears because they're afraid that they'll make them real.
18:54 But, I am a proponent and a lot of evidence
18:56 suggests that if you can just make them real,
18:58 it gives you something to work with.
19:00 You're not hiding from it.
19:01 So, you write down everything you actually want
19:03 to care less about, put it in the left,
19:05 and then just reflect on how you feel when you look at that.
19:08 I love that.
19:10 It's simple.
19:10 So, that's our careless list.
19:12 We've identified all the things that we want to care less about.
19:15 The next step is, okay, what do I want to care more about?
19:18 What do I actually want to shift
19:19 my attention to because attention is such a superpower.
19:22 If we're not aware of it,
19:24 we're going to be stuck in patterns that keep us stuck.
19:27 But if we can become more aware of it,
19:28 be a bit more curious about how we're thinking, this is called metacognition.
19:32 It's the ability to think about your thoughts,
19:35 and it is a fundamental superpower cuz
19:37 the moment you start thinking about your thoughts,
19:39 you're no longer in your thoughts.
19:41 So, consciously write down, what do I want to care more about?
19:44 Well, I want to care more about being a value in my life.
19:48 I want to care more about having the kind of courage that allows me
19:51 to take the step even if I've got the acne or I look a certain way.
19:56 You map them down, and then it's a super simple practice.
19:59 You just bring yourself back to this regularly to remind yourself, okay,
20:02 my attention is going on to these things,
20:04 but I really want to care less about them.
20:06 How do I actively shift my attention to what I want to care more about?
20:09 When you consciously take control of your thoughts,
20:12 you're re-engaging the prefrontal regions in your brain.
20:15 We get more activation, more blood flow going here,
20:18 and then it fundamentally shapes how you're showing up.
20:21 So, that's a really,
20:22 really simple practice if you're struggling with any kind of physical element.
20:26 Well, it's also really helpful if you're moving through something emotional.
20:33 Completely.
20:33 If you have just gotten laid off,
20:35 your job already was something you cared about for years.
20:39 If you no longer have it, even if it was devastating to lose the job,
20:45 don't you want to care less about that job that's no longer here?
20:49 And don't you want to care more about the future you
20:52 and your future value and the next chapter of your career?
20:56 Same thing with a breakup.
20:58 You already gave years or months or however
21:00 much time and energy to the relationship that's over.
21:04 Don't you want to care less about it?
21:06 Have it impact you a little bit less?
21:08 Don't you want to care more about all
21:11 of the things that could bring you happiness,
21:13 about reinventing yourself, about stepping into this next It's such
21:17 a beautiful and simple illustration because it's true, Dr.
21:21 Shade.
21:21 We live in our heads.
21:22 Mhm.
21:23 And I love that when you get out of your head and you put
21:25 it on paper like this, it allows you to not be in your thoughts,
21:30 but to examine them and direct them differently.
21:32 It's brilliant.
21:34 Dr.
21:34 Shade, could you walk us through just what does
21:37 life feel like for somebody who has low self-acceptance?
21:43 So, we see four really painfully familiar
21:46 patterns with people who have low self-acceptance.
21:49 The first one is what we call the pressure to prove.
21:52 Mhm.
21:52 So, this is where you feel like you're not enough,
21:55 so you have to prove your worth through achievement,
21:59 and setting and achieving the goal, and getting the recognition and the title.
22:04 But, what happens is you tell yourself, "When I get there,
22:07 then I will feel like I'm enough." Mhm.
22:09 And you get there, and it doesn't feel like you thought it would,
22:12 and then you just set the next goal.
22:13 So, you're perpetually chasing this feeling of enoughness,
22:16 and you're proving yourself,
22:18 but it's not having the effect that you want.
22:20 That's the first, pressure to prove.
22:21 The second one is what we call the likeability trap.
22:24 So, if you don't accept who you are,
22:27 you outsource your worth to how other people see you.
22:30 Mhm.
22:31 And if they can like you, if they can see you as acceptable,
22:34 then maybe you can see yourself as acceptable.
22:37 But, then this leads you to sacrifice yourself.
22:40 You say yes when you really mean no.
22:42 You over-apologize for things you shouldn't be apologizing for.
22:45 You don't speak up in the meeting.
22:47 You don't ask for what you deserve.
22:50 And you end up sacrificing what you want
22:51 and need because you're prioritizing everyone else all the time.
22:55 And you don't know who you are.
22:56 So, that's the likeability trap.
22:57 We prioritize being liked over being true to who we are.
23:00 And I say we because I struggle with acceptance.
23:03 I speak from experience here.
23:04 Now, the third one is what we refer to as the shrinking syndrome.
23:10 So, this is where you see someone,
23:11 and you might resonate with this if you're watching or listening,
23:13 where an opportunity comes your way, an incredible opportunity,
23:19 but suddenly your brain starts magnifying all the ways it could go wrong.
23:22 The ways you might fall short,
23:23 the ways you might fail, the what will other people think.
23:27 And so, you know what?
23:27 It's safer just to shrink back and make an excuse
23:31 as to why you're not ready or why the timing is not right.
23:33 Yeah.
23:34 You shrink from those incredible opportunities.
23:36 And then the fourth is the Schadenfreude cycle.
23:39 This is a German term, and it refers to that feeling that some people get,
23:43 that feeling of pleasure when they see other people struggle,
23:47 or other people stumble, or other people fail.
23:51 And it's ego-driven, and it's because when they don't accept themselves,
23:54 they like to see other people suffer, too.
23:57 Oh.
23:57 It's terrible.
23:58 It's absolutely terrible.
23:59 It's more common than you'd think.
24:01 It's why people love gossip.
24:03 It's why people love reading headlines that are tearing other people down.
24:07 It's very much a human experience,
24:09 but it reflects that someone doesn't fundamentally accept who they are.
24:13 Oh, I hate that.
24:14 I hate that, too.
24:15 Wow.
24:15 It happens.
24:16 You know, in your book, Big Trust,
24:18 you cover 10 different ways that you can start to build self-acceptance.
24:24 Can you just give us a handful of them?
24:26 Absolutely.
24:26 I'll share some of the simplest ones that are really,
24:28 really tangible for people.
24:29 So, what we see with anyone who
24:30 struggles with acceptance is they will over-apologize.
24:34 Sorry I'm talking too much.
24:35 Sorry I'm so emotional.
24:36 The simplest thing you can do here,
24:38 rather than apologizing which is to highlight
24:40 some inadequacy and makes you feel less, yeah, is to shift into appreciation.
24:45 So, instead of sorry I'm talking too much, you would say,
24:48 "Thank you so much for listening." Instead
24:50 of sorry I'm being really emotional right now, thank you for bearing with me.
24:55 I'm passionate about this.
24:56 [clears throat] And this is the power of the words that we use
24:59 when we're engaging with people because it not only shapes how we feel,
25:02 suddenly we're not apologizing for existing,
25:05 we're actually acknowledging the other person.
25:07 So, we feel better, but it makes the other person feel better, too.
25:09 I needed you yesterday as I was crying over something and then
25:12 apologizing to everybody for being emotional about something that was stupid.
25:17 But it's cuz you care.
25:18 And then saying to everybody,
25:19 "And you're probably judging me that I shouldn't be stu- So,
25:21 now I'm making them wrong.
25:24 When I And it made me feel worse and it made everybody feel uncomfortable.
25:30 And it would have been way better to just say, "Thank you for bearing with me.
25:34 This is just a lot.
25:35 And I really appreciate your patience and your kindness on this I
25:40 need a I As soon as this interview is over,
25:42 I am making a phone call and saying that to somebody
25:45 because it it I didn't use that and it's very powerful shift.
25:49 Because I can see how stomping on myself and not accepting my emotions.
25:54 And then inadvertently stomping on everybody sitting there trying to comfort me.
26:01 Wow.
26:01 Okay, what's another one?
26:02 Simple, powerful.
26:03 Okay, the next one is if you struggle with acceptance,
26:05 you also tend to say yes before you've even
26:09 processed what you Is this resonating with you, Mel?
26:12 Yes.
26:12 It's I didn't think I struggled with self-acceptance so, but I guess I do.
26:15 Well, interestingly, a lot of really high achievers who have
26:18 done incredible things in their life struggle with self-acceptance.
26:21 Huh.
26:22 And it's one of the things that keeps them pushing,
26:24 but it's also one of the things that really tethers them and is weighty.
26:27 Yeah.
26:28 So, if you, like me, like Mel,
26:30 tend to over commit because you're saying yes to everybody
26:34 else because you don't want to let them down,
26:37 what's really valuable is learning how to say no.
26:40 But what you want to do first is not just an automatic no.
26:43 You create a little bit of a delay.
26:44 So, you can actually process what they've said.
26:46 We know from research that even a few seconds, a few milliseconds,
26:50 allows us to make a better decision when the pressure is on.
26:52 So, what does that actually look like in practice?
26:54 You start with thank you for thinking of me, so positive first response.
26:58 You move into let me check with my schedule.
27:01 Let me check with my husband or my wife.
27:03 Let me confirm I have capacity,
27:06 and then step three is I will get back to you by X time, right?
27:09 Thanks for thinking of me, let me check, I'll get back to you.
27:13 And then you reflect on whether you actually want to do this thing.
27:16 Now, then the next part comes,
27:17 how do you actually say no if you want to decline?
27:20 When we just think about the saying no,
27:21 it can feel very selfish if you are a people pleaser,
27:24 if you struggle with approval and acceptance.
27:28 So, what you want to be thinking about is, okay,
27:29 how do I make this not a no, but a yes to myself?
27:32 Oh.
27:33 If I can make this a yes to myself,
27:35 I don't have to say to the other person I'm saying yes to myself,
27:37 but it makes the process so much easier.
27:39 me an example.
27:40 So, an example would be, okay,
27:40 I don't want to spend the whole weekend helping someone move in because
27:45 I'm going to say yes to the fact that I need recovery this weekend.
27:49 Yes.
27:49 So, then when you go and give the decline,
27:50 it's not just a no because I'm selfish, it's actually again,
27:53 thank you for thinking of me, this weekend I'm focusing on rest and recovery,
27:57 but let me know how you go.
27:58 I'd love to see you when you're all set up.
28:00 Right, or this weekend I'm I had plans to go to the museum,
28:03 or this weekend I already had something else going on and can't help you out.
28:07 So simple.
28:07 So, that's the second tool.
28:08 I want to share it just two more really quick ones.
28:10 The third one is a really counter-intuitive one.
28:12 If you want to accept yourself more, go and get a hobby.
28:15 Why?
28:16 Because people who struggle with self-acceptance
28:18 tend to identify with their jobs.
28:21 So, if you're watching or listening right now and you're you're
28:23 resonating with this, you probably identify with the work that you do.
28:27 Which means if things are going really well at work, you feel fantastic.
28:30 If things are not going well,
28:32 you're going to feel terrible because you're internalizing it.
28:35 Does that resonate?
28:36 I feel called out.
28:37 I'm just going to say it right there.
28:38 Yes, given that I was crying yesterday morning [laughter]
28:42 and objectively things are going amazing.
28:45 When you do something outside of your day job,
28:48 outside of your business, outside of whatever title you've attached to yourself,
28:51 it reminds you that you are so much more
28:54 than what you're doing in that business, at work.
28:57 Now, we also need to acknowledge sometimes this is
28:59 to do with your role as a parent.
29:01 Mhm.
29:01 You might identify so closely with being a parent if you are a full-time carer.
29:06 And so getting a hobby gives you that separation.
29:08 It activates different parts of the brain.
29:10 There was a study with over 93,000 people in 16 different
29:13 countries and they found that people who have hobbies accept themselves more.
29:18 They have higher self-esteem.
29:20 So there's that evidence.
29:21 There's also another super interesting study of Nobel Prize winning scientists.
29:26 They found that those Nobel Prize winning
29:28 scientists were three times more likely than regular
29:31 scientists to have a hobby and 22 times more likely to have a creative hobby.
29:37 Now, what does that tell you and why is that important?
29:39 It tells us that well, what these actual scientists told the researchers,
29:42 which then leads into what that tells us,
29:44 they said that having those hobbies gave
29:46 them something outside of work to make connections.
29:49 Mhm.
29:49 It gave them an outlet when they were having a bad day at work and it
29:52 allowed them to realize that their identity is
29:54 not just what they're doing in the lab.
29:57 They actually can go and have fun and give
29:59 themselves permission to play and be a beginner.
30:01 Could you talk specifically to a person who's listening right
30:04 now who may be in a moment in life where
30:09 they are a caregiver for somebody aging or they've got
30:12 super young kids at home and they're stretched so thin?
30:16 Could you speak directly to why a hobby right now
30:23 when it feels like you have no time is the exact
30:27 thing you need to make time for when it comes
30:30 to your self-doubt and everything that you're doing for everybody else?
30:36 Because hobbies are a form of recovery Mhm.
30:38 and they remind you that you're important, too.
30:41 And when you give yourself the permission
30:43 to recover and go and have fun and play,
30:46 it allows you to be a better carer, to be a better parent,
30:51 to be a better whatever it is in your life.
30:53 You give yourself that permission, you're honoring the fact that you accept who
30:57 you are and that you need these things.
30:58 We know, the research tells us that play is important, hobbies are important,
31:02 and honoring that can be one of the most powerful things that you do.
31:05 Dr.
31:05 Shade, you also say that to build more self-acceptance,
31:11 stop using positive affirmations.
31:15 This is a big one.
31:16 So, we see all the time online that we should use positive affirmations.
31:20 If you don't feel like you're enough,
31:21 tell yourself, "I'm enough." every morning.
31:23 Yep.
31:23 Now, that doesn't work if you struggle with self-acceptance.
31:28 Research shows us that if you struggle with self-acceptance and self-esteem,
31:32 using positive affirmations backfires and makes you feel worse.
31:36 Why?
31:37 Because it contradicts how you see yourself.
31:39 Mhm.
31:40 And there's a part of your brain, your mind that goes,
31:42 "Nah, you're faking it." and you can become even more self-critical.
31:46 Wow.
31:47 Wow.
31:47 So, what do we do instead?
31:48 That's not to say that positive affirmations cuz if you hate the way you look
31:52 in the mirror and you're like, "I look beautiful.
31:54 I'm enough.
31:54 I'm this.
31:55 I'm that." and you don't believe any of it, then there is this disconnect.
32:01 You know you're lying to yourself.
32:02 So, if you can't say positive things, what does the research tell us that we
32:07 should say if we're struggling with self-doubt and self-acceptance?
32:11 To use a self-affirming, growth-oriented statement instead.
32:15 That's a mouthful.
32:16 So, what is the sentence?
32:18 simple, simple terms, it's simply don't lie to yourself.
32:21 Just flip it into something that's growth-minded.
32:23 For example, Yes.
32:25 one of the areas that lack of self-acceptance
32:28 shows up in is this belief of I'm boring.
32:31 I'm actually boring because people don't want to be too much for others.
32:35 And so, that looks like them believing that they have nothing of value to share,
32:39 nothing of meaning to share,
32:40 and so they tell themselves, "No, I'm boring." So a simple way is not,
32:44 "Oh, I'm the life of the party.
32:45 Everyone loves me." That's a positive affirmation that will backfire.
32:48 You would say, "Okay,
32:50 I bring a calming and grounded presence to my conversations."
32:54 You see how you're not trying to one-up with something positive.
32:58 You're actually just sidestepping it and flipping it.
33:00 Yep.
33:01 And that suddenly makes you feel very, very different.
33:03 If you feel like you're unlovable,
33:05 instead of "No, I am lovable," which may backfire,
33:09 you would say, "I have certain qualities that the right people value." Mhm.
33:14 So again, it's so simple.
33:15 It's not flipping it with something that's almost toxically positive.
33:18 Yeah.
33:19 It's just shifting into something that is growth-oriented and anchored in truth,
33:22 and it doesn't require you to become someone else, which is the beautiful thing.
33:26 Well, it sounds like the test is do your shoulders drop?
33:28 Yes.
33:29 Versus, "I'm lovable." You know, your shoulders up, "I don't know.
33:32 Am I?" Yeah.
33:33 But if you say, "I have qualities
33:35 that the right people really love and appreciate." Aw,
33:39 like your shoulders just dropped because there's truth in it.
33:43 I love that.
33:43 I love that.
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34:35 So, let's move on to the second A in the four-part
34:39 framework of rewiring self-doubt and building
34:43 more confidence, and that is agency.
34:45 What is agency?
34:47 So, in the context of self-doubt,
34:48 agency is that attribute that allows you to trust that you can do the thing.
34:53 And if you don't know how to do it, you will learn how to do it.
34:56 And so, if you trust that you can do that, you're going to take the step.
35:00 You're going to say yes.
35:01 You're going to persist when things don't go
35:03 well because deep down you believe that you can.
35:07 Now, when this is weak Yes.
35:10 let's explore what this looks like.
35:11 So, if this is weak, if you struggle with your agency,
35:13 we see a number of patterns here.
35:15 The first one is the dreaded imposter syndrome
35:19 where you have achieved things in your life,
35:21 amazing things, maybe recognition, maybe awards, maybe an amazing job title.
35:26 And yet, you feel like you don't deserve it.
35:28 You feel like someone is going to highlight that you shouldn't be where you are.
35:32 And so, essentially, what it comes down to is that you believe other
35:36 people think you're smarter or more competent than you really are.
35:41 Now, a few things about imposter syndrome.
35:44 The term imposter syndrome was not the term
35:46 that was used initially when it was discovered.
35:49 Back in the '70s, '80s, when it was first observed,
35:52 they called it the imposter phenomenon.
35:55 Now, what's the difference between a phenomenon?
35:56 So, a phenomenon is basically where you
35:58 observe something in a population of people.
36:01 Right?
36:01 A syndrome is something that seems medical and seems
36:05 pathological and seems like something is wrong with us.
36:07 A phenomenon seems like something that can appear occasionally.
36:11 Yeah.
36:12 Syndrome feels like a life sentence.
36:15 Well said.
36:16 Okay.
36:16 And so, we need to think when we feel like an imposter,
36:20 it's actually far more common than you'd expect.
36:23 In fact, some studies have found up to 82%
36:25 of people have felt like an imposter at some point.
36:28 Wow.
36:28 And the beautiful thing about feeling like an impostor
36:31 is it is a sign that you are growing.
36:34 You are stepping out of your comfort zone.
36:36 Cuz anyone who has ever done anything new will be
36:38 in a position where they haven't had all the skills,
36:41 or they don't know all the answers,
36:43 and it's very easy for them to then feel like I don't deserve to be here.
36:47 But you have to honor the fact that you bring a track record with you,
36:50 and maybe we'll talk about a few tools to help with this a bit later.
36:53 Yes.
36:54 So, that's the first one.
36:54 The second one we see a lot of here
36:56 with anyone who struggles with agency is social comparison.
36:59 Oh.
36:59 They're comparing themselves to other people, not in a positive way,
37:03 but in a you are so far ahead of me and I'm inadequate, I could never do that.
37:07 And we see this a lot when people again are leveling up in their lives,
37:11 moving up in their careers, achieving more things in their business.
37:15 Suddenly, as soon as you take that step to the next level,
37:18 you're now comparing yourself with people at that level,
37:21 which naturally means that there's more for you to develop
37:24 and do and and grow because they've been there longer than you.
37:28 Maybe they are better at certain things,
37:30 but if you start fixating on that and feeling like I can never do what they do,
37:33 you undermine your agency.
37:35 So, that's the second one.
37:36 I mean, comparison is natural,
37:38 but we need to get better at making sure it's not filling us with self-doubt.
37:42 Yep.
37:42 And then the third area here is where
37:43 people are just constantly waiting to feel ready,
37:46 to feel prepared, so they procrastinate by busying
37:50 themselves with planning and reading and preparing.
37:54 And they say, "I just want to learn a little bit
37:55 more." But we know that the more you learn about something,
37:58 the more you realize how little you know about that thing,
38:01 and the more doubt you have, and the less likely you are to take the step.
38:05 I think this is so fascinating,
38:07 and I just want to reflect back two things to you.
38:10 So, if you're somebody that struggles with agency when it comes to self-doubt,
38:16 you may feel impostor syndrome,
38:18 you may struggle a lot with comparison, and you may also be a big planner.
38:23 And one of the things that struck me that I've never thought about before
38:27 is that when you identify and get very clear about a goal that you have,
38:32 whether it's getting in better shape or it's dressing
38:34 in a more style-able way or it is earning more
38:38 money or it is changing your career and getting
38:40 into real estate or learning how to make money online,
38:43 simply identifying a new goal or a change means that you
38:49 have a gap of having to become more capable in that area.
38:55 You've never done this before.
38:57 And so, what are the tools other than saying,
39:00 "I can figure this out." or saying, "Hey, comparing myself is part of this.
39:05 Like it means that I want this." Like
39:06 how do you deal with imposter syndrome in particular?
39:11 So, the very first step, let's look at the feeling that you are fraudulent,
39:15 that you don't deserve to be where you are, okay?
39:17 What you want to think about is, "Okay, this is actually super common.
39:21 This just means I'm stretching and growing.
39:22 So, how do I give myself time?" And a very simple reframe,
39:25 because we know how powerful it is when we're
39:27 changing the language that is going on in our heads,
39:30 is instead of, "I don't feel like I deserve this." or "I don't feel like
39:33 I belong." immediately shift to "What an incredible
39:37 opportunity I have to learn and grow." Mhm.
39:41 So simple and yet so effective,
39:43 because you're shifting your attention to everything
39:45 you think you lack into, "Cool, I can fill some gaps.
39:49 Amazing." Again, you don't have to lie to yourself,
39:51 you're being really pragmatic about that.
39:53 So, that's the first step.
39:54 The second one is to actually talk about it when it comes to imposter syndrome.
40:00 So many people have experienced it.
40:02 Just feeling undeserving.
40:04 It's so common and when you speak about it openly,
40:08 you realize that everyone is on this same journey
40:11 and that sense of collective can be really helpful.
40:14 So, in the 1980s Citicorp was merging with Travelers Insurance,
40:20 and they needed a graphic designer to come up with their new logo.
40:23 So, they hired the firm, and Paula Scher was a partner at this firm.
40:26 She's an incredible graphic designer.
40:27 She comes in, and she's sitting
40:28 at the boardroom table with the the decision-makers,
40:32 and they're all talking about what they wanted for the logo.
40:34 She grabs a napkin from the side of the table,
40:37 and she starts scribbling on that napkin.
40:39 A few seconds later, she slides that napkin across the table,
40:42 and she says, "Here is your logo." Now, the room was stunned.
40:47 People were thinking, "How is it possible that you designed a logo
40:49 in just a matter of seconds?" And she says,
40:53 "I designed this in a second and 34 years.
40:57 I designed this with everything that I have learned.
41:00 So, yeah, you got it in a few seconds,
41:01 but it took me 34 years to be able to do that." Mhm.
41:04 And they ended up paying her $1.5 million for that logo.
41:08 Now, what is the message behind this that we can take away?
41:11 So often when we feel like imposters, we are just looking at the here and now.
41:15 The spotlight is on this current space that we're in.
41:18 And we forget that we have this incredible track record behind us.
41:23 In Paula Scher's case, it was 34 years of work that got her to that point.
41:28 But a lot of us will sit there in that meeting and think,
41:30 "Oh gosh, I need to design something.
41:31 I don't know if I've done this before." We fixate on all the gaps.
41:34 "I don't deserve to be here." So, that's a really powerful lesson from that.
41:39 Shift the spotlight back to everything that you have
41:42 developed over the course of your life and your career.
41:45 That reminds you, "Hey,
41:46 maybe I do have certain capabilities and skills that I've
41:50 earned that allow me this seat at the table." The third A in this framework
41:54 around self-doubt and building confidence is autonomy.
41:58 What does autonomy mean, Dr.
41:59 Shade?
42:00 So, in the context of self-doubt,
42:02 autonomy is the belief that you have a degree of control over your life.
42:05 Mhm.
42:06 You feel personally powerful.
42:08 Now, that doesn't mean you can control absolutely everything,
42:10 because not everything can be controlled,
42:12 but you focus on what you can and because
42:14 of that you feel like you have more control.
42:17 Now, if you don't have a strong degree of autonomy,
42:20 we see a number of common patterns here.
42:23 And if you're paying attention,
42:24 if you're listening to this, you will probably be able
42:27 to identify at least someone in your life who is struggling here.
42:30 We are less able to identify in ourselves
42:33 because part of low autonomy is not taking ownership.
42:36 Mhm.
42:37 So, okay, let's look at these patterns.
42:38 The first one is if you struggle with autonomy, you complain a lot.
42:43 You complain about everything wrong in your life because
42:45 it's easier to complain than to do something about it.
42:48 Because to do something about it requires you to take ownership.
42:51 And that is what low autonomy doesn't allow you to do.
42:54 So, you complain.
42:55 Now, people don't realize when they complain about things,
42:58 they are reliving the situation in vivid detail in their brain,
43:02 which is creating deeper, more efficient neural pathways,
43:06 which makes complaining your default.
43:08 You basically become a negativity magnet.
43:11 Cuz you notice more of the things to complain about.
43:13 So, we get complaining is the first pattern.
43:15 The second one is blame.
43:18 People are blaming others, the situation, the traffic,
43:22 the weather, my husband, my wife, my boyfriend, my team.
43:26 There's no personal accountability.
43:28 And they will share that with everybody else.
43:30 The third one is resentment,
43:33 where again they are resentful to other people because they
43:37 feel like everyone else has an easier life than they do.
43:40 And that also leads them to play into this victim mindset, why me?
43:43 Life is so difficult for me.
43:45 And the fourth is Okay, so you know those people that come to you
43:49 when they share with you their objectively difficult life stories?
43:52 And the first time they share it with you,
43:53 you are so filled with empathy and compassion for what they've been through.
43:58 And then by the time they've shared it with you the 20th or 30th time,
44:02 you realize they are keeping themselves stuck by ruminating on it.
44:06 Yes.
44:07 because it's safer for they feel safer when they can hold
44:09 on to a wound because it reinforces this view of I am a victim.
44:13 I am powerless.
44:14 Look at how terrible my life has been.
44:16 And they get sympathy from that, so it's socially rewarding.
44:19 So, this is what we see.
44:20 So, the next question is, well, what do we do?
44:22 Yes.
44:23 If Yes, what do we do?
44:24 And I want to take them one at a time
44:25 because so many people struggle with each one of these.
44:27 So, Dr.
44:28 Shade, what do you do if you are constantly overthinking everything?
44:32 So, if you're constantly overthinking everything,
44:34 overthinking is a sign that you do not feel like you have control.
44:39 And it's your brain's attempt to try
44:41 and manufacture certainty when there is none.
44:44 Your brain says to itself, cuz the brain likes to be really efficient.
44:47 It wants to save energy.
44:49 And so, it's fundamentally lazy.
44:50 And so, there's this part of it that goes,
44:52 if I can anticipate everything that could go wrong,
44:55 then I have to expend less energy when the consequence eventually happens.
44:59 And this is why we get stuck in those loops
45:01 of everything that could be out of our control.
45:03 It's also what reinforces low acceptance because
45:06 we start overthinking, do they like me?
45:08 What did that mean?
45:09 How come they haven't replied to me?
45:11 Or agency.
45:11 What if people find out I can't do this?
45:13 What if I mess up there?
45:14 So, it's all a reflection of low autonomy.
45:17 So, when we're overthinking,
45:18 something that is terrible advice is to tell yourself, just stop worrying.
45:22 Stop overthinking.
45:24 And yet you might have someone in your life
45:25 that says this to you, just stop worrying.
45:28 Bad advice.
45:29 What we know is much more effective is to give your overthinking an outlet.
45:34 What does that mean?
45:35 Every time you have a distracting thought that pops up during the day, a worry,
45:38 you're ruminating on something,
45:40 grab a notebook and a pen and actually write it down.
45:43 And then you say to yourself, I'm not going to worry about you now.
45:46 I will worry about you during worry zone.
45:49 Okay.
45:49 Okay, so you're parking it somewhere.
45:51 Got it.
45:51 Then, at the end of the day,
45:53 you want to actually schedule in your calendar about 10 minutes of worry time.
45:58 Not too close to bed cuz it might keep you up.
46:00 So, a good time is, you know, around 5:00, 4:00, 5:00, whenever works.
46:03 You schedule it in your calendar.
46:05 When that time comes, you set an alarm for 10 or 15 minutes.
46:08 You bring out your worry list, and you allow yourself to worry.
46:12 Now, this does a few things.
46:13 It's called stimulus control for worry,
46:15 and research has found This is an incredibly effective technique.
46:19 It is.
46:20 To It is.
46:21 be honest, it sounds dumb.
46:22 It sounds completely dumb.
46:23 It sounds like, what?
46:24 It sounds completely counterintuitive.
46:26 But, what happens is when you're not worrying about something in the moment,
46:29 the emotions attached to it when it initially came up Mhm.
46:33 are no longer there.
46:35 And when you're not worrying about it in the moment,
46:36 when it comes up in the moment,
46:38 it's driven largely by default areas in the brain.
46:41 By you know, there's greater activation in the threat detection centers,
46:44 in the fear centers of the brain.
46:47 And so, naturally, we don't have access to the front regions,
46:50 which allows us to process that rationally.
46:53 But, when you review it later, you suddenly Well, it shrinks the fear to size,
46:57 and the research tells us that you can so better manage your emotional state,
47:01 and actually assess, "Okay, well, are any of these actually going to happen?
47:06 And do I have control over any of these things?
47:09 Now, the next step is once your alarm goes off,
47:10 you actually close it, and you That's it.
47:12 Like, you're done with your worries.
47:14 End of the week, you reflect.
47:16 What could I control?
47:18 What couldn't I control?
47:19 And if there's something I can control, what am I going to do about it?
47:22 It's a really effective way to deal with that overthinking.
47:26 Dr.
47:26 Shade, what do you want to say to somebody who's a chronic complainer?
47:29 You don't realize how you're keeping yourself stuck when
47:33 you complain about the things you have no control over.
47:36 It's cathartic.
47:38 It feels good in the moment.
47:39 It's rewarding, but it's actually keeping you stuck.
47:42 The moment you find yourself complaining,
47:45 the first step is to become aware of it, which is sometimes the hard part.
47:48 The next step is to ask yourself, "Okay,
47:50 well, I essentially have a few options here.
47:51 I can accept the situation as it is.
47:55 I can change the situation.
47:59 I can leave the situation, or I can change how I see the situation.
48:04 They're the only four options I have.
48:06 So, you pick one, and then acknowledge that if I
48:09 keep complaining about this, I'm only going to feel worse.
48:12 It is not going to help me.
48:14 So, what is fantastic for anyone who tends to complain a lot,
48:17 you will also hear language of should.
48:19 Oh, I should have done that.
48:21 I should do this.
48:22 Mel, how do you feel if I were to say to you, "Oh,
48:24 you should so-and-so." What would you How
48:27 would you respond to the word of should?
48:29 How you should do that?
48:30 done something wrong.
48:31 And you might feel a bit resistant, or you might feel a bit defensive.
48:34 you said, "Mel, you should." I was like, "Now,
48:36 what did I do?" It's because we experience something called a reactance,
48:39 which is this deep internal feeling of resistance.
48:42 Don't tell me what to do.
48:43 We want to feel like we're in control.
48:46 Uh-huh.
48:46 When we're saying should to ourselves,
48:48 when we struggle with autonomy, it makes us feel terrible.
48:51 Now, research also shows that the language
48:52 of should cuts off divergent thinking.
48:54 We don't think as clearly.
48:55 We don't think of solutions.
48:56 We don't think of options.
48:57 There is one swap.
49:00 Move from should to could.
49:03 Okay, what could I do right now?
49:05 Mhm.
49:05 You're not committing to anything.
49:06 It's really low stakes.
49:07 And again, I encourage people to grab a sheet of paper, divide it into two.
49:12 On the left, you write down your could list,
49:14 all the things that you could do in the moment.
49:17 Then, you move into your I will list.
49:20 Pick one, two, or three things that you've identified, and actually do them.
49:25 Actually take the step.
49:27 This is how you increase your autonomy.
49:29 You bring your locus of control back inwards, and it's so incredibly simple,
49:33 and it gets you out of the complaining spiral,
49:35 because sometimes all you need in that moment is to feel powerful,
49:38 and to do something.
49:40 I love that.
49:41 You can catch yourself by saying, "Oh,
49:43 there I go saying I should have done this, making myself wrong,
49:46 increasing self-doubt." Reframe it to I could,
49:49 and then identify something that you will do.
49:52 I love that because it's so simple.
49:55 So simple.
49:56 So simple.
49:56 What if you're somebody that blames?
49:58 The world isn't fair, my boss is a jerk, it's my ex that's ruining my life,
50:04 and you may have a lot of things going
50:06 on, but talk to us about blame and self-doubt.
50:09 Blame is attributing responsibility to everybody else.
50:13 And we hear a lot of always and never from people who are blaming.
50:17 You always do that.
50:18 This never works out for me.
50:19 It's always them.
50:20 It's never that.
50:21 This is something I struggle with.
50:22 I have very like black and white language,
50:25 and it's something that I'm working on a lot
50:28 because I tend to be like very precise.
50:30 Like it's always, or it's never, or it's this.
50:33 Not with people, but a lot when things are happening with work or with myself.
50:38 And so this is an area where I will admit uh it's not blaming other people.
50:44 It's in the way that I talk probably has a lot of weight and blame to it.
50:48 Ooh.
50:48 So what's actually really interesting, and I was going to say this about you,
50:51 I think that your doubt profile,
50:52 from what you've shared with me, acceptance is your weak one.
50:55 Mhm.
50:56 Autonomy is your absolute strength.
50:58 Yes.
50:59 Sometimes what happens when autonomy is so high
51:01 and people take so much responsibility for things,
51:03 they actually end up personalizing things that are not theirs to take.
51:07 Well, as the CEO of the company, I think everything's my responsibility.
51:10 Perfect example of that.
51:11 Yes, I do.
51:12 And so you get into always and never
51:14 because it's your way of holding yourself accountable,
51:16 but sometimes it's not actually helpful in terms
51:19 of how you feel and what you do.
51:20 parents do this, too, that we think everything is our fault.
51:23 And take it on the chin like that.
51:25 So let's talk about blame and how you deal
51:28 with that if you're somebody that's recognizing it in yourself,
51:32 or you're thinking of somebody that's a big blamer,
51:35 and you're about to send this conversation to them.
51:37 So the first thing to think is, okay,
51:39 let's change the language, the intensity of the language that we're using.
51:43 Mhm.
51:43 So instead of this always happens to me,
51:46 let's bring that fact-checker back in, right?
51:48 Is that factual?
51:49 Does it always happen to you?
51:51 Usually, the response will be well, no, it's not always.
51:54 It's It's maybe some of the time, maybe often, but it's not always.
51:57 Okay, what's a more realistic way of looking at that?
52:00 Okay, well, instead of you always cut me off when we're speaking.
52:05 You would say to yourself,
52:06 I've noticed that there are times when I do get cut off when I'm speaking.
52:10 Then you shift responsibility to you.
52:13 How can I speak differently to this person to reduce that happening?
52:18 How can I change what I'm saying or how I'm saying it or when
52:20 I'm saying it to reduce the chances that they're going to be interrupting me?
52:24 That's your first thing.
52:25 So, you take full ownership.
52:26 The second stage is, okay,
52:28 have I made this person aware of something that they're doing?
52:32 You could go to the person and say, look, I've noticed when we speak,
52:35 you either get really excited or you're not aware of it,
52:37 but you do cut me off a lot,
52:39 and I would like to be part of a conversation and a relationship
52:42 or a friendship where both of us feel valued in what we say.
52:45 Were you aware of that?
52:47 A lot of the time, people are not even
52:48 aware of it cuz they're so stuck in their worlds.
52:51 So, there are just a few little tools that you can use.
52:52 If you're blaming, try and bring it back to you.
52:55 Instead of oh, he never takes the trash out.
52:58 Okay, is there something I could be doing to remind him to take the trash
53:02 out or put it in a different place so he takes the trash out?
53:04 Just bring it back to you again.
53:05 That boosts your autonomy.
53:06 So, the last of the four A's is adaptability,
53:09 the ability to kind of go up and down with the curveballs of life.
53:13 Why is this important for rewiring self-doubt and building self-confidence?
53:18 Because adaptability is actually so much more than what we think it is,
53:21 which is just adapting to life.
53:24 In the context of doubt, it's adapting to the emotions that come with life.
53:29 Okay.
53:29 Because emotions are generally experienced when we
53:32 do something and it doesn't work out.
53:34 I mean, look, emotions are experienced all the time,
53:36 but when it comes to self-doubt,
53:38 there's something that we will have done or we'll be thinking
53:40 of doing and then it doesn't work out and there's an emotion attached.
53:44 The disappointment, the that feeling of I'm a failure, I'm not enough.
53:48 These have emotional profiles attached to them.
53:52 And so when we're deciding whether to do anything,
53:56 to take the step, to say yes, to ask them out,
53:59 we're going through this checklist of can I deal
54:02 with the emotions of this thing if it doesn't work out?
54:05 Because our brain is going through that process
54:07 of all the ways that it won't work out.
54:09 And if we don't believe that we can handle whatever emotion comes,
54:14 we will not take the step.
54:16 And that's why getting better at handling and harnessing
54:20 the emotions that come makes everything in life so much easier.
54:25 Well, that makes perfect sense cuz if you don't feel like you
54:28 can handle the emotions of going in and asking for a raise
54:32 or having the hard conversation or putting yourself in a situation where
54:36 you're going to try something that makes you feel anxious or nervous,
54:39 then you're not going to do it and your self-doubt is
54:42 going to increase and you're going to be stuck in this gap
54:45 between what you know you want or what you know deeply
54:48 you're capable of, but you keep blocking your own momentum in life.
54:52 And so that makes perfect sense.
54:56 Is there one thing that if somebody recognizes that they
54:59 are stuck in this aspect that they should do today?
55:04 I'm going to share a super simple strategy here.
55:06 It's called the opposite action strategy.
55:08 It's so easy.
55:09 When we are overcome with some kind of a negative
55:11 emotion in relation to a self-doubt that we have,
55:13 what usually happens to our body?
55:15 We freeze.
55:16 We like kind of go into like a nervous reaction.
55:20 And what usually happens to shoulders or neck or posture?
55:24 Oh, we kind of shrink and like feel like we want to hide.
55:27 Honestly, yes.
55:28 Exactly.
55:29 And so what the opposite action strategy
55:30 tells us is from dialectical behavior therapy.
55:33 It simply says when there is no physical threat,
55:36 do the opposite of what your body's telling you to do?
55:38 Do the opposite of what your body's telling you to do.
55:41 So, if So, in a situation where you feel
55:44 that tension cuz you want to have the conversation, you want to do the thing,
55:49 but now you're blocking your own momentum,
55:51 do the opposite of what your body's telling you to do.
55:53 So, what do you do?
55:54 So, instead of withdrawing, you sit at the end of your seat.
55:56 Engage, look at the person, bring your shoulders back.
55:59 I'm going to share again another really interesting
56:01 tool that comes from the world of research.
56:03 It was just published recently.
56:05 Mel, and everyone listening and watching,
56:06 can you put your hand at the back of your neck?
56:09 Okay.
56:08 to feel a joint.
56:10 Yes, it's like a bony thing, yeah.
56:11 It's like a bony thing.
56:12 Give it a little massage.
56:13 Yes.
56:13 want you to just tilt your head down,
56:15 and you're going to feel more of that, okay?
56:17 And then bring your head back Pointy bones is what I feel.
56:20 great.
56:20 Bring it back up.
56:20 Now, I'm putting my head back up.
56:22 Now, this is a great stretch.
56:23 I encourage everyone to do it regularly.
56:24 But this right here, that action of chin to chest and back up,
56:27 that is called neck flexion.
56:29 Neck flexion, okay.
56:31 Now, we know that there's this connection between
56:33 what our bodies are doing and our posture.
56:35 Should I keep my hand here?
56:36 Oh, you can remove your hand.
56:37 So, that's neck flexion.
56:39 Neck flexion.
56:39 There's a connection between what our bodies are doing and how we're feeling.
56:43 We know that if you have a big expansive posture,
56:45 you tend to feel more powerful and confident.
56:47 This study found that it's because of neck flexion that we feel that way.
56:52 What?
56:52 It is the connection between chin and chest.
56:54 The distance between your chin and chest is what determines how you feel.
56:58 Now, what does that mean for all of us?
57:00 It means that when you're going into a high-pressure situation,
57:03 when you feel the self-doubt,
57:04 when you're wanting to withdraw, you don't even have to think about posture.
57:07 All you have to do is elongate your chin.
57:10 Think about how to expand the distance between chin to chest.
57:13 That's it.
57:14 Oh, I just thought of a rhyme.
57:16 Lift the chin, let's begin.
57:18 I love that.
57:19 Perfect.
57:19 That can go on a mug.
57:20 See, I'll remember that.
57:21 Okay, I'm feeling myself collapse,
57:23 I'm getting nervous, I'm blocking my momentum.
57:26 We got to lift the chin, let's jump in.
57:28 Beautiful.
57:28 Oh, man.
57:29 Okay, I I that.
57:31 Dr.
57:31 Sade, what does research say about your voice and clarity
57:35 and how other people perceive you based on how you speak?
57:38 Okay, so research in speech communication looks
57:40 at the various tones that we have.
57:42 And what we've identified is there's generally two overarching ones.
57:46 One of them is very much a throat voice,
57:48 which happens when we're not really breathing very
57:50 deeply and our voice entirely comes from our throat.
57:53 It's very shallow.
57:54 You see how it sounds friendly, it sounds warm,
57:57 but maybe there's not a lot of credibility to it.
57:59 Let me try that.
58:00 I'm now trying to talk through my throat
58:01 and it's like a different voice that you hear.
58:04 Completely different.
58:05 And that changes how you're perceived.
58:06 Now, the other type of voice It feels different, too.
58:09 It feels really different.
58:09 This is what a lot of people do
58:10 when they're nervous because their bodies tense up.
58:13 So, they're not able to get the oxygen in to fill up their lungs
58:16 and when you don't have a lot of breath because you're trying to retain it,
58:20 that's when you get that higher sound.
58:22 The other one is a more breathy
58:25 voice where you're breathing into your diaphragm,
58:28 which is much easier to do when
58:29 you're not stressed and you're not feeling insecure.
58:32 Mhm.
58:32 And so, you've got breathy voice, which is generally higher pitched,
58:35 which a lot of women unfortunately do when they're nervous
58:37 or in loud spaces because they feel like they can be heard better,
58:41 which is very interesting.
58:42 But what we know is that this deeper diaphragmatic voice,
58:47 which comes with breath,
58:48 it comes with gravitas, this leads to perceptions of greater credibility.
58:53 You come across as if you're more credible.
58:55 You come across as if you're more confident.
58:57 You come across as if you're more grounded.
59:00 And so, a really simple tool for everyone or something
59:02 to practice is to actually hear the difference in those voices.
59:06 In one of them, just speak with a little bit of breath.
59:09 Don't allow a lot to come out.
59:10 It's not super breathy.
59:11 Allow a lot of vocal fluctuation.
59:14 And then the other one,
59:15 which is going to be from the diaphragm, hear the difference.
59:19 Now, if you're in an interview, if you're in a high-stakes environment,
59:22 try and really breathe into We call it breathing into the stomach.
59:25 You're not actually breathing into the stomach,
59:27 but when you take a deep breath into your lungs,
59:29 your diaphragm drops down, so you feel your belly coming out.
59:33 And when you breathe through that, breathe through that voice,
59:37 it does wonders for how you're perceived.
59:39 How can I train myself to speak more eloquently?
59:43 Oh.
59:43 Well, I came prepared, Mel.
59:45 Here is a pen.
59:46 Okay.
59:47 What you're going to do is grab this pen
59:48 and put it between your teeth like this.
59:51 Okay.
59:51 So, for everyone watching and listening,
59:53 we're basically holding the pen between our teeth
59:55 a bit like a dog would hold a bone.
59:57 Okay, great.
59:57 That's exactly what it looks like.
59:58 So, Dr.
59:59 Shaday has put it in between her teeth like a bone, and you know, her stuck.
1:00:03 Here we go.
1:00:04 Okay.
1:00:04 Now, with with the pen in your mouth, so everyone,
1:00:07 make sure you clean your pen before you do this.
1:00:09 I highly encourage that.
1:00:10 You're going to grab a book.
1:00:11 Okay.
1:00:12 And you're going to read any sentence or paragraph from that book.
1:00:16 And you want to pay attention to pronouncing every single sound clearly.
1:00:21 Mel, would you like to do us the honors?
1:00:24 I would.
1:00:25 Great.
1:00:26 Okay.
1:00:27 I am reading from page Oh, this is really hard.
1:00:31 It's really hard.
1:00:32 I'm reading from page 219 of your book, Big Trust.
1:00:38 Yes, you can do the hard thing.
1:00:43 Of all factors that have been studied to understand motivation,
1:00:48 the most potent one is simply feeling like you're making progress.
1:00:54 Like that sank in.
1:00:57 Beautifully done.
1:00:59 Now, you can take the pen out, you can wipe it.
1:01:01 Can you try reading just another paragraph right now?
1:01:05 I'm going to read from page 219 of Big Trust.
1:01:10 Yes, you can do the hard thing.
1:01:14 Of all factors that have been studied to understand motivation,
1:01:18 the most potent one is simply feeling like you're making progress.
1:01:24 Now Mel, tell us how it felt once you took the pen out.
1:01:27 Well, how it felt when the pen was in Let's start there.
1:01:29 was like being at the dentist when they're trying to take x-rays
1:01:33 and your tongue is in the way and you're trying to move
1:01:35 everything around and it feels very awkward and saliva is falling
1:01:40 around and your mouth is not making the shapes that you want.
1:01:43 But as soon as I took it out, it was as if I had a mouth that had been
1:01:48 warmed up and stretched out and the words just felt more intentional.
1:01:54 And this is exactly what this exercise does.
1:01:57 So you're warming up your entire facial muscles.
1:02:00 You're warming up your throat and your tongue and stretching what otherwise
1:02:04 doesn't get stretched very often and that's what leads us to mumble.
1:02:07 That's what leads us to be difficult to understand.
1:02:09 Communication really comes down to how well your message is received
1:02:13 by the other person and that can influence how confident you're perceived to be,
1:02:17 how credible you're perceived to be, how people respond to you.
1:02:20 When we're nervous, everything tenses and so we tend to mumble.
1:02:24 So if you're somebody who mumbles or you have somebody in your life who is
1:02:29 you know kind of going like mumble mumble does this pen trick and practicing it,
1:02:34 is this something that you can do for free at home that will help
1:02:37 you speak more clearly and eloquently
1:02:40 and that will change the way people perceive you?
1:02:42 Absolutely yes and I encourage you to do it often.
1:02:45 Do it in the morning, do it at night, do it before every meeting,
1:02:47 before every phone call because that's how you're
1:02:50 training yourself to be able to pronounce far better,
1:02:53 to enunciate better which is going to improve how you're perceived.
1:02:57 I love this simple pen trick.
1:02:59 Holy cow, I hope you share this with everybody.
1:03:01 It's so cool and I've just started working
1:03:04 with a voice trainer and I'm going to tell
1:03:05 you there were so many things about this I
1:03:07 didn't understand but what you just showed and what
1:03:11 I felt in terms of the difference is
1:03:13 like having a professional voice coach and it's so
1:03:17 important to take this seriously so that people
1:03:21 take you seriously when you have something to say.
1:03:24 Um Dr.
1:03:24 Shade, can you explain to me and to the person
1:03:28 that's here listening or watching what's courage versus humanness scale?
1:03:35 What is that?
1:03:36 So, this is a scale that we will share with leaders and teams
1:03:38 that we work with at the Fortune 100 companies that we're so blessed to support.
1:03:43 Basically, when we look at teams, especially high-performing teams,
1:03:46 we find that there are two general qualities that come up.
1:03:49 The first one is the humanness qualities.
1:03:53 What do you think some of these are?
1:03:55 Warmth.
1:03:55 Yes.
1:03:56 Um care.
1:03:57 Yeah.
1:03:58 Positivity.
1:03:59 Um uh confidence, humor.
1:04:04 Exactly.
1:04:04 All of them.
1:04:05 Uh collaboration.
1:04:06 Empathy.
1:04:07 Empathy.
1:04:07 Compassion.
1:04:08 Yes.
1:04:08 All of these qualities that make us human and allow
1:04:10 us to come to work in a place that we enjoy.
1:04:13 Yes.
1:04:13 Then we also have the performance-based qualities.
1:04:16 We call them courage-based skills.
1:04:19 What are some of these?
1:04:20 What would a team need in order to make sure they're actually performing?
1:04:23 Leadership.
1:04:23 Uh decision-making.
1:04:25 Uh uh clarity.
1:04:28 Uh feedback.
1:04:31 Uh very like definition of goals, process.
1:04:36 Uh am I getting it?
1:04:36 Absolutely.
1:04:37 you.
1:04:38 So, expectations, ROI.
1:04:40 Here we go.
1:04:41 KPI.
1:04:43 And when we look at the research,
1:04:45 this is looking at a scale it's called the trust versus assertiveness scale.
1:04:49 Some of them call it the compassion versus performance scale.
1:04:52 We call it humanness and courage cuz it's just it's easy to understand.
1:04:55 Now, if we were to map these out, so I have a little visual and I will
1:04:58 pulling up a whiteboard as you're listening.
1:05:00 Don't worry, I am going to explain this.
1:05:02 So, we've got she's got on this, we can't see it yet,
1:05:05 but for you listening, imagine four square,
1:05:07 the game that we played in elementary school.
1:05:10 You're on the playground, there's four squares.
1:05:12 We're standing in the squares.
1:05:13 She's got four squares.
1:05:14 On one side it says human on the other side it says
1:05:17 courage and we're about to find out what are in these four squares.
1:05:20 So where we have teams or individuals,
1:05:22 let's look at it from an individual level first.
1:05:24 Someone who is very low and now let's start with high.
1:05:27 Someone who's very high on humaneness.
1:05:29 Yes.
1:05:29 So a lot of that warmth and the empathy and the compassion.
1:05:31 But very low on courage.
1:05:34 Okay.
1:05:34 What we get is the classic people pleaser.
1:05:38 It's the person who wants everyone to like
1:05:40 them and validate them and so they don't say
1:05:41 what they mean in the meeting and they
1:05:42 sit on their hands and everyone's happy with them.
1:05:47 What about someone who is really high on courage but very low on humaneness.
1:05:52 I think everyone who has worked especially in corporate will know someone like
1:05:55 this and unfortunately a lot of these people are in positions of leadership.
1:05:58 Yes.
1:05:59 not great.
1:05:59 They're steamroller.
1:06:00 Steamroller, they're cold, they're calculated.
1:06:03 You don't like working with them and they make you feel insecure.
1:06:06 We call this the agitator.
1:06:07 Oh god, some days I'm like that.
1:06:09 I'm just [laughter] going to admit it.
1:06:10 Usually it's cuz I haven't eaten or I'm getting over an illness or something
1:06:13 disappointing happened and I don't mean to do this but some days I am.
1:06:17 I find that if you find yourself in this state, do your checklist.
1:06:19 Have I had a nap?
1:06:21 Have I had a snack?
1:06:23 [laughter] Have I done my exercise?
1:06:24 Am I doing my breathing?
1:06:25 Sometimes that's all you need.
1:06:26 By the way, this works in a marriage and in a family and in every relationship.
1:06:30 and this is what happens when we don't have the balance
1:06:33 of these two qualities that we need to be functioning people,
1:06:36 team leaders, team members, in a relationship, as a as a parent.
1:06:40 What about someone who's really low on humaneness and low on courage?
1:06:44 I I mean, are they even do they even have a pulse?
1:06:46 I mean, what's happening?
1:06:48 This is where we get apathy and toxicity.
1:06:50 So so if you're dealing with somebody who has behaviors that you know,
1:06:56 people are throwing around the label toxic person.
1:06:59 I don't like that cuz I like I prefer to say just label the behavior.
1:07:03 A person may not be aware that they're this way.
1:07:06 But if you're if you're with somebody who is reading on the toxic
1:07:13 side in terms of their behavior at work or in friendship,
1:07:16 what does that tell you about what
1:07:18 they're dealing with based on humanness and courage?
1:07:21 They have a lot of fear?
1:07:22 They might have a lot of fear.
1:07:24 They might also lack the agency to believe in their competence.
1:07:28 Or and this is something really important in the context of careers,
1:07:32 there's something called career imprinting.
1:07:35 Where the first few experiences we have in our career end
1:07:38 up shaping our sense of identity when it comes to our career.
1:07:42 That makes sense.
1:07:43 So if you're starting out in the workforce
1:07:46 and you have a really unsupportive environment, you have a micromanaging boss,
1:07:50 you have team members who are not giving you the time of day that you need,
1:07:53 you start to internalize that I'm not worthy, I'm not good enough,
1:07:58 and it's always going to be like this because it becomes what's called a schema,
1:08:01 which is like a template in our mind.
1:08:03 Yeah.
1:08:03 And then we go to a new company, a new team, and everything might be amazing,
1:08:08 yet we expect that we're going to be
1:08:11 overlooked and talked over like we were before,
1:08:13 and then we unintentionally create that in the new environment.
1:08:17 Wow.
1:08:17 That's why it's so important when we start thinking about career imprinting,
1:08:21 when we think about that idea of us
1:08:22 and our self-image and the experiences that we have.
1:08:25 Well, you just taught me something about myself.
1:08:26 I think one of the reasons why, other than just personal values,
1:08:29 I have such a innate sense of justice and fairness and injustice is because
1:08:36 my first real big job out of college and law school was as a public defender,
1:08:41 representing people in the justice system who could not afford
1:08:45 a lawyer and who had experienced systematic discrimination their entire life.
1:08:50 Wow.
1:08:51 And so it is like imprinted in my soul to both respond to moments that feel very
1:08:57 unjust and also to get the dukes up
1:09:00 and fight when I have this sense that, you know,
1:09:04 fairness is very important here.
1:09:06 So, that explains a lot.
1:09:08 Mhm.
1:09:08 So, you've had that career imprinting take place.
1:09:11 And it's continually reinforcing itself.
1:09:13 Absolutely.
1:09:13 And what happens when you have high human-ness and high courage?
1:09:17 So, this is what we call the partner.
1:09:19 Okay.
1:09:20 And we we call it the partner cuz
1:09:21 we're usually sharing this in the context of leadership,
1:09:23 but this is someone who feels like they are
1:09:25 a partner with every single person in that team.
1:09:27 Mhm.
1:09:28 When What do they say?
1:09:29 When the tide rises, all ships rise.
1:09:32 And it's someone who recognizes that by them succeeding,
1:09:34 other people can succeed.
1:09:36 And by them helping other people succeed, they succeed.
1:09:38 It means that they are able to be appreciative of others and collaborative
1:09:43 and cooperative while still giving the feedback that needs to be said.
1:09:47 While still addressing behaviors that need to be addressed.
1:09:50 So, why this model is really valuable for anyone who is working
1:09:52 in a company or working in a team or in relationships is just to recognize
1:09:56 that if you struggle with any of the four elements of big trust
1:10:00 that undermine your confidence and courage
1:10:03 and self-trust and you have that self-doubt,
1:10:06 it means that you're going to live in one of these spaces.
1:10:08 The people pleaser.
1:10:10 Being apathetic.
1:10:11 Where you can see if you're apathetic or toxic, you're a blamer.
1:10:14 If you're a people pleaser, you're overthinking or you are comparing yourself.
1:10:19 Or validation.
1:10:21 If you're the agitator,
1:10:22 you're running people over and you're blaming lots of things
1:10:26 and you're taking control but in the wrong ways and complaining.
1:10:30 And if you're the partner, you're just reaching for the tools.
1:10:32 You're adapting.
1:10:33 You are like telling yourself you're capable of figuring
1:10:37 it out or we're capable of figuring it.
1:10:38 I see how this all tracks directly to what you've been teaching us.
1:10:41 It's brilliant.
1:10:42 Wonderful.
1:10:43 So, that's that.
1:10:43 That's the the matrix that we like to share.
1:10:46 And so, it's great to just see how this matrix maps back into big trust.
1:10:49 You know, it's not just an impact that we get for ourselves.
1:10:51 It's an impact that we are taking
1:10:52 into our lives because we don't live in a microcosm.
1:10:55 We're we're interacting with other people.
1:10:57 Yes.
1:10:58 Dr.
1:10:58 Shetagh.
1:11:00 If the person listening takes just one action out of everything
1:11:05 you've taught us today about the research around breaking self-doubt,
1:11:09 rebuilding trust, what's the most important
1:11:12 thing for the person listening to do?
1:11:14 This is something that you encourage people to do, Mel,
1:11:17 which is pick one thing that you have been hesitating from doing.
1:11:20 One thing that you've been holding back
1:11:22 on because self-doubt is getting in your way.
1:11:24 Break it down into the smallest possible step and just do the thing.
1:11:30 Can I share a very quick story here?
1:11:33 Please.
1:11:34 So, this is a story about Elizabeth Gilbert who wrote Eat,
1:11:36 Pray, Love, which became a movie and a global bestseller.
1:11:39 Now, when she was writing it, it's her memoir.
1:11:41 You'd think a memoir would be kind of easy to write.
1:11:43 It's your story.
1:11:45 But, she said that she couldn't get words on paper because
1:11:47 she had this mantra of this sucks running through her head constantly.
1:11:52 Nothing was ever good enough.
1:11:53 She would write, she would rip it up.
1:11:55 She would write, she would delete.
1:11:57 And then, amidst all of that uncertainty and the self-criticism,
1:12:00 she had this moment of clarity and she thought, "Hold on.
1:12:03 I never promised the universe that I would write brilliantly.
1:12:06 I just promised the universe that I would write.
1:12:09 I would write something." And so,
1:12:11 with that, she made write the goal and not write brilliantly the goal.
1:12:17 And so, the message behind this is sometimes we need to lower our standards.
1:12:22 We need to lower our standards.
1:12:23 Don't aim for perfection.
1:12:25 Just aim for good enough for now.
1:12:26 You can always improve later.
1:12:28 So, don't aim for going viral on social media.
1:12:31 Aim for hitting post.
1:12:34 Don't aim for building a billion-dollar business.
1:12:36 Aim for setting up a website or getting one paying customer.
1:12:40 Don't aim to find your soulmate.
1:12:43 Just aim to ask them out for a coffee.
1:12:46 When you lower the standard, you make it so much more achievable.
1:12:48 And when you achieve it,
1:12:49 then you see yourself being the kind of person who achieves these things,
1:12:53 which fundamentally changes your self-image,
1:12:56 changes how you see yourself and what is possible for you,
1:12:59 and then that starts to change the rest of your life.
1:13:01 I love that.
1:13:02 Dr.
1:13:03 Shade, what are your parting words?
1:13:06 Show up for the life that you want now.
1:13:09 Don't wait for it.
1:13:10 Don't wait for permission.
1:13:11 Don't wait till you feel ready.
1:13:12 Don't wait till you feel worthy.
1:13:14 If you show up for the person that you want to be now,
1:13:18 there's this beautiful phenomena called embodied cognition.
1:13:22 And when you show up for it,
1:13:23 the world starts responding to you as if you already have it.
1:13:26 You see yourself speaking in the meeting,
1:13:29 going after what you want, creating your own momentum,
1:13:32 and that is how you fundamentally shape your self-image,
1:13:35 which shapes your identity, which shapes who you're becoming.
1:13:39 So, don't wait.
1:13:40 Just show up today, and it is remarkable what you will be able to achieve.
1:13:46 Dr.
1:13:46 Shade, I just want to say on behalf of the person
1:13:49 listening and everyone that they will share this with, thank you.
1:13:53 Because it's one thing to say that, it's a whole
1:13:55 different ball game when you show up with frameworks and tools
1:14:00 and very specific things that you can do in order
1:14:04 to understand the nature of how self-doubt is blocking you,
1:14:08 and exactly what is within your reach to push through
1:14:13 it and continue moving toward the goals that you have,
1:14:17 building the confidence that you know is within you,
1:14:20 and seeing yourself doing the things that you
1:14:23 had otherwise held your back yourself back from experiencing.
1:14:27 Thank you so much for having me,
1:14:28 and for everyone watching and listening, thank you for being here.
1:14:32 Thank you for investing in yourself, and I'm excited to see where you end up
1:14:36 when you apply some of what you've learned today.
1:14:38 I am so excited, too.
1:14:39 I'm so excited that you decided to spend
1:14:42 time listening to this or watching this.
1:14:44 Today you got tools, you got frameworks,
1:14:46 you got the research broken down in the simplest
1:14:49 ways so you can start applying it today.
1:14:51 I cannot wait to see how this changes your life.
1:14:54 So, make sure you tell me what happens.
1:14:56 And one more thing, in case no one else tells you today, as your friend,
1:14:59 I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you and I believe in you.
1:15:02 And I believe in your ability to create a better life.
1:15:05 There is zero doubt in my mind that when you use the tools to rewire self-doubt,
1:15:10 those moments that are going to keep coming,
1:15:12 and you double down on your capacity and the things that are in your control
1:15:16 and the talents that you have inside you
1:15:20 to push through what's happening and learn and grow,
1:15:22 your life is going to get better.
1:15:23 I mean, how could it not?
1:15:25 Alrighty, I will see you in the very next episode.
1:15:27 I'm going to welcome you in the moment you hit play.
1:15:30 And thank you.
1:15:31 Thank you for watching all the way to the end.
1:15:33 I'm so excited that you're investing your time
1:15:36 in learning how to create unshakable confidence.
1:15:38 And I also want to thank you for sharing the link
1:15:41 to this episode with people in your life that you care about.
1:15:44 Whether it's [music] your sister or your partner,
1:15:46 somebody in your life that keeps shrinking and blocking their own way.
1:15:50 One way to be a great friend [music] or a sibling
1:15:52 or a great partner is to share these resources with people.
1:15:56 And so, I just really appreciate you doing that.
1:15:59 And one [music] more thing.
1:16:00 My team was just showing me that 57% of you who
1:16:03 watch the Mel Robbins podcast here on YouTube are not subscribers.
1:16:06 My goal is to get that number to 50%.
1:16:08 So, could you do me a favor?
1:16:09 If the subscribe button is lit up, would you just hit it?
1:16:12 It's free and it's the best way for you [music] to say,
1:16:15 "Thanks, Mel." And thanks to the team here at the Mel Robbins podcast.
1:16:18 And thanks to Dr.
1:16:19 ShaDay who flew halfway around the world to be
1:16:22 [music] here in Boston to teach you this.
1:16:25 I really appreciate you doing that and I know
1:16:27 that you would appreciate me recommending the next video.
1:16:30 This, you're going to love, and I'll welcome you in the moment you hit play.