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Embracing Emotional Sobriety: Small Choices for Big Healing from Heartbreak and Anxiety with Laura McKowen

March 20, 2026 Leave a Comment

embracing emotional sobriety
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In this episode, Laura McKowen discusses embracing emotional sobriety and small choices for big healing from heartbreak and anxiety. Laura talks about her 11-year sobriety journey and her personal journal of navigating heartbreak. She delves into the daily choices that foster healing and emotional well-being. Laura also shares insights on the non-linear nature of recovery, the importance of small, consistent practices, and the role of relationships and self-compassion in emotional sobriety. Together, they explore how healing is an ongoing process, shaped by vulnerability, connection, and the willingness to embrace both pain and growth.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Personal journey of sobriety and its challenges
  • Managing anxiety and heartbreak after a significant relationship
  • The non-linear nature of emotional healing and recovery
  • The parable of the two wolves and its relevance to personal choices
  • Importance of daily practices for mental health maintenance
  • Concept of emotional sobriety and its distinction from mere survival
  • The role of relationships in emotional well-being and healing
  • Understanding attachment dynamics and their impact on relationships
  • The interplay between trauma, addiction, and relational patterns
  • Emphasizing self-forgiveness, compassion, and community support in healing processes

Laura McKowen is the founder and CEO of The Luckiest Club, a global sobriety support organization, and host of Tell Me Something True podcast.  Laura has been published in The New York Times, and her work has been featured in The Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal, the TODAY show and more and is the bestselling author of We Are The Luckiest: The Surprising Magic of a Sober Life,

Laura McKowen:  Website | Instagram

If you enjoyed this conversation with Laura McKowen, check out these other episodes:

Why Community and Courage Matter More Than Ever with Laura McKowen

A Journey to Self-Discovery and Sobriety with Matthew Quick

This episode is sponsored by:

Pebl – an AI-powered platform that helps companies hire and manage global teams in 185+ countries. Get a free estimate at hipebl.ai

Brodo Broth: Shop the best broth on the planet with Brodo.  Head to Brodo.com/TOYF for 20% off your first subscription order and use code TOYF for an additional $10 off.

Alma is on a mission to simplify access to high-quality, affordable mental health care. Visit helloalma.com to learn more!

By purchasing products and/or services from our sponsors, you are helping to support The One You Feed, and we greatly appreciate it. Thank you!

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If you enjoy our podcast and find value in our content, please consider supporting the show. By joining our Patreon Community, you’ll receive exclusive content only available on Patreon!  Click here to learn more!!

Episode Transcript:

Eric Zimmer 00:00:00  You may have heard me mention my new book a few times, and I can assure you, you will certainly hear it a few more. But now we are offering some pre-order bonuses. One of them is the still Point method, which I believe is the only systematic way to interrupt negative thought patterns often enough for them to change. There’s a lot out there about what you should think and not think, but there’s very little that gives you a small and portable system to actually do it. You get the guide to the method, and three free months of a new app designed to help you implement it. There are other bonuses too. You can learn more and claim them at one. You feed your net.

Laura McKowen 00:00:42  As we go along further in life. The big thing for me, and maybe this is true for you, that I am learning that it all comes down to how much I can forgive and love and have compassion for myself.

Chris Forbes 00:01:04  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts.

Chris Forbes 00:01:10  We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:49  There’s a version of healing that many of us secretly hope for. You do enough work, grow enough, learn enough, and eventually the same old pain stops knocking you over, but life doesn’t always seem to work that way. Often the same lesson comes back around again, but with the work. You can meet it with a little more awareness and a little more compassion. In this conversation, Laura McCowan and I talk about emotional sobriety, heartbreak, anxiety, and the realization that healing isn’t a straight line.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:23  It’s a circle. It deepens. We also explore the small practices that help us stay steady when things feel anything but steady. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi Laura, welcome to the show or welcome back to the show, I should say.

Laura McKowen 00:02:40  Hey, Eric. Good to be here. Thank you.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:42  I’m always happy when I get a chance to talk to you. I’ve been sort of following along with your sobriety journey. It’s 11 years now, so congratulations. And you’ve got a great Substack also where I have been reading and keeping up with. So I’m excited to talk about a bunch of different things. But before we start, we’ll start like we always do with the parable. And in the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with a grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:19  And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And their grandparents says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Laura McKowen 00:03:33  Okay, so I’m not sure how I have answered this question in our prior conversations, but I know how I would answer it today. I have been writing about and dealing with a lot of acute anxiety in the past couple of years especially. I had a relationship and we were engaged together for four years and it ended about two years ago, almost two years ago, and I’ve always struggled with anxiety to some degree. But since then it has been really acute periods of anxiety. And so I’ve had to try to find new ways to look at that, work with it and think about it and relate to it. And if you have struggled with anxiety in this way, or anyone who’s listening has struggled in this way, it can really, really, really take over your life and take you down on the days that it’s bad, it feels otherworldly.

Laura McKowen 00:04:23  It feels impossible. And what it has forced me to do is go back to the most basic practices of, I would say, sobriety, that I really started in sobriety, where this comes into the good wolf, bad wolf thing. If I think of waking up in the morning with like an empty stomach or two empty stomachs, the good wolf stomach and the bad wolf stomach, the the good wolf being the path that I could go down. That is going to mean that I’m able to manage my day just like very baseline expectations. The bad wolf meaning I am going to feed the stories. The lack of discipline, which I’ll get into a second, the practices, the sort of rote habits that will lead to a really horrific anxiety day and therefore a non-functional, very depressive day.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:29  Right.

Laura McKowen 00:05:30  I have to the the good wolf versus bad wolf, in which one I’m going to feed dials down to the like, minute by minute choices I make when I wake up. And what I mean by that is I have to be extraordinarily focused and disciplined with the thoughts that I’m allowing myself to chase and nurture in my mind, and I have to sort of stack up very, very, very basic practices that help me get to a level of okay ness versus like sliding down a hill.

Laura McKowen 00:06:08  And what those are for me are no caffeine on those days. Unfortunately, writing these specific prompts and sort of practices that I’ve learned in my journal and it takes, you know, sometimes it takes 30 minutes. So it’s a chunk of time. It means moving my body. It means putting my phone away. It means praying for me, and it means meditating for like 10 to 15 minutes minimum. And I think sometimes the the good wolf bad wolf thing can seem a little bit esoteric and like, you know, am I looking over my right shoulder or my left shoulder or am I, you know, reading this book or that book, or am I giving into, you know, desires or am I, you know, going to spend my time in some fruitful way where I’m of service to others, it can seem like these very sort of big, grand, Big stroke things that we have to decide. And and I guess there’s a long way of saying, it’s the teeny tiny, tiny things right now.

Laura McKowen 00:07:15  The seemingly teeny, teeny daily rote habits that I that I have to choose that stack up to me being really okay versus not okay. I have no shot at, the good wolf winning. Let’s say if I’m not doing these teeny tiny little habits and they’re so easy to let go of and they’re so easy to forget, they’re so easy to let go of, you wake up in the morning, you’re like, man, I just want to have a cup of coffee and like, zone out and scroll Instagram for 15 minutes. But if I do that on these days and these weeks and months where I’m in a really acute anxiety place, I’m gone. And it’s like a snowball and I can’t. I can’t track it. So that’s the good wolf, bad wolf for me right now. And it’s it really feels when I’m in the bad place, it really feels absolutely untenable. And it’s amazing to me that these small things add up to such an extraordinary difference.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:14  There’s so many things you said in there that I would like to hit on, and one of the things that I’ve enjoyed, the way you approach it, not that you are going through it, but that it has been the way you are writing openly about how devastating the loss of that relationship was, how serious the anxiety has been.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:32  And I think there is a tendency in sobriety circles for us to paint a happy picture of what sobriety is, because it is a much better picture, right? I think we would all agree at any time, those of us who are sober would say like, it’s much, much better. And you know what? It still sucks sometimes. Sometimes it’s still really hard. And I think about that parable too. I was actually saying to somebody it was interviewing earlier today, and I said, I don’t know that a decade on, 11 years on that, I would pick that parable as the way I would orient the whole show today.

Laura McKowen 00:09:09  Totally. Yeah, I agree.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:11  But when I’m in times of trouble, that parable rings really, really strong, right? Because it points to there are things that I know can help, and there are things that I know don’t help, and I’ve got to make that choice. And so I think that that’s really for me when it becomes, like you said, less ethereal and a lot more pragmatic.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:38  Now, I think part of emotional sobriety for me is realizing and learning how to do those kind of practices consistently, even when I’m not in trouble. Right. Yeah. Like that’s that’s kind of that’s kind of the trick is, you know, how do we stay motivated to do the things that are good for us when we’re not in so much pain?

Laura McKowen 00:10:00  Yeah, we’re saying the same thing. You said it in a different in a different way, a little bit more succinctly. I don’t know I don’t know the secret to that yet. I haven’t figured that out yet because they tend to get a looser with with things once I feel good. and I don’t know that that I don’t know that there’s anything actually wrong with that. I think that’s sort of a natural ebb and flow of life.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:23  Right, right.

Laura McKowen 00:10:24  I think we bounce back faster. We go back to our practices faster. We have built a stronger baseline of remembrance in our body and in our, nervous system and in our, in our, neural pathways, so that it’s like getting on the track is not that big of a deal.

Laura McKowen 00:10:46  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:46  Right. Yeah. So there’s something you wrote recently that made me laugh out loud. You’re talking about anxiety. I always want to find it here for a second. You said, I know my back is against the wall when I’m really reading Pema Chodron. Not like have her on in the background because it’s a nice voice, but like, I’m really reading it and that just made me laugh because that is so true. And she’s exactly the author. I would say that when I’m like, really freaked out, really having like an existentially bad time, she’s where I go back to and I don’t find her as compelling to me most of the time because I’m like, well, yeah, I know everything is groundless and but, you know, like, but when I am in trouble. And that just made me laugh. Like, I know I’m in trouble when that’s what I’m reading.

Laura McKowen 00:11:35  I think she’s that for a lot of people.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:38  Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Laura McKowen 00:11:39  And God, I’m grateful for her.

Laura McKowen 00:11:42  When you’re really in the shit, she is my go to and she has been for like 15 years.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:17  So a couple years ago, I had, I went through a pretty difficult time, where there was a lot of grief. There was a lot of anxiety, there was a lot of surprise. I was just sort of completely taken aback by what was happening. And I remember having these moments where I felt like I thought I had done all this work. Like, you know, I’ve done inner child work, I’ve done I, you know, I thought I was through all of this. What is this. And having certain moments of feeling very discouraged. I had a therapist help me reframe that and we may get into that. But I’d love to know like was that your experience and how have you been able to put that in a context that’s useful?

Laura McKowen 00:13:06  Yes, it has been my experience throughout sobriety, and I think of things that have helped me reframe it, I think. Do you know about Spiral Dynamics and kind of that we heal? You don’t even need to know.

Laura McKowen 00:13:20  You know anyone who’s listening about the whole thing of Spiral Dynamics. But I think we heal in a spiral. Yep. Trending up. But we go around and around and around and.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:29  We see the same things again.

Laura McKowen 00:13:31  Feels like we are revisiting the same lessons. And we are. And I think we may be revisiting them in just a different context. We may feel we often feel like you said like, oh, I’m just here again. It’s the exact same thing. I don’t think that’s true, though. I love the quote. Nothing ever goes away until it teaches us what we need to know. And I think each time I say we circle, I’ll just pick an example. I have a pattern of relationships that I’ve had since it was imprinted in my childhood. Comes from my dad. I chase, or am attracted to, or in relationship with, or in some kind of situation with an unavailable, emotionally unavailable person. And I could look at the entire history of all my relationships, starting from very young and until this last one, and say, God, I’d never learned anything.

Laura McKowen 00:14:34  I just kept repeating the same thing over and over again. But if I look closer, that’s not true at all. Each time, certainly since sobriety, it’s gone up like that. My healing has gone up and up and up. It’s not a once and done, and it’s never going to be a once and done. I don’t think there will be a time, while I will ever not be triggered into that type of reaction, whether I’m in a relationship with a healthy person or not. Yeah, the difference is we get out of said situation more quickly, we recover more quickly, and sometimes I do think too. This is my theory right now, and I don’t have anything really to base this on, other than all the sort of spiritual reading that I’ve done over the course of my life, meaning there’s nothing scientific that I know about it. It’s just my feeling and what I’ve learned. Things get really intense before we sort of jump a level of healing. So this last relationship for me was like, you have got to be kidding me that I’m in this much pain.

Laura McKowen 00:15:48  Learning this particular thing again at ten years sober, and it was the most excruciating pain that I had ever experienced.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:59  Right.

Laura McKowen 00:15:59  And I did, in moments feel like that was a failure. Like, God, I haven’t learned anything or I’m hopeless. It’s just going to keep happening. But I know what’s truer is one, because of all the prior work that I had done, I was able to actually metabolize more of the hurt and the pain and therefore absorb more of the healing and the lessons. So I think it’s this strange inverse where it’s almost like the more capacity we have built, the more the deeper our sorrow and our pain. It’s like it carves more out of us. But then in that, you know, the Kahlil Gibran, the deeper our sorrow, the more joy we can contain. I think the deeper the sorrow, the more healing and the more joy and the more capacity we then have for the next thing. So there’s that. I also think that as we go along further in life, the big thing for me, and maybe this is true for you, that I am learning that it all comes down to how much I can forgive and love and have compassion for myself.

Laura McKowen 00:17:11  And that has really only come online in the past few years. Yeah, I still was what I would call healing or growing or, you know, my resilience was really based on some kind of pressure to just push forward and a little bit of self-hatred or a lot, a little bit of just, I’m going to exile that part of me. I’m still pissed. I just don’t want those parts of me anymore. And so I think the, the part where nothing ever leaves us alone until it teaches us what we need to know. I think the end point of what we really need to know, and what we really need to learn is that until we accept all the parts of ourselves and really learn to integrate those parts and love them and bring them along, we’re going to get that same lesson. So it almost hurts worse the longer we go along, because there’s more accumulated pain and exiling of those parts. So this part of me that chased that unavailable person, which is really just me trying to complete some story from my childhood with my dad, with just a new person.

Laura McKowen 00:18:19  Right. I now, instead of having done it ten times, I’ve done it 400 times. And I feel that and that part has been exiled 400 times, and the pain is deeper. And I’m also 11 years sober. I don’t have other coping mechanisms now, so I’m feeling it more. But the opportunity to integrate that part and to bring that part along and to have more self-compassion for that part and to actually say, okay, I’m not going to hate you anymore. I’m not going to punish you. I’m not going to say you’re stupid or you’re wrong or whatever. That opportunity is there. And with that becomes, it comes a another level of healing. It just hurts worse. So there’s a few things there. I think, like overall, I think we do keep circling the same lessons. I think we get better at recovering. I think we get better at acknowledging, I think our awareness increases, but I don’t think the pain gets easier. I think it actually gets harder the further we go along until we’ve really, really integrated the lesson.

Laura McKowen 00:19:28  And I think it always takes so much longer than we think. The ultimate acceptance is that we just don’t ever get to finally arrive at the healing place.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:39  Yeah, I don’t think there is one. And I think the tricky part with all this is like you lose a relationship to someone you’re engaged to, that you’ve been in this relationship that you’ve built all these ideas and around. What’s the healthy, healed response to that? It’s still an enormous amount of pain.

Laura McKowen 00:19:59  Yeah. The healthy, healed response is to be in pain.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:03  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight? Breath shallow? Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday, I send weekly bites of wisdom. A short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show. Things like mental health, anxiety, relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day it’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it. If you’d like extra fuel for the weekend, you also get a weekend podcast playlist.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:41  Join us at one UFI Net newsletter. That’s one you feed your Net newsletter and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. I thought a relationship that was really important to me was ending, and my therapist just kept bringing up my childhood and I was like, well, of course, yes, but if I came to you and said that my partner had just died, would you be telling me right now that the thing we need to be doing is finding out what’s broken about me from my childhood?

Laura McKowen 00:21:16  Oh my God, yes.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:17  Like, no, we would not be doing that now if my grief went on and devastated me and I couldn’t climb out of it. And of course. But there’s also a natural humanness that none of us get out of. And I think that the self-improvement world subtly tells us there is a way out of it. When I don’t think there is.

Laura McKowen 00:21:40  No, I think you’re so right. I was actually very grateful for the amount of pain that I felt and could feel.

Laura McKowen 00:21:49  My marriage ended. 13 years ago, I didn’t feel much of anything except relief. I was because I was still drinking. I was deep into my addiction. I just wanted to be alone with that, and I wanted to stop feeling like I was ruining his life and his dreams. And I wanted to stop lying. And I wanted to stop cheating and not being married removed a lot of that, and I couldn’t feel the pain because I couldn’t access it. I was so distanced from my own heart because of the drinking and all kinds of unprocessed shit. So I was actually so grateful that I felt it so acutely. This time I felt more real, I felt more alive, I felt more present, and I felt way more sober because, like, emotionally sober, because there’s this quote that I saw maybe six months after the breakup, when I was in this place of like, I just want this to go away. Why is this sticking around so long? You know, you don’t want to be in pain when you’re in pain.

Laura McKowen 00:22:54  It’s terrible. Yeah. And you mentioned the self-help world. A lot of the self-help world. And you said not so subtly. Subtly, I would say not so subtly in some cases. You know, we pathologies, all kinds of forms of dependence, like codependency is like this big thing now, like, oh, if you are somehow emotionally tied to another person’s being and process in their heart and you know, you’re you’re codependent. Yeah. And I think that’s bullshit. I think codependence is real. There is a certain level of pathology that belongs to that. But I think by and large, we have tried so hard not to need each other, not to depend on each other, that we’ve mythologized any emotional regulation that exists in a relationship that should exist. That’s very natural as the kind of animals and the beings that we are. And I saw this quote that said, this is a brutalization of it, but it basically was like we are undone by each other, and if we aren’t undone by each other, there’s something wrong.

Laura McKowen 00:23:59  We’re missing something. Yeah, we are undone by each other.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:03  Yeah. That’s beautiful. I actually think it’s getting better. And I would say in the last several years I feel like this is lessened. But there’s a psychology version and there’s a spiritual version of it which basically said we should be these, like you said, we should be these creatures that all our happiness is inside of us. I should just be happy and be able to generate all that just inside myself. And that’s what a healthy person is. And I think that the more that I’ve learned about what it means to be a human, the way we are wired up, the type of creatures that we are is that that is profoundly false. Yes.

Laura McKowen 00:24:59  Profoundly false.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:00  We should be undone by each other. And like you said, there are ways in which we should be perhaps less undone by each other. Right. And there are people that it’s worth letting undo us. And there’s people that we probably shouldn’t let in to undo us.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:14  And there’s a whole lot of nuance and subtlety in that. But to think that that wouldn’t be the case is to miss. I think a lot of understanding of what we are as creatures, and just a lot of the beauty of being alive.

Laura McKowen 00:25:27  A lot of the beauty of being alive, and a lot of the beauty of being in relationship, which is it’s kind of all we have. Yeah, it’s it’s the number one predictor of happiness is if you have healthy relationships or not. And also of health. Overall health and well-being. So I do agree. I think there’s some ways we are getting more of the nuance in there and getting it a little bit more right. Especially as we’ve understood the the reality of trauma and the impact of trauma. So meaning this sort of hyper individualism and this hyper sort of self-reliance, we’ve started to break that down a bit and understand that, like it’s not just a matter of if you want to be happy, you will. And if you want to have self-esteem, you will.

Laura McKowen 00:26:17  And if you want to have self-worth, you will. You just generate it yourself. That’s all you need is this relationship with yourself. Some of that has dialed down a bit with the understanding of how trauma actually works and, you know, other psychological factors, but I totally agree. And I think that’s a lot about what I’ve written about in this next book, just from a memoir perspective, not a teaching perspective is just sort of this coming around to the fact that we are undone by each other. And that’s not a bug, right? That’s not a problem. It’s a reality of being emotional beings, being biologically connected to each other. I mean, some of this stuff is just science. We we attune and attach to each other nervous systems. We do co regulate each other. When you’re with another person that you love and that cares for you, you co regulate each other. We need each other. We need community, we need relationship. So for me, because this is my, you know, sort of my ground zero lesson, this is what has been the hardest for me to sort of accept about myself that I can be impacted and that there’s nothing wrong with the way I am impacted, that my feelings aren’t a problem, that my quote unquote weaknesses are not actually a problem.

Laura McKowen 00:27:40  They’re beautiful. And part of what makes me just normal human. That that I don’t need to have shame about that. That’s what I’ve written about in my latest book, is just coming around to the fact that, like, emotional sobriety and so much like physical sobriety is learning to how to see the humanity and the behaviors that you have and that they are only always, ever a way to connect and feel okay and safe in the world.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:05  Yeah, that’s a beautiful description of it. Because the more I have reflected on my addiction, the more I see that’s what it was all about.

Laura McKowen 00:28:14  That’s all it ever was.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:15  Recently, you told a man you didn’t want to keep seeing him because he didn’t feel safe. And you described this beautiful scene. It really moved me where you’re you’re sort of you’ve told the guy this and you’re crying, but you’re not crying because the relationship, you’re crying because you you did it for yourself. You stood up and you went, okay, I’m not going to go down that path.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:37  And that’s a really big moment.

Laura McKowen 00:28:40  It was wild. And it’s really goes back to what I was talking about earlier about, you know, I have done that same dance 400 plus times in my life. It’s the thing I know best. It’s where I have actually tried to find safety. It is something I have hated and shamed myself for so many times. It has caused me such excruciating pain over the course of my life. And specifically, what I’m talking about is, is abandoning my self to try and be what someone else. To try to get some form of scrap of love, attention, affection. Because better than nothing, you know, to have that pathological sort of hope that, oh, maybe this will, this will turn into something different. Maybe this will rewrite that original story. Finally, this time, I’ll get the person who can’t see me to see me. Yeah, and what I meant by this guy isn’t safe. This person isn’t safe. As I knew I could feel it.

Laura McKowen 00:29:56  And he had said as much in not not that specific way, but he’d said he was looking for something different than what I wanted. He. He said it. And it was like this sliding door moment where I could go into that old dance. I could go into that old thing, and man, did I want to. It’s kind of like substance addiction, actually. It’s a lot alike. It like it where you really actually want to keep doing the thing. There is some kind of comfort and relief and deep familiarity with what is going to happen and your biology. And there’s a chase element and there’s a reward element. And, you know, it’s that equation that we have that’s in the background when we have a substance addiction, where I remember someone in in the rooms of AA when I first started and I was going to those meetings, say if there was even 5% relief left for me in drinking, I would still do it.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:03  Yeah.

Laura McKowen 00:31:03  And I remember thinking, oh, there’s still a lot of relief left there for me.

Laura McKowen 00:31:08  I still get a payoff. I still like it for the first couple hours, maybe even the whole night. Maybe I don’t hate it until the next day. But eventually and very quickly, once I, you know, my back was sort of up against wall, and I knew I shouldn’t be dreaming. I knew this thing had me. The relief window got really, really, really small to where it was almost nothing. And the relief window for this type of a relationship. For me, the payoff window has started to get smaller and smaller, but it’s still there. And man, it’s harder to break because it’s not a substance. Emotions love. People are not a binary. It’s not either you’re doing it or you’re not. We’re all sort of doing it or testing doing it right. And so sometimes you don’t know til it’s a little too late and you’re already attached to this person and you’ve already got some history and you’re attached to them, and your biology is firing to like, go towards this person.

Laura McKowen 00:32:09  I think it’s way stronger than substances, the biology, the biological urge to reenact the trauma.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:16  Yeah. And also substances you can eliminate.

Laura McKowen 00:32:18  You can eliminate. That’s what I mean. It’s not a binary.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:21  Yeah. I mean it’s one of the great things about if you have a substance addiction is you can just truly starve it out of existence. Yeah. I’m not saying it’s easy, but you will hit a point where, at least for most people, it ceases to be a problem. But relationships. You never get out of that dance.

Laura McKowen 00:32:40  You can’t. No you can’t. And like alcohol, I can remove it from my home. I can stop going places where there’s drinking. I can limit the access I have, you know, the places that I go with my friends. You know, all those things I could. Like you said, I can slowly choke it out and starve it out of my life. And truly, I haven’t had a drink in 11 years. I haven’t touched alcohol and I don’t have to.

Laura McKowen 00:33:01  I have to and want to be around people, and I want to be in relationship and I want love, I need it. Not only do you want it, you need it. You can’t. You literally can’t starve yourself out of relationship. So it’s messier that way. So back to this story. All of the work that I had done in the past had sort of brought me, bubbled up into this moment, and I first was able to verbalize to him that, and that’s something I’d never been able to do before. I would have been too embarrassed to say, you’re just not safe for me. And it wasn’t physically safe. It’s like you’re not safe for me to invest my heart into this will not just cause me pain, it certainly will, but it will cause me. It’s very costly for me. It’s not just like, oh, I might have a little heartache. Like, now this is this is going to equal a lot of anxiety. It’s going to equal pain that I will have trouble tolerating.

Laura McKowen 00:34:04  I will not function. I will, you know, it’s it’s it’s real deep for me. So I said you’re not safe for me and decided to stop pursuing this thing. And I had never done that before. Never. I had done the exact opposite. I’d run towards it. Well, maybe putting up some like, you know, saying, oh, I’m not going to do her. This is bad for me or what? Saying I trying to be the cool girl. I would do all kinds of gymnastics to try to make it okay and it could never be okay. And I cried for all the times that I hadn’t done that before. And I cried because it was fucking hard. And there was sadness there. I didn’t want to do that.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:42  Yeah, but you did. It’s just amazing to me. Like, I just love a story like that. And again, it’s not to say that you may not in two weeks do the exact same thing again, but those moments, I think, and I can recognize them in my journey to sobriety.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:59  I can recognize the moments where even if it was for a day or a week or one night where I was able to, like, go, oh, no, yeah, I’d be like, oh, look at that. Holy mackerel.

Laura McKowen 00:35:12  It’s a possibility that you now have it’s a little twitch of muscle memory that you now have that you didn’t have before. And people who haven’t been through something like this, it’s really hard to explain the knife’s edge you’re on in those moments, what it costs you to go in either direction.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:32  That’s a great way of saying it. What it costs you to go in either direction. One of them just costs a little bit more. One of them probably a little bit, actually. Maybe. Maybe a lot more in the long term. But yeah. And I love the way you describe it. So in AA we used to use the phrase cunning, baffling and powerful. Yeah. Right. And that’s what this sort of thing you’re talking about is I’ve got my own version.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:56  I’ve been in a relationship for ten years. I’ve got my own version of it, which is more or less, you know, like I have to really work because I think there’s a certain degree of distance that I like. And if you come too close, I want to back up. But if you start to pull away.

Laura McKowen 00:36:16  You five alarm fire in your body, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:36:19  Yeah. And and what I’m astounded by is I only know it now with a ton of awareness because it changes my entire perception of the other person. It’s bizarre to me the way like, oh, if you’re moving away from me, I suddenly it’s just crazy, like it’s, you’re the most beautiful person in the entire world. But if you’re coming at me, it’s different. And and to recognize that like to say it’s emotional. It is. But it’s it changes my entire perception. It’s biology. Really deep. Yeah.

Laura McKowen 00:36:57  Yeah. It’s truly biology. Yeah I think there’s there’s an emotional thing going on. There’s probably a spiritual thing going on.

Laura McKowen 00:37:03  But I think it’s truly biology. I think the attachment system goes nuts. And all of a sudden this you are in a, it’s a threat to your whole body that this person is moving away from you. And so of course they become more attractive. Of course they become more powerful. Of course they become. Yeah, there’s a fantasy about them now. There’s they have magical powers. They have all these things.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:29  Yeah. It’s amazing because I can look back at previous relationships and see like how wildly different I saw the same person, right? How wildly different? I saw the same person. And with years of remove now I’m like, well, maybe I see them as accurate as we ever see anything, which I think is questionable, but I can look back at like my wife of, you know, my son’s 28. So 26 years ago, I feel like I can see her with some degree of I’m not hooked up. Yeah. I’m not hooked up. Right. And I’m like, oh, okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:04  That’s interesting. She’s neither as amazing as I thought when she was moving away. And I think biology is a great way to say it because it changes perception in a really deep way.

Laura McKowen 00:38:17  That’s the only way I’ve been able to really understand it and explain it into the depth in which it animates you is biology. Yeah. And I’m not making that up. This is like I have have the fortune of being connected to the foremost sort of leaders in this space, the space being, you know, psychology, attachment theory, biology, complex trauma. I’m assuming you have some complex trauma in your past. And this plays into it because when you feel safe, I’m just going to guess because of what you just said, when you feel safe in a relationship. There’s a discomfort to that almost. It’s like that’s the sort of moving away thing. It’s like, it’s safer.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:06  Or it manifests bored. It manifests like.

Laura McKowen 00:39:10  Yeah, the person’s not that interesting or sometimes not that interesting. Like, there’s no spark.

Laura McKowen 00:39:18  There’s no electricity. Yep. And when someone’s moving away from you, it is familiar. It sparks that Disorganized attachment thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:31  Which I am, which I think is such a great term. Yeah.

Laura McKowen 00:39:36  It’s it’s and it’s and your body like you don’t sit there and this is not rational. No. All of a sudden your system just lighting up and you’re like, oh, and I can’t control that anymore than I could control my drinking at the end that this is deeper. This was underneath the drinking. This is a lot of the reason I did drink.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:56  Yes.

Laura McKowen 00:39:58  Was to try to soothe this sort of it causes this extraordinary existential pain.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:03  It’s been interesting to remain in relationship with somebody for ten years and and do this dance. Yeah. And a lot of it is me. I’m a lot more conscious of it now. So I can sort of just I can’t really make it go away. Exactly. But I can try and relax around it. So I sort of think about a lot of times I use being sick as a really useful analogy for a lot of things, because when I’m sick, I just know my brain isn’t working and I just do my very best to be like, okay, I hear everything you’re saying, but the world isn’t that black, that bleak, that like, just settle down.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:43  And that’s what I think I’ve learned to do. The other thing I’ve learned to do is name it a little bit and sometimes even not, not a lot, but sometimes even with my partner. And the minute I do, it’s gone. It’s so strange. It’s so strange. The minute I say I’m feeling this and I say it to her, it vanishes. Yeah, but I don’t want to be saying that all the time, right?

Laura McKowen 00:41:04  No, because that’s hard as a partner, but.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:06  As another person.

Laura McKowen 00:41:07  Yeah, yeah. But I think this speaks to the fact that we heal relationally. Yeah. That what you’re talking about is, like, really healing with someone in real time. And that person can’t be that for you all the time. We would destroy each other if we if we did that.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:23  If we vocalized every weird emotional fluctuation that went through us. Yeah. Of course.

Laura McKowen 00:41:29  But being with someone where it’s safe enough to speak that sometimes, and to put words to that and to have them stay and I mean, that is how we actually heal is relationally.

Laura McKowen 00:41:41  So this is all this stuff that is really deeply present for me now and at 11 years and that I’ve written about in this last book, and I’m still walking through and understanding, but I understand a lot more than I did before. Wow. It’s a wild ride.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:57  Yeah. Before you check out, pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection, and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change. Feed your good wolf at one you feed dot net newsletter again one you feed dot net. newsletter. Well, I think that’s a beautiful place to wrap up. I, as always, am inspired by you. Your writing, it’s outstanding and just the bravery that you show in this, I think, is such a beautiful thing. And you said something in relation to this that I just want to end us with.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:44  If I can find it. You say I’m sharing this mostly because if it’s your experience too, it might be helpful to know you’re not alone or somehow uniquely fucked up, especially in sobriety. It seems like we shouldn’t struggle in this way, but almost everyone I know does. We drank for good reason. It would be completely unmanageable if I was drinking. It’s still tough, not unmanageable, but tough. And I just love that because you’re normalizing this thing that everybody has and people in sobriety, you know, there’s the performative aspect of going to meetings and I’m sober and how wonderful it is. There’s a performative aspect to it is wonderful to see people write about honestly. So thank you for all that.

Laura McKowen 00:43:25  Oh, you’re so welcome. No. Thank you. It’s I’m it’s I’m grateful to have this conversation. You’re catching me when I’m, like, doing these things in real time. So I don’t have packaged sort of ways to talk about it. So I appreciate your patience as I fumble my way through my words.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:46  no real fumbling that I noticed.

Laura McKowen 00:43:48  Okay. Thanks, Eric. It was really nice to see you again.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:51  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

Navigating Life’s Disruptions: Insights on Adapting and Thriving with James Patterson

March 17, 2026 Leave a Comment

navigating life's disruptions
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In this episode, James Patterson discusses navigating life’s disruptions and shares insights on adapting and thriving in life.. He also discusses managing negative thoughts and balancing ambition with contentment. James shares insights from his writing career, co-authoring experiences, and personal life, including parenting and the importance of prioritizing family, health, friends, and spirit. The conversation blends practical advice, engaging stories, and reflections on adapting to change, offering listeners inspiration and tools for navigating both personal and professional challenges.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Discussion of James Patterson’s new book, Disrupt Everything and Win: Take Control of Your Future.
  • Exploration of how individuals and organizations can adapt to change and leverage disruption.
  • The metaphor of the “two wolves” representing positive and negative qualities within individuals.
  • Insights into Patterson’s writing process and creative journey.
  • Reflections on co-writing experiences with various collaborators.
  • The balance between ambition and contentment in personal and professional life.
  • The importance of storytelling and practical tools in business and self-help contexts.
  • Patterson’s early career in advertising and its influence on his writing and approach to disruption.
  • The significance of maintaining balance in life, using the metaphor of juggling five balls.
  • Personal anecdotes and reflections on travel, parenting, and life philosophy.

James Patterson is the most popular storyteller of our time and the creator of such unforgettable characters and series as Alex Cross, the Women’s Murder Club, Jane Smith, and Maximum Ride. He has coauthored #1 bestselling novels with Bill Clinton, Dolly Parton, and Michael Crichton, as well as collaborated on #1 bestselling nonfiction, including The Idaho Four, Walk in My Combat Boots, and Filthy Rich. Patterson has told the story of his own life in the #1 bestselling autobiography James Patterson by James Patterson. He is the recipient of an Edgar Award, ten Emmy Awards, the Literarian Award from the National Book Foundation, and the National Humanities Medal.

Connect with James Patterson: Website | Instagram | YouTube

If you enjoyed this conversation with James Patterson, check out these other episodes:

How to Find Real Life in Stories with George Saunders

Life Transitions with Bruce Feiler

This episode is sponsored by:

Pebl – an AI-powered platform that helps companies hire and manage global teams in 185+ countries. Get a free estimate at hipebl.ai

Brodo Broth: Shop the best broth on the planet with Brodo.  Head to Brodo.com/TOYF for 20% off your first subscription order and use code TOYF for an additional $10 off.

Alma is on a mission to simplify access to high-quality, affordable mental health care. Visit helloalma.com to learn more!

By purchasing products and/or services from our sponsors, you are helping to support The One You Feed, and we greatly appreciate it. Thank you!

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If you enjoy our podcast and find value in our content, please consider supporting the show. By joining our Patreon Community, you’ll receive exclusive content only available on Patreon!  Click here to learn more!!

Episode Transcript:

Erich Zimmer 00:00:00  You may have heard me mention my new book a few times, and I can assure you, you will certainly hear it a few more. But now we are offering some pre-order bonuses. One of them is the still Point method, which I believe is the only systematic way to interrupt negative thought patterns often enough for them to change. There’s a lot out there about what you should think and not think, but there’s very little that gives you a small and portable system to actually do it. You get the guide to the method, and three free months of a new app designed to help you implement it. There are other bonuses too. You can learn more and claim them at one you feel. Net book.

James Patterson 00:00:42  Imagine life is a game in which you’re juggling five balls in the air. You name them work, family, health, friends, and spirit and you’re keeping them all in the air somehow. And hopefully you soon understand that work is a rubber ball. If you drop it, believe it or not, it will bounce back.

James Patterson 00:01:00  But the other four bowls family, health, friends, spirit are made of glass. If you drop one of those, they will be irrevocably scuffed, marked, knick damaged, or even shattered. They’ll never be the same.

Chris Forbes 00:01:22  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Erich Zimmer 00:02:07  One thing that feels true about the moment we’re living in is that disruption isn’t optional anymore.

Erich Zimmer 00:02:13  Technological shifts, economic changes, artificial intelligence. So many forces are reshaping the world around us, and it can feel like the ground is constantly moving beneath our feet. My guest today is James Patterson, one of the most widely read authors in the world. In this conversation, we explore how he thinks about disruption, not just in writing and business, but in life. How do we respond when the world changes around us? Do we resist it or learn how to work with it? His latest book is Disrupt Everything and When, where he looks at how individuals and organizations can adapt to change and even use it to their advantage. I’m Erich Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi, James, welcome to the show.

James Patterson 00:03:02  Thank you very much. I’m delighted to be here.

Erich Zimmer 00:03:05  We’re going to be discussing all kinds of things, but we’ll be spending a fair amount of time with your latest book, which is called Disrupt Everything in Win Take Control of Your Future. But before we get into that, we’ll start like we always do with the parable.

Erich Zimmer 00:03:19  And in the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild. They say in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

James Patterson 00:03:51  Well, I think it just means that everyone is complicated, and I wish we could kind of look at the world that way. It’s very logical to me. It’s exactly what you see in life that people have, you know, in the writing. I always want highest common denominator. I mean, that’s just me, I want it, I want a common denominator, but I want the highest and in life.

James Patterson 00:04:11  You know, you do your best or I do my best. And most people, I think, do to, to sort of, feed your better side. It’s always worked out better for me to be a straight shooter as much as you can. to try and avoid spending too much time with people who aren’t that way. You know, if you have business to try to not deal with people, that the wrong side is coming out all the time. One of the things to me about negotiation is I always felt this way, and people have different ideas about it, but my thing is I want to walk away from a negotiation with the other person, feeling, okay, maybe I could have done better, but I feel okay about this and I want to walk away the same way. I want to leave money on the table if it involves money.

Erich Zimmer 00:04:55  Speaking of negotiation, we, I think, may share a literary agency. I’ve got my first book coming out, and Richard Pyne at Inkwell is my agent.

James Patterson 00:05:05  Yeah. No, Richard was early on. He and his father, Arthur and Richard and. Yeah, they were terrific. Very. I’m sure they’ll do a nice job for you. Yeah, or he will. I’m sorry. Yeah.

Erich Zimmer 00:05:17  Yeah. His father has passed. Before we get into the book I saw on your Substack, you have a Substack right now called Hungry Dogs, where you’re doing lots of interesting things. One of them is that you showed books on your bookshelf, the books that have helped shape you, that you’ve read. And I was struck by two things. One is you seem like a very positive person, very upbeat person. And yet when I looked at that bookshelf, there’s some pretty heavy stuff on there, Write a fan’s notes on naive.

James Patterson 00:05:51  Yeah, a lot of people think it positive. To me. It’s just a logical thing if you can do it to be positive.

Erich Zimmer 00:05:57  So some of the books that were on your list when you Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, The Bell Jar.

James Patterson 00:06:04  And Ken Kesey, even for Ken Kesey, who wrote that sometimes a Great Notion is another book that he wrote, which a lot of people think is better than One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. I love that title. Sometimes, yeah, a great notion. That’s a really it’s a really cool title if you think of it. A great notion, yeah. Notion. An interesting word to use. I’m sorry, but go ahead. Ken Kesey yeah, yeah.

Erich Zimmer 00:06:27  Well, one of the things I thought was interesting is you’re going through the books and some of these books, like we said, The Bell Jar, those books, they’re pretty heavy books. And then you get to The Day of the Jackal and you say, you know, you had been very serious about your reading before you read that book. And it occurred to you that while you may not be able to write something like 100 Years of Solitude. You could write in that direction. Was that a real landmark? Was that a big change moment for you?

James Patterson 00:06:55  Yeah, I think it was.

James Patterson 00:06:56  I wanted to write for a living. It seemed to me that if you want to write for a living, to some extent, it probably has to be commercial. A and B, I thought I probably was capable of writing a literary novel, but I didn’t particularly want to write for those people, and I didn’t think I had anything, you know, incredibly profound. I thought I could write something that, you know, probably could get published and do okay, and I didn’t want to tell stories for it. For the people that read those books in particular, I was in graduate school at Vanderbilt just before that. And, and I started writing mysteries, which I didn’t read much. I had only read a few mysteries, but I thought de the Jackal and the other one was The Exorcist, and I didn’t read a lot of Pi. I was a little, you know, literary snob, right? You know, grad graduate English student on a, you know, and and I read those and I went, oh, these are pretty cool.

James Patterson 00:07:48  And maybe I can do something like that and keep writing and tell stories, which I love to do. And, you know, and part of it for me anyway, is when I do a project, when I do a book, it’s something that I’m that I’m passionate about when I, when I get into it, and I hope it will turn out really well. And that’s all that matters to me, that it does turn out that I can do the best I can. And at the end of the project I go, I’m really glad I did. That doesn’t always happen.

Erich Zimmer 00:08:14  I heard you on a previous podcast sometime in the past, talking about what you wanted to to do a book where there’s a detective, his wife dies, she comes back as a hummingbird. And you were you were doubting yourself on that one. Has that gotten any? I was going to say legs. But wings.

James Patterson 00:08:29  Yeah, I still like that story. I think it’s a cool story. reincarnation. Play around with that a little bit fantasy.

James Patterson 00:08:36  There’s certain things, certain kinds of books I can write a love story that I have. I couldn’t write a romance novel, you know, the old. Nothing against him, but I couldn’t write one. I don’t know how to do it. I don’t get that. I could not write a book about a general. I don’t kind of get them. I don’t get the way they talk. I don’t get the way they think. I just couldn’t do it. I’m actually writing now, which I’m loving a romantic. And I had written a few, you know, Yaris and a few of those, and I kind of liked them, I mean, and they were and, and I liked the idea of fantasy and world building, and I hadn’t done it. And I thought, well, that would be a cool challenge, and I think I can do it, and I’m loving doing it a lot. It’s it’s really exciting and fun and, and a challenge.

Erich Zimmer 00:09:17  What is it that keeps you moving forward? You’ve written, I mean, God only knows how many books.

James Patterson 00:09:24  It’s that that next book is going to be the best I’ve done, or at least that it’s going to be as good as I hoped it would be. I just finished a book with Viola Davis, a novel which is coming out in March, I believe, and I think it’s the best sort of legit novel that I’ve ever done. I think it’s very dramatic. You know, it’s interesting with viola because she said she said, James, you know, you would think I’m Viola Davis and I’m watching. The minute you would think that I’m getting all these great parts to play with great characters. He said, I don’t. And she said, what I love about this novel that we’re doing is I love this character. I want to play this character. But she says it’s rare. It just doesn’t. And, you know, people always go, well, oh. James’s style is in short chapters. It really isn’t. Every book that I do, whether it’s non-fiction, even even with Disrupt Everything or I just did a book about the Idaho murders out there.

James Patterson 00:10:19  You’re looking for a voice. I am, and they’re all different. Alice Cross’s voice is very different from the Viola Davis novel that I just finished. David Ellison sort of suggests that he’s Skydance or whatever. Very terrific reader, and he’s very interested in entertaining people, and he wanted to do something on it I wasn’t sure that I wanted to do the book initially. And then I talked to Vicky Ward, who I did that with. She’s a wonderful reporter, really, you know, digs up all sorts of information and, you know, very just fabulous to work with. But we didn’t want to write about, you know, this, this killer as much. But but we wanted to write about is to capture those two college towns, Moscow, Idaho and the Pullman, Washington, and what it would be like to have this incredibly sad, tragic, scary thing happen in your town. What would be the effect on the town? What would be the effect on the students? What would be the effect on the police who may never handle anything even close to that? Yeah.

James Patterson 00:11:22  What would be the effect? As you see the the all these terrible. Not not at all. But some terrible people on the internet who will expose people and go, well, that’s the killer and it’s not the killer, and you just put it out to, you know, half a million people that that person is a killer. What a horrifying thing to do. Yeah. You know, and that became the voice of it. The voice of if you lived in one of those towns, this would it be like, this is this is how you might feel.

Erich Zimmer 00:11:50  What is the co-writing process like? You’ve co-written with lots of.

James Patterson 00:11:54  Depends on who it’s with. Yeah. Do you want to try the. No. You’re too slow. We alternate words. Just kidding.

Erich Zimmer 00:12:01  Hang on. I was hoping we’d end this interview with us co-writing a book. Now, you didn’t warn me that was coming.

James Patterson 00:12:06  Never know. You never know the one you feed. You know, it really depends. With President Clinton, it’s very different.

James Patterson 00:12:13  And he likes mysteries and thrillers, and so he likes the genre anyway, and he brings authenticity to it. And he’s a good writer on top of everything else. The only trick with President Clinton is he wants every book to be like a thousand pages. And that’s that’s a little hard in that mystery world. But I mean, if the stories are a little far fetched and they are a little, the president would say, well, if it happened, here’s what the Secret Service would do or if something happened. Here’s what here. Here’s what it’s like in the white House. Here’s what it’s like to be the president or the most recent one, the first gentleman he didn’t get to be. He wanted to be the first gentleman. That didn’t happen with Hillary as president. so he would bring authenticity. Dolly Parton also brought incredible authors. So it really depends on who you’re working with. some of them, you know, want to do a fair amount of the writing by Olha did a lot of, of rewriting dialogue, which was great because she’s thinking of, of of what it would be like in the movie and how the dialogue might work better.

James Patterson 00:13:15  And there was one young character in there who she was particularly attached to, and she wanted to make sure that we got it right with that 13 year old. But it’s all over the life.

Erich Zimmer 00:13:47  Keeping up with your catalog is is a full time job. So I don’t know if the fact that you wrote an autobiography, then a book about being an advice for dads and now this book about disrupt everything. Is this your first real foray into, for lack of a better word, the advice world?

James Patterson 00:14:06  Yeah, I you know, I don’t give advice as much as sort of lay out some thoughts that I’ve had. And I did a thing online and it had to do with the way I write. And I say, I don’t give advice. I’m going to tell you what I do. You might find some of it useful. Yeah. The only thing I said about it is that the stuff that you’re nodding at don’t pay attention to because you’re already doing it. The stuff that you shake your hand at, that’s the stuff you ought to think about because you’re not doing that.

James Patterson 00:14:33  And maybe you should. Maybe you shouldn’t. But that’s that’s the interesting stuff. But but yeah, in terms of, you know, what’s disrupt everything. Maybe there have been others, but it is both a little bit of self-help and a business advisor. And I think I’m in a position to talk to people about that because I had two careers. I was in advertising, and I was the youngest CEO ever at the J. Walter Thompson, which at that point was the biggest ad agency in the world. But everything I did there was about disrupting. I went there, I was in grad school at Vanderbilt and what it was there in Vietnam, and it was during the lottery, and I had a high lottery number, but you had to leave school. So I left after one year there, but I needed to get a job and I didn’t. I had no marketing courses, no advertising. So I went to J. Walter Thompson and said, you got you need a portfolio of it. So I quickly I did a portfolio of ads and that was supposed to be the deal.

James Patterson 00:15:23  But the second week I brought him another portfolio, and the third week I brought him another portfolio, and they said, okay, well, these portfolios are pretty good. And this guy seems hungry and whatever. And we like him up to a point. And so they hired me. But everything there was a disruption when I took over the New York office. A lot of their offices were quite good. But Newark, New York was terrible and nobody wanted to go work there. And I did this thing right. If you want work, did an ad on the back page of the New York Times, it was eight questions like, here are the ingredients on a can of beans, oil, vinegar, whatever make it sound delicious. And what you could do when you read these eight answers that people wrote in was you could tell A whether they could write and be whether they could solve problems. That actually was the most important thing. In ten minutes, you could tell. And over the course of a couple of years, I hired over 40 writers on that.

James Patterson 00:16:17  One of them went on to be the showrunner on cheers. Another one has written a couple of movie scripts that got produced and, you know, whatever. But once again, another disruption in the book business. You know, as I went over and I had been involved in because I wrote a book when I was 26, a novel, I got turned down by 31 publishers, and they went on to win an Edgar, which is bizarre, so turned down by everybody. And then it’s the best first novel of the I don’t know, whatever that’s all about. In those days, it was sort of like you do the one book a year, and that’s the rule. I’m going, well, I mean, why is that the rule? I don’t understand. It’s fine to do one a year or one every five years or whatever, but why is that a rule? I don’t quite get it. And I remember going to the publisher and I and the Alex Cross series that was going on and that was successful, and they said, okay, well, this year I really like to do three books and I want to do Alex Cross.

James Patterson 00:17:11  I said, yeah, that’s great. And then and then I had another idea for a mystery novel. I said, oh, okay, that sounds okay. And then I had a love story, Suzanne story for Nicholas. And when I told them the story, the the CEO actually cried while I was telling the story. And then when I was done he said, oh, well, we want to do the Alice Cross and we’ll do the other mystery, but we don’t want to do the love story because that’s not your brand. And I go like, okay, I don’t know. I was in advertising, I kind of, I don’t think of myself as a brand, but if I did, I think what it would be that James will keep you turning the pages. So if you want to read a love story that kind of moves along, you might like this. Yeah. And so reluctantly, they published it and it’s now, I think, the section of the third most popular book I have ever published.

James Patterson 00:17:53  But once again, it’s just this thing of disrupting positive disruptions, which is basically been the secret of my whole life, just, you know. Well, why is that? And and I think I can help other people to deal with it. And what that can do immediately is remove a lot of stress from their lives immediately. And anybody you talk to your doctor, they will all agree stress kills. Stress is not good. So if we can remove some stress or if, you know problem comes in the late. Whatever the hell happened this week or today, whatever it is. And it’s like, oh my God, you know, artificial intelligence. They’re bringing it into our company. It will help you to make the first step in terms of, okay, how do you deal with that? Let’s suppose that your job is threatened. What are some of the skills that you have? What are some things that you could do. So it’s a useful thing if for no other reason just to calm you down, you know, or if you have a product that you think you believe in in terms of, okay, here’s a lot of steps to figure out how to maybe deal with that product and ultimately bring it to market.

James Patterson 00:18:56  So depending on whether you want a little or a lot, that’s what the book is, is about. And we also we have a series with Franklin Covey. They, they do a lot of courses around the country, businesses, and they’re doing one based on the book. And I think that’s very exciting too, because if you’re in a business, one, you need a mission. Obviously the one you feed you need is a mission for that. What are we going to do? What’s the sort of style of it? How is it going to work? So disrupt everything helps you to make sure that that mission is as tight as it can be. But then you need buy in for the mission. So for our publisher, for for Hachette, they had some new people in there and they had a new mission. And for that to work, it meant that all the editors need to disrupt the way they’ve been editing and the way they’ve been buying books. The sales department would need to disrupt the way they’ve been selling books in the receptionists maybe has to disrupt the way they greet people and talk to people.

James Patterson 00:19:53  So and insofar as you get in a company or in your at your team, in a company, insofar as you get buy in, the mission can work. If you don’t get buy in, the mission doesn’t work right. You know so so the book does that. And that’s what the Franklin Covey, that’s a lot of it, helping companies to make sure that their missions are, are going to operate at optimum or closer to optimum.

Erich Zimmer 00:20:15  So what caused you to decide writing a book about disruption. And that was just a writer.

James Patterson 00:20:22  Yeah, it was a fluke. I got invited, I said, I went to undergraduate, I got invited to do a little lecture for their business school, you know, one one hour lecture. And they said, you can write anything you want. And I did about the power of disruption and doctor laden. It was his course. And afterward he said, I’d love to do a book with you. Would you consider it? And I said, well, I don’t know, but maybe.

James Patterson 00:20:46  And he started doing disruption. And over the course of three years, actually, Patrick did a lot of research on it in terms of disruption and how it might work. The book has a lot of tools and things that you can you can work on in there, and that’s very useful for a lot of people. I’m not as tool oriented as some people. And so the research was really, really, really valuable. And then I sort of insisted that it not be a boring business book and that we went out and we just did a lot of talking to people. And then the book is full of stories. it’ll tell a story. And then which kind of illustrates whatever the point is to be made. You know, one of them was about a young guy, and he had just he was about to go off in business, and he had a brother who was on the spectrum, and he wanted to take care of his brother. And he decided on this car wash company where, where people with autism could work.

James Patterson 00:21:40  And now they have four and they have I think they have 100 employees, but 80 of them have, you know, autism. And that’s driven his life. And Patrick said to him, you know, if you hadn’t done this, where do you think you’d like to be? And he said, I like to be right where I am now with these companies and my brother and, you know, so the stories kind of illustrate the different points, but they make the book more interesting. I don’t know, a lot of business books to me are unreadable.

Erich Zimmer 00:22:05  Yeah. There’s certainly a lot of frameworks in this book as well as a lot of stories. If I name a story or two. Let’s see if you remember the story.

James Patterson 00:22:14  You know we talked about.

Erich Zimmer 00:22:15  How about.

James Patterson 00:22:15  That.

Erich Zimmer 00:22:16  You’re here. All right. How about.

James Patterson 00:22:17  I mean, one thing that I particularly love is, is the posse. And I know the people who were involved in it. And this is a great thing in terms of having an idea, but then executing it.

James Patterson 00:22:27  There are two pieces here. The idea was especially when the posse started, that a lot of colleges wanted to bring in kids from inner cities and whatever, but the problem was that they would arrive at a Brandeis or whatever, and there wouldn’t be many other kids from the inner cities, and some of the kids would be lost. And so they came up with the notion of the posse, where at a Brandeis or Vanderbilt actually is one of the schools that the school would bring in 5 to 10 every year, kids who had been trained to deal with and to get ready for it because you’re going to go to a college, it’s going to be like this here are going to be some of the things you’re going to have to deal with, and you will have your posse to help you get through it, which is brilliant. And then they sold it into, I don’t know what, they’re 40 or 50 schools at this point, and it was a great way to solve that problem for a lot of colleges, which is how do we bring these kids in and then keep them right and also make it a good environment for them.

James Patterson 00:23:25  So that’s one that I particularly love.

Erich Zimmer 00:23:27  Yeah, I loved that story. Also, how you were helping people to make connections with people, and then the whole of them was much stronger than any of its parts.

James Patterson 00:23:38  Yeah, yeah. And solving problems. It’s you have an idea and it’s kind of a cool idea, but okay, I don’t know what to do with it. Well, we can help you. Not always, but but we can. We can help you with that. Or even if you have an idea at work, there’s something that you know would make your group or the company. And to help you to be able to frame that and make it more concise so that when you bring it in, people are going to listen more rather than, oh, I get this idea and it’s all over the place and blah blah, we help you to focus it, which which is important in terms of getting people to listen and take what you’re saying seriously.

Erich Zimmer 00:24:12  Right? So this is a question I talk with a lot of guests about, and I love your perspective on it, because I think there’s two sort of things that we could get caught in.

Erich Zimmer 00:24:23  We’re not caught in. I guess I’m going to ask the question more simply, how do you balance ambition and striving with being content with what you have right the way it is?

James Patterson 00:24:34  I don’t know if they balance. Yeah. You know, I mean, one of the things that’s really big that I write about, actually, most of the novels, the Alice Cross novels, even, it’s about balancing your work life and your home life. And I think that’s huge. Alice. Crossing people, whatever. What it’s really all about is Alex has this, you know, over the top work life as this detective and then a home life. There’s a series now with Alex Cross on Amazon, and Aldis Hodge is a perfect person because in terms of an actor to play that part, because he’s very intense and as a detective, he’s very believable and very intense, and that works in terms of this terrible day job that he has, and then he’s great with the kids. And we all have not not all of us, but on some level, most of us have that thing of like, how do I balance that? You know, difficult work, life, very demanding at times.

James Patterson 00:25:26  And then I got to go home and deal with my family and somehow keep it in balance. And that’s a big thing. I have another series, Michael Bennet, and it’s complicated how it happened, but Michael winds up with, you know, 8 to 10 kids. They’ve all been adopted. He’s a New York homicide detective. How do you balance that crazy bit of, you know, but. And people identify with it. Which which is which is really important. The dad. The dad book you mentioned. Yeah. How to be a better dad in an hour. And that’s not meant to be a joke. It’s a very serious thing that a lot of what a lot of dads, young dads especially, are being overwhelmed, totally overwhelmed. And there’s a lot being written about that now. And most of them will not read a 400 page book about being a dad. So this thing is like one hour. And my promise about that book is if you spend an hour with it, what I’m going to make it engaging and it would be some comedic at times or whatever, you know, you’ll be able to read it in a good way.

James Patterson 00:26:22  And I guarantee that if you invest one hour in it, you will be a better dad. Period. Absolutely. You know, and it’s not an advice book. It’s just I, I interviewed a lot of dads and whatever and read everything I could read about it. And here’s a whole lot of shit to think about. And if that doesn’t work for you, go to the next page. And if that’s, you know, but I guarantee you you will walk away from that book. If you’re at any age that a young dad or even an older, then go and people love it. I mean, it’s amazing kind of thing when you write a book and people go, that’s really great to read. And it’s and it’s useful.

Erich Zimmer 00:26:57  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight, breath shallow? Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday, I send weekly bites of wisdom, a short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show.

Erich Zimmer 00:27:16  Things like mental health, anxiety, relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day it’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it. If you’d like extra fuel for the weekend. You also get a weekend podcast playlist. Join us at one you feed. That’s one you get and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. How old was your child when you wrote that book?

James Patterson 00:27:50  The dad book? Jack was probably 25.

Erich Zimmer 00:27:53  Okay, so he’s around that age.

James Patterson 00:27:55  Jack’s 27. Yeah.

Erich Zimmer 00:27:56  Okay. Oh, my son is 27, actually. we have sons the same age. How did you balance in Jack’s childhood.

James Patterson 00:28:05  Was easier for me with Jack because we had Jack, I was 50. Yeah. First. First marriage, whatever. And Sue was 40. Second marriage for her. But she didn’t have kids in her first. But we didn’t have financial issues. Yeah, we had time. If we needed help, we could get help.

James Patterson 00:28:23  We didn’t. I mean, we were very. I think we were good parents. And really, you know, we were there. Yeah. And I was there because I was I was home every every day. I’m home. I work at home. So there it is. Here’s Jack. You know, so we had a lot of advantages. And then there are tricky things with when we’re in a town that’s wealthy. You’ve got a dad who’s been successful, a mom who’s been successful in other ways. And how do you make sure that Jack or your son or whatever, they’re going to be okay with that? And I was always like, you know, I write a lot of books. Who cares? So it’s not a big thing. And trying to keep Jack where he’s comfortable with that and trying not to. Where he feels he has to compete. Yeah. Insofar as you can help.

Erich Zimmer 00:29:34  How do you work with that idea of kind of going with the river as best you can? Swimming upstream is often a bad idea, and yet disruption is a sort of swimming upstream.

Erich Zimmer 00:29:45  Or do you think of it differently?

James Patterson 00:29:46  Well, for starters, the disruptions are coming at us. We have no control of that. It’s never been, to me more overwhelming than it is right now. Yeah, it’s just really very disconcerting and overwhelming and I think difficult for people. So I don’t think you can get out of the way of that. But once again, part of it is having some perspective on things. That’s sort of the sky, the river, it’s the river. It just go with the flow a little bit, try not to go crazy on things that aren’t going to necessarily help the problem, but maybe we’ll drive you a little crazy. Just try to get sync with this stuff a little bit if you can do it. Tiger woods would always say he’s never concerned about a bad shot, so he just moves on to the next shot. Yeah, with the confidence that you’re very good at what you do, you’re very smart, you’re very logical and just have that confidence and go on to the next the next day.

Erich Zimmer 00:30:42  Yeah. In the book, you talk about a baseball player, Dansby Swanson, who talks about compartmentalizing failure, which is critical in baseball because even great hitters fail 70% of the time.

James Patterson 00:30:55  Yeah. Yes. Yeah. Or strike out three times in the same game? Yeah. Danby. He was. He was a Vanderbilt. They had very good baseball teams. Yeah. This really actually of a good football team, which is unprecedented.

Erich Zimmer 00:31:07  A lot of this stuff, I think is the discernment. It’s one of the sections in the book is around learning to discern. It’s the discernment. Like, do I compartmentalize that failure? Move on. It’s just a bad shot going in the next one. Or do I learn or do I spend a little bit more time with this thing? Right? In order to learn the lessons it has to teach?

James Patterson 00:31:27  Yes. And both. I’m still learning about the novel business. You know, as I look back in the beginning. I mean, one of the things I did early on is I want to do a block book.

James Patterson 00:31:37  So I had a half assed idea about destroying Wall Street, which seemed like an attractive idea at the time. blowing up Wall Street. Cool. I didn’t do the research, and I didn’t think about the characters. The book I published. But I mean, it’s not a good book if you do the research and please don’t fill the book with it. At least not my kind of book. But if you’ve done the research, you’ll be much more confident in terms of writing about that particular scene or that character. And then and then the character. And now, you know, when I’m doing an outline for a book, I’ll also have a side thing where I’m just everything I can think of about this character. What does a character do? What is a character like? What happened to why does the character think this way? Why does the character act this way? What was the effect of this on the character? What’s going to differentiate this character? You know, because the last thing that I want is here’s the typical, you know, detective who goes home and drinks himself to sleep and blah, blah, blah, blah.

James Patterson 00:32:35  Unless you’ve got some new twist on that. Right.

Erich Zimmer 00:32:37  Right. It’s a.

James Patterson 00:32:38  Little.

Erich Zimmer 00:32:38  Bit of a played out theme.

James Patterson 00:32:40  Yeah, it’s a cliché, 100%. Yeah.

Erich Zimmer 00:32:42  So you mentioned that in addition to outline. So you’re known to do a lot of outlining of your book.

James Patterson 00:32:49  And a lot of writers don’t. David Baldacci, who I interviewed, David doesn’t doesn’t align, and he’s very good and very successful at it, but he doesn’t outline at all. I have a suspicion that James Joyce did not outline Finnegans Wake. I don’t know, it’s just a guess.

Erich Zimmer 00:33:07  How about Ulysses?

James Patterson 00:33:08  You know what I think he did kind of outline Ulysses. Or at least in his head he did. Yeah. It’s very I mean, it’s very, very, very complex, but the pieces kind of fit together. You know, they they follow certain things about story, you know. So who knows? Yeah. I’d like to ask him, but. Yeah.

Erich Zimmer 00:33:27  Yeah, yeah. So when you create an outline for a book and you’ve written so many books, there’s not going to be any like, I always do it this way.

Erich Zimmer 00:33:34  Right. Because it’s so many different books. You evolve, you change. How do you outline what you want to have happen and yet allow yourself to have room to surprise yourself? How does how does that process unfold?

James Patterson 00:33:47  Oh, because one of the nice things about the outline is you sit down. You never sit down to a blank page. This is the the notion for that chapter. That’s a useful thing. But I never labeled the outline. And what happens? You’re writing the book and all of a sudden the character gets much more interesting than you thought. Yeah. And suddenly you’re writing a lot more about that character than you thought you would in the Michael Bennet novels. It was a sort of a sidekick, and he just kept getting more and more and more interesting. So you write more about that and or this was going to happen and you go, hey, this is here’s a much cooler ending for that. Yeah. And that sort changes what goes after that. And I never, not, never almost never know how it’s going to end.

James Patterson 00:34:28  I think I do in the outline, but it’s almost never that’s what happened.

Erich Zimmer 00:34:31  Really? Really.

James Patterson 00:34:33  Yeah. Yeah yeah. So so so the key is for me the outline helps me to keep moving forward also. I mean, for me, and I think this is useful for a lot of people writing a lot of kinds of books is if I’m stumped, I just move on to the next chapter. I’m not going to sit there and torture myself and it’d be TBD. I’m not going to drive myself crazy and create all sorts of psychological problems, because I can’t solve this thing. And eventually, in fiction, at least you can. Okay, you know what? I can’t solve this problem. And it becomes two paragraphs in the next chapter. Yeah. It’s just like I couldn’t really solve it. Solve it. I need it to happen. But I don’t need that. I don’t need that scene. I can move forward without it. Yeah, but the main thing is don’t sit there and drive yourself crazy because that’s not going to be useful.

James Patterson 00:35:22  And when you come back to it and you should always be rewriting anyway, when you come back to it, you got a new mind. You refresh and sometimes you go, oh, I know what to do with that now. You also will have written a lot more about the character of the story.

Erich Zimmer 00:35:35  I would imagine you’re a fast writer. You would almost have to be. Do you kind of go all the way through and then go back and start editing? Or how is the process? Yeah, you just kind of plow through.

James Patterson 00:35:46  And once again, the co-writers and some of the co-writers are not famous. They’re just, you know, good at what they do. And with the co-writers, I will write a long outline, and sometimes they’ll have to do a lot of rewriting, sometimes not.

Erich Zimmer 00:35:58  So I’d like to turn a little bit to the number one dad book. And what I’m interested a little bit in is how you were parented, how that drove part of the desire to do this book.

James Patterson 00:36:13  I’d just give you a jolt about my family. The only time as an adult that I ever hugged my dad was on his deathbed. He was a bright guy, and he was very lucky in the sense that the people who ran the poorhouse liked him a lot. And they took him under their wing, and they lived near the high school. So. So once he got into high school, he would stay in their house during the week and then go back to his mom on the weekends. And he wound up getting a scholarship to Hamilton’s very good school and coming out of Newburgh, that that was a jump for anybody.

Erich Zimmer 00:36:48  Yeah.

James Patterson 00:36:48  In a lot of ways it helped that he was, you know, homeless because that was part of his story. But he didn’t have a dad, so he he didn’t know how to be a dad. And, he was about to go off into World War two, and he got this call from this guy, and the guy said, my name is George Hazleton.

James Patterson 00:37:04  I live in a nearby town. Just bear with me a little bit. And George Hazleton said to my dad, he said, I’m about to go off and into the Pacific Theater. And after dinner, my parents took me downstairs to the living room and they said, George, you know, we love you so much, but because you’re going off to the war, we have to tell you we’re not your natural parents. And then George Hazleton said over the phone to my father, he said, I’m your brother. And, you know, George had been adopted when George was a little boy baby. And my dad stayed with with the mother. And that’s the first time my father knew that they had a brother. And they both survived the war and came back. And a few years after they got back, my uncle called again and they became great, great, great friends, my father and my and my uncle. But he said, I found our father and he said, he’s tending bar in Poughkeepsie.

James Patterson 00:37:54  Let’s go see him. My father said, I don’t want to go see the bastard. And so my uncle went up by himself. My uncle was kind of a shy guy, very smart, but shy. So he goes to this crummy little bar under the Poughkeepsie Bridge. And, here’s his father, bartender, and he orders a Coke. He doesn’t drink, and he’s watching this guy. He watches him for about 20 minutes, and he leaves. He’s so turned off by this guy, he doesn’t introduce himself. He just leaves. So, yeah, all of that, I think, has something to do with the dad book. Yeah, it can be tough. It can be tough. And I think, you know, as I say, and you know this, there are so many guys out there that are struggling, you know, how do we fit in? We’re not, you know, the breadwinner, all these these things that sort of people assume they don’t kind of work that way anymore.

James Patterson 00:38:43  Ergo, who am I? How do I forget? Who’s making the rules up? Are there rules? And I thought that between talking to a lot of dads, reading a lot of stuff in my own experiences, I could throw out some ideas that that guys would find useful. And as I said, I do. And anybody that’s listening, you can’t read this book and not become a better dad. It’d be a struggle. You’re going to pick up some stuff that’s useful.

Erich Zimmer 00:39:13  We have insight. We might read something in a book and have insight. And then there’s the challenge of sort of application. how is your book deal with that sometimes gap between like, okay, now I know better, but I don’t know how to do better.

James Patterson 00:39:28  Well, it tries to help a little bit in terms of how this might work, how it might.

Erich Zimmer 00:39:32  Work.

James Patterson 00:39:33  Yeah. And it’s just a whole lot of things for people to think about here. And as I’ve said, if 1 or 2 of these are paid for for people, that’s that’s great.

James Patterson 00:39:42  Yeah. You kind of encourage people to do things that aren’t necessarily natural. Do the hard thing a little bit. Yeah. Put in the work a little bit. It’s worth it when we talk about that a lot in terms of how important this job is, that you’ve undertaken this job of being a parent for mom and dad.

Erich Zimmer 00:39:59  Yeah.

James Patterson 00:39:59  It’s crucial. And instead of the monster effect on these kids, and insofar as you can, to help them to take it as seriously as they can, try to make it as enjoyable for them as you can empathize with the fact that a lot of days there are things you’d rather do. There’s some tough love in there for sure.

Erich Zimmer 00:40:20  Yeah. I thought maybe we could pull out a couple of the items in here and just see what you might have to say about them. And this sort of ties to what you just said, which is tell your children your story and help them discover who they are. Yeah. And it sounds like your dad telling the story of him growing up Actually, was him helping you do that? That’s a way in which he was a good father.

James Patterson 00:40:44  Yeah, he you know, look, he he did the best he could. Yeah. I have a friend, teacher all his life, and, he had a religion doing the best I can. Religion? Yeah. And if people are doing that, I give him credit. Yeah. You know, I think my dad did the best he could. I think my mom did the best she could. They were both functioning alcoholics, for whatever the reasons. But I think they did the best they could. So, you know, I’m not going to blame them for it just. Okay, that’s the deal. And, you know, once again, here it is. You know, the river is life. And we just kind of move on hopefully.

Erich Zimmer 00:41:20  Yeah. There’s a real theme also in this book, progress versus perfection. Right. There’s no way to be a perfect father.

James Patterson 00:41:27  I don’t know what the perfection thing is. Yeah, it’s a thing we need to get out of our systems or be able to handle a little better.

James Patterson 00:41:35  I mean, you see it in these people that write about and complain about athletics and whatever. Oh, it’s not perfect. Oh, Buffalo, the football team. Give me a break. This team, for years they were the second best team in the NFL. And people are like beating them up. No, they’re the second best team. This is really cool. It’s Buffalo. You know what do you expect. You’re the second best team. And nothing against Buffalo. But I mean come on celebrate it. Yeah yeah. You you want it. You try. You try. I mean, maybe maybe we can, but but you can’t really control okay. Here’s Tom Brady and Tom Brady is this incredible quarterback. You had an unfortunate thing that you know you had to go up against Tom Brady and stuff. He’s going to win very often.

Erich Zimmer 00:42:18  That seems to be the case. Before you check out. Pick one insight from today and ask how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection and links to former guests who can guide you, even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change.

Erich Zimmer 00:42:42  Feed your good wolf at one you feed. Net newsletter again one you feed net letter you talk about being willing to admit when you’re wrong. Can you think of any times in your parenting where you had to admit you were wrong? None. Never. Never. Okay.

James Patterson 00:43:00  Yeah yeah yeah. One of my weaknesses is not wanting to go to the Galapagos, do some of these things. So a lot of times Sue and Jack would go and I wouldn’t. I don’t even know why this is, but, you go to Italy or you go to Vilnius, Lithuania, where we went. And after about two days, I don’t want to be there anymore. I feel like I’m in, like a two day documentary movie and I’m in it. You were talking about 48 hour documentary movie. I don’t want to see any more churches. I don’t want to see any more things with the with the arrow in Jesus’s heart or whatever. Yeah, I’ve you know, I kind of like I’m, you know, so.

James Patterson 00:43:42  And that’s a weakness. I didn’t do as much of that as I could of and I should have I should have done more of that.

Erich Zimmer 00:43:48  What do you like to do for vacation?

James Patterson 00:43:50  Right.

Erich Zimmer 00:43:52  Well, that would make sense. You know.

James Patterson 00:43:53  I love I love beautiful locations. Sue and I, my wife and I did a book, mother Daughter Book Club, which is coming out next year. Novel. And it’s set in Lake Como. So we went to Lake Como and it’s beautiful. It’s gorgeous, unbelievably pretty. They’re unbelievable, you know. And that was great. And we wandered around the streets and you know all that and and that’s fine. And it’s Italy. So of course the food is excellent. And that was good. And you know we took some boat rides and you know walked. Yeah. Whatever. So so you know that that was okay. I’d like to go to South Africa. Still I’ve been a lot of places the best vacation for me. And it was before I was with Sue was the Kenya.

James Patterson 00:44:34  I spent two weeks there. You know Safari. Not a camera. Safari. Spectacular. Yeah. It’s just so much better than I thought it was going to be.

Erich Zimmer 00:44:42  What would be the one thing from the book about fathers that you would want to leave somebody with?

James Patterson 00:44:48  I read one thing from it, and we mentioned this thing about balancing and keeping things in balance. And I don’t know where this came from, but I’ve lived by to some extent. And this is the five balls. Imagine life is a game in which you’re juggling five balls in the air. You name them work, family, health, friends, and spirit, and you’re keeping them all in the air somehow. And hopefully you soon understand that work is a rubber ball if you drop it. Believe it or not, it will bounce back. But the other four balls family, health, friends, spirit are made of glass. If you drop one of those, they will be irrevocably scuffed, marked, nick damaged, or even shattered.

James Patterson 00:45:33  They’ll never be the same. And if you remember that, it does help you to balance your life.

Erich Zimmer 00:45:39  Well, that is a beautiful piece of advice to end on. Thank you, James, for coming on. It’s been a pleasure to meet you. I’ll be in touch soon about our co-writing project, but until then. Okay, well. All right.

James Patterson 00:45:51  Okay, thanks. Bye bye.

Erich Zimmer 00:45:53  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity. But we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

The Best Path to Authentic Happiness: Embracing Spiritual Minimalism with Light Watkins

March 13, 2026 Leave a Comment

Learning to Find Comfort in Discomfort
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In this episode, Light Watkins explores the best path to authentic happiness and embracing spiritual minimalism. Light defines spiritual minimalism and delves into the importance of leaving every place better than you found it. The conversation explores authenticity, happiness, stress, embracing discomfort, and the value of consistent, small actions. Light also shares personal stories and practical wisdom on finding freedom in limitations, giving what you want to receive, and focusing on process over outcomes to create a more meaningful, present, and fulfilled life.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • The parable of the two wolves and the importance of choosing the “good wolf” or authentic self.
  • The concept of spiritual minimalism and its principles, including leaving places better than found.
  • The significance of final impressions in interactions and their lasting impact.
  • The relationship between happiness, income, and stress, emphasizing internal versus external sources of fulfillment.
  • The paradox of motivation and the importance of consistent effort for personal growth.
  • The idea of finding freedom within limitations and the power of acceptance in challenging situations.
  • The principle of “give what you want to receive” and its role in fostering community and connection.
  • The importance of embracing discomfort for personal growth and stepping outside comfort zones.
  • The value of being process-oriented and focusing on the journey rather than just outcomes.
  • The significance of consistent effort and incremental change in achieving lasting transformation.

Light Watkins has been a meditation and spiritual teacher for more than 20 years.  He facilitates workshops and retreats around the world, and gives talks on happiness, mindfulness, inspiration, and leadership.  He is the author of manty bestsellers including The Inner Gym, Bliss More, and Knowing Where to Look,  and also hosts a weekly podcast called The Light Watkins Show. His latest book is Travel Light: Spiritual Minimalism to Live a More Fulfilled Life

Connect with Light Watkins: Website | Instagram | Twitter

If you enjoyed this conversation with Light Watkins, check out these other episodes:

How to Embrace Mindfulness on the Path to Personal Growth with Dan Harris

How to Let Go of Expectations and Transform Disappointment into Growth with Christine Hassler

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Episode Transcript:

Light Watkins 00:00:00  Giving people the benefit of the doubt is a really good way to leave a positive final impression. And if you want to have influence over how that person is seeing a situation, guess what? You’re going to have way more influence if you help them feel seen and heard versus the person who cuts them off, dismisses their point of view as nonsense, and makes them feel stupid.

Chris Forbes 00:00:29  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:13  We spend a lot of time thinking about first impressions, but we rarely think about final impressions. How did I leave that conversation? Did I make that person feel heard? Did I close that loop? Well, in this conversation light. What can shares this idea that has been really helpful for me? And it’s that one of the simplest ways to live well is to leave every place better than you found it. This spiritual minimalism, as he would call it, is a very simple rule to try and apply. I can ask it any time. It’s very simple to ask and very simple to know the answer. We also talk about giving what you want to receive and about finding freedom in fewer choices. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed highlight. Welcome to the show.

Light Watkins 00:02:04  Thanks, man. Good to be here. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:06  We’re going to be discussing your book, Travel Light Spiritual Minimalism to live a more fulfilled life and whatever other topics come up. But we’ll start like we always do with the parable.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:16  And in the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparents. They said, well, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Light Watkins 00:02:48  Well, you know, I’ve been writing a lot about this idea of following your heart voice, which is how I identified the voice of your spirit. And obviously there are a lot of other voices in our awareness. There’s the voice of fear. There’s the voice of our past traumas. There’s the voice of our parents, teachers, coaches, preachers, neighbors, news, cultural indoctrination, all of these voices.

Light Watkins 00:03:18  And what I encourage my followers and my readers to do is to split tests which one is the voice of their spirit, because that’s the one that’s going to encourage you to do the right thing when you don’t feel like it. That’s the one that’s going to cheer you on when you want to give up. That’s the one that’s going to want to make you more compassionate, more generous, more empathetic, etc. and if you follow that voice enough times, then that’s how you turn the volume up. So it’s not just a still small voice, but it can actually become a loud, annoying voice. So it’s kind of like that good wolf, you know, it’s right in your ear and it’s louder than the bad wolf. And if you can hear it and experience it in that way, it’s easier to follow the good voice. The problem is, we follow the voice of fear so much that that’s the default one that we oftentimes hear. And that’s why it’s easier to to follow the fear voice than it is to follow the still small voice of your intuition.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:21  Well, it’s the guy who spent the early part of his career in software testing, right? I’m very familiar with the idea of split testing things. Right. But not everybody might be. And so basically what you’re suggesting is, well, say more about what you are suggesting. How do you split test that? And I love this idea of like see which voice brings about which results, but say a little bit more about that.

Light Watkins 00:04:44  Well, that’s essentially it. You know, like we may have two voices, a good and a bad. There may be a neutral voice, there may be another instigating voice, you know, and there may be another shame voice. And so there’s all these voices. And if we want to turn up the volume on the one that we feel supports us the most, and that leads to the result that we want the most, which I’m assuming is we want to feel like the most authentic version of ourselves. We want to feel the most expansive. We want to feel the most creative.

Light Watkins 00:05:15  We want to be able to tell the best stories. Right. I think about it not in terms of what’s happening right now, because I get that what is happening right now could be very chaotic, and there are lots of things that need to happen. Right. But let’s fast forward and project to our final moments and maybe even beyond that, let’s go to our funeral and let’s say we’re now in spirit form. We’ve left the body. We’re at the funeral, and we’re watching people come up to the podium to talk about us and to report on their experiences with us and what sorts of testimonials. What sorts of reports would we be proud of at the end of our days, when people go up there and talk about us, do we want to hear people talk about how we always paid our bills on time and how, you know, we got that promotion that one time? Probably not. Probably. We want to hear about how we were a good person. We gave people a second chance. We were the one that listened when nobody else would.

Light Watkins 00:06:22  You know, these kinds of more altruistic exchanges and dynamics. And so if we play that little game with ourselves, then we can just reverse engineer back to this moment where all this chaos is happening and there’s not enough time to do anything, and then we have a clear idea of how we want to move through this moment. So split testing is just another way of saying, don’t put so much pressure on yourself to try to figure out which one is the good wolf or the bad wolf. Just follow the one you think is the good wolf. And if you do that enough times, you’re not going to get it right all the time. You know, the ego is really good at disguising itself as that good wolf. But if you do it, say, 100 times or 500 times, you’ll have a pretty decent idea of which one is the voice that you ultimately want to follow, because there’s a feeling tone that’s associated with it. There’s a little sense of anticipation. There’s a little bit of fear, perhaps, around what’s going to happen next, because there’s no certainty related to following that good wolf.

Light Watkins 00:07:24  But if you follow it enough times, you’ll see that on the other side of it, there’s this feeling of expansion that is very consistent, and it’s something that helps you sleep better at night. It’s something that helps to make you wiser, and it’s something that you ultimately will be proud of at the end of your days.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:42  Yeah, I love that idea. And, you know, I often in certain groups that I’ve led, we’ve done that sort of funeral exercise. Right. It’s a very clarifying exercise. Like what is really important. What do I want people saying? You know, and the other thing is, depending on where you are in your journey and path, right, you may get very good feedback relatively quickly after you follow a certain voice. Right. At a certain point, there is a sense of being in integrity with ourselves. You know, of our actions matching up with who we want to be and to be out of that. Oftentimes we really know it. You know, sometimes we don’t.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:19  Your point is well taken. Sometimes it’s confusing. And on big, you know, confusing decisions. But there’s a lot of feedback that I’m able to find pretty quickly. You know, after I do something like, okay, what do I feel inside? What I’d like to ask you is I find this idea of an authentic self inside of us, a little bit of a confusing idea. And what I mean by that is you listed a lot of ways we’ve been conditioned. You gave a long list and we could add to it. We could spend the next hour right, Laying out all the factors that have conditioned us to be the person we are today. So that makes this idea of like an authentic self a little bit harder to tweeze apart, right? Because we do have all this conditioning. Talk to me a little bit. You know in your mind about what that authentic self is. Is it different in me than it is in you? When you get down to that true. As deep as level?

Light Watkins 00:09:16  I’m so glad you made that distinction, because I’m a big fan of defining concepts that people just take for granted that everybody understands, and we’re all on the same page.

Light Watkins 00:09:25  And the reality is that actually, that’s not the case at all. And so I’m happy to unpack this idea of authentic self. And just to keep it really simple. The way I define authentic self is in a range of behaviors that we do. It’s different for different people, but we act upon what we feel like, as you said, is most in alignment with our own personal integrity. But let’s just talk about it, generally speaking. Let’s just say, generally speaking, as a heterosexual man, right? We’ve all had the experience where you see a pretty girl out somewhere, and it may be clear that she is not in a relationship, she doesn’t have a ring on or anything like that. And everything in you says, go up and talk to her. Go up and say hi. Go and strike up a conversation. Just take a leap of faith. Just see what happens. You know, say f it or whatever. We’re saying it in our minds, and we’ve all had the experience of not doing it.

Light Watkins 00:10:26  And when you don’t do it, what ends up happening? You think about it, it bothers you, right? And you keep playing the scenario out in your head over and over and over. Maybe for hours, maybe for days. You’re hoping you’re going to see the person in the same place again. Now you’re sort of stalking the place, hoping that she’s going to walk in in those moments, which are probably more rare. Those moments where you did go up, you did say something. Even if it doesn’t materialize into anything, you always feel like, you know. This sense of expansion. Yeah. And you feel so good that you at least did something, and it’s easier for you to move on to whatever the next thing is. And without thinking about whatever could have happened or should have happened had you behaved differently, I would classify your authentic self as you making choices more in alignment with that expansive feeling where you knew that you did what was a little bit nerve wracking, a little bit scary, a little bit, you know, anticipatory.

Light Watkins 00:11:29  But it was something that made you feel like the best version of you, the story that you ultimately want to tell. If you’re the superhero of your life and you’re just breaking your life down into these moments. And the question is, what would the superhero do in this moment? Well, the superhero was certainly go up and talk to the person. The superhero would certainly stand up for people who can’t stand up for themselves. The superhero wouldn’t be in the room gossiping about anybody. They’d be the person, you know, shutting down the gossip conversation and saying, hey, this person’s done all that bad. You know, they have these and that great qualities. So when we think about our own personal hero, what the qualities are of that personal hero. Those are qualities that we deep down want to embody for ourselves. Yeah, right. And so when we can operate in alignment with those qualities, that is our most authentic self. And that’s different for everybody. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:25  And it’s interesting that the example you gave is a good one.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:28  The the example that came to my mind is extending kindness to strangers. You know, there are moments where it’s like I see an opportunity to extend a kindness. It could be any number of different things, but I’m anxious to do it. Like, does the person want me to extend the kindness? Do they just want to be left in their little bubble. And I know that the best version of me does the kind thing, and if it isn’t received well, then it isn’t received well. But I know that I was acting from the part of me that knows that that’s something I really value, right? Is to try and be kind to everyone. And so I think, yeah, we all have this sense of expansiveness and I love that idea. I’ve often thought about just that very idea expansion versus contraction, you know, as a really good guide for how to make decisions and how to orient, you know, does this feel like it makes me a bigger, more open, better version of myself? Or do I feel like this closes me down and it causes me to contract? And for me, that’s almost been the best way of thinking of certain things is in that sense of expansion versus contraction.

Light Watkins 00:13:40  And I think when you look at it that way with feeling tone, as opposed to even semantics and trying to come up with language for it. Just see how you feel. How does it make you feel? Does it make you feel a little bit more expansive, or does it make you feel like a smaller version of yourself? And if you just follow those expansive feelings, you know, just like with eating French fries or doughnuts? Look, I love French fries. There’s a time and place for a donut.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:03  But absolutely.

Light Watkins 00:14:04  If you eat these things all the time, because the idea of it makes you feel expansive in the moment, but then 20 minutes later, you feel shitty. Yeah, that’s an indication that this is not taking you in the direction of your most authentic self. Yeah. Eating these kinds of foods, you know, going to work out may make you contract initially, but then afterward, what happens? No one ever walks out of the gym or an exercise class having killed it, and feel like a smaller version of yourself.

Light Watkins 00:14:32  You feel like the superhero version of yourself. And so, you know, you got to look at it in a broad spectrum of activity as opposed to how you’re feeling in the moment. And then again, once you have enough of these types of experiences and you have a point of reference, then you can make those decisions easier and easier.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:50  Yeah, it’s funny, I’ve interviewed a bunch of behavioral scientists on this show and I always ask them, I’m like, explain something to me every single time I have ever worked out. And it’s thousands and thousands and thousands of times, right? I’m not a young person, right? Every single time I have left going, I’m so glad I did that. You would think I would run to workout every single time. And yet it’s still difficult. No one has ever really satisfactorily been able to answer why that is. I think it just has something to do with an inbuilt wiring to conserve energy. As a living being. I think we just have some degree of that, but it’s funny, I could have that kind of track record 100% success and still I still have to talk myself into it.

Light Watkins 00:15:37  I mean, but look, let’s expound on that further. Let’s say you’re looking at doing Navy Seal training, but then you’re like, there’s no way I don’t want. I just don’t want that sort of stress in my life. Right. But you know that after you get through Hell week and all that crazy stuff, you’re going to feel like a freaking super machine. Yeah. Right. Even though, you know it’s going to take you to the brink of your potential. And so we all kind of have that. It’s just a matter of to what degree do we feel it, you know, and challenging ourselves. But we know that getting to the other side of that challenge is going to feel amazing. But, you know, it’s just a matter of, okay. What sort of challenge do I want today? And, you know, maybe working out presents, what seems to be a very steep obstacle for us. But we know that once we get to the other side of that obstacle, it’s going to feel great.

Light Watkins 00:16:24  But do we want to take on that level of obstacle that day? Or maybe there’s a smaller obstacle that we’re satisfied with because we know that it’s not going to stop. It’s going to just be the same thing the next day and the next day and the day after that, etc..

Eric Zimmer 00:16:38  There’s an absolute art to get in that, right. You know, not too much, not too little. Sort of threading the needle on that before we get into the book. More specifically, I wanted to ask you about a recent Instagram post that you did, and you said in it, look at happiness, income, and stress as debt. Say more about that.

Light Watkins 00:16:56  So that post was referring to this idea that I think a lot of people find themselves stuck in, which is the acquisitive approach to happiness, which is happiness that comes from the outside to the inside, which means as soon as I get the promotion, as soon as I get the better job, as soon as I get the better spouse, as soon as I move to the better house, better car, better city, better this another zero my bank balance that I’m going to be happy and let me do whatever it takes in order to make that happen.

Light Watkins 00:17:29  And the opposite of that is what the Buddha and all of the sages and gurus over millennia have said, which is happiness. There’s no way to happiness. Happiness is the way. So in other words, happiness is an inside out proposition, and therefore it requires some sort of inner inner practice that will help to cultivate the happiness that you ultimately want. And now, you know, science is backed this up. And research has said that in American society at least beyond, you know, having your basic needs met and you making a salary of like 70, 75,000 bucks, making more money is not going to increase your baseline level of happiness. Right. This doesn’t mean that you can’t be any happier than you were at $75,000. It just means that making more money is not the thing that’s going to increase it. What will increase it, though, is having strong friendships. What will increase it is being of service, having a greater purpose in your life, and what’s also been shown to increase the happiness is cultivating more of the chemicals that are responsible for happiness serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin, etc. and the practices that can do that very effectively are gratitude and meditation.

Light Watkins 00:18:48  So the thing that stops us from feeling happier than we would be at that threshold, that $75,000 threshold primarily is lack of those chemicals. And so what does the body do that prohibits us from feeling those chemicals? It reacts to demands pressures and changes of expectation. So that’s another way of saying stress. It’s experiencing stress. Stress depletes the body of serotonin dopamine and oxytocin. So it makes us want to run away from whatever the experience is or fight that experience. Meditation. Gratitude helps to create those chemicals which makes us feel more present, more fulfilled and happier inside, more content with whatever it is that we’re experiencing. Just to put a definition to happiness, because a lot of people think. Happiness is me walking around with a big smile plastered on my face all the time. And that’s not the reality of what happiness is. Happiness is being in a state where you don’t need other things to be happening, to make you feel more fulfilled as a person. That’s what true happiness actually is. So when we can get the body addicted to those happy chemicals, then our body will respond by making us crave those experiences that are responsible for those happiness chemicals which makes us wake up in the morning.

Light Watkins 00:20:10  You know how some people will wake up. They can’t wait to have their coffee, or, you know, they can’t wait to turn the television on, or they can’t wait to start scrolling on social media. Well, those are not arbitrary experiences. You’ve programmed and conditioned your body to be dependent upon the chemicals that are associated with those experiences. And the good news is that the same thing can happen with more positive experiences like meditation, like gratitude, like being of service, like operating from a purpose. And so as you go throughout your day, your body is actually prompting you, hey, hey, Eric, it’s time to sit down and meditate or hey, Eric, you haven’t really thought about anything you’re grateful for in a moment. What are you grateful for right now? You know, and you start having these kinds of experiences from the inside out, and you feel yourself being more present and more fulfilled. And as a result, you’re not sitting there thinking to yourself, oh, I’m very present right now.

Light Watkins 00:21:03  I’m very happy. I’m very fulfilled. No, you’re just completely engaged in whatever the activity is. And as you’re walking around, you’re noticing things. You’re noticing the birds, you’re noticing the sounds, you’re noticing the colors, you’re noticing the breeze on your face. And when a demand is placed on you, you don’t jump right into scarcity. Oh, my God, I don’t have time for this. No, you’re able to be present with that and to be the person that stops and helps the person across the street, because you have the time. In fact, your time billionaire, because that’s what presence does. So it’s not that you need to even be aware of that any of this is happening. It becomes who you are and that’s what that means. The more of those happiness chemicals you get. It’s kind of like that’s the true wealth that you’re actually looking for. And the more stress you have, it takes away your ability to feel that. And that’s why we want to start to see stress as a debt, as a liability, and not this thing that we need in order to find our edge or whatever it is that we’re telling ourselves.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:03  As we drop into the book and this idea of spiritual minimalism, I want to talk about what you describe as one of the principles of that. And it’s that the fewer options you have, the more freedom you have to make decisions and the more present you become. Say something about that because we tend to want to maximize our optionality, right? We tend to want to give ourselves the widest range of options. Right. Because then we can make the best choice. And we know there’s a paradox of choice out there that if you have way too many options, you get overwhelmed. But even well, short of that, I think you’re talking about, you know, short of that. So why is less options often more beneficial for us in a spiritual minimalism sense?

Light Watkins 00:22:46  You’re referring to principle seven of spiritual minimalism, which is celebrate the freedom of choice looseness. So there are a few different seemingly contradictory truths in that statement, right? One truth is that having options is actually a good thing. Like if we have the option to be well versus the option to be sick, we’re going to choose the option to be well.

Light Watkins 00:23:08  We want that option 100 times out of 100. And at the same time, let’s say for whatever reason, we’re not in a situation where we can be, well, we don’t have what it takes. We don’t have the money, we don’t have the resources. We’re in a weird physical location where we can’t get access to care. Right. So then there is a freedom that is associated with that. And what that means is that we can either focus on what’s not happening, which again yanks us out of the present moment, and it actually makes the body sicker. It doesn’t heal the body to be in that mindset. Or we can accept where we are and what’s happening. Provide it. We’ve done everything we could, right? And this is where we are. So we accept that now, just through sheer acceptance, we’re able to anchor ourselves more in the present moment. And then it’s through that present moment awareness that we’re going to be able to see and detect and feel things that we would not have had access to otherwise.

Light Watkins 00:24:14  My, one of my spiritual teachers used to say, if you want to know what’s going to happen tomorrow, then you better get present today, because the richest information about what’s happening tomorrow is only found in the present moment right now. So otherwise, you have to use speculation and guesswork to try to figure out what’s going to be happening tomorrow. So both of those things can be true. You know, I like options, and I’m recognizing that I don’t have a lot of options for whatever reason. And so I’m just going to do the best that I can right now. If you have time, I’ll tell you a little story about that. Sure. I used to teach yoga back in the day, and I remember I had a yoga class. It was like at 10:00 in the mornings on, I think, Wednesdays and Fridays in Los Angeles. And I lived about ten minutes drive from the yoga studio, and I had my commute time down to the minute I left 15 minutes early, it would take me, you know, seven minutes, eight minutes to drive there, park, go upstairs, go to the studio, set up my room, and I had to have an extra five or maybe seven minutes to greet people as they were coming in.

Light Watkins 00:25:20  And I’ve done this, you know, hundreds of times. There was never any traffic in one morning. I get in my car and I’m well, you know, right within the time frame that I always gave myself and there was all this traffic on the main road going in the direction of the studio. So like any good LA driver, I zig zag my way down to the next street and I hit another pocket of traffic. And this is highly unusual. There’s never traffic on one of those streets, much less both of those streets. So now I’m recognizing that I’m going to be late. And I hate it being late, but there was nothing I can do about it. So I tried to, like, breathe and calm myself down as I’m inching through this traffic. And then I finally get to the the main intersection that crossed both of those streets. And if there was going to be anything causing this traffic, it would have been at this intersection. But I didn’t see anything. I didn’t see any construction.

Light Watkins 00:26:13  I didn’t see any obstruction, no accident. There was no reason why there would have been traffic on those streets. And then eventually this traffic just kind of spontaneously cleared up. I arrive at the class ten minutes late. I’m embarrassed. Right? Because now I’m sending the message that it’s okay to show up late to my class. And as I walk into the room, the actual room, I have flip flops on and I feel all this crunching underneath my flip flops, and I look down and there’s like, there’s a million shards of broken glass all over the floor. And I look up to the front wall, which is a wall of mirrors probably about ten feet tall. Each pane of mirror was about three feet, four feet wide. And in the very middle of the room there was a missing panel ten feet tall by four feet wide. There was no mirror there. And so what had happened was apparently about ten minutes before I came in the room, right at the top of the hour, when the class was supposed to start, that panel of mirror somehow dislodged and came crashing down right where I would have been sitting had I arrived at the class on time.

Light Watkins 00:27:21  So evidently, that phantom traffic jam that I was secretly cursing on my way there was actually saving me from having a very unlucky start to my day. And the reason I like that story is because it tells the flip side of the freedom of choice looseness, right? Which is when you’re being rejected from something, when you’re losing something and you think to yourself, oh my God, if only I had done X, Y, or Z. If only I left earlier. If only I hadn’t made friends with this person. If only I had put more money into it, then it would have worked out better. That’s how we play it out in our minds without realising that although the situation was bad, it could have been a lot worse and I would have had a very unlucky start to my day had I gotten there when I wanted to get there. So the universe or nature, whatever you want to call it, was gifting me with a freedom of choice looseness. And after that happened, whenever I’m inconvenienced, it doesn’t bother me anymore.

Light Watkins 00:28:21  When I miss a flight, when there’s traffic, when someone’s not texting me back as quickly as I think they should be, I think back to myself. Phantom traffic jam, broken mirror. Okay, you know this is not what’s meant to be happening now. Again, it doesn’t mean I’m sitting on my hands waiting for things to happen. I’m still doing everything I can do, but when the thing is not happening beyond that, then I have an easier time saying, you know what? This is fine. Let me keep focusing on what I can control and let go of what I can.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:11  It always seemed to me there are situations in which there’s something I can do about this, and I absolutely do it, or there’s nothing I can do about it. So I let it go. And then there’s all that middle ground where we’re like, wow, you know, I don’t, you know, I don’t quite know, you know, I’ve got a job that I don’t love, you know? Do I accept that? Because by accepting it, I might start to like the job more.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:35  And I’m not resisting it. You know, it’s that middle ground that’s always so, so confusing. And like we talked about, you know, there’s there’s an art to finding, you know, what’s the right response and what situation.

Light Watkins 00:29:48  Yeah. And I think one way to kind of navigate that is to again, remind yourself of what are the most important things that you want people to say about you at the end of your life. And just narrow that down to like three things. I’m the person that gives people second chances. I’m the person that leaves the world more inspired. And let’s say I leave places better than I found them. So that gives you a different point of focus in these moments where the outcome isn’t what you think it should be, and therefore you can now become more process oriented. And guess what? The value that you ultimately want from the experience is going to be found from the process of it versus from the outcome of it. So going back to our earlier example of, you know, going through hell week as a Navy Seal.

Light Watkins 00:30:35  Sure. It’s wonderful to say that you’re a Navy Seal, but let’s say you had a hookup, Eric. Let’s say, you know somebody in the Navy who could just make you a Navy Seal without you having to bother with hell week, right? Would anybody want that? No self-respecting person would want to have Navy Seal status without going through all of the things that you have to go through, which is advertised as hellish. This is going to be hell to go through these things. But that’s what makes you into the person. That’s what gives the experience its inherent value. And so as a Navy Seal, you’re the kind of person that does things beyond the point where most people give up. You’ll go through whatever you have to go through and make sure you protect your fellow seals. You’re the kind of person that doesn’t come up with excuses about why you can’t make things happen. Instead, you find solutions. So when you put yourself through that experience, you actually become that person. And then 20, 30, 50 years later, when you look back, that’s what you remember fondly.

Light Watkins 00:31:41  Yeah. I didn’t give up. Right? And yes, I went beyond where most people would quit. And yes, I do protect people, you know, just because I expect them to protect me, etc. and that becomes a part of who you are and that shows up in everything you do. And you realize, yeah, it was the journey. It wasn’t the destination. That was the most valuable part of the whole experience.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:02  Yeah. You touched on there one of the key elements of spiritual minimalism that you talk about. I find it just to be a good, all purpose intention in life, which is just to leave every place better than I found it like that, just to me, almost encompasses. Right. So much of what what I value. Because that could look a thousand different ways based on what you mean by that and where you are and all that. It is a way of orienting towards all of your situations that I just have found to be, like I said, a good all purpose intention.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:38  It’s one of my fallbacks.

Light Watkins 00:32:40  Yeah, there’s a story in that principle in that chapter called Final Impressions, and I talk about how we’re really good at making first impressions, putting our best foot forward. But we’re really bad when it comes to final impressions. And what I mean by that is, you know, if anybody could say these things about you, they didn’t show up to the meeting that I set up for them, and they never notified me, or they broke up with me over text message, or they ghosted me, or they didn’t do what they said they were going to do. So I just stopped screwing around with them. You know, these kinds of little things, you know, to us, they’re like little things. They can become these really big moments that we get known for if we do it enough times And you know, when people are gossiping. Usually they’re not gossiping about the first impression. They’re gossiping about your final impression, how you left the situation, you know, and then you start to hear the grapevine version of how you left this.

Light Watkins 00:33:39  It’s never it’s never like what actually happened. It’s the exaggerated version of what happened that you have to then give context for, for the rest of your life and have to explain for the rest of your life. And it could be distracting, and people don’t want to have anything to do with you, because now it’s blown up into this whole thing. And these would be, you know, ridiculously simple situations to correct. Maybe just by giving a little bit of clarification, maybe giving an apology, maybe just giving someone a chance to feel seen and heard, you know? And so I try to remember that in my day to day life, everyone that I’m encountering, that’s an opportunity for me to leave a positive final impression. And that could just be listening, that could just be acknowledging what someone just said or what they’re going through. I’ve experienced this recently. I don’t want to make this, you know, time sensitive, but, you know, there’s some international conflicts that are happening right now as they’re there almost always are.

Light Watkins 00:34:42  There’s something happening somewhere in the world. But, you know, having these conversations, especially if you feel strongly about one side or the other side, is really easy to dismiss someone who doesn’t agree with you. And I think that that’s an opportunity from a spiritual minimalism point of view, to help people feel as seen and as heard as you would like to feel, even if you think they’re wrong, even if you feel like they’re misguided, they’re not seeing the full thing, well guess what? They probably feel the same about you. Yeah. So at the end of the day, who’s right? Who’s wrong? We don’t know because we’re all being propagandized. We’re all being indoctrinated by whatever our echo chamber has been conditioning us to believe, and that’s been repeated throughout the history where we thought things were one way, but actually, turns out they were a different way. And so just exercising the benefit of the doubt, giving people the benefit of the doubt is a really good way to leave a positive final oppression.

Light Watkins 00:35:40  And if you want to have influence over how that person is seeing a situation, guess what? You’re going to have way more influence if you help them feel seen and heard versus the person who cuts them off, dismisses their point of view as nonsense, and makes them feel stupid. And because nobody wants to feel those ways. So some very powerful work that we can be doing on a daily basis. And that’s what that principle of spiritual minimalism give what you want to receive actually means.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:09  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight, breath shallow? Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday I send weekly bytes of wisdom, a short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show. Things like mental health, anxiety, relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day it’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it. If you’d like extra fuel for the weekend, you also get a weekend podcast playlist.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:47  Join us at one you feed. That’s one you feed newsletter and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. So you kind of segue us into another of the principles. We were sort of talking about leaving every place better. And but you’ve kind of named it here, which is, you know, give what you want. You say give what you want to receive. It doesn’t matter how much or how little you have. If you want a friend, you must be friendly. If you want love, you must be loving. You know, you’ve talked in the book about if the community that you want isn’t there? Start creating it. So talk a little bit more about this. You know, give what you want to receive.

Light Watkins 00:37:27  When I turned 40, I had an epiphany. I was like, man, I’m not really going out very much. And I reflected on that and I realized the reason I wasn’t socializing was I had stopped drinking when I was about 25, 26, started drinking alcohol, and I never had a problem.

Light Watkins 00:37:46  I just kind of did the math in my mid 20s and just realized it didn’t really add up. It didn’t make me feel like a better version of myself when I was drinking. It was expensive, you know, all the things. So I decided to experiment with not drinking. I’m just not going to order any drinks and see what happens. If I miss it, I’ll go back to it. If I don’t miss it, then great. I’ve liberated myself from feeling like I need to drink in order to be social. And so I never missed it and I just stopped. I just stopped drinking over the course of like six months, and then I just didn’t really think about it much. But yeah, when I turned 40, I thought, okay, well, I want to be more social. But then I was thinking, you know, well, where would I go? And all the places that I was thinking of were places that were, you know, centered around drinking either directly or indirectly.

Light Watkins 00:38:30  So I thought, well, maybe I’ll create an experience. There’s got to be other people out here who also want to socialize without having to feel pressure to drink. So I started hosting these gatherings once a week at this little dance studio in West LA. It was costing me $50 each week to rent this place out for like an hour, an hour and a half, and I’ll be in my kitchen making honey lemon ginger tea, which I really loved from when I visit India. I would have a question of the night, because one of the things I hate is going to a social event as an adult and you don’t know anybody and you feel like everyone’s in their little clique, and then you have to kind of get out of your shell. So I was like, how can I create an experience where people feel naturally inclined to approach other people? Right. And I said, oh, let’s do this. Let’s have a question of the night. Something like, who’s your personal hero? Or where would you like to go on vacation next? Or what’s a book that changed your life? And instead of writing their name down on a name tag, write the answer to the question of the night on your name tag and wear it on you.

Light Watkins 00:39:32  And that way when people come in and they write their answer, you’re going around and you’re seeing everybody’s answer and it’s a natural conversation starter. So we said we did. We did that. And then I led a meditation because I thought, why not have meditation at a social event? And we had someone else come in and give like a quote, Ted talk. So I would have like my salsa teacher come in and talk about like what the principles of teaching salsa. And I had like someone else come in as a coach, a life coach, come in and talk about that. And it was a really cool little experience. You know, we only got like 12 or 13 people coming out and it was a free event for them. But it just it really lit me up inside and I didn’t know what was going to happen with it. I was just happy to have something to do every Wednesday. It was like a purpose driven thing. For me, it wasn’t even about making money. But then I had this volunteer in one day, she said as we were straightening up.

Light Watkins 00:40:24  Afterwards, she goes, why don’t you start taking up a collection since you’re paying for it out of pocket? Just take up a collection and just, you know, at least you can pay yourself back or use that to pay for the the rent of the space. So the next event, we took up a collection and there were probably 13 to 14 people there and we collected $55. So now I was a little disappointed, honestly, Eric, because I was thinking, man, $55. That’s it. After all this work I’m putting into this, it’s like I got to see how the market value this experience, and it wasn’t as high as I was hoping. And, and so I got home that night and I had my $55 in cash, and I thought to myself, you know, I could spend this 55 bucks paying for the next rent, I said, or I could give it to somebody at the next event, and I think it tasks them with the mission of using it to help somebody in some positive way, and then have them come back and share what they did with the $55.

Light Watkins 00:41:27  Obviously, it’s not enough money to make a huge difference in someone’s life, but that’s the point. Like, you don’t need a lot of money to make a positive impact in the world. So let’s see what someone creative can do with $55. So we randomly awarded someone that the next event, the $55, they come back to the following event and they said, yeah, I put this kid through a summer art camp. I added 50 bucks of my own money, and this is the kid’s name, and this is how the summer camp worked. And everybody was so inspired. And I was like, oh my God, this is the missing component of the event. And so that night we probably still had 14 people, but we collected like 120 something dollars. So the donations went up. And that became a sort of pivotal moment where we saw hockey stick growth in the amount of people who were coming, because when people would share the story of what they did with the money. Everyone was inspired and I would tell people, you don’t have to win the money.

Light Watkins 00:42:21  You have 55 bucks in your checking account, probably pretend like you want it and go and do something about it and come back and tell us what you did and we’ll share the story together. And so it got to the point where we were getting hundreds of people, man. We had like we had events with like 300, 400 people coming six months later. And we had to charge because we started serving food. It became this whole thing. We were doing it in New York. We were doing them in London, we were doing them in Germany. They were all over the world. And we started getting written up in The New York Times and NBC and all the different outlets, and I ended up getting a girlfriend from that experience, you know, because she was volunteering. So basically everything that I was lacking in my life came into my life. As a result of that event, I got my first publishing deal, which was like a six figure publishing deal. And even though I didn’t make a dime on the event directly.

Light Watkins 00:43:14  But that’s the message behind giving what you want to receive. Instead of sitting around thinking about how no one is doing what I think they should be doing, and you know, this world is screwed up. You give that give that to people in whatever small way you can. And if it’s authentic and if it’s in integrity with, you know, whatever your heart is having you do, people will respond to it and they’ll come to it. And so on my own podcast today, I just launched the episode of me with one of my childhood friends who’s become the mayor of Montgomery, Alabama, where I grew up. And he has a wonderful story of being an outsider. And you know how that all worked with him getting into politics. But I think that’s another area that people complain about a lot and criticize a lot. It’s like, well, these are just people just like you and me. So if you want to see something different, throw your hat in the ring and, you know, give it a run and see if you can make a difference, if you feel like no one else can.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:26  It’s a great story on so many levels. And, you know, I think the lesson I would take from that is I think sometimes we think if we do something, it has to turn into what that turned into for you. And it doesn’t have to. Right. If what you want is a couple more friends, if you start hosting gatherings and you get a couple more friends, you’ve succeeded. It doesn’t always have to turn grandiose to be valuable. And that’s one of the things I see in a lot of people that I work with is this idea that things have to be grandiose to be meaningful, and that’s a trap.

Light Watkins 00:44:58  Yeah. And I tell people in the book, I said, you know, don’t be distracted by all these things that happen. You know, even if you just cook the home, cook dinner for people, everyone loves a home cooked dinner. Or if you want to walk and you want company to start a walking group with your friends from church, and it could be 3 or 4 of you or movie night, or just keep it really small.

Light Watkins 00:45:16  I mean, you never know where it’s going to go, but. Right. Yeah. My intention wasn’t like built as big event. My intention was just to create an experience that I actually wanted to have, that I wanted to see, and it grew from that. And in the process, you know, it forced me to have to be a leader because leading people who are getting paid is one thing. Leading a bunch of volunteers is a whole other skill set. Indeed, you have to keep them motivated and inspired all the time.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:40  Yeah, indeed it is. Principle number six is find comfort in discomfort. And I want to read something that I believe one of your teachers said to you, which is the most dangerous place you can be, is in the ever repeating moment. And the safest place is to be moving towards the unknown. So talk a little bit more about finding comfort and discomfort or that particular line. Yeah.

Light Watkins 00:46:05  So we have our comfort zone which we all heard about right. That’s the zone where you kind of know how things are going to go.

Light Watkins 00:46:13  There’s not a lot of surprises. There’s a lot more certainty. But yet you’re not really stretching yourself. You’re not really growing into your potential. And just to use an analogy that we’re all familiar with is the gym. Right. Imagine if you go to the gym. A lot of people do this. You go to the gym and you do the same exercises that you know you’re good at. You stay away from the ones that you know. You’re you’re weak in those areas. You know you’re weak because you don’t like feeling weak. Nobody likes feeling weak. Nobody likes feeling like they can’t do something. So left up to our own devices, probably we’re going to do more exercises that we feel stronger in. Skip the look what happens when you hire a trainer? Yeah. When you hire a trainer, the reason you’re hiring a trainer is to push you beyond whatever your comfort zone was. And so that trainer may immediately see, oh, you’re weak in this area of that area. You know, after.

Light Watkins 00:47:10  After doing their little diagnostic assessment with you. And yet they’re listening to your goals. You know, I want to have a stronger back. I want to have a bigger. But whatever the goal is. And the trainer is like, okay, well, this is what you have to do if you want to achieve those goals. And probably the reason you haven’t achieved those goals is because you haven’t been doing the kinds of exercises that you need to do in order to achieve those goals, and that’s going to make you very uncomfortable. So the moment you start getting uncomfortable now, you’re moving towards your growth zone. And the growth zone is almost always uncomfortable. So if we want to grow in whatever area of our life, then that means we have to start making friends with discomfort. And that’s what finding comfort means in discomfort is, is that is an essential part of the process of getting stronger, accessing more of our potential, becoming the person that we ultimately want to be, etc..

Eric Zimmer 00:48:10  It really is interesting.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:11  I think we hear that and we know that. You know, get outside of your comfort zone. And yet we very often don’t. I know as I’ve gotten older, I do think this is one of the things that happens as you age, if you’re not careful, is that we begin to prioritize comfort more and more. And this goes back a little bit to this idea of choice closeness, right? Like, I’m a Zen student. It’s very rigid. It’s very formal. You know, like you do these exact things a certain way, which is against my very nature. But the fact that I just give myself to the form, I just hear it is stop your endless debate about how you want things to be. This is how you’re going to do them for this period of time. I find that helpful. But this idea of discomfort is it’s hard to keep pushing yourself outside your comfort zone. And like we’ve talked a bit about in this conversation, right. There’s an art to finding, like how far outside your comfort zone you can go and still maintain it and continue to do it.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:10  You go too far and you’re like, you run back in. So I know you don’t go far enough. You don’t grow. And that’s what a good trainer does, right? A trainer, a good one knows I can push him to here any more than that. And he’s going to, you know, he’s not going to come back, right? I can push him to here. And so I think that’s the other piece of this is finding, like, what way outside of our comfort zone and how do we maintain being there.

Light Watkins 00:49:34  Yeah, I would say that that is associated with spiritual maturity. Right. So when you’re young and you want to change, you tend to go a little too far, too fast and you end up getting the pendulum effect. Yeah. But as you become more spiritually mature, you understand the value of discomfort, but you also understand the value of taking the tortoise approach as opposed to the hare approach. And so that becomes the new gauge through which you approach Change because you realize that everything is just different forms of change.

Light Watkins 00:50:12  You’re changing, they’re changing, circumstances are always changing, and there’s less of the whole binary. This is good, this is bad. There’s goodness and everything and there’s, you know, negative aspects to everything depending on what perspective we’re looking at it from. And so if we can kind of condition ourselves to stay engaged in the process, and that’s where the discomfort really is, I think the greatest is being just in the process and maybe not understanding how it’s all going to turn out, but just knowing that being in the process is the goal. It’s not about reaching the outcome, it’s not about the destination. The destination will be whatever it is. But again, the more process oriented we were, the more we will extract the value from the experience. And I have this thing that I’ve written as well which says, you know, when you’re seeking advice, should you seek advice from people who’ve done what you want to do? Or should you seek advice from people who haven’t done and they’ve lived with the with the regret, with the pain of regret from not having done it? Who should you seek advice from? And I say seek advice from the person who has been the most consistent.

Light Watkins 00:51:26  They’ve consistently put themselves out there with whatever they were trying to do, and sometimes they’ve succeeded and sometimes they haven’t. But they keep going back again and again and again. And if we can just adopt that approach of being consistent, even if it looks like it’s not going to happen, or if it looks like it’s a sure thing, we’re still showing up as if it’s not going to happen. Right. That’s the ultimate habit that we’re cultivating is consistency, which means I’m not attached. I’m not rigidly attached to the outcome. Sure, I have Preferences. Sure, I would like for it to go in this direction or that direction, but I understand that the real value is just me showing up every day, and I’m giving my best and I’m letting the chips fall where they may, right? So the outcome will be whatever it is. But if we have the consistent ability to show up, then we can apply that to anything.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:28  Before you check out, pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:50  Feed your good wolf at one you feed. Net newsletter again one you feed net letter. My Spiritual Habits program is based on one key idea and that is little by little. A little becomes a lot, right? That that’s how real change tends to happen and stick is. It’s just little by little, you know, a little becomes a lot. And it’s that consistency and that really does add up. And that does really lead to change. It’s just not as fast as what we might wish.

Light Watkins 00:53:24  Yeah. Another spiritual guru I can’t remember who it is. He says what are you rushing towards death. Like what’s the big hurry if you keep extrapolating it? What’s the hurry? Yeah, ultimately you’re gonna die. So, you know, there’s no real point to all the rushing around if that moment is going to be fleeting anyway, I think the better approach is to just enjoy whatever little moments you have right now and extract whatever presence you can right now from those moments.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:50  Yeah, well, we are at the end of our time.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:51  You and I are going to, in the post-show conversation, talk about meditation. You’ve got a way of meditating that you believe leads to making it the most enjoyable and sustainable. So we’ll talk about that. Have you lead us in a guided meditation? Listeners, if you’d like access to that other post-show conversations, add free episodes. Episode I do called Teaching Song and a poem and the deep internal satisfaction of supporting something that you love. You can go to one. You feed and become a member of our community. Light. Thank you so much. Such a pleasure to have you on and I’ve really enjoyed our conversation.

Light Watkins 00:54:27  Absolutely.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:28  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity. But we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

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Procrastination: The Hidden Pain Behind Your Limiting Beliefs with Nir Eyal

March 10, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Nir Eyal, author of Beyond Belief explores procrastination and the hidden pain behind your limiting beliefs. He explains how beliefs shape our perception of reality, motivation, and behavior. He also shares how beliefs are flexible tools, not absolute truths, and that changing limiting beliefs can reduce suffering and unlock personal growth. The conversation covers the brain’s filtering of reality, the motivational triangle (behavior, desire, belief), and practical strategies for reframing beliefs to overcome procrastination, manage discomfort, and foster well-being. Nir emphasizes using science-backed methods to intentionally choose beliefs that empower and support lasting change.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • The nature of beliefs and their impact on perception and reality.
  • The distinction between beliefs as flexible tools versus absolute truths.
  • The role of beliefs in motivation and behavior change.
  • The motivational triangle: behavior, desire, and belief.
  • The influence of beliefs on health, longevity, and personal growth.
  • The concept of pain versus suffering and how beliefs affect this distinction.
  • The importance of exposure therapy in overcoming limiting beliefs.
  • The relationship between beliefs and procrastination as a pain management issue.
  • Strategies for identifying and changing limiting beliefs.
  • The significance of adopting empowering beliefs to enhance well-being and life satisfaction.

Nir Eyal is a globally recognized authority on behavior change and human potential. His frameworks have empowered millions to build better habits, enhance focus, and unlock greater agency in their lives and work. A former lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford, Nir has collaborated with leaders and organizations worldwide to boost performance through behavior design. He is the author of the international bestsellers Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products and Indistractable: How to Control Your Attention and Choose Your Life, which have sold over one million copies in more than 30 languages. Hooked was a finalist for the 2014 Goodreads Choice Awards. Indistractable won the 2019 Outstanding Works of Literature (OWL) Award and was named one of the Best Business & Leadership Books of the Year by Amazon, Audible, and The Globe and Mail. His third book, Beyond Belief: The Science-Backed Way to Stop Limiting Yourself and Achieve Breakthrough, reveals how to identify and replace the hidden beliefs that define our limits.

Connect with Nir Eyal:  Website | Instagram | LinkedIn

If you enjoyed this conversation with Nir Eyal, check out these other episodes:

How to Master Internal Triggers and Regain Control of Your Attention with Nir Eyal

How to Overcome Procrastination with Tim Pychyl

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Episode Transcript:

Nir Eyal 00:00:00  The brain does not see reality as it is. We all live in our own simulation. It’s not like the matrix where there’s one simulation is that we all create our own simulation, because the brain is simply incapable of processing all the information that it’s taking in. We know that the brain takes in about 11 million bits of information every single second. That’s the equivalent of reading War and Peace every second. Twice.

Chris Forbes 00:00:31  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:16  One of the most liberating things that’s ever happened to me is realizing that my thoughts aren’t necessarily true. We see everything through conditioned lenses, and one of those lenses is our beliefs. Nir I all and his great new book, Beyond Belief The science backed way to Stop limiting yourself and achieve breakthrough Results, makes this point very clear. He describes beliefs as tools, not truths. He says the real question isn’t is this belief true? But does this belief serve me? Near as always, a pleasure to talk to? And there are a lot of gems in this conversation. I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed Hi, Nir. Welcome to the show.

Nir Eyal 00:02:00  Thanks, Eric. Great to be back.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:02  I am excited to have you on. I loved our first conversation and I’m really excited about this one because we’re going to be talking about your new book, which is called Beyond Belief The science backed way to Stop limiting Yourself and Achieve Breakthrough Results. But we’ll start, like we always do, with a parable.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:21  And in the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Nir Eyal 00:02:55  So last time I was on the show, I had a different interpretation. I kind of took that story with with the grandpa’s words and took that to heart. And I think now, having spent the past six years going so deep on the powers of belief, I think what really resonates is that those two wolves aren’t just good and evil. That was kind of my original interpretation of your good instincts.

Nir Eyal 00:03:17  Your bad instincts. I think it’s it’s deeper than that. They both live within us in that one represents, to me at least now over the past six years. One is about our limiting beliefs primarily around fear and how debilitating fear can be, and how how many problems fear causes in our life through these limiting beliefs. That to me is the bad wolf and the good wolf are these liberating beliefs, these these beliefs that help motivate us, that elevate us, and that reduce suffering in our lives?

Eric Zimmer 00:03:46  I think that’s a great way to think about it. And I wanted to just start with a core thing that you say early on in the book, which is that beliefs are tools, not truths. Say more about that.

Nir Eyal 00:04:01  Sure. So this was really the the mind blowing revelation that I had as I looked through the research. And this is an, you know, I feel bad taking credit for any of this because what I do, I take a really long time to write my books because I really start from first principles.

Nir Eyal 00:04:13  Looking at the studies, there’s over 30 pages of citations to peer reviewed studies. And so I, I like to go as deep as I possibly can into the research literature. And what I kind of put together from everything I read was that I had misattributed what is a belief and kind of used that as a synonym for a fact. Right. We hear people saying a lot of times, I believe this, I believe that, and I kind of took that to mean the same thing. And it’s not the same thing that facts are objective truths. They are things that are true whether or not you believe in them. The world is more like a sphere than it is flat. Sorry flat earthers, the world doesn’t care what you think. That’s a fact. On the other end of the spectrum is faith. Faith is a conviction that does not require evidence. So what happens in the afterlife? God rewards the righteous. This is not something that requires evidence in between. Fact and faith is what we call a belief.

Nir Eyal 00:05:05  A belief is defined as a conviction that is open to revision based on new evidence. And what’s so remarkable about a belief, and what differentiates beliefs from faith and fact is that they can change. We can adopt new beliefs. And so the thing that I really took away from this research is that these beliefs are tools, not truths. They are tools, not truths. So we can change them, we can examine them. We can adopt new beliefs to find the ones that serve us rather than hurt us. And when I say hurt us, I mean quite literally that we know that our beliefs are at the core of chronic pain. They in fact shorten our lifespans. If you have limiting beliefs like literally, people with certain beliefs live, on average seven and a half years longer than. People who have these limiting beliefs around aging. They affect so many different aspects of our life from from our relationships to our financial success to how we see reality are all defined by our beliefs.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:09  Yeah, I think about this a lot.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:10  I’ve got a chapter in my book, and it’s similar to a chapter you have in your book where it’s like how we see the world as a result of very much how we are. Then we talk about like, well, you can ask yourself questions like, what am I making this mean? And what else could it mean? But the last question that I often have is, is this useful? And that’s exactly what you’re saying with belief as a tool. If I am sort of interpreting reality, you know, there’s the facts, then there’s the interpretation. Why not interpret it in the way that is most useful to me?

Nir Eyal 00:06:44  Bingo, bingo. And I think if there’s one criticism that I hear sometimes is that people ask, are you just telling me to lie to myself? Like if if I could just make up beliefs and I can just choose them for myself. Aren’t you just telling me to gaslight myself? Like, come on now, you can’t do that. To which I say, newsflash, you are already lying to yourself.

Nir Eyal 00:07:05  These limiting beliefs are already delusional. Right. You think you see reality. You don’t. In fact, what we know, we used to think that the brain. You know, we every generation has its metaphor of how the brain works. During the Industrial Revolution, Freud talked about how the brain has these desires that need to be blown off like steam because they accrue pressure in the psyche, and then because that was the best metaphor that he had. And then, you know, during the chemical age when we were trying to, you know, Dow Chemical was was helping us live better by creating plastics and all kinds of objects in the industrial age. Then we thought the brain was like a scientific test tube lab where, you know, the the right amount of chemicals and the wrong proportions. And so you had all these chemical imbalance theories, which turned out to be woefully inadequate. And then we had the computer processing age. And that’s what we thought. The brain, how the brain worked, that it created mathematical computations.

Nir Eyal 00:07:55  That’s not true either. The best model we have today for how the brain works, it’s called predictive processing, that the brain does not see reality as it is. We all live in our own simulation. It’s not like the matrix where there’s one simulation is that we all create our own simulation, because the brain is simply incapable of processing all the information that it’s taking in. We know that the brain takes in about 11 million bits of information every single second. That’s the equivalent of reading War and Peace every second, twice. So the light entering your eyes, the sound entering your ears, the ambient temperature of the room, 11 million bits of information. But conscious attention can only process about 50 bits of information. So 50 bits versus 11 million bits. And so the only way that the brain can make sense of reality is to filter our reality through this tiny, itsy bitsy keyhole of attention. And that’s how we see reality. And what is that keyhole of attention? It’s belief. It’s all based on our prior understandings.

Nir Eyal 00:08:56  What happened to us? Our history, our our background, everything we’ve done in our life that is literally how we see things. And so what to think that we are seeing things clearly is, is a delusion. I think that’s one of the most important things I learned, is that we need to hold our sense of reality. What we are sure is true. We need to hold it very lightly, because it turns out that none of us actually sees reality accurately.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:20  Right. It’s one of the big cognitive biases called naive realism, which means we believe we see things the way they are, and everyone else is the one who’s right, which is the. Once you’ve got that bias in place, you’re pretty hosed.

Nir Eyal 00:09:34  That’s right, that’s right. Because it’s so true. There’s this immunity to change that the brain has this immune system just like your body. You get a splinter in your finger will create an infection to defend against this invader. The same happens with our mind. We hate changing our beliefs because we have these understandings of the way the world works, and if something interrupts what we expect, it can be very jarring, especially if it’s something that reflects poorly upon us.

Nir Eyal 00:10:00  Oh, it’s really, really hard to change. But in many ways it limits us. And that’s why we call them limiting beliefs. Because the more we believe about our limitations, we will actually only see our limitations. And then the more we see those limitations, the more they become true, because we act in accordance with them. So it’s this vicious cycle that keeps us trapped in a cage of our own making.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:22  So one of the things you and I are both very interested in is how people actually change. And you talk about belief as being part of a motivational triangle. Walk us through what the motivational triangle is and the role that belief plays in it.

Nir Eyal 00:10:38  Absolutely. So I used to believe, you know, I was an economics minor in college, and so I kind of bought into the classic paradigm of motivation. What is motivation? Motivation is when you have an incentive, right? People are ruled by incentives. And so if I want this benefit I will do this behavior. And that generally works.

Nir Eyal 00:10:55  But there’s something hidden that we don’t often think about, which is that it’s not good enough to just know what to do the behavior and want the benefit. There’s something missing. If it was that simple, if we if it was all just about knowing what to do and wanting what the behavior will get you, well then we would all have six pack abs and be multi-millionaires. Because in this day and age, who doesn’t know, right? If you have a question, you ask ChatGPT. You Google it. The answers are all out there. There’s no more secret knowledge to getting your goals. And basically all of us, if we’re really honest, we know we have the books on our bookshelves, we have access to the experts, we can figure out what to do, and we can want the benefit, but we still don’t do it. And that is maddening. And this is so annoying for me because, you know, as an author, I always thought, well, if I just tell people the answer to their problems, well, then they’ll just go do it.

Nir Eyal 00:11:44  And not only do they not do it, I don’t even do it. I have books on the shelf of things that I haven’t put into practice. I paid for consultants and gurus to tell me what to do, and I haven’t done what they’ve told me. Why? Well, because motivation is not a straight line. It’s not good enough to know what to do and why I need to do it. There’s something missing that if I don’t have a belief underlying those two things, then the behavior doesn’t occur. So motivation is not a straight line, it’s a triangle. So if I want the benefit, but let’s say I don’t believe that I will get the benefit. For example, let’s say you have a boss who doesn’t have your best interest at heart, somebody who you don’t believe will give you that raise or that promotion. Well, how motivated are you going to be to work for them? Not very much. More common is actually what happens when I know the the behavior I need to do, but I don’t believe in my own ability to sustain motivation.

Nir Eyal 00:12:37  Right? If I don’t believe I’m going to do it, if I believe that somehow I have a limiting belief that that I don’t have time, this is too difficult. This is too painful. This sucks. I’m not gonna. You know, I’m not cut out for this. Guess what? I’m also going to lose motivation and I’m not going to do it. So underlying sustain motivation, which we know from from several studies. Now that sustain motivation is the differentiating factor between who wins and loses is who can just continue. Right. The number one reason people fail, the number one reason people fail. Not a lack of knowledge, not of lack of resources. When we fail on our goals, the number one reason, obviously is we quit. It’s as simple as that. The number one reason we fail is we quit. So to sustain motivation to achieve pretty much any of our dreams, we have to understand that knowing what to do, the behavior and wanting the benefit is not enough. We also have to have that belief that undergirds both of those aspects.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:00  I’ve thought about this a lot because I did one on one coaching with people over the years, and I sort of build myself with a term I don’t. I don’t even know if it’s a real term, but behavior coach, right? It was people who were having trouble changing something. Right. You don’t hire a behavior coach unless you generally have failed at changing something a bunch of times. So that was one of the underlying biggest problems is that people came thinking, I can’t do this. I’m the kind of person who X, Y, and Z. I’m not motivated, I’m not disciplined. I don’t have what it takes. And how you unwind that is really, really critical. Because if you don’t believe, like you said, that you can do it, you simply won’t do. It is one of the biggest oppressors of. If we think of motivation that there is right. We. I think we’re more motivated when we believe in ourselves, and we’re less motivated when we don’t believe in ourselves.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:57  And that shows up in a lot of different manifestations. But the question then becomes, how do we change that belief when we’ve got a lot of evidence to support it? Right? Like, I’m a recovering heroin addict, and there was a time where every single time I had tried to change that, I had failed. Again and again and again and again. So how do we work with this underlying belief. How do we change it when the evidence points a different direction.

Nir Eyal 00:15:28  This is something that was really frustrating to me because we, I think we all kind of intuitively know that beliefs are super important. Right. We’ve heard Henry Ford telling us that whether you believe you can or you can’t, you’re right. We know this kind of stuff and then you’ve got the positive thinking movement and the manifesting movement that just tells us that we’re not thinking positively enough and we’re not manifesting hard enough, and that that’s so unsatisfying. It turns out to be scientifically not true, that there’s so many problems with that. Because if you have problems in your life, well, that means you didn’t do it well enough.

Nir Eyal 00:15:57  You didn’t think positive enough you. And so you brought these bad things into your life. And I think that’s that’s bullshit. That’s not true. I think the problem is we haven’t been told exactly the science of how do we effectively change our beliefs and what beliefs are worth challenging. And so I think the beliefs worth challenging where I found the most leverage are the beliefs around suffering. And this is particularly pertinent to people who have struggled with substance use disorder or some kind of compulsive disorder that I think one of the biggest beliefs that we don’t, we don’t look at and we kind of accept to be true, is that pain and suffering are the same thing that we think that if if someone causes us pain, including ourselves, that that must make us suffer and pain, as we talked about earlier, is just another signal. It’s just one of many, many data points that 11 million bits of information that our brains are constantly taking in suffering is the psychological interpretation of that data. So one of the things that totally blew my mind and then helps me makes this point is when I stumbled on the research around hypno sedation, and in the book I share what happened to a guy by the name of Daniel Geisler.

Nir Eyal 00:17:05  Daniel Geisler was in his 50s and he had a freak accident, and he had to have these screws put into his, his his ankle. He shattered part of his ankle a few years later, after the operation, he was healed up, but he still had to get the screws removed. Now, this operation was a 55 minute pretty serious operation, and what Daniel found along the way over those years is a technique called hypno sedation, where he trained himself to separate pain and suffering, and through the power of attention, by training himself. It took him several years, but it’s not rare, in fact. Tens of thousands of people are just like Daniel who have done this before. He underwent a 55 minute procedure where scalpel was cutting into flesh, where metal screws were being wrenched from bone completely without any sort of anesthesia, no general anesthesia, no topical anesthesia, nothing. And I wouldn’t believe it if I didn’t see the tapes myself. His heart rate was stable. His blood pressure was stable. He didn’t show the physiological signs of suffering.

Nir Eyal 00:18:08  He didn’t show any of those symptoms because he had learned through the amazing power of belief to channel his attention, that little keyhole of attention, to focus on what he wanted to focus on and leave the rest behind. And why do I tell this story, Eric? I’m not asking for people to to do hypno sedation. I’m not going to do it. But I tell this story because it proves to us that if we can change our perception of reality to the point where people, Humans. Just like. Just like you and I are as well. All of us. If people if human beings are capable of going under surgery for 55 minutes without anesthesia, what does that tell us about our capabilities? What does that tell us about our untapped potential to weather pain? Because, you know, the hardest part about an impulse control disorder, like an addiction is the wanting. It’s the craving, right? That is so psychologically painful. And so when we learn to manage discomfort throughout our life, right, we know that when people repair relationships, when they come to grips with their past, when they ask for forgiveness and forgive others, their cravings subside.

Nir Eyal 00:19:13  They learn these impulse control skills by learning to deal with their suffering in a new way. How do they do that? It’s fundamentally about changing our beliefs.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:24  Yeah, it’s interesting you say that about craving and how psychologically painful it is, because that is the one thing that I reflect on the most is that worst feeling I knew was this sort of being torn apart. Feeling of addiction. Yeah, right. Of just this craving that was relentless with the deep knowledge. Like you should not. Don’t do it, you know. And that that wrenching, you know, is is brutal. And thank God that goes away.

Nir Eyal 00:19:55  Yeah, yeah. And how does it go away? I mean, your question that I didn’t really answer well before. Of how do we change those beliefs? It’s the same exposure therapy technique. So what happens? And you tell me if I’m wrong here about. About what your journey looked like, but through exposure of. You know what? One day at a time, I can I can make it through a little bit longer.

Nir Eyal 00:20:13  A little bit longer. You’re exposing yourself to get comfortable with discomfort. You realize, hey, nothing’s going to happen, right? If I wait a little bit longer? Yes. It’s uncomfortable. And so the fuck. What? It hurts. Okay? It hurts. But everything worth having in life. Tell me one thing in life that’s worth having. That’s not on the other side of discomfort. You want to have a beautiful family. Let me tell you, it takes work. You want to build a business?

Eric Zimmer 00:20:35  Ice cream. What’s that? Ice cream.

Nir Eyal 00:20:38  Ice cream. Well. Ice cream. You got to pay for it. You got to find the money for that, right? Everything. All the good things in life. Take work. You want to start a business? Takes work. It’s going to be uncomfortable. It’s going to be painful. Now, it doesn’t necessarily have to lead to suffering. And that’s. That’s the big change. So the basic process. How do we do this? We take out our limiting belief.

Nir Eyal 00:20:57  Okay. Which is very very difficult. Again we have this psychological immune system that tries to protect us the way I think things are the way things are. We misinterpret our beliefs as facts. This is the case absolutely all the time. That’s who I am. That’s my past. This is what happened to me. This is the trauma. This is going to suck. This is going to hurt, right? We have these stories in our mind and we can’t see them for what they are. They are just beliefs. Very few of them are actually facts. And so what we do first is we hold a mirror to ourselves. You know, it’s like if I asked you to look at your face, how do you look at your face? You can’t look at your face the way you can look at your hands or your feet. You have to have a mirror. You have to. Now we’re on a zoom call so we can see your face, but without some kind of external way to do it, you can’t see your own face.

Nir Eyal 00:21:41  Same goes with our limiting beliefs. We can’t see them because we believe they’re true. We don’t think of them as beliefs. We think of them as facts. Right? And so it’s only by exposing ourselves to those limiting beliefs and then offering a different perspective, either through small steps of agency, of making it one more day at a time and showing, hey, I can get through this. I’m not going to die. I’m okay, I’m safe. And you bring down that fear. You know, fear is this, this great creator of pain, even chronic pain. I document in the book how effective it is, how changing your beliefs can cure chronic pain. People have been suffering from terrible back pain, terrible fibromyalgia, terrible diagnoses where they are full of suffering and by changing their beliefs, by trying something different, by looking at a perspective that makes no sense, the total opposite of that perspective. They can Repair this pain, the suffering that has plagued them for very, very long time.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:36  So let’s dig into this just a little bit more. You sort of hit these a little bit and I want to get them very clearly, which is the three powers of belief framework. Right. So we’ve talked about attention. Our beliefs shape what we see and what we notice. You also talk about anticipation and agency. Sort of walk us through all of those in one sort of framework.

Nir Eyal 00:23:01  Sure. So the first power of belief, the power of attention, it’s the power to shape what you actually see, your present reality. Because we look at the world through this tiny keyhole of attention, our beliefs shape what we can actually see. So when you think about a relationship, how two people can experience the same exact thing, right? So I remember one time my wife commented that there were dishes in the sink, okay, dirty dishes in the sink when she saw me looking for a cup. She was just making a statement of fact. I heard that as a criticism that I hadn’t washed the dishes.

Nir Eyal 00:23:28  Same exact words, but I saw things differently based on my beliefs. Based on that, I thought I was being judged. And as you said, you don’t see things as they are. You see things as you are. And that comes all the way from the Talmud. This is ancient wisdom. Yeah. Then there’s the power of anticipation. The power to change what you feel. Your physical internal state. That’s how the power of belief will shape things like chronic pain. The power of the placebo pill, how we experience various products and services based on what we anticipate will be our reaction when we experience them. And this and this science goes on and on and on. There’s fascinating science about how powerful the placebo effect can be. And then finally, the power of agency. The power of agency determines what we are able to do, how our beliefs shape what we can actually do in our lives. And so this this comes down to how do we use our beliefs to help us do the things that we previously thought were impossible? And also make sure that we don’t adopt these limiting beliefs that can act as a nocebo effect.

Nir Eyal 00:24:24  One of my favorite studies was this case of Mr. a mr. A as he’s called in the in the literature was this guy who, one day had a very bad breakup with his girlfriend and decided that he wanted to end his life. And so he took an entire bottle of pills of antidepressants. And after he takes these pills, he reflects for a minute and he decides he doesn’t want to die. And so he he stumbles over to the neighbor’s house. He asks his neighbor to rush him to the hospital. He gets to the hospital. He crashes onto the floor with his bottle of pills slipping out of his hand, and he tells the nurse, I took all my pills. I took all my pills. Now he’s clearly showing signs of an overdose. They wheel him in on a gurney. They take his blood pressure and his heart rate. They notice that that his heartbeat is is dangerously low. His blood pressure is falling, and they’re trying to figure out what he took so that they can give him some kind of antidote to this overdose.

Nir Eyal 00:25:16  And they look on the pill jar and they see that it doesn’t say what medicine is in the pill jar. It says to call a number. And so they call this phone number. And it turns out that Mr. A was in a clinical trial. And the clinical trial was of antidepressants. And so they said okay, quick, hurry. Hurry. What is this substance? We need to know what he took so that we can we can try and save his life. And they look up on the computer and they look at Mr. A’s file. And very quickly, they determined that Mr. A had taken the placebo, that he was in the group in the study that was given an inert substance that had no way of causing these physiological symptoms. And yet here he was, you know, near death almost. So within 15 minutes of them telling Mr. A that he had just taken a placebo pill, 15 minutes later, his blood pressure was at normal, his heart rate returned to normal, and he walked out of the hospital.

Nir Eyal 00:26:06  And so that is an amazing example of how the stories we tell ourselves can have physiological effects. This was a completely inert substance. And because he had this expectation, he had this label that he was going to die, his body cooperated, his body did so. And so this is one of the reasons I think we, you know, we need to be very careful that our labels can become our limits, that we tell ourselves these stories constantly. That can do nothing but act as nocebo and reduce our ability to act.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:36  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight, breath shallow? Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday, I send weekly bites of wisdom, a short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show. Things like mental health, anxiety, relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day. It’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it. If you’d like extra fuel for the weekend, you also get a weekend podcast playlist.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:14  Join us at One Coffee newsletter. That’s one you feed. Net newsletter and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. So you’re giving us some examples of sort of the the extremes of how far this can go and, and how strong the mind body connection really is. I’m always curious about placebo and nocebo. It’s a very prominent part of the scientific literature. It’s not made up. It’s real. Right. And yet, lots of people don’t respond to a placebo. Right. There’s lots of people who think I won’t overdose from drugs, who end up overdosing from drugs, even though they have a belief they’re not going to. Right. I mean, no sane person would keep doing heroin in today’s world if you didn’t have some strange belief that, like, not me. So what do we do with these situations where either placebo doesn’t work, there is a physical reality underlying some of this stuff. So. So talk to me about how you, you think about applying sort of edge cases to day to day life.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:32  Yeah.

Nir Eyal 00:28:32  I show the extreme cases to show what the the mind is capable of doing. Right? Right, right. What? What is it possible to. Now, I’m not saying we should do any of of of those extreme cases, right. I’m not saying we should do hypno sedation. I’m trying to illustrate how much more powerful we are than we can ever imagine. That we are limiting ourselves. Why? Because our default state is passivity. We used to believe in this concept called learned helplessness. And what everybody knew learned helplessness. It was this idea that you are taught to be helpless. And so this explains why certain socioeconomic groups stay stuck in poverty and why, you know, all kinds of phenomenon. There was there was a there was kind of an accepted truth. And then the people who who ran these studies, Seligman and Meyer looked back at the data. And then a few years ago, they came up with the complete opposite conclusion. They determined that we actually don’t learn helplessness. Helplessness is our default state that we always fall back to our defaults.

Nir Eyal 00:29:30  We always fall back to our limiting beliefs because our default state is safe, right? What I know before the reason why does someone keep taking heroin? It’s not thinking that. They just think, hey, this is this is never going to happen to me. It’s that they have shown themselves that nothing has happened in the past. So the brain predicts nothing will happen in the future. Right? Right. So? So to me, that would be crazy. That’d be incredibly risky. But to them, they’ve proven it. And to to somebody else doing something like going on stage that’s been it’s crazy. Well I’ve done it many, many times. And so I’m not scared of it anymore. It’s essentially exposure therapy. Exposure to what? Exposure to the fear that is causing the limitation. It’s all about that fear. It’s this fear pain, fear cycle that the more I fear something, the more I pay attention to it, right? The more I see the potential for pain, the more I anticipate pain.

Nir Eyal 00:30:18  The second power of belief and the more I reduce my agency. And so whether it’s a vicious cycle or a virtuous cycle, it’s the same exact three steps. This is the same loop that causes chronic pain, and it’s the same loop that heals our pain and suffering in life.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:53  So let’s walk through that loop. In the case of causing chronic pain and then of helping to alleviate it. Like like give me an example. Kind of each step along the way.

Nir Eyal 00:31:02  Yeah. I mean, I’ll tell you personally, I used to suffer from back pain. And I took the conventional advice. The conventional advice used to be. Now the medical community has, has really changed over the past few years. I mean, we used to be obsessed with pain. Back a few years ago. You know, this actually led in large part to the heroin epidemic that we’ve been struggling with in the United States. We were constantly asked about our pain. Right. We thought this was the new vital sign. Remember, they used to have the they don’t do this anymore.

Nir Eyal 00:31:29  But every hospital, every doctor, constantly. As soon as you step in, they took your heart rate. They took your blood pressure, they took your temperature. And they asked you to rate your pain on a pain scale. Remember this?

Eric Zimmer 00:31:39  Oh, we don’t do this. Remember it because my mom, who I believe has had chronic pain for a long time, and I think some of it is kind of what we’re going to talk about. I used to always answer that question with like 34, what’s your pain on a scale of 1 to 10, 34 or 18 or. Right. Always way off the top of it, right? Yeah. Always way off the top of it, which I think is interesting.

Nir Eyal 00:32:01  Yeah, yeah. So what does that do? Step number one okay, so I was told to constantly pay attention to your pain. How are you feeling. How are you. How. Tell me rate your pain. How is it. What’s going on. Right. And when? When a doctor tells you that this is as important as your blood pressure and your heart rate and your temperature, what does that say? Doesn’t say that pain is just a signal, which is the truth.

Nir Eyal 00:32:23  It tells you that something’s broken, something’s wrong, and there is pain associated with damage, obviously. And that’s why we have pain, right? When there is physical damage, then that is a signal sent to the brain to say, hey, there’s something wrong here, but there’s a difference between sickness and illness. We use them as synonyms to two separate things sicknesses in the body. Illnesses in the mind. And all pain is real. All pain is real. I’m the last person to tell you that. Chronic pain, that people are making it up. That is not true. Pain is real. All pain is real. I want people to hear me loud and clear. But all pain is also in the brain. Pain doesn’t happen here. Pain doesn’t happen here. Pain happens here. Even physical damage is processed in the mind. Right? And so we can have sickness without illness and illness without sickness. How can that be? Well, you can have cancer and not know it yet. And so you can have sickness without any kind of illness, without any kind of symptoms that you’re conscious of.

Nir Eyal 00:33:19  You can also have illness in the mind. Without sickness, as in the case of chronic pain. And so what happens with chronic pain? First we pay. We become hypervigilant. We pay attention to it all the time. So when I had this back pain, every little tweak. Oh, no. Oh, it’s coming again. Okay. I was looking for every tiny little signal. Then came the anticipation. The second power of belief. So every time I would get a little back pain. Okay, what did I have to do? I became terrified because I anticipated that it would. It might get worse. And then once I would get a flare up. Oh my God, what if it never goes away? Is my entire life going to be like this? Am I not going to be able to sleep tonight? And how am I going to play with my kids and what am I going to do? All this anticipation was causing more fear. And what happened? When you’re in fear, you regress into that state of passivity.

Nir Eyal 00:34:08  And so what happens? Because that’s safety. Safety is don’t move. Safety is don’t act. Safety is is retreat. And so what does that do to your sense of agency? The third power of belief. Now you can do less. And that’s how chronic pain becomes symptomatic. That’s how what we call neuro plastic pain versus physiological pain. It’s pain that has no physical symptoms that we can detect and lasts for more than six months. Because it turns out that actually I mean, if you think about it, you know, modern medicine, I think it’s because we have so much modern medicine that we expect instant solutions. But if you think about it, for 200,000 years of human history, people had pain all the time. They had abscesses and cysts and parasites and all kinds of diseases. How could they possibly function with 15 different parasites and infections in their body all the time? Guess what? Because your brain has the amazing power to tune down the pain. Did you know that there’s no connection when when they gave doctors scans of people’s backs? Do you know there’s no connection between slip discs that a doctor can detect on an X-ray and whether that patient is suffering from pain? No connection.

Nir Eyal 00:35:15  Yeah, because not all damage causes pain and not all pain is caused by damage. So how do you reverse this cycle? So this is called a pain reprocessing therapy. And by the way this is just a small part of the book. But I think it’s fascinating. And it applies to other areas of our life. Pain reprocessing therapy which has been shown to be even more effective than leading medications. What we do, the first step is to realize we’re safe. Okay, just because I feel pain, it’s a signal. That’s all it is, just a signal. Second step is to reduce the urgency. It’s all right, I feel it. It’s okay. It’s going to go away. When it goes away doesn’t mean it’s damage. I’m safe. There’s nothing wrong here. And by the way, this is again, as a disclaimer. This is when we don’t know when we can’t detect any physical symptom. And it’s lasted for more than six months. Okay. So if there is a physical problem okay.

Nir Eyal 00:36:02  If you have a broken arm this isn’t going to work. Right? Then there’s a reason why the pain is happening. But we’re talking about neuro plastic pain. So the second step is to reduce the urgency okay. We don’t have control about whether that pain can turn off like a light switch. Not going to happen that way. And it’s only a ridiculous expectation through modern medicine that we even expect to be able to turn off. So we change our anticipation. We change our expectation. It doesn’t have to urgently go away. Then we bring levity, humor and agency to it. What we’re doing is that we’re teaching the brain to not be afraid. You can’t laugh at something you’re afraid of, right? It’s very difficult if you’re afraid to laugh at the same time. So what did I start telling myself when I felt that pain? I would say, I see you there. I see what you’re trying to do to me. It’s okay, I see, I acknowledge you, but I’m not going to pay attention to you.

Nir Eyal 00:36:45  In fact, I’m going to do the exact opposite of what I used to do. So now I still, every once in a while, I’ll get a little tweak in the back. So you know what I do, I don’t immobilize, I don’t ice it, I don’t heat pack it. I don’t worry about it. I do the same thing ten times. I will literally go up and down, like if I’m about to sit my chair. And that’s, you know, when I get a little tweak on my back, I’ll do that movement ten times to teach my brain just a signal, just a signal, just a signal. And over the years, my pain has reduced dramatically. And I’m not alone. This this pain reprocessing therapy has worked for for thousands and hundreds of thousands of people at this point.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:17  It’s really fascinating. It’s been a number of years now, but I interviewed Yoni Ashar, who is one of the early people really involved in pain reprocessing therapy. And the thing that struck me was, and again, this has been years ago, I may not get it exactly right and the science may have evolved, but the thing that they were able to sort of show is that in people with chronic pain, not all people, but in the people who are a good candidate for this thing, what they were able to show via brain scan was that the signal was all in the brain, meaning you think it’s coming back to brain, but in these cases, it was all in the brain.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:03  It was coming from memory, parts of the brain. And that was really illuminating. And again, it’s not to say that pain isn’t real because it is real. It’s just not coming from where you think it’s coming from in all cases. And I think that it’s a really powerful modality. My mother is older and less of cognitively capable than she used to be, and so I feel like praying pain reprocessing therapy seems to be just beyond where she’s quite capable of focusing in on it, which is really sad. And all the things you say are true. Attention goes to that, you know, anticipation, constantly thinking it’s going to be there and then reduced agency doing less and less and less. It’s a it is a sad cycle and a beautiful cycle when we can get it to go the other direction.

Nir Eyal 00:38:52  I would love to give an example of of the virtuous example of this, so people can take away, even if you’re not suffering from, from from chronic pain, how can you use this in reverse? So this is where this amazing study at Yale blew my mind that people who have certain beliefs about aging live seven and a half years longer.

Nir Eyal 00:39:10  I mean, talk about like all the, you know, how many articles have you seen about longevity and, and you know, rich which reredos who are spending millions of dollars on matcha enemas to expand their lifespan and doing all kinds of crazy, ridiculous stuff to to live longer. And it turns out that one of the simplest things we can do doesn’t cost a dime, is change our beliefs about aging. So in this study, they found that people who had positive views about aging versus negative views about aging lived, on average, seven and a half years longer. That is longer than the effect of smoking, quitting smoking that is longer than the effect of a good diet. That is longer than the effect of exercise, right? So for all the talk about you have to exercise. Eat right. Stop smoking. Turns out your beliefs can make a bigger difference than any of that stuff. Now how is that done? I hate to tell you, it’s not magic, okay? Your beliefs don’t magically become your biology.

Nir Eyal 00:40:03  It’s behavior. Let me back up. What do these beliefs sound like? And I suggest that every single person listening to the sound of my voice. I voice. I want to save your life right now and I’m being dead serious. I want you to stop telling yourself this limiting belief that you’re having a senior moment, okay? That aging involves inevitable decline. Stop saying that stuff right. Is it true? Who cares? It might be true, I don’t care. It doesn’t serve you. What’s a better belief? What is? And this is exactly what the study found. People who thought something as simple as growth is possible at any age. Just something as simple as that. Versus aging involves inevitable decline. Growth is possible at any age. Eric, which one of those is true? Which one’s a fact?

Eric Zimmer 00:40:48  Well, I don’t know. Both of them. They’re. Yeah, both of them. Either of them depending. Yeah. Yeah.

Nir Eyal 00:40:53  Exactly. Does it matter? So I choose to believe every single day growth is possible at any age.

Nir Eyal 00:41:00  I don’t tell myself I’m having a senior moment. I’m 48. My birthday’s tomorrow. I don’t say that stuff. It doesn’t serve me. I tell myself growth is possible at any age. And so what’s the magic here? It’s not that that makes my cells and mitochondria sparkle with unicorn flutters. No, what change is, is that when I believe that when I choose the belief that a growth is possible at any age, what does that do to my attention? I start to notice examples of other people who are proving that point. I start looking at myself and saying, hey, look, I got a little stronger, I got a little faster, I could do this and that, and I don’t pay attention to the stuff that doesn’t show me that evidence. I anticipate that I’m able to do things, and I’m proud of the fact that I can do things that other 48 year olds can’t do. Right. And then finally, agency that what this study found is that people who have positive views of aging, the big of the study is that when you have a positive view of aging, you’re more likely to go out and see your friends to take that walk, to go play another round of golf, to to garden, to volunteer, to do things that do actually expand your lengthen your lifespan.

Nir Eyal 00:42:09  So it’s not that it’s magic. Beliefs change your biology on its own. It’s that when you hold these beliefs, your motivation to do the right behavior changes. And that’s why we live longer.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:21  So let’s go into some of the nuance here. You multiple times in the book say this is not the power of positive thinking. This is not about, I’m going to say like just simply believing things that are not true. Even in this chapter on aging, you point out some studies that, I mean, I’ve had Ellen Langer on the show. She’s given me the, you know, the study of people who go into a house that’s rolled back 30 years, how they’re younger. I’ve heard the studies about how if you tell anyone who cleans a hotel that their activity is exercise, they lose more weight. I mean, I’ve heard all of that and you debunk some of it. So. So what is the reality here? How do we sort this out? Because you’re not just saying believe anything and magic happens.

Nir Eyal 00:43:06  That’s right. And I appreciate that. Wow. You’ve really, done a very careful reading of the book. I think you’re the first person who’s who’s asked me about that. And I think it’s super important, and I. I hate to critique, other researchers work, but I think it’s I think it’s very important. I mean, this is what science does, right? Yeah. Science is all about beliefs, actually. We’re looking for evidence that can help us better understand the world. And I think it does us a disservice when we start spreading studies that really don’t hold up. So, for example, the the two studies you mentioned, the made study, turns out it didn’t replicate that. When they tried to do the exact same study, they didn’t find the same results at all. The effects were very, very weak. The study where they turned back the clocks. And then men started aging in reverse and acted younger and all that. Turns out that wasn’t even published. It was an anecdote, and we’ve never replicated it again.

Nir Eyal 00:43:58  And so I think what I discovered when I look at the studies that were well done that are replicated, I’ll give you one that was replicated, that I think is also very illuminating is the steroid study. When they took two groups of men and they told them, hey, we want you to exercise and want a group of men. They monitored and said, just do your normal routine. The other group of men, they said, we’re going to give you this amazing new steroid, okay, you’re going to take the steroid pill. here you go. And we’re going to monitor how much muscle mass you gain. Well, lo and behold, it really is true that even though those men were given a placebo, they didn’t know they were given a placebo. But even when those men were given a placebo, they tacked on more pounds. So placebos really do work when it comes to muscle mass gain. That’s amazing right? We can give people sugar pills and they’ll put on more muscle mass. Now, the previous studies that I kind of debunk not really, but I show don’t build your foundations on them.

Nir Eyal 00:44:52  A previous study would say you see your beliefs become your biology, but that’s not what the placebo steroid study found. When you look into the study, what actually found, what they found was that these men who were given the placebo steroid, they did one extra rep. They put on a little bit more weight on the barbell and they worked harder. So beliefs become biology, not through magic, not just because you think it, but because you did something differently. You worked a tiny bit harder. So that just means we need to use placebos and this effect appropriately, which means we can all do it right. So for example, you know, I think it’s a good investment to pay a little bit more money for those expensive running shoes if you can afford it. Or maybe, you know, take a little vitamin C as long as if you think it’s going to help, it probably will. It’ll make you feel better. It’s not going to cure you. It’s not going to change your biology.

Nir Eyal 00:45:41  It’s not going to cure the sickness, but it will change your perception of that sickness. It will make you feel better. And it turns out that about 80%, 80% of our healthcare spending today is not spent on sickness. It’s spent on illness. It’s spent on treating the symptoms of sickness, the illnesses. And so I think it’s a great investment to know what placebos can and can’t do. Placebos Can’t fix a broken arm. Placebos cannot cure cancer, but they can change the perception of pain of those maladies. And so that’s how we should use them appropriately.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:12  So I’d like to talk a little bit about motivation and procrastination. We earlier talked about how motivation is a triangle between belief, behavior and benefit. But you also talk about procrastination being a belief issue or a pain management issue. What do you mean by that?

Nir Eyal 00:46:31  So I think it’s a very fascinating topic to actually dive deeper into. Not only why did we procrastinate, which I think is such an interesting question, right? You know, we know that it’s not a new question.

Nir Eyal 00:46:40  We think that, oh, procrastination was caused because of our cell phones or social media or whatever. No no, no. Plato was talking about the tendency to do things against our better interest 2500 years ago. So procrastination is just part of the human condition. But why isn’t that so interesting that I know what to do? It’s going to benefit me. It’s right there, and yet I’m not going to do it. It’s so interesting. Yeah. And so I think what I want to do was dive a layer deeper into not only why do we procrastinate, but why do we do anything and everything. And it turns out that this paradigm between carrots and sticks, we’ve all heard that that’s how you motivate people. Right. You have carrots, the benefits and you have sticks. The punishment turns out neurologically that is not true, that neurologically we can actually see it in the brain, that the reward centers of the brain don’t make us do things because we want to feel good. Everything we do, everything we do is about the desire to escape discomfort, everything.

Nir Eyal 00:47:34  And this hits people the wrong way. Many times we’re like, what are you talking about? I love to be with my family. I love to be. I love to do fun things. I like to eat delicious food. Yes, but think about it. There’s a reason we say love hurts. You know that old song from the 80s? Love hurts. It’s exactly right.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:47  Oh, it goes back to Roy Orbison. It’s even older than that. Right. Yeah. That’s right. Yeah. Very classic.

Nir Eyal 00:47:52  He. He was a neuroscientist. He got it right. Well, before most of us understand. Because what happens is even when we desire to feel good. Lusting. Hunger. Desire. Wanting. The brain makes us feel bad. To kick us in the butt. So that we could go get the things that make us feel good. Because the brain doesn’t motivate us by things that feel good. Right now, we already got it. It makes us feel good by things that felt good in the past, right? That’s what we go get.

Nir Eyal 00:48:20  We are chasing that pleasant feeling and the chasing itself is spurred by discomfort. Yeah. So that therefore means if all human behavior is spurred by a desire to escape discomfort, it means that time management, procrastination is pain management. Money management is pain management. Weight management is pain management. It’s all pain management. And so once we understand that, once we understand this is the crucial point here, is that we have a problem with dealing with our discomfort. It’s not a character flaw. It’s certainly not a moral failing. It’s just that we haven’t learned the skills to deal with that discomfort in a healthier manner.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:00  And so let’s take procrastination. What is the discomfort that I am relieving when I procrastinate?

Nir Eyal 00:49:09  Sure. Is there something you’ve been procrastinating on? Is this a anything come to mind?

Eric Zimmer 00:49:12  I am actually in a very good non procrastination state in life right now. Awesome. Not always, not always. But. But right now I’m kind of dialed in. So no, it’s not a personal interest.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:24  But I think about this question a lot. Having wrestled with procrastination in the past and knowing so many people who do and knowing, I mean, it’ll be back. It’s right. I just, you know, something about the way I’ve got everything, you know, set up right now is working. But it’s always a question. And I do think about, you know, like you said, I might not say it right. Oh, yeah. That is the big question. Why do we do things that we just know are the wrong thing to do, and we watch ourselves do it?

Nir Eyal 00:49:55  That’s right, that’s right. It’s all about pain management, that the brain is limiting. It is trying as hard as possible to take the path of least resistance. So anything that hurts, we try and avoid. That’s how we learn. And so we’ll continue to do that. So for me, you know, I used to be clinically obese. I don’t know if I would say it’s an actual addiction to food, but I would say it was pretty close.

Nir Eyal 00:50:14  There was a time when food definitely controlled me in ways I didn’t like. And, as any formerly obese person will tell you, I wasn’t eating because I was hungry. I would love to blame the fast food companies and say they did it to me. But I’ll tell you, I know exactly why I was obese. It was because I was eating my feelings when I was lonely. I would eat. When I was, bored. I would eat when I was ashamed about how much I had just eaten. I would eat. And this is the classic sign of addiction, right? What starts out as a solution to a problem becomes the problem. And I that that hunger got worse and worse and worse and worse until I did something about it. And so when you realize that procrastination is just another impulse control issue. So for me, you know, exercising is painful. I’m not going to say it’s not painful now. I don’t suffer from it anymore because I’ve changed the dialogue. I’ve learned to see it differently.

Nir Eyal 00:51:02  I’ve changed my belief about about exercise. But yes, it’s still painful. So when I used to procrastinate about exercise and I still catch myself from time to time doing this, especially if I’ve got other stressors in my life, we know that that’s a contributing factor to neuro plastic pain. If your pain gets worse when you’re stressed, that’s neuro plastic pain. Classic hallmark. And so when challenges are more difficult, when they’re stressed in your life, when you haven’t gotten good sleep, whatever, this is a great sign that the problem is your inability to deal with discomfort. So exercise is a classic example. Why do I procrastinate going to the gym? Sometimes it’s because exercise hurts, and whatever I’m doing right now checking email, being with my family, watching TV, reading the news, even if it’s things I think are productive. Right? I’m working. I’m writing. So therefore I can’t go to the gym. It’s because going to the gym is painful, right? So fundamentally, if you can change your beliefs about that, how do I do this? How did I actually do this? I took out these limiting beliefs.

Nir Eyal 00:51:57  I took out the limiting belief that told me that exercise was suffering. And I used to tell this to myself all the time. Exercise suck. I hate it, right? And when I took out that limiting belief and actually assessed wait a minute, is there another point of view? So step one, you take out the limiting belief. Step two you ask yourself, is it true? In step three, you find what Byron Katie calls the turnaround. You look for the exact opposite of that belief. Could something else be true? And when I discovered that that mechanism, I found it. And so now I have these mantras that I repeat hundreds of times a day, sometimes to remind myself of these liberating beliefs. For example, when I face the pain of a difficult task, like going to the gym. And today at 48, I’m happy to say I’m in the best shape of my life. I have these mantras that I take out, for example. This is what it feels like to get better.

Nir Eyal 00:52:47  This is a prayer of mine or a mantra I tell myself dozens of times per day when something is painful, this is what it feels like to get better. So now what I do, it seems like a very simple mantra. It’s actually quite complex because I’ve taken something that I’ve attached pain to suffering and now I’ve detached them. Feeling the pain becomes pleasure. Why? Because I believe I’m getting better. Is it true? I don’t know. Does it affect my performance? Am I more motivated? Do I suffer less? Hell yeah. So that’s what I’m going to believe. This is what it feels like to get better.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:20  Before you check out, pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change. Feed your good wolf at one you feed. Net newsletter again one you feed net letter.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:52  What are some other mantras that you use regularly that you found helpful?

Nir Eyal 00:53:56  Yeah, I’ll tell you another one. So writing is also really hard. Very painful. I’ve written three books now. I’ve published dozens of articles. I’ve been in the New York Times, The Atlantic. Let me tell you, it never gets easier. It’s always fricking hard when I sit down to write. You know this. You just finished a book. Write. All I want to do is check sports scores and read the news and look at stock prices and check email. Do anything but the fricking writing. The thing that I actually want to do. I would keep procrastinating. Or here’s the best one. Eric, let me do some research on that. Right? Like, look, let me just Google that for a minute. And of course that turns into hours of waste of time. So the mantra I repeat when I have a similar incidence is is this I close my eyes and take a deep breath, and I repeat to myself, it doesn’t get easier.

Nir Eyal 00:54:44  You get stronger, it doesn’t get easier, you get stronger. Just a bit of a prayer, a tiny reminder to again Disconnect pain from suffering that I don’t have the anticipation of it getting easier. The problem, the reason I kept suffering, Eric, is that I somehow expected, or if I was a professional author, this would be easy, right? Malcolm Gladwell doesn’t feel writer’s block. Know everybody has these things. Everybody feels pain. It’s just that they process it differently. So that is another mantra that helps me. And I’ll give you a third one that this happened with my family. So I read this amazing research around around luck, around how there is no such thing as lucky people. There are only people who think that they are lucky, right? Statistically. Think about it right. Luck is kind of evenly, evenly spread statistically. But it turns out that people who think they are lucky create their own luck. That luck is not chance. You can manufacture your own luck. Turns out that lucky people notice when they get lucky.

Nir Eyal 00:55:41  And so a mantra we’ve had in my family is that every time there’s something good that happens to us, we go to a restaurant and there’s no line. We go to the airport or something and we can. We can check in quickly and our flight’s on time or whatever. Like small incidents, meaningless stuff. Whenever something nice happens, we will just say out loud. Somebody will say out loud, you see, everything good happens to us. Everything good happens to us now. Is that actually true? No, no, we just don’t talk about what most people talk about. What I used to see. You know what I used to say? This always happens to me, right? goddamn. There’s that person in front of me who just cut me off in traffic. there’s always a traffic again. Or, you know, this person annoys me. Or my mom said that thing. She’s so annoying. She’s so, you know, she’s so judgmental. She’s this. She’s that. You know, we do this about everybody.

Nir Eyal 00:56:26  We judge them, we put them into little boxes, and then we reinforce again and again and again the way we want to believe they are. We don’t see people as they are. We see our beliefs about people. Right. And so we stopped. I stopped doing that. And God do I feel it. More peace. I’m so much happier again. Is it true? I don’t care, it serves me. I’m more at peace. I’m happier. I’m more productive. I sleep at night better. Everything gets better when you choose the beliefs that serve you. Because beliefs are tools, not truths.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:56  Well, I think that is a beautiful place for us to wrap up. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Thank you for the book. It’s wonderful. I enjoyed reading it. We’ll have links in the show notes to where people can find the book. Find all of your stuff, and thanks again for coming on.

Nir Eyal 00:57:12  My pleasure, Eric, thanks for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:13  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the one You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

From Overwhelm to Empowerment: Harnessing Tiny Shifts for Emotional Resilience with Elisha Goldstein

March 6, 2026 Leave a Comment

TINY SHIFTS FOR EMOTIONAL RESILIENCE
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In this episode, Elisha Goldstein talks about how to go from overwhelm to empowerment by harnessing tiny shifts for emotional resilience. He explains how small, consistent changes, or “tiny shifts”, can break negative emotional loops and improve stress, relationships, and longevity. He shares personal stories, practical tools like the “four R’s” (Recognize, Release, Refocus, Reinforce), and emphasizes emotional awareness over willpower. The conversation offers accessible strategies for managing overwhelm and building resilience, encouraging listeners to make manageable changes that support emotional health in everyday life.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • The concept of “tiny shifts” in emotional health and well-being.
  • The impact of modern life on emotional loops and chronic stress responses.
  • The importance of emotional awareness in breaking negative patterns.
  • The biological and psychological effects of “bracing” in response to perceived threats.
  • Strategies for interrupting emotional loops and fostering recovery.
  • The “four R’s” framework: Recognize, Release, Refocus, and Reinforce.
  • The role of self-compassion and supportive questioning in emotional management.
  • The significance of reinforcing positive emotional experiences for lasting change.
  • Practical applications and limitations of the discussed methods.
  • The relationship between emotional health, stress management, and longevity.

Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D. is the co-founder of the Center for Mindful Living in West Los Angeles and is the creator of the 6-month Coaching and Mentorship Program: A Course in Mindful Living. He’s a psychologist and international speaker and mindfulness educator. He’s written many books and in this episode, he and Eric discuss his book, Uncovering Happiness: Overcoming Depression with Mindfulness and Self Compassion. There are so many practical approaches and new perspectives in this episode. We think you’ll get a lot of useful information out of the conversation.

Connect with Dr. Elisha Goldstein Website | Instagram 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Elisha Goldstein, check out these other episodes:

Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D-Mindfulness and Depression

Jonathan Rottenberg

Florence Williams

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Episode Transcript:

Elisha Goldstein 00:00:00  My mind has been so deeply entrenched with anxiety and self-loathing for so long, or like catastrophizing, like what I need. You know, I need big things to fix me. Know. It’s in the moment, in the real time, and it’s the smallest things when we weave them together consistently that actually really do make the biggest changes.

Chris Forbes 00:00:25  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:10  Elisha Goldstein described a conversation he had not very long ago at a dinner party in Los Angeles. A friend of his, a woman, said, I’m not handling it all very well. None of my friends are either the WhatsApp groups, the text, the emails, juggling the kids and family plans, the brutal news all the better advice. It never stops. I can’t keep up. I hear a lot of the same things. Elisha’s answer to this is emotional health. And we achieve emotional health by learning to break what he calls emotional loops and construct better ones. He and I have come to the same conclusion. It’s not big insights that save us, but small, repeated ways of relating to ourselves and the world differently. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi, Alicia. Welcome to the show, Eric.

Elisha Goldstein 00:02:03  It’s great to be back with you.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:05  Yes, I am happy to have you back on. And we’re going to be discussing your book, which is called Tiny Shifts How Emotional Health Transforms Stress, relationships and Longevity.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:17  And we will get into all that in a moment. But I want to start the way we always start, which is with the parable. And in the parable is a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild. And they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do to me.

Elisha Goldstein 00:03:00  It’s it’s very direct, that parable. There’s a saying that wherever your focus goes, you invite an energy to flow. And some people in the neuroscience world would say, and that’s the way the brain grows.

Elisha Goldstein 00:03:11  And if you allow for your mind to drift in certain what I call emotional loops or certain patterns or habits, you’re going to have a certain energy that follows. It’s also going to influence what you do in your life. If you’re aware of that, that that’s a pattern. You might have learned it from your your your parents or your culture, or it just might be a mood that you fall into biochemically. and but if you’re aware of it, then you can pause, create some space. And, you know, there’s a way to do that physically too. And then you can do, you know, what I call tiny shift to be able to feed the other wolf and to be able to support an opening to seeing maybe possibility, choices, opportunities, a different way of supporting yourself that might give you the energy to move in a direction that’s going to serve you and serve your family and serve your friends and serve your community and serve the people around you. And it doesn’t take willpower. That’s not what I’m talking about here.

Elisha Goldstein 00:04:19  It all starts with emotional awareness, and that begins how we can kind of shift who we feed there.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:26  Yeah, I love the emotional loops and we’re going to get into that in a minute. But I want to start just by reading something that’s pretty early in the book. It might even be where the book starts. I sometimes forget by the time I get to the end of the book. But you said in November 2023 at a dinner party in Los Angeles, a close friend said to me, I don’t know about men, but I can tell you this I’m not handling it all very well. None of my friends are either the WhatsApp group, the text, the emails, juggling the kids and family plans, the brutal news. All the better advice. It never stops. I can’t keep up.

Elisha Goldstein 00:05:01  I mean, just even hearing that, I feel overwhelmed, like. And so, you know. And I remember that moment at the dinner party with with my friend. And this is about the time that I was kicking around the concept of this book, too.

Elisha Goldstein 00:05:12  And I was kind of asking her her experience. And, I mean, I experience it myself. I mean, the the amount of the different forms of communication that we have, the amount of inputs that that are happening. I’m not even talking about the algorithm and how it’s feeding negativity bias after negativity bias, you know, and but just the just the amount of juggling, like it’s overwhelming, it’s taxing to our nervous system and overwhelm. That feeling of overwhelm, which is very real, isn’t just an emotion. We can it’s an amount of emotion, but it’s a loop. It comes with certain thoughts. It comes with certain physiological, biological sensations that are involved with it, and it typically leads to leads to certain reactions. And where do we go? Most of us to look for more information. How do I solve this feeling? That’s here. And we don’t need more information. We need an interruption. And you know, that’s one of the the keys here. Because when we’re constantly fed this idea of optimizing everything, optimizing our health, optimizing our our knowledge and information, optimizing even our rest, optimizing our sleep, optimizing our the way we eat.

Elisha Goldstein 00:06:22  and and I mean, how many different ways can we do all this stuff? And when we have too many ways, none of it sticks.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:29  Yeah, it is overwhelming. And I think you and I have thought a lot about this stuff. We both work with people where we both see what’s happening, and I think we’ve landed in fairly similar places around this idea of, you know, tiny shifts or small steps or a way of doing that. And one of the things that I really hit on a few years ago was just how little the average person has bandwidth to make any big changes. Right. We all know we’re overwhelmed, and the one answer to overwhelm would be just do way less. Turn off the WhatsApp. Turn off the phone. Don’t don’t have email. You know, make sure you have two hours a week to meditate. Like do less. But for most people, my experience is that that’s not going to happen. Those aren’t the choices that people are generally going to make. And so then within that context of everything that we’re describing, how do you make any sort of ongoing change that doesn’t feel overwhelming? And I think the the conclusion that I came to and it seems like you came to is you’ve got to do it almost in the context, in the flow of day to day life.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:46  Like you can interrupt, but not for too long.

Elisha Goldstein 00:07:49  Yeah. One of the moments that’s really hit me. Was trying to write about this in tiny ships too, but the we have this area of our kitchen that I think probably a lot of people have, which we call the corner of crap. And it’s just like where.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:03  I read that made me laugh when you said that, I was like, yep, I got one of those.

Elisha Goldstein 00:08:07  Yeah, we all got one of those. Like, where does this go? Okay, it goes here. That’s one of my Achilles heels in general. Growing up I wasn’t I was never shown had a, you know, how organization worked or anything like that. And I got lots of stories around that. But but I was sitting there and I was this speaks directly to that woman’s story that you mentioned a moment ago, too. I was sitting there and I was I was flipping through my phone because what if I could, if I could, if I could just get this, this Amazon return out of the way, you know, if I can just figure out how to transfer my airline, my, my credit card, my whatever to my airline miles and, you know, and so I was sitting there and I was like juggling these two different tasks at the same time.

Elisha Goldstein 00:08:43  Meanwhile, my son had come to as my youngest son and, and he had come to me and he was kind of like pulling out my shirt. He just wanted to kind of show me something or is there some some basketball trick or, you know, something like that. And I was just like, one minute I got, you know, I’m almost there. I’m almost there. With this Amazon return, I’m almost there with this. And then, you know, by the time I kind of woke up to that, you know, he was gone. And I mean, that was a precious moment that I likely missed. Probably. What’s more important than the meaningful moments of life? I think at the end of life, that’s what people look back and they say, you know, hey, it’s about who you love and how you loved, and the rest of it really never mattered. What was more interesting to me was like how I was so caught in a form of bracing, like biological bracing that was happening to get this thing done, this perception of urgency that I had that, you know, if you tie the amount of urgent things that our mind perceives as urgent together, we’re going to miss out on all kinds of moments of life.

Elisha Goldstein 00:09:42  And likely what was happening to I was I was also sort of we could take this with a grain of salt when I say this, but if I allow myself to stay in that form of bracing in that form of elevated stress, then I’m causing harm to my body physically too, and that’s going to impact my sleep patterns, that’s going to impact all kinds of things. And so, you know, that’s when it really hit me. I’m like, wow, it would be really nice to create, even for myself, a psychologist, mindfulness teacher for some decades, and to support my own emotional awareness so I can wake up to this and be more intentional about where I’m placing my attention on what really matters in the moment.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:19  Yeah, I think there’s so many things in what you said there. The first that I want to hit on is that fallacy that we just need to get one more thing done because it never ends. And like quite literally, for me, it it never ends. I mean, I used to have these days where I was like, I’m going to get through my inbox, I’m going to get through my task list.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:41  I’m going to get no, I’m not like, I no sooner cross one off Then three more. Go on it. And there’s a certain amount of learning to relax into that. That I have found has been really important is when I just go, okay, that’s the way it is. Like, that’s that’s the nature of life and that’s the way we want it to be. Maybe someday I’ll not have enough things on my task list, or people won’t send me enough email and I’ll be like, I miss all that. But in this stage of my life, how do I relate to the fact that the demands, both good and bad, they’re ongoing, there’s no arrival.

Elisha Goldstein 00:11:22  And if we don’t have that awareness, what happens is, and I’m sure everyone who’s listening or watching has a has this experience, but you pile on that false sense of urgency trying to get this done and that done and that done, and answer this text and make sure to respond to this personal person’s birthday and, you know, and and, you know, return this.

Elisha Goldstein 00:11:41  And, and I better get this thing done in my house today. We literally walk around the day bracing, and we’re wondering why we feel so exhausted.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:50  What do you mean by bracing?

Elisha Goldstein 00:11:51  Bracing? Like, literally. Well, I’ll give you a I’ll give you an example. But what this actually is. So what’s happening in the body during the day. We have these we noted them earlier. These kind of like emotional loops. These are like this kind of reactions that we’re in typically unconsciously, that include a certain collection of emotions and certain thought patterns and sensations, biological sensations happening, our body and things that we’re doing. and, and what’s happening is these, this sense of like, urgency or needing to get things done, or the moment we open our phone and see the various threats that are possible for us, or we see something happening with the economy, or we see war somewhere or, you know, get in a fight with somebody. Our brain interprets it as like something is something is threatening.

Elisha Goldstein 00:12:43  There’s some potential on the scale of 1 to 10. Pick your in the continuum some form of danger, and that could come external again through those threats that we’re seeing around the world, or economy or whatever, or internal with our own thoughts and emotions that are there sensations and and our body reacts biologically. So when you say what’s bracing? Our body reacts biologically because our amygdala gets kicked in, we fall into a fight flight, freeze response on a certain level, and that instantly changes what’s happening in the body itself. And so for those who aren’t aren’t familiar with this, what happens is stress hormones start to get kicked up. We get cortisol and adrenaline operating at a certain level, which is wonderful in short bursts, but not in longer bursts. Our heart rate starts to go up, our blood pressure starts to go up. It’s just elevated a bit, right? Elevate depending on the person, but it’s elevated a bit. And then what happens is our muscles literally start to tense and brace. So our shoulders might be creeping up to our ears.

Elisha Goldstein 00:13:45  We might be actually feeling like more tension around our arms, or around our buttocks, or around our quads, particularly maybe in our face, the area between our eyes or our cheeks. And then, of course, digestion. We know we’re not hungry or we’re too hungry. Our immune response goes down. And then, like long term healing, our body gets prioritized. And imagine now for a second that because of all the inputs that you and I have been talking about, that you know, with our whether it’s with our phone or our now, our really trained implicit sense of perceived urgency that we have, or needing to check to smooth out some underlying anxiety that’s there, that’s been embedded in us since probably 2007 or before, when I’m just kind of noting the time that the iPhone came out. And the problem is that we’re not really stuck in any kind of danger. We’re just caught in this loop. And and so we can literally if our body is having this kind of biological reaction, the moment we become aware of this loop we say like, oh, overwhelm this here, I’m thinking about this.

Elisha Goldstein 00:14:46  Or there was something you said a moment ago, which I was like, oh, that would be a perfect thing just to remember, not for me to remember, but in daily life to remember. I’ll come back to it. but the moment we name it and we label it, we notice it. We realized we’re in. This thing is something that in all the many worlds, wisdom, traditions, and in the field of science, we’ve known for a while now that creates this moment of space. And that’s when I said, we don’t need to look for more information, or we don’t need to solve the problem with more content. We need an interrupt. And the interrupt is to interrupt the biological reaction that’s happening in that moment. That’s kind of harming us. And the first interrupt is really just recognizing the experience we’re having. Like literally as simple as noticing the shoulders tense up where they are on your on your body if they’re up a little bit. And then, you know, we can try this right now.

Elisha Goldstein 00:15:51  You know, anyone who’s listening or watching, you can just kind of see if you can notice where your shoulders are and see if you can just drop them like 5%, just a little bit or something I really love to do is I like to take a breath and on the exhalation because, you know, take a breath, your shoulders naturally rise because you’re breathing in. When you breathe out, your shoulders naturally, naturally fall. And so you’re you’re noticing them fall and you’re even maybe saying the word release a little bit and you’re creating a little space, you’re creating that interrupt, you’re creating a little bit more spaciousness. And I guess that’s what I mean by bracing and how we can begin to interrupt it.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:26  So let me ask you a question. What you’ve just described is let’s assume we we get caught in emotional loops and we’ve been getting caught in them for a while. Let’s assume that the outer conditions are making it more likely that this happens. Let’s assume that our stress hormones have been higher than they should be for a while.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:46  How does a tiny shift address what seems to be a pretty big problem?

Elisha Goldstein 00:16:53  So the tiny shift supports recovery, so we’re never going to catch the reaction. We may have like years of conditioned reactivity that our brain now implicitly, you know, creates in our in our lives to relate to the family members around us, in our workplace, how we relate to people in traffic. Before we even got on this call, we were talking about the the idea with the comparing mind and, you know, writing and how we can get caught in, you know, that kind of place. But that also creates a lot of stress. And I was saying how that’s very draining. That can lead us to not being motivated to complete the tasks that we’re doing. So when we get caught up in that sympathetic arousal over time, especially if it’s conditioned. We’re typically not going to catch it in the exact moment, but at some point we are and we want to support now as recovery, because emotional health is less about like feeling happy and positive all the time.

Elisha Goldstein 00:17:58  It’s more about like, how quickly can we recover from the trained reactivity that we get hooked into here and there throughout the day? Because the more you can recover, consider this for a second. The more you can recover, the more your body is going to get better at repairing the cellular inflammation that’s happening there, the less damage it’s going to have on these protective caps and the end of your chromosomes that are called telomeres that are associated with lifespan. The more your blood pressure and heart rate’s going to go down. And if you’re susceptible to heart disease, let’s say, or you’re going to be kind of potentially protecting your life by doing that. So it’s really about the recovery. And like how do we support ourselves in recovering from this type of reactivity and then putting ourselves back on a track that’s going to be healthier for us?

Eric Zimmer 00:19:18  So let’s talk about emotional loops because this is really important. You say these are the automatic mind body patterns that pull us into worry at 3 a.m., snapping at the people we care about, or suddenly dropping us into a funk that we can’t explain.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:34  Then you go on to say they have four interconnected parts, so walk us through the different parts of an emotional loop.

Elisha Goldstein 00:19:41  Okay. I’ll walk you through it. Through a story. Okay. And this actually happened to me like, while I was writing this book and ended up being a huge gift because I put the story directly in tiny shifts, and you may have had this experience. I’m sure a lot of people here can relate to this. Where I was asked to be on a health panel by some celebrity who was putting on like a health event, whatever. And her team reached out to me and and they were going to, you know, there’s pay me. Here’s the date we got to set up this tech call. So I set up a tech call with them. I’m kind of excited about it. I’m like, this is going to be really cool. All right. I’m writing this new book and you know, that’s a good exposure to. And I get on this tech call and something feels a little weird about it, but I, I, I overlook it because I’m kind of excited about this thing.

Elisha Goldstein 00:20:27  And just to cut to the chase here in the tech call, it turns out what happened was they had me kind of go into my in my Facebook because I had they wanted me to set up something because the event was going to be on a Facebook Live type of whatever, and at the end of it they said they couldn’t do something. But I felt kind of weird about it. So I contacted the celebrity directly and they’re like, this is a total scam. They’ve done this to a bunch of people. I’m like, oh my God, what kind of information have they gotten from me? What have they done? Before I knew it, they had taken over my Facebook page and they had been posting weird stuff and like, I’m like, did they get financial details? And so I start kind of freaking up. My nervous systems kind of a little bit on fire at that moment might steal my identity. You know, catastrophizing in a lot of different ways. And the anxiety wasn’t the worst part about it.

Elisha Goldstein 00:21:13  I had my assistant kind of helping me, and and I realized that, wow, I’m really kind of on fire right now. My body was bracing in a lot of different ways, and my heart rate was elevated. And I asked myself, like, okay, so you know what’s going to be most supportive to me right now? And I decided to take a walk with my dogs. But what was most interesting on that walk was how loud the shame was. So with an emotional loop, we’re talking about thoughts, emotions, sensations and actions. So those are the four elements. I had these voices in my head that were telling me what an idiot I was. How could you possibly fall for something like this? You saw some signals that weren’t there. Why didn’t you pay attention to them? You’re a psychologist, your mindfulness teacher. You write about talk about emotions all the time. What’s wrong with you? Like you know all of that. And so the shame was intense. And so I was walking there and I noticed it, and I was able to recognize it.

Elisha Goldstein 00:22:12  I was able to recognize the feeling that was there and saying, well, this is shame alive in a big way right now. I could feel it in my body, you know, I can hear the voices. They were so loud and I decided to kind of like soften around it. It’s a little bit of this method that we talk about, and here are this forearm method where the first step is recognizing the the emotion. We need that emotional awareness. Remember, we need the. We don’t need so much more content. We need more emotional awareness. And so I was able to recognize that that created an initial interrupt, and I was able to soften around it while I was walking. And that created a little bit more space. Then I asked myself the question, what would really God? There’s so much there’s so much pain in here right now. Like what would be supportive to me right now? I was able to redirect. You talked about that initial question about feeding the two wolves. I talked about wherever your emotions go, energy, wherever your attention goes, energy flows.

Elisha Goldstein 00:23:06  And that allowed me to open up this window of saying, can I can I be kinder to myself? My mind is so mean to me right now. Can I be kinder to my eyes? Can I just open this window? Classic self-compassion question, but I got the ability to do that by interrupting the emotional loop that was happening. Would that recognize and that release? And that question squeaked out a little small voice inside of me that said, yes, yes you can. And what would that look like? Okay, so I did something. I continued walking, put my hand to my heart for a second just to kind of just make contact with me. I just need a grounding. Like. And then as I did that, I noticed the shame turned into sadness. And because there was grief at being, you know, violated, you know, in some ways. And then that eventually, as I allowed myself to kind of stay with that, that turned into anger also from that feeling. So I allowed that.

Elisha Goldstein 00:24:04  I allowed that to be to be there as well. And within an hour after that hour, change whatever it had kind of washed through me. Now, the danger is if you don’t allow yourself to walk through a process like that, we need things that are that are simple, where life life is too overwhelming, too complex. And so we need like a method that’s really simple. And so I worked really hard to make this method super simple. And so with that ability to kind of move through this in this way, I wasn’t hijacked. The rest of the the evening and the night and the day. Turns out that we were able to go through Facebook and get it, you know, repaired within a few days and not too much damage was done, fortunately and but more importantly, was the way I was able to move through the biological cognitive reaction that was happening through me and be able to create a bit more peace inside, even in the midst of the storm.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:00  Yeah, that’s a really good example of applying this.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:05  And I want to hit the four Rs in a second, but I’m going to stay with emotional loops just for a second to give some examples, because I love the fact that you’re talking. They have thoughts, they have emotions, they have sensations, they have actions. And one of the things that I think a lot about is the good thing, when you when we can kind of recognize that those are the components, is even by deconstructing those components from each other. Here’s what I’m thinking. Here’s what I’m feeling. Here’s what’s going on in my body. Here’s what what I feel compelled to do. Right. There’s usually a some sort of action that it’s it’s it’s pushing us towards. Even the deconstruction of those into their component parts helps me take the whole thing down a notch or two. And I also think what’s really interesting about about framing it that way is that we can then intervene in different ways. Sure. Right. We can intervene with our thoughts. We can try and take a different cognitive approach.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:04  We can intervene emotionally. We can try and intervene with the body. Right. And we can also intervene with the behavior that we do or don’t do. So I just love this concept of tying it up in an emotional loop. And I also love that you name some of these loops. You name just a couple here. The self-doubt loop. The should loop, the what if loop. So talk to me a little bit about the should loop. Walk me through that one, how that one works and and how these things kind of feed on themselves to if we don’t interrupt them.

Elisha Goldstein 00:26:41  So I think I’ll first say that, as you’ve been noting, there’s a real value in naming the different loops. So we said there’s an umbrella overwhelm loop. We we talked about before you named a few different types of loops, but I also want to give people permission. The value in this is in the recognizing the naming. Right. And so if there’s like a I can’t stand this particular friend loop, you know, you can kind of play with that.

Elisha Goldstein 00:27:09  Like if there’s a way to kind of bring a little humor to it. Like though this is, this is my 11:30 p.m. urge to snack loop, you know?

Eric Zimmer 00:27:17  Yeah, right. I have a loop I’ll share. This is a funny one. It doesn’t sound funny at first. It’s called the I wish I was dead loop, but I’d be completely serious That thought pops into my head. That’s the cognitive aspect. And of course, then immediately there’s there’s emotion that goes with it and all the sensations. And by naming that loop, what I’ve realized for myself is that a just when I recognize it, I sort of laugh a little bit now because I’m like, that is such an extreme overreaction. Like on one level, you could look at and go, well, that’s sad that that is set deep enough in me that it still fires off. You know, that I felt that that way. But naming it does cause me mostly now to laugh, because it’s usually usually happens when I don’t know the answer to something.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:08  And it often happens with the stupidest things like should I use conditioner today or not? And the next thing you know, my brain goes, I wish I was dead. I’m like, well, settle down. But so your point about humor is really important. I found like naming them in that way is often really helpful, just that immediately diffuses it.

Elisha Goldstein 00:28:28  That’s what we’re looking for. We’re looking for the interrupt. We have to take to heart for a second that even though we’ve been trained and programmed to think that we need to do these big things, to fix these things in my. Oh, my mind has been so deeply entrenched with anxiety and self-loathing for so long, or like catastrophizing, like what I need, you know, I need big things to fix me. Know it’s in the moment, in the real time. And it’s the smallest things when we weave them together consistently that actually really do make the biggest changes. The reason you’re able to recognize the I wish I were dead loop, and then you immediately kind of turn to like, eye rolling and laughing or something like that, is because you have so much practiced experience with that and redressing it that that there’s now an inner knowing inside of you that’s top down, that processes, you know, from this experience and so that you can kind of cut to it pretty quickly.

Elisha Goldstein 00:29:28  Now I’ll, I’ll, I’ll say this as a caveat to the different ways we can interrupt the loop. and it’s not it’s not that we can always just kind of shift our mind and reframe and, or we can just go to our body or something like that. It really depends on what’s happening. So, for example, if you’re really activated and you’re really feeling anxious, let’s say on a scale of 1 to 10, seven, eight, nine, something like that, reframing or just kind of trying on a different way of looking at things doesn’t typically work very well, right? And the reason is, is because our emotional center of our brain is far deeper and more primitive and faster than the more evolved area of our brain or the prefrontal region where we’re trying to cognitive and reason and be rational about stuff. So we don’t believe ourselves in that moment. Right? Right is the reality. And so we need a different type of entryway in there. The recognition typically comes something more somatic. That’s more implicit.

Elisha Goldstein 00:30:27  So it starts with the body typically versus the thoughts. If we’re like bothered by something or we’re really kind of being down on ourselves or we are just telling ourselves, just like life’s not going to, I’m never going to be successful or, you know, who knows. And and on a scale of 1 to 10, it’s like, I don’t know, 4 or 5, six, three, something like that. We can recognize that and we can say, hold on a second. We can take a breath and say, what’s another way I can look at this? Yes. And if you have a lot of experience like you do in in that particular one, your mind can just cut right to the truth because you know what the reality is. And so we just need that shortcut based on our inner knowing.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:31  There are times that the emotion part of the loop is so high, like the cognitive part of the loop, the thoughts are going crazy, but you’re not going to rein them in to your point.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:41  So that might be a time that what we need to focus on is the sensation aspect of the loop, the body aspect of the loop. Or, you know, sometimes I find with these things too, is it’s just recognizing, like the fire is really burning right now. And even being able to just give myself some grace to go. This one’s going to take longer to untangle. Right?

Elisha Goldstein 00:32:05  To have that awareness.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:07  Yeah. And mine is sort of funny because it’s so dramatic, but it’s oftentimes the ones that aren’t so dramatic that are harder. That one is so absurd, given the general state of my mind. Now, a thought like that is like it stands out. You’re like, where did that come from? A time in my life, though, that might not have barely even registered as different. And it’s those ones that we almost don’t notice, but they’re happening that I think can be so insidious.

Elisha Goldstein 00:32:42  Yeah. Consistently in the background. Yeah. you know, we could be asking ourselves, you know, like I was with the Facebook scam story.

Elisha Goldstein 00:32:52  You know, I could have been asking myself, how can I be so stupid? A lot. Yeah. And, you know, the thing about shame is it’s one of the fastest loops we fall into.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:02  Why is that? Do you think.

Elisha Goldstein 00:33:04  We’re wired to belong? That’s for our own security and evolution. And it’s the greatest threat to not belong. And shame is basically saying I don’t belong. We have to be quick to see where the dangers are in order to survive. And so that’s been wired into us since the dawn of. Yeah, before the dawn of humanity. However, we, you know, believe the evolution of humanity is. So I think shames like a little a cousin to that, but more on a social level. And so if that was familiar to me and I was able to say like, oh, how can I be so stupid? Okay, there’s that one again. You know, and I was able to take a breath and I would say, what if I asked a different question? So what’s the difference? I’d say anyone listening right now or watching what’s the difference? If you’re asking yourself like unconsciously or semi consciously, how can I be so stupid? How can I be so stupid? What? What kind of answers are we going to get from that? Well, you can be so stupid because you’re hopeless and, you know, you’re you’re really not as adept as you thought you were.

Elisha Goldstein 00:34:07  And you know, it’s going to come with all the reasons like that, you know, that are going to back up that thing. But what if I was able to take a ship and make a tiny shift? In that moment? I was able to recognize that that thought pattern, because I’ve had it before, this kind of like, how can I be so stupid? Loop. I was able to take a breath, just could create a little space, and I was able to shift to say something like, what is it that I’m really needing right now? What’s going to be most supportive to me right now while this feeling is here? What kind of answers am I going to get? Well, just like I did. Well, can maybe you can be a little kinder to yourself. Maybe you need to take a walk outside. Maybe you want to talk with someone about this. Maybe. And which are going to be healthier and more adaptive, which are going to get me on my feet quicker and which are going to be better for the relationships I have and for my health.

Elisha Goldstein 00:34:52  And so it’s all about like how how quickly can we recover from these moments that we slip into these little insidious loops and the the naming them like we’re talking about in a variety of ways we can do it is just really the first step to be able to interrupt.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:08  Yeah, let’s go through the four R’s. So we have these emotional loops. And your general point is that interrupting those as close to as when they’re happening, and being able to do it in a very easy way, that doesn’t take a ton of time, that we don’t have to go sit on a, you know, we don’t need to go sit down in journal for 30 minutes. Like we can use in the moment. And so we come up with the four R’s. So walk me through those. We’ve already talked about the first one but okay.

Elisha Goldstein 00:35:40  So again baseline idea here is we don’t need to do more about anything. We just need to be able to do something that that allows us to shift in the moment with the life we’re already living, the things we’re already doing.

Elisha Goldstein 00:35:51  That’s the key. And we want to make it simple and repeatable because small, consistent actions like you and I are both talking about with your book and my book, small, consistent actions lead to big changes. And so, so for ours recognize release, refocus, reinforce. That’s what it is. Recognize release, refocus, reinforce. That’s what it is. So we recognize we talked about that. The important part of the release is understanding that emotions are biological. And so when we get caught in an emotional loop, we’re having a biological reaction like we ran through before the impact of the sympathetic nervous system being aroused going into the fight flight freeze response, how that impacts our muscles, our blood pressure, our heart rate, cortisol, adrenaline, interrupting sleep, messing with how we eat. You know, all the different longevity factors that most people focus on eating, sleeping, exercise and messes with all those things. Because in order to do those things exercise, sleep and nutrition, we typically need some form of body battery to be able to drum up the energy to engage those types of things.

Elisha Goldstein 00:36:57  And when we get emotionally depleted through these emotional loops, we’re draining our body battery. And so it makes it harder to actually follow through on the habits where we’re trying to follow through on. So we we release to be able to move into recovery, we to move to activate the parasympathetic nervous system and to be able to move the body into recovery. Also, we release because what you do notice is from a psychological point of view, I always say like recognizes, stepping into that space between stimulus and response releasing is widening that space. So now we have a little we have more wherewithal to recognize the choices and the perspectives, bringing more blood flow to the prefrontal region, which is about emotion regulation and impulse control. And so now we have the ability to refocus. So what people typically do is they skip the second hour. They just go to like I’m recognizing this. What do I need to do differently. But the reason that doesn’t work as well is because we typically need a little bit more space in order for that refocus to land.

Elisha Goldstein 00:38:00  And so to to become more fertilized, let’s say as an example. So we refocus. And one of my favorite ways of refocusing is some of the things we’ve been talking about here is by accessing what I call our natural intelligence. What’s natural intelligence? I’m kind of playing off of the big hoopla around artificial intelligence right now and accessing our natural intelligence, says when we ask our brain questions, it searches for answers. And so let’s ask it a different question and see if it comes up with a different answer. So instead of, you know, why am I so stupid? Well, what’s going to be supportive to me instead of the world’s going to hell in a handbasket? What are some examples of things that are going well right now? Or moments of kindness? Like we were talking about earlier before we started our episode together here, or this is all there is and nothing’s going to work out for me, and no one can help me and I can’t help myself. Okay, hold on a second.

Elisha Goldstein 00:38:54  Is there another way that I can see this? Are there other things that I haven’t uncovered? You know. So. So those are just some different ways of asking questions. Another way of refocusing is what we had sort of mentioned here before is by reframing a situation. And that’s sometimes really helpful to be able to expand perspective from there. And for example, there was a hiccup with the layout of my book, and it turned out that it it kind of delayed the time. I’m going to actually like, get my physical books to be able to give to people, which I was like at first I was like, oh, I’m going to disappoint people. And then I realized I was sick last week. And another way that I could see the, well, this gives me a little bit more space and time to recover now so I can present, you know, in the best way that I can present different ways of kind of reframing, which allows for a little bit more relaxation. Another way is by accessing your inner knowing, just like you did Eric, with when your mind was able to go back and say, what did it say? What? What is it? What did it access in that example?

Eric Zimmer 00:39:51  Oh, it just recognizes that like, okay, settle down.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:54  That is a dramatic overreaction. Because again, it’s something it’s almost always something really small about not knowing the answer.

Elisha Goldstein 00:40:03  Yeah. So you you have that inner knowing based on your practice so we can. Another way of refocusing is by accessing our inner knowing based on our own experience. I call our own wisdom. I know for me that idea of can I be kind to myself, or that idea of noticing when I’m activated and taking a moment to lower my shoulders or put my hand on my heart for a second? Is is something that helps me deactivate. I know this about myself because I’ve done it a thousand times, so I can kind of shortcut my refocus to that, because I know that that’s something that I need. I don’t really need to ask myself a question. I don’t need to reframe anything. I just know what I need because I have a lot of experience with it. So we all have things like that. Another way of refocusing sometimes is to do something that I call taking a joy break.

Elisha Goldstein 00:40:53  Sometimes we just need to do something different. And so one of my favorite examples of this is when a client of mine or one of my programs, she’s like, you know what? When I feel overwhelmed, the first thing I do is I just even know, I recognize that I’m able to kind of take a beat with it. And then I go straight to my garden and put my hands in the dirt. And for her, that’s just accessing something that gives her joy, which. Joy, joy, humor a play. These things can flip our emotional experience. So the fourth R so we got recognized release refocus a variety of ways of refocusing. There’s other ways of releasing too because we can release certain beliefs and mindsets as well. is this last piece that most people miss. And this is what makes change really hard for a lot of people. The last R is called reinforce. And why are we what what do we need to reinforce? Well, if we believe that neurons that fire together wire together.

Elisha Goldstein 00:41:50  and we believe that our perception of any given moment is based on memory. So I know this as a phone right here I’m holding up my phone for these are just listening. And I know that because someone showed me that at one point and they said, that’s a phone. The phone, a pen, same thing. Right? So that helps me see that and not have to question it, and I know exactly what I need to do with it. We have experiences all the time where we help ourselves. We activate our parasympathetic nervous system, we relax our shoulders. We have a good conversation with someone. We think of a new insight or idea that really helped us out. Generosity. Sure, that felt good, you know, that kind of thing. But we don’t do something that in the field of neuroscience is called emotional tagging. Emotional tagging supports memory. We want to support the memories that work for us. And so one thing to consider doing is when you notice a new insight or you notice your shoulders dropping, or you notice a moment of relief or calm or some way, you did a tiny shift that supported you in the moment, then you want to take a moment and just kind of close your eyes, or keep them open and literally see yourself.

Elisha Goldstein 00:43:00  Take a mental snapshot of the moment, a snapshot of how you’re feeling, a snapshot of what you did, a snapshot of yourself in this present moment. Our brain loves to work off pictures and images. I was talking with someone earlier today and she was like, I wanted to remember my daughter’s wedding. And so I took a moment and I just kind of paused and breathed, and I looked at the stones on the wall. I looked at the people all around. I paid attention for a moment. I took a mental snapshot in my mind of this experience. This was years ago, and she goes to this day. I could tell you the exact colors of those stones, each one of them. I could tell you who was there and what their facial expression was, because she intentionally paused and took a mental snapshot. This is the exact same thing. When something works for us from a tiny shift that we make, we want to reinforce it by taking a mental snapshot in our mind and reminding ourselves that this moment matters, and that’s how we reinforce it.

Elisha Goldstein 00:44:03  So recognize, release, refocus, reinforce. Those are the four R’s that help us interrupt, recover and get back on track.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:12  I have a few questions within each of those. So I think with the reinforce, I think that’s a really important point to be able to tag something. I find myself more and more relying on an ability to look back at a challenging situation and say, oh, that’s how I handled it. Oh, that’s what I did there. Oh, that’s right. And that’s sort of the reinforcement process is I not only tried to encode it in the moment, but I can then call on it and go, oh, I know it. I know it helps me in this situation. I know what what will work here. And so I think your whole book is filled with these. There’s all these tiny shifts you can do. Right? I even feel like cataloging them sometimes is somewhat helpful for me to know. Like, here’s my little library of things that I can turn to and do that help? Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:08  An example I often give is it’s with music. I know that when I get depressed that music is helpful. The problem is that when I’m depressed, no music sounds good to me. Like, I’ll just flip through my library, but nope nope nope nope nope. Right. So I just created a playlist of like, just go click on this when you feel that way. And I think we can create a similar playlist of the tiny shifts that help.

Elisha Goldstein 00:45:35  That’s that’s a great idea. I mean, reinforcing writing it down as a form of reinforcing talking about your experience as a form of reinforcing. We’re looking to reinforce a memory. If you want to make a list of the tiny shifts that have been really helpful. That’s another way of recommitting it to memory. You know, they’ve been saying in school for so long that like, taking notes is so important for memory. writing things down physically is what they mean by that. These are great examples. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:04  So let’s talk about putting all of this kind of into practice, in what situations? You work with clients a lot.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:11  So you’ve been obviously teaching these ideas. Who does this not work for? Or what happens when people don’t get benefit out of this? Like what goes wrong with this approach? If anything.

Elisha Goldstein 00:46:24  you know, if someone is severely emotionally disabled you want to work with with somebody anyway, or not even severely emotionally disabled. Sorry if it’s going to be hard to work with anything if that’s happening, but if you’re really emotionally impacted, I’m just going to support the notion of how important it is to speak with somebody. And by the way, that could be a tiny shift all in its own, meaning like the idea of what’s the one decision I need to make that’s going to support me. I’m going to reach out to someone and talk to them a professional. So I don’t actually see this really not working for somebody because it’s so personalized and contextualized. It’s not a model where it’s giving us specific directive. That’s the same for everyone. It’s more of an architecture that someone’s personal experience can fit into. So, you know, we can all get better at recognizing how we’re feeling.

Elisha Goldstein 00:47:19  And typically like, you know, you and me, we didn’t grow up learning about emotions or how our body’s reacting to things or, you know, being present to really any, anything but our thoughts. I mean, you know, for the most part, and even then, not in that way, but I think anyone can really do that, and anyone can get better at it, and anyone can get better at noticing the the connection with their, their mind and body, noticing how emotions are biology and being able to just do something to slightly redress a little bit more ease in the reactivity. Now where this could go wrong, I’ll say, is if somebody confuses the second R with relaxation, because that’s not what that’s meant to be. And so what that means is they recognize it and they try and relax their bodies, but they won’t relax. And they say this, this isn’t working for me. This is not for me. What it’s really meant to do is it’s a leaning in toward easing.

Elisha Goldstein 00:48:14  It’s more of a verb of of releasing tension. Not that you arrive at a state of relaxation. That’s not what that’s about. So it could go wrong if there’s a misinterpretation of the step. And I think refocusing at that point could support anybody. I’ll add a caveat to that. Depending on how impacted you are emotionally in the moment. Could be really helpful to do it with another person, whether it’s a trained professional or a good friend that you feel really comfortable and safe with, that’s where that could be done in partnership can be really helpful and even reinforcing, I think could be supportive and partnership. The more people we have around us that, you know, can support our good moments, that gives us a boost. But being able to do what you sing, even right down physically, like the moments that were the tiny shifts that were supportive to you and put them down to support your memory. Because also, when we’re really impacting, we’re really depressed, we’re highly anxious, our memory, like gone kind of yeah, that’s the part of our brain that’s like, I’m going offline now.

Elisha Goldstein 00:49:22  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:23  You know, I’ve got a method that I teach called Still Points, which are similar to tiny shifts. They’re more something not that we do in response to something, but something that we more try and insert into lots of different points in our day. And I think the things that I see make an approach like this not work for people or a couple. One is we just don’t remember, right? It’s just hard for us to remember. Like, here’s a loop. I’m in it to recognize it, to do it. I mean, I think that’s one of the big ones. The other one that I think is really important also is that a lot of times the tiny shift or the still point that I’m describing, it’s mildly helpful, but oftentimes very mild, and we want more help than that. We want. Like, I’m just going to do this thing and I’m suddenly going to feel better. And my experience is that the thing about these sort of small interventions or small approaches or small moments, is that any one of them on their own isn’t really that big of a thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:36  It’s when they accumulate that all of a sudden things really start to shift. That’s been my experience. So if I give somebody a practice of doing still points, a still point of like, we set your alarm to go off four times a day, and each time you just spend a minute noticing five things, you can see five things you can feel, five things you can hear any one of those. Okay, great. That was a lovely little ten second exercise. But if you do those day after day after day, all of a sudden your ability to be more present does start to shift. And I think that’s the challenge that a lot of people face with this sort of small approach to anything is that we want results way faster, and when we don’t get them, we then go, oh, this thing doesn’t work.

Elisha Goldstein 00:51:23  I’m going to push back slightly on that, please. What I’ve actually found is that first, just acknowledging what you said and and also saying yes to that too, when the expectation is that when, when there’s a sense of I need to fix it all with this moment, you know, right now our expectation is whenever we don’t meet an expectation, a hidden expectation, we get deflated.

Elisha Goldstein 00:51:46  And it can be we can be demotivating. But the simple interruption sometimes, that’s why we want to really keep it simple. We want to keep it. We want to kind of back up and say, all you need to know for now is just be aware. See if you can be curious in naming how you’re feeling. And that’s it. You need to do nothing more. And then just allowing that to be without giving a whole method or a formula all at once. All you need to do now is notice where you’re where in the day your your shoulders are bunching up towards your ears and softening. And a simple thing like that, the feedback I’ve gotten has been game changing. Like just just being able to notice where tension is in your body and begin to soften. It changes the person’s level of presence. And it’s something so simple and so small on its own that it can create a big or kind of a big shift. Now, like I think the danger is. And what what you’re noting is there needs to be some level of consistency.

Elisha Goldstein 00:52:50  And if there’s not consistency, well then you forget about it and you slide back. That moment wasn’t wasn’t Enough to that that one moment wasn’t enough. In the field of the decades of your life that you’ve had of conditioning. Right? Yeah, right. So what’s going to support you and being able to be consistent. And so that’s why you’ve probably noticed when I in tiny shifts, one of the things that I was so intentional of doing was I wanted to say, I want this to be so low of a lift for people, because the whole premise that chapter one is called the Culture of Overwhelm. The whole premise is like, guys, we’re all like living in this state of overwhelm right now. I’m not going to ask you to lift anything heavy here, because that’s not going to work. That I sprinkled these tiny insights and tiny shifts in action in the book where just by reading the book, you’re experiencing these shifts with repetition. Just by reading the book alone, you’ll experience these shifts with the consistency and repetition that will create an experience as you go through the entire book without you needing to lift anything really that heavy.

Elisha Goldstein 00:54:01  That was the intentional design within the book. Not telling people to go out and like, go do all these practices and do these meditations or go do this 20 minute exercise like nothing like that. Because, look, the reality is, when you’re holding a book, I don’t know. I don’t know what to follow through on. That really is if you’re asking someone to do heavy lifts, you know, in the book. Well, because I’ve done that before in other books. So that’s that’s my hope. So to to just acknowledge what you’re saying and weave in a strategy that can support the consistency that can move through that initial like, well, I don’t know if I felt enough or I don’t know if I can continue doing this on my own type of thing. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:44  Excellent. Well, thank you so much for coming back on. I really enjoyed the book. It makes a lot of sense to me. Obviously we see a lot of things similar. And thank you. Always a pleasure.

Elisha Goldstein 00:54:56  Yeah. That’s great. I’ll just let everyone know as we go. Like, if you remember nothing else from this time with me and Eric, it’s that if we can kind of keep it simple. One tiny shift in how you relate to your emotions and noticing what you’re feeling and how you’re relating them can change the trajectory of your day. And if there’s a repetition and consistency of that can change the trajectory of your life. Proof is in the eating of the pudding. Try it on. See what you notice.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:19  Beautiful way to end. Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom. One episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the one You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

Little Addictions, Big Impact: Transforming Your Habits for a Healthier Life with Catherine Gray

March 3, 2026 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Catherine Gray discusses her new book about “little addictions” and the big impact of transforming your habits for a healthier life. She explores how everyday compulsions like excessive screen time, snacking, or people pleasing are driven by ancient brain wiring and dopamine. Catherine shares practical strategies for managing these habits, emphasizing environmental changes, self-compassion, and shifting reward systems. The conversation highlights the importance of awareness, reframing language, and building mental strength, offering listeners actionable tools to regain control over their “tiny but mighty” compulsions and make more intentional choices.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Exploration of “little addictions” and their impact on daily life.
  • Discussion on the neuroscience of addiction, particularly the role of dopamine.
  • Examination of the difference between “little addictions” and clinical addictions.
  • Strategies for managing compulsive behaviors and creating healthier habits.
  • The importance of environmental factors in shaping behavior and habits.
  • Insights on the internal conflict between the impulsive limbic system and the self-regulating prefrontal cortex.
  • The concept of “dopamine shifting” to redirect reward systems toward healthier activities.
  • Personal anecdotes illustrating the challenges and successes in overcoming compulsions.
  • The significance of language in framing choices around habits and self-control.
  • Practical tools and apps to help manage technology and behavioral addictions.

Catherine Gray is the author of six books, including The Unexpected Joy of Being Sober. Little
Addictions is her seventh. She’s sold well over half a million books in English-speaking
territories alone, and her books have been translated into fourteen languages. With a background in journalism, she has written for The Guardian, Grazia, Stylist, The Telegraph and many more. In 2018, Catherine founded charitable campaign Sober Spring, a three-month sabbatical from alcohol, with Alcohol Change UK, for whom she is an ambassador. She’s been sober since 2013.

Connect with Catherine Gray Website | Instagram | X

If you enjoyed this conversation with Catherine Gray, check out these other episodes:

Understanding Identity and How Our Past Shapes Who We Become with Catherine Gray

Rethinking Addiction and Identity with Catherine Gray

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Episode Transcript:

Catherine Gray 00:00:00  Our brains really haven’t evolved that much since hunter gatherer times. And so what’s happening is a lot of these things that we find so impossible to put down are pressing on ancient urges.

Chris Forbes 00:00:21  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:06  Our guest today is one of my favorite guests of all time. She is one of two people to have appeared on the show now five times.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:15  Her name is Katherine Gray. She’s an English writer. She approached me years ago because she loved the podcast and talked about it in her first book, The Unexpected Joy of Being Sober. And we’d become friends in the years since, and her new book is really, really timely. It is called Little Addictions Freedom from our tiny but mighty compulsions. And she really makes the point that we all have these little addiction. You know, maybe we wouldn’t call them addiction, but we know the feeling of, you know, we keep clicking next episode or we keep checking email again, or we scroll a little bit longer or one more snack and we talk about how the part of the brain that wants what it wants now needs to be balanced with the part of our brain that can zoom out and choose the long term picture. And then we talk about some tools that make that actually more likely to happen. So if you’ve ever thought, why am I doing this again, this episode is going to be great for you.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:15  I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi Catherine, welcome to the show again.

Catherine Gray 00:02:21  Thank you. I’m very grateful to be back for, I think, the fifth time.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:27  You and one other person are in the top spot for visits.

Catherine Gray 00:02:32  I love that. Well, as you know, this is my favorite podcast, so I am delighted to be here again.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:38  Well, I’m so happy to have you on. We’ve talked many times before and you and I got a chance to meet each other in Cornwall this summer. Ginny and I were planning a trip over there and you said, I’m going to Cornwall for a vacation. And I said, all right, we’ll go there too.

Catherine Gray 00:02:56  It was joyous to meet finally after many years. I think it’s been nine years of talking. Yeah, I.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:05  Think.

Catherine Gray 00:03:05  So. We finally get to meet in real life. and we had such a beautiful afternoon, didn’t we? Eating chips and watching the sunset.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:13  We did. It was very, very lovely.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:15  And I appreciated the Cornwall in reference or invitation because Cornwall was amazing.

Catherine Gray 00:03:22  Yeah, it’s stunning there.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:23  Yeah. So let’s talk about your latest book. Your latest book is called Little Addictions Freedom from our tiny but mighty Compulsions. What led you to doing a book like this, given some of your past work on not drinking and giving up drinking? What brought you to the point where this was what you were really interested in?

Catherine Gray 00:03:45  Well, I don’t know whether you will relate, but even though I’ve cracked my big addictions, clinical addictions, I would say, of alcohol. And then there was cigarettes and then there was love. So I did a year of dating. Even though I’ve cracked those open, I still keep finding it’s almost like a giant Russian stacking doll. I just keep finding more dolls. So the ever descending in size, these addictions. But they’re still there and they’re ignorable. And so now I think I’m dealing with, you know, the tiniest of dolls, but they still sort of take me over.

Catherine Gray 00:04:28  And if I use them too much, it really affects my mental health. And I find that also they tend to live in clusters. So if I have a day where I use lots of my little addictions in a way that isn’t in my best interests, they all come together all at once. And so I will, you know, start the day to too tired because last night I clicked. Next episode instead of going to bed. And then I’ll have more caffeine than I should and more sugar than I should. And I’ll reach for nicotine and I’ll spend too much time on social media. And then by the end of the day, my mental health is a four. You know, when I want it to be more like an eight. So that’s what I’m grappling with right now. Nobody’s worried about me now. I don’t have any big clinical addictions, but I know, I know that I could be doing better when it comes to regulating my use of these things, but I had no idea how to moderate because I don’t want to quit any of these things apart from nicotine.

Catherine Gray 00:05:37  But that’s a that’s a side story. But yeah, I want to use them in a balanced way. So I went out into the world and asked two dozen experts, how do I do this? You know, how do I down regulate my use of this thing to the actual amount I intend to use, you know, rather than finding that my actual usage outstrips that consistently. So that was the mission behind this book.

Eric Zimmer 00:06:01  And so words are important. You’re a writer and obviously you care a lot about words. Using the word addiction for these smaller things is a feeling. I have mixed feelings about. What led you to what to use that word.

Catherine Gray 00:06:17  I mean, I get it, and I, I can understand why people who’ve really grappled with a clinical addiction would have mixed feelings about that. And one of the things that I’ve done in the book to sort of proof against that is there’s a big table at the start where I consulted a psychiatrist and a neuroscientist about what is the difference between a little addiction, what I’m calling, and a big addiction so that nobody is going into this book with a big addiction, thinking I’m going to moderate down my big addiction to alcohol using this book.

Catherine Gray 00:06:50  You know, it’s made really clear right from the get go. Little addiction is just a colloquial term that I have made up, you know. and if you do have anything larger than a little compulsion, then abstinence is probably the best option. And here are the resources you should go to. So, I mean, if if a little addiction doesn’t do it for you, you can think of it as like tiny habits or but they’re just destructive habits, you know, they’re not they’re not healthy ones, but I, I understand your consternation. You know, it is a big word to be using. But for me also, I think it’s important that we see addiction as a spectrum, because that’s how I do see it. And I think if you find that tipping point where your actual use of a thing is starting to tip beyond what you want it to be, that is when an addiction is, it’s just the seed, you know, it’s the it’s an addiction in its infancy. and I think it’s really important that we’re all aware of that liminal space where, you know, we’re starting to to make decisions that aren’t in our best interests.

Catherine Gray 00:08:02  So for that reason, I think it’s defensible. Just.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:07  Yeah, one of the things that I see happen a lot and I kind of in general wrestle with is this idea of we we tend to over pathologies, normal human behavior sometimes these days. Right. Everything gets a diagnosis which it can be very helpful. And again I think the key here is what words work and help. Because on the other hand arguing on the other side on your side. Addiction to me is all about loss of control. That’s what it is. It’s not about consequences. It’s it’s about am I in charge of whether I do this thing or not? Yeah. Do I feel like I’m calling the shots on this? Yeah. And so in that way. Right. Many of these little things, you know, we aren’t calling the shots on. And I like that what your book does a nice job of is I think it threads the needle. Well between you got to treat this like it’s some really big deal. And look, here’s some simple things you can do that’s going to make it a little bit easier to do this, because I think we all want to cope.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:11  We all have coping mechanisms of different sorts and some are healthier than others. And I don’t think that’s going to go away or a bad thing. But the book really gives us tools for thinking about it and taking the actions we want to to change it. It’s interesting. And then I’m going to stop a monologue because this is your interview. But I interviewed I, I interviewed a guy from the UK named Pete Etchells. Are you familiar with Pete?

Catherine Gray 00:09:36  No.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:37  He wrote a book about screen time, and he was he was sort of pushing back on the Jonathan Haidt and that group who were like, screens have ruined an entire generation of children and saying like, the science isn’t all the way in on that. And he said something, though that I thought was interesting. He said, the way we talk about our, our phones is we talk about them as if they are super addictive. And he said, that’s what our experience is. But to what degree is that experience colored by the fact that we think that they’re addictive or bad, which I just thought was an interesting counterpoint.

Catherine Gray 00:10:14  Yeah, that is really interesting. And there’s a study that echoes that, actually, which I’m sure he’s probably sighted, where if people think of their social media use as an addiction, they are more likely to use it in an addictive way. which I don’t want to go too far down that path because it might ruin my breakfast. But I do think I do think there’s there is a nuance, though, that is this. Most people out there are grappling with some sort of thing, whether it’s porn or coffee or gaming or a gambling app on the phone or buying turtlenecks, you know that they do a little too much of. And I think that everyone I know has some sort of little addiction, and they’re not always fully aware of it. And I think it’s so important to realize that it is. And my psychiatrist called it an essentially human impulse to overuse things. She was like, yes, biscuits on the table over there. And I know I intend to have three or whatever, and I will return to them again and again throughout the day.

Catherine Gray 00:11:27  And so all of us do this to some degree with something. So it’s recognizing that it is a universal human experience and not a sign of weakness or failing. Yeah. So that’s that’s how I approached it anyway.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:43  And I think what you just said gets to the heart of of that thing for me, which is it is a universal human experience. And we want to be very conscious about what we choose to do with our time and our attention and our bodies. Right. I think that’s a that’s an important thing. One of the things you say early in the book that I like, you say we’ve lost control ever so slightly. Thing uses person rather than person using thing.

Catherine Gray 00:12:11  Yeah. And I mean this is, this is what I found once I started digging into my little addictions. You know, I know what is best for me. I know that I’m 12 years in recovery and I have all these tools. And yet I consistently find that my screen time tips over the amount I want it to be, you know, two hours is the golden amount for me.

Catherine Gray 00:12:35  And I consistently go over that. not anymore, thanks to the things I’ve learned. But it’s, you know, TV. I know that an hour is just right. That’s the sweet spot. But then I find myself clicking next episode. You know, it’s just knowing how to keep ourselves in check and put our long term self in the driving seat rather than succumbing to what our short term self wants. So that’s what I was really interested in pinning to the page with this book. Like how do we do that? What are the tactics? What is proven? What do the studies say? Once I started unfolding it, I just couldn’t believe how much I found that we can actually use. So it’s it really has changed my life and, you know, transformed my mental health. Just writing and researching this book. And there’s only one that I’m still, you know, nicotine. Turns out it’s not a little addiction for me. It’s more like medium or large. you know, while I was writing the book, it really digged its claws in, and I started finding that I felt like I needed it to focus and to drive and all sorts of things.

Catherine Gray 00:13:45  So for me, you know, obviously abstinence is going to be my option. So I’m on the runway to quitting that. and I think it’s important that all of us have that accountability of knowing, okay, is how big is this thing for me? What do I where do I need to go with it? Do I need to stop looking at porn altogether and do I need to, you know, put myself on GameStop, which is this thing in the UK which blocks you from most gambling sites? What do I need to do? And it’s just having that personal accountability and action in it.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:18  I will tell you a little addiction story of my own. Even saying this out loud makes me feel ridiculous, but solitaire can become a problem for me.

Catherine Gray 00:14:30  You’ve mentioned that a few times.

Speaker 4 00:14:31  Yeah, so I know, I know, I know, yeah, yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:34  I mean it’s never like a huge deal, but like, if I’m not conscious of it, I’m not taking steps to do it.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:40  I could lose 45 minutes to an hour a day doing it, which, the reason that I have a real problem with it is not that 45 minutes to an hour of enjoying myself a day is wrong. That’s not it at all. I actually think that’s great. It’s just that I don’t particularly enjoy it that much and it adds absolutely no value. Like Jenny, I like, I watch TV shows with Jenny a lot of evenings and that adds value. I like the show. I think it’s, I think their art. I’m sitting close with Jenny. We’re spending time together like that has value. Solitaire has really none.

Speaker 4 00:15:16  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:16  And so what I generally have done in the past is I just set up a little blocker where I’m like, okay, start my workday, set up the blocker, it blocks the one solitaire site I go to, and that’s usually enough because, I mean, I know there’s a thousand solitaire sites, but what I need is just reminded for a second, don’t do that.

Catherine Gray 00:15:34  Yeah. And do you know what that does? That that activates your prefrontal cortex, which is what the neuroscientist told me in the book. Just that tiny delay. Just installing that friction, installing that obstacle means that it can come online. And that’s all about the bigger picture. And long term, you know, it’s like, do I actually want to spend 45 minutes in solitaire? No.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:19  When I went to England and I saw you, I realized something. And what I realized was, when I am not sitting in front of my work computer, I never think of playing solitaire. It just doesn’t come up. Yeah, but the minute I sit down in front of this thing, it’s right there. And so in my case, I was like, okay, this just feels like habit energy. It just feels like context. Like I get into a certain context and this behavior emerges. And I was like, you know what? I’m going to try and starve this one out. I’ve been doing sort of the moderate, like just block it, play a little bit here and there.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:56  And I was like, okay, I’m going to try and starve this one out. And I have not played solitaire since I was in England. And it’s interesting. I can sit down and feel something inside of me. And so I’ll go ahead and I’ll go ahead and block it. I don’t generally block it now. I don’t need to.

Speaker 4 00:17:10  But so in.

Eric Zimmer 00:17:11  Some days I’m like, I feel it, you know, like I’m working on something hard and I don’t. I didn’t sleep great last night. Kind of to your point. Like these things group up so I don’t feel good. I didn’t sleep well. I’m not thinking clearly. I’m sitting here in front of the computer, and I’m finding myself, like, wanting to sort of escape. And so then I’ll block it. And I think this speaks to something you’re talking a lot about, and I’d love you to expand upon, which is this idea of this pole between these different parts of our brain.

Catherine Gray 00:17:41  Yeah, absolutely. And something which is really interesting about what you just said.

Catherine Gray 00:17:46  Right. So for a start, I’ve worked this out because we’re we’re around the same age, right. And I figured this out through some maths. That was far too complicated for me, but I managed it. So I figured out that if I spend 54 minutes a day doing something. So that’s around the time you were spending doing solitaire. That’s two years of my waking life left out of my, you know, 35 theoretical years. If I die right on the average age of death. and that really brings it home. You know, do you want to spend two years of your waking.

Speaker 4 00:18:27  Remaining.

Catherine Gray 00:18:28  Life playing solitaire? Now, like you just said with TV, I do want to do that with TV, but I am capping it at 54 minutes a day because of that. You know, I can swallow two years. I can’t swallow four. I’m not up for that. I’m not up for spending four years. So two hours a day. Way too much for me. 54 minutes is just right.

Catherine Gray 00:18:50  The thing you’ve just talked about with when you sit down in that situation, that specific situation where you play the solitaire and you feel the pull. So something that I discovered, talking to neuroscientists and professors and all sorts is that dopamine, which is what creates that craving. It learns. And what happens is that it has a back propagation of cues. So say, for instance, with the solitaire thing, it’s only you sitting down. That’s the cue at your work computer. But with my alcohol addiction, that daisy chain went all the way back. So it might have been, you know, when I, when I was 19 or whatever, you know, walking past a pub would have been the cue to trigger the dopamine to trigger the wanting. But that went all the way back to, you know, any glass, any cashpoint, because I would have gone to the cashpoint before nights out. Anything to do with, you know, my alcohol use. And the same happens with any sort of clinical addiction to the point where, you know, say, for instance, somebody who is addicted to smoking crack and they do it out of a broken light bulb, you know, light bulbs are a massive trigger for their dopamine, you know, to come cascading and, and the craving to ensue.

Catherine Gray 00:20:13  And so it’s really interesting how q hiding can help and changing that up, you know, changing it up. So so for instance, if you frequently game on your phone and you’re hooked on Candy crush, you know, simply deleting that from your phone. It sounds so ridiculously simple, but it works because that’s the situation that you do it in. And like you said, there are different parts of our brain that are pulling in different directions, and that’s why we feel this constant push pull. It’s like a tug of war because what is driving the addictive behavior is the limbic system, which is basically I want what I want and I want it now. It’s very emotional. And then there’s the prefrontal cortex, which is really helps by delay and really comes online if we do things like read instead of watch and all sorts of things that we can do practically meditate, exercise, you know, all of that strengthens our prefrontal cortex. And it’s about putting that in the driving seat. And yet re angling our reward system towards healthy pursuits, which is sources of slow dopamine.

Catherine Gray 00:21:26  Yeah. I found out so much about dopamine. Well, while researching this book, I had no idea how central it is to addiction and how it really is the lifeblood of all addiction. but it’s also the source of, you know, any motivation. It’s the source of everything that we do that’s good as well. You know, it’s why we get up and see people and work and strive.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:51  Right. Yeah. We need it for sure. Let’s talk about some of the challenges that are are unique to where we find ourselves today. And you share in the book that we’re in a space where the speed of technological advancements outstrips generational hand-me-down wisdom. We have no playbook of structure, of coping strategies to draw upon. Which brings us to how we now live, each holding a clutch of little addictions.

Catherine Gray 00:22:20  Yeah, I mean, I think we are now living in the age of peak addictiveness. Our parents did not have to deal with this, you know. They did not have limitless TV shows on their sets to watch, you know.

Catherine Gray 00:22:33  They just had four channels and they didn’t have the bottomless scroll of porn. And if they wanted to gamble, they had to go down to the bookies or to the casino. Whereas now everyone has apps on their phone. It’s just everything is here. You know, it’s the same hour delivery. It’s ever more we can afford it and it’s there. And there’s aisles in the supermarket of ultra processed food that are just designed to be as Moorish as possible. So we really haven’t been in this situation ever before. And what is really interesting is I spoke with a couple of experts who described it as what’s called an evolutionary mismatch, in that our brains really haven’t evolved that much since hunter gatherer times. And so what’s happening is a lot of these things that we find so impossible to put down are pressing on ancient urges. Like, for instance, one of my neuroscientists said, we metaphorically still have a honey axe in our hands, which is, you know, if we were strolling through the forest, you know, back in hunter gatherer times, we would have cracked open a beehive and eaten as much honey as we could.

Catherine Gray 00:23:46  You know, that made sense. That was a survival method. Gorge on the high calorie, high sugar food. and our brains are still designed to have the urge to do that. so there’s a real problem. You know, we still have these brains that have these impulses, and we’re living in a world where algorithms are designed to be as hooky as possible. You know, exits are hidden, friction is reduced. You know, it’s just it’s a nightmare. So we need all the tools that we can get.

Speaker 4 00:24:20  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:20  I’m always very struck by how resistant a lot of people are. That I’ve talked to and done work with to using technological tools to fight technology addiction.

Catherine Gray 00:24:33  That’s a really good point.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:34  There’s this belief like we should be able to do it.

Speaker 4 00:24:37  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:38  Oh, occasionally come across this this is going back a while. But there was a drug called an abuse that would make you violently sick if you drank. And I would find people saying like, well, I shouldn’t need to use that.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:49  And I’m like.

Speaker 4 00:24:49  Well.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:50  Okay.

Speaker 4 00:24:52  And yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:54  Exactly. And you clearly continue to drink. So I would suggest it. And I find a similar thing like, well, I shouldn’t have to set up, you know, all these weird rules and blockers and I’m just fully in the like the way I felt about, like, heroin. Like I’m in over my head with this thing. Like, I’ll take help wherever I can get it. And that is the one thing from doing my book that I would say, if you got all the behavioral scientists in the world together and force them to agree on one thing. They would a have a very difficult time doing so, but they would all probably agree that the more that you can do to make it easier on yourself to do the thing you want to do or not, or harder to do the thing you don’t want to do, the better. Like we all have to rely on some degree of, I don’t know, whatever term you want to call it self-control, discipline, something.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:48  There’s some there’s some thing that comes on that we need to pull us through. But we want to we want to use that as little as possible.

Catherine Gray 00:25:57  I mean I completely agree and I think it’s the sheer willpower method. That’s, that’s what how people approach things. They think I should be able to do this. And so they enter things like Dry January in the UK and just don’t have any tools. They expect themselves to be able to live in a house that’s still heaving with alcohol and not drink it. And most people don’t make it. You know. Yeah. And they expect to be able to go to the pub and not drink. They’re just like, I should be able to do this. So I’m going to grit my teeth and white knuckle my way through it, and it just invariably does not work. So like you say, I mean, I always say to people, make it as easy for yourself as possible. Yeah. To do the thing that you want to do and, you know, install obstacles and create friction, that is absolutely the way to do it.

Catherine Gray 00:26:51  And like you say, there’s so many apps and devices out there that can help us. There’s one called brick. I don’t know whether you have it in the States, but it’s this, this thing separate to your phone where you can tap it and disable whatever apps you choose for a number of hours. So say, for instance, if you don’t want to go on social media for the rest of the day, you can disable everything for the rest of the day, and then you tap it to reactivate them. What a brilliant idea, right? And they’re adopting it like nobody’s business. I think they’re the ones that are really spending the most time on their phones, but they’re also the ones most willing to pick up these tools. and there’s another one called one SEK, which makes you take three deep breaths, which is, you know, allowing your prefrontal cortex to come online before you open apps that you have designated as your stickiest apps, whether it’s, you know, vintage or right move or, you know, a roulette app, you know.

Speaker 4 00:27:48  So I don’t.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:49  Know what any of those are that you just described. Now I suddenly feel very, very out of the cool apps.

Catherine Gray 00:27:55  Well, I did talk to a lot of millennials and Gen Z.

Speaker 4 00:27:57  Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:58  All right, all right, all right.

Catherine Gray 00:27:59  Well, to get the tip.

Eric Zimmer 00:28:22  Hey, friend, before we dive back in, I want you to take a second and think about what you’ve been listening to. What’s one thing that really landed, and what’s one tiny action you could take today to live it out? Those little moments of reflection. That’s exactly why I started good wolf reminders. Short, free text messages that land in your phone once or twice a week. Nearly 5000 people already get them and say the quick bursts of insight help them shift out of autopilot and stay intentional in their lives. If that sounds like your kind of thing, head to one Eufy net SMS and sign up. It’s free. No spam, and easy to opt out of any time. Again, that’s one you feed.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:07  Net. Tiny nudges, real change. All right, back to the show. I use something called Clear Space on my phone, which does a similar thing. It just it doesn’t stop me. It just makes me take three deep breaths and say, I want to do it, which again, very often is enough. My thing is I check email on my phone way more than could possibly be necessary when I’m like when I’m really lost in it. And so clear space just sort of stops me because I’m like, all right, you know, I’m going to click that thing. I’m going to have to wait three seconds. I’m going to have to take a deep breath. And oh, yeah, I actually I don’t need to check it because I just did four minutes ago.

Speaker 4 00:29:46  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:47  Right. But but but that’s all happening on an autopilot method. I want to talk more about this pulling of the two parts of the brain, which in essence, I think you’re saying comes down to a little bit of a battle between what we may call our limbic system, our emotional systems, and our prefrontal cortex, which is where all our executive function lives.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:08  It’s the part of our brain that can say, here’s what I think is most important to me. Here’s what I think is good to me. Here are the plans that I want to follow. And it’s a battle between, you know, to a certain degree, between those two. But what I found fascinating is I think you’re quoting Anna Lemke from the book Dopamine Nation, that we get prefrontal cortical atrophy as our reward pathway has become the dominant driver of our lives.

Catherine Gray 00:30:37  Yeah. And I mean, this is what happens when we have a clinical addiction as well. Our prefrontal cortex, literally it loses synaptic density. In other words it shrinks. And what happens when people enter recovery and become, you know, begin a path of abstinence is that it regains that lost volume. And there’s even been one study doctor Martin Lewis commented on where that shows that it goes beyond the level of those those people who were never clinically addicted to anything in the first place, because you’re having to do all that resisting. So your prefrontal cortex gets really strong and it’s just so interesting to me.

Catherine Gray 00:31:17  I’ve found out nine practical ways that we can activate and strengthen our prefrontal cortex. And Alek and I, we exchanged some emails about this as well. And one of the ways that she suggested is telling the truth about everything, you know, big or small. And I couldn’t agree with that more because it’s something that’s central to my recovery. My partner calls it my weird honesty thing.

Speaker 4 00:31:42  And.

Catherine Gray 00:31:42  Suggested he was like, you should write about that for the book. That’s definitely one of your little addictions, because sometimes he’s like, can’t we just lie? Can’t we just say that you know, me as ill or whatever, so we can’t go to the party? And I’m like, no, you know, we have to be honest. But I told so many lies when I was in active addiction that that is just something that’s a pillar, and I’m not willing to compromise on that.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:06  So how does that help us make our prefrontal cortex more synaptic dense?

Catherine Gray 00:32:12  I’m not actually sure, but I guess it’s.

Catherine Gray 00:32:14  It probably comes down to. Discomfort, because almost everything. That activates the prefrontal cortex isn’t. Something that’s easily one. It’s something that involves some sort of mental grit or, you know, pushing through a bit of a wall. So, you know, the things that activate it are exercise, meditation. You know, meditation is really hard. I’ve started doing it on a daily basis, and it is hard, and, you know, reading books rather than watching things, even if you read the news rather than watched it, that helps you gain some distance from it. So I always do that now with the news, rather than watch clips of atrocities. I’ll read about it because it just enables me to sort of maintain that emotional knowledge, but also not getting really, really wrapped up in it. And you know telling the truth. this I can’t remember all of them now. But you know, there’s lots of ways that we can consciously activate it. And almost all of them to do, to do with delayed gratification.

Catherine Gray 00:33:26  And, and you know, cold water therapy for instance, that’s that’s hard. You know, getting into an icy plunge is hard, but it really helps your prefrontal cortex. So it’s so interesting finding the ways that we can we can do this consciously. And almost all of them aren’t fun to begin with.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:49  Right. Right. Yeah. You’ve got a couple others on here. Talk about exercise. Talk about big picture judgments. Talk to me about that.

Catherine Gray 00:33:59  Yeah, yeah. So because the prefrontal cortex, it really zooms out and sees the whole picture. So say for instance, the experts that I spoke with. He said that the reason people in recovery. You know, they strengthen their prefrontal cortex is because he said to me, okay, so you liked getting high and you like being sober, but what do you like better? And that’s what the prefrontal cortex decides. Now I didn’t like getting high. I liked getting drunk but you know whatever. It’s the same principle. And where it really comes online is I want to watch TV right now but I have a deadline tomorrow.

Catherine Gray 00:34:42  It’s the decisions that really have a bigger picture in mind. You know the in five years time I want to or in a year’s time I want to. So one of the ways that you can you can use this is I don’t make vision boards because I can’t be asked to collage.

Speaker 4 00:35:01  And I don’t.

Catherine Gray 00:35:02  Want to, you know, get scissors out and cut out pictures of whatever. but I do. Every January I write a letter to the universe or whatever you want to call it, and outline what I want to achieve this year. And that’s a big picture judgment. That is that is me, you know, looking at the whole year and thinking, what do I want to do? You know, it’s not the here and now. It’s not instant. I want to watch Tehran. You know, I.

Speaker 4 00:35:30  Want to watch.

Catherine Gray 00:35:31  This new show on Apple TV. It really is thinking about your long term self. And the more that you can do that, the better off you are and the stronger your prefrontal cortex will become.

Catherine Gray 00:35:44  It’s kind of like weightlifting. You know, it just gets stronger and stronger and then it will be able to overcome whatever your, you know, limbic system and striatum are telling it to do so. One of the neuroscientists I spoke with, Alex, Doctor Alex Korb, he described, he said the prefrontal cortex is like the adult in the room. and I’ve extrapolated on this and made it, you know, the most responsible adult, you know, the one who owns packing cubes and uses them has three types of pension. You know, the one you invite to the pub quiz because they know about foreign policy, whereas the striatum and the limbic system, which really power all addiction and short term decisions, are like a dog and a teenager. And if you leave your striatum limbic system to the range of choices, they will run your life. So you.

Speaker 4 00:36:38  Really.

Catherine Gray 00:36:39  Need the adult to come into the picture and, you know, take control. That’s what the prefrontal cortex does. So it’s absolutely key to any sort of addiction recovery or management.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:53  Yeah. Yeah. The term I use for myself is I, I think about like I call it my wise or true herself. Like what’s the what’s the better version of me want.

Speaker 4 00:37:02  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:02  But a question and I was just writing about this because it’s I’ve got a section in the book on it that I find encapsulates this really well for me is what do I want most versus what do I want right now?

Speaker 4 00:37:15  Yeah, right.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:16  Because oftentimes we end up in this thing of like, I want this thing, this moment. I want that thing. But then there’s that, you know, I do have a deadline. Instead of realizing, like, oh, I really do want to turn my book in on time, that’s really important to me right now. I’m sort of giving that prefrontal cortex a little bit of emotional energy to use also because I’m recalling like, oh, that is that is important to me. I do want that. And I think that’s what a lot of these battles come down to is.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:48  They just come down to that basic. Yeah. What is it that I want now versus what do I want most? Yeah. And not everything is that way. Sometimes we get into values, you know, conflicts between our values. And that’s a whole nother avenue of challenge. But when we’re talking about these little addictive things, I couldn’t agree with you more. That basic idea of just getting enough resources to the parts of our brain that are capable of making better decisions.

Catherine Gray 00:38:18  Yeah. And it’s tough. It’s harder to to do that. So one of the things that I’m doing right now, is I’ve just set up a pension. Do you use the term pension in the States? You know, it’s retirement savings.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:33  Yeah, we would call it a retirement or a 401 or an IRA, but yeah, similar thing.

Speaker 4 00:38:40  Yeah, yeah.

Catherine Gray 00:38:40  Well, I’m only just doing that at age 45, which is absolutely too late. And so I’m trying to do battle with I love eating out. I love I love going to my gym and buying an overpriced salad and smoothie.

Catherine Gray 00:38:55  And I worked out that I’m spending, you know, £60 a week on these overpriced salads and Smoothie. I don’t necessarily really enjoy. So what I’m now doing is, you know, trying to trying to prepare, eat beforehand something tasty at home that’s nicer and putting that away for my pension. And it is the harder choice and it takes more planning and prep. But I know that future me which, by the way, one of the tips in the book, which I found really interesting, is that there was this study and it showed that if you see an age progressed picture of yourself, then you will double the amount you put away for retirement savings, which I found so interesting. So I used this app while I was researching the book to look at a picture of myself when I’m 70, and now I have it on my phone and I always think about my 70 year old me. And you know, she’s going to want to go on holiday. She’s going to want to eat out.

Speaker 4 00:39:58  Yep, yep.

Catherine Gray 00:39:59  So putting that money away for her is is hard, but it’s important.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:04  So I’d like at some point to get into some of the specifics, because you name a bunch of common tiny addictions in this book. Gaming and gambling, people pleasing, shopping, television. There’s more than that, and I’d like to get into some of those specifically, but the book kind of does two things. One is it sets up all right. Here’s the problem. Across all of these, here are some tools that you can use that are helpful across all of these. And then here are some specifics related to this particular tiny addiction. Are there any big picture tools that we that we haven’t really hit yet that you think are important?

Catherine Gray 00:40:46  Yeah, I mean, so something that I write about in the book is that dopamine detox and dopamine fasting is really overused at the minute. and It’s it started off as something that I think was well-meaning, but now it’s become very misrepresented. Everyone thinks that dopamine is a pleasure chemical, and that we like our phone because we get quick hits of dopamine while we’re scrolling through it.

Catherine Gray 00:41:16  And that just isn’t what dopamine is. So dopamine, like we’ve covered is about wanting, not liking. But it also gets us to do everything good in life. So, you know, create a beautiful family, family Christmas or write a book. You know, the irony is that is that you would never do a dopamine fast without dopamine.

Speaker 4 00:41:38  So yeah, there’s a whole chapter in.

Catherine Gray 00:41:40  The book which is which is about dopamine shifting, which I think is a much more accurate term. And re angling our reward system towards these slower social sources of dopamine, which don’t drag us into a deficit afterwards. And, you know, there’s a bunch of them, they’re very similar to the ways that we activate the prefrontal cortex in that they’re to do with delayed gratification. So it’s, you know, things like gardening or painting or writing, you know, with your hand or, reading, you know, anything that isn’t instant, that is slightly harder one. And that’s a huge way that we can do battle against the sources of fast release dopamine.

Catherine Gray 00:42:25  That is basically every little addiction listed in the book. So, yeah, that’s an overarching thing that I wanted to mention.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:33  And that is hard. I mean, all of these things are difficult because my experience is that what we try to substitute for the behavior that let’s say our thing is playing games on our phone or like, okay, I don’t want to play games on my phone. Instead, I’m going to do a puzzle, an old fashioned puzzle on the table, right? The slow, slower dopamine. The problem is that in the beginning, an old fashioned puzzle isn’t as stimulating. And this is the core problem of anybody who’s gotten over a big addiction. Knows is you’re like, well, okay, yeah, I’m doing these other things, but they’re a far cry from the high, you know, from getting high. And we’ve got to be able to stick with it long enough for our brains to change, for us to, you know, have more synapses in the prefrontal cortex for our our neurochemicals to shift.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:26  How do you think about bridging that gap? You know, how do you think about staying with something when our initial reaction is, well, this is not giving me what I need?

Catherine Gray 00:43:36  Yeah, I think that’s it’s a really interesting question. And I don’t think the gap has to be that large. So I know my partner won’t mind me talking about this, but my partner used to have a real gaming addiction with apps on his phone, and there were very simple games, things like balloon popping, you know, Or, you.

Speaker 4 00:43:55  Know.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:56  Solitaire.

Speaker 4 00:43:57  Yeah. Yeah, exactly.

Catherine Gray 00:43:58  Exactly. And so what he’s now done is and and this is, this has come from experts in the book as well, which he read and was inspired by, is he’s deleted all the games from his phone and he still games, but he does so on, you know, a big desktop with, you know, proper kit where, you know, it’s a proper console. so making that shift means that he has to go to a physical place.

Catherine Gray 00:44:25  The game isn’t always in his pocket, and now he’s playing games with more of a narrative arc, you know, like, the, the EverQuest and the. I think he plays God of War or something like that. so it doesn’t have to be so radical a shift. You know, something as simple as that. You know, moving away from the app. Games that are my expert described them. So professor Natasha Scholl, she was like there there repetitive ludic loops. These games like Candy crush and you know, they’re just they’re not doing anything. There’s no story, there’s no quest. You’re not taking a team and going off and doing something cool. And it was really interesting to me because a lot of my experts were gamers. In fact, most of them were. It reframed how I think about gaming, but only when it’s done in a physical place. They all did it in the same way at a console and played these games with the narrative arc, which I found really interesting. So you can still get the fun.

Catherine Gray 00:45:29  That’s the thing, it’s not about never gaming again, it’s just about doing it in a more deliberate way, in a way that’s more in line with your intentions.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:39  Okay, so we’ve got dopamine shifting. Any other broad tools that we should be thinking of before we get into some of the smaller, specific tools?

Catherine Gray 00:45:48  Trying to think, well, I think it’s about being Aware, so many people don’t realize that addiction is just learning, and some of my experts would describe it as disordered learning or maladaptive learning, and others didn’t use any negatives to preface it whatsoever. They just said, it’s a terrific example of how the brain has a hyper ability to learn, but it’s about repetition, learning in a repetitive way, which then becomes a habit, which then becomes an addiction. And so what we do in a row really matters. And oftentimes it’s just a matter of pushing through that discomfort, of doing something different in a row. And then it starts to bed in. You’re learning a new way of doing it, you see.

Catherine Gray 00:46:39  So for instance, with TV, I’ve, I still love TV. I’m always going to watch TV. It’s one of my joys. But I’ve time boxed it within 9 to 10 p.m. and that’s now become habitual so that it feels strange if I turn the TV on before that or.

Speaker 4 00:46:56  Watch.

Catherine Gray 00:46:56  It beyond that. And so I’ve learned a new way of watching TV. And I think all of us, if we if we’re given a chance and we don’t rely on sheer willpower like we were talking about earlier, and we make it as easy for us as house as possible, we can learn new ways of using all of these things. And that’s certainly what I’ve done while I’ve written the book. So yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:19  Excellent. So let’s talk about, I don’t know, pick one. Do you call them the sticky eight? Am I remembering that right.

Speaker 4 00:47:27  Yeah.

Catherine Gray 00:47:27  So the sticky eight are alcohol, nicotine and cannabis gaming. Gambling and porn. Our phones and ultra processed food. And then we’ve also got seven more.

Catherine Gray 00:47:42  So three of them are more behavioral. and people don’t realize how addictive these behaviors are, but they are procrastinating judgment and gossip and people pleasing. And then we’ve got caffeine shopping. let me see if I could remember them all. And dating flirting in sex, I think I’ve hit them all. so. Yeah, I mean, choose. Choose your poison. What do you want to talk about?

Eric Zimmer 00:48:11  Well, I don’t want to talk about caffeine. No, no, no. Well, I guess I should say I don’t want to talk about caffeine, because I certainly am physically addicted to it. I am certain, and I, I don’t do more than what I set out to do on any given day. Generally, it’s I’m not downing the 3 p.m. espresso that I regret later, but it is a it is a temptation. let’s see, we did gaming. Let’s do people pleasing.

Speaker 4 00:48:41  Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:42  Let’s do people pleasing.

Speaker 4 00:48:43  Yeah, that’s an interesting one.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:44  Not that I have any challenges with that.

Catherine Gray 00:48:48  So people pleasing is a really interesting one. So my psychotherapist that I spoke with very quickly corrected me and said it’s it’s actually falling. And it’s the fourth unknown sibling, largely of the survival mode family which is fight flight freeze for one. And obviously you’ll you’ll know about it because you’ll have interviewed people about it. But one of the reasons it’s so hard to turn off and we experience true withdrawal, like physical discomfort when we start trying to stop fawning, is because it would have ensured our survival. Back in the day, you know, even a hundred years ago, if you were ostracized by your family, for instance, you didn’t stand great chances of survival. So it is such an inbuilt urge to please our families in particular, which is why people pleasing is so acute there. but also our wider community, and that’s one of the reasons why social media is so insidious, because our wider communities have become our followers. You know, we want them to like what we’re doing. And that’s why when we post, we check, check, check to see if people like us like what we’ve posted.

Catherine Gray 00:50:04  And it’s being aware that it is going to be uncomfortable. And I’ve certainly experienced it in my whole body when I started saying no to things and pushing through that, because that’s the only way that we can change it. But the discomfort is real and it’s normal and it will go away eventually. Once you teach your amygdala, that it’s okay. one of my experts said the amygdala has to be open for you to change it. So the only way through is through.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:41  I love that. That’s really good. That’s really good that you can only work through that fear when you feel it. Is what.

Speaker 4 00:50:47  You’re saying. Yeah. He he.

Catherine Gray 00:50:50  Used. He describes it like a clam shell. You know, it has to be open and activated. You have to be, you know, in the situation where somebody wants you to laugh at a joke that you find really problematic and say, actually, I, you know, I think that’s funny. And that’s the only way you can teach your physiology and psychology that it’s okay not to do the thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:15  Well, that adds another brick to the wall of why avoidance is so destructive. Right. I mean, because avoidance is just every time you avoid something, you subtly send signals to yourself that it is something to be feared and you should avoid it, and then you feel bad about yourself for avoiding it. But, but what you’re also saying is that you don’t have the chance to realize that what you’re scared of isn’t that scary unless you actually face it and feel feel the fear.

Catherine Gray 00:51:46  Yeah. And do it anyway. And I mean, I would definitely recommend if people are trying to stop people losing or falling, that they start with baby steps and, you know.

Speaker 4 00:51:56  Start start.

Catherine Gray 00:51:56  With a WhatsApp, you know, or saying no over email before you tackle the the bigger, thornier topic of saying no in person. But once you start, it can be a little bit. I found that it was almost a little bit addictive.

Speaker 4 00:52:13  The.

Catherine Gray 00:52:14  The batting back and the saying no. And I took it a little bit too far.

Catherine Gray 00:52:19  and I had to walk it back and start saying yes again. So yeah, the people displeasing can be addictive too.

Speaker 4 00:52:28  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:28  Well, I don’t know, timing of episodes. So listeners, I don’t know when you’ll be hearing this in relation to something else, but a woman wrote a book about fawning called Ingrid Clayton, I believe, and Chris is editing that episode right now.

Catherine Gray 00:52:43  So fascinating. Can’t wait to hear that.

Speaker 4 00:52:46  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:46  All right. I think you had ultra processed food, right. Give us a couple tips there.

Catherine Gray 00:52:52  Okay. So with ultra processed food it’s again about being aware that there’s this bliss point installed. I mean that’s everyone knows about the bliss point. Now it’s that exact confection of you know fat sugar salt. That means that the minute we finish the last morsel, we want more, I found. So I’ve now shifted my diet away so that it’s 80% non ultra processed. And some of the changes were really actually quite simple. Like you can find ice cream that isn’t ultra processed.

Catherine Gray 00:53:24  You can you know most bread is ultra processed which surprised me. But if you buy bread from the bakery, even if it’s in store, like in the supermarket, and that’s generally okay, or it’s the organic baked beans rather than, you know, the non-organic. So the the changes that you can make are pretty simple. But one of the most surprising things I found out, one of the books I read when I was researching this chapter was by Doctor Kessler, and it’s called Food or Fiction The Truth About the Ultra Processed Foods Making America Sick, and I had no idea. So I knew about the gut brain connection. But there is actually a reward system in the gut. So I found that really interesting. And that’s one of the reasons we found we find some of these foods so compelling because they hit that reward system. so and many of the tips that my experts gave me were just about friction, you know, making sure that you don’t keep these foods within, within reach. It’s obvious, but it’s true.

Catherine Gray 00:54:30  And if you do want to keep them, then something that you can employ is called unit bias. So we see whatever serving of a food as one unit, whether it’s a Big Gulp or a tiny little, you know, kids can. So something that I’ve started doing if I want to have M&Ms or whatever, you know, I’ll put it in a tiny little bowl, the tiniest.

Speaker 4 00:54:54  Bowl I have.

Catherine Gray 00:54:55  You know, I have a family pack of crisps in the cupboard, but I’ll decant them into my into my smallest bowl. And I see that as one unit. And that’s really helped. And I also put ice cream, which I love, into a cone. And that’s meant that I, you know, I used to eat a quarter of a tub. Now I eat a sixth of a tub. And also identity change can be really compelling. so saying I’m not the kind of person who eats ice cream every night. So, for instance, once I started telling myself that, it became a source of pride that I don’t eat ice cream every night, rather than I can’t eat ice cream every night.

Catherine Gray 00:55:36  It’s so bad for me. I’ve got to stop that. You know, that small sidestep in meaning and language is just so much more appealing to our brains. But yeah, I mean, there’s a ton of tips in the book, but I can’t remember them all. But the way the way that I approach food now is completely different.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:53  As we wrap up, take one thing from today and ask yourself, how will I practice this before the end of the day? For another gentle nudge, join good Wolf Reminders text list. It’s a short message or two each week, packed with guest wisdom and a soft push towards action. Nearly 5000 listeners are already loving it. Sign up free at one. You feed us. No noise, no spam, just steady encouragement to feed your good wolf. Yeah, it’s become so challenging in how easy everything has become. Like I, I remember there was a point where I could say to people like, just, yeah, don’t have junk food in your house, but now, you know, you can have nearly anything delivered to you in like 20 minutes.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:39  You know, DoorDash will bring the worst of it right to your door. It’s it’s become harder to to engineer yourself out of some of those things. I do find food a fascinating one in how the palate really does adjust over time. I guess it’s similar to what we’ve said with other things in the beginning. My experience is a lot of these things are really, really hard, and then they slowly become much easier. Like when I’m not eating like a lot of processed sugar at all, I find it very easy not to eat it. Yeah. It’s just not really an issue. Yeah, but once I start, you know, once I start, the sugar monster wakes up and is is is ready to go. And a lot of times for me, it’s just getting through those first couple of days again. Okay, wait. Just stop. Like, I’ll go on vacation. When I go on vacation, I’m like, I’m going to eat what I feel like eating. And then I come back and I’m like the sugar monster is still hyper aware.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:38  In everywhere I go. Oh look at that, look at that. But after a few days he just sort of goes back to sleep a little bit and isn’t, you know, checking out every candy aisle everywhere I go.

Catherine Gray 00:57:50  Yeah. And it’s just about finding substitutes that that make you feel good. So, I truly used to eat ice cream every night, and now I’ve discovered that pear and yogurt, really hits it for me. It just feels. It feels decadent. And once I’ve had that, I’m not craving ice cream anymore. you know, it is these simple shifts, and it just it feels almost ridiculously elementary, but it does work.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:18  Well, it is trying to make the sort of changes we’re talking about. I think of it in two broad categories. The first I would call like structural. And it’s all these sort of tips that you’re giving around. Make it as easy as possible. Don’t have it in the house. Set up your environment to make it easier or harder to do it.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:35  Be specific about what you’re going to do. Think through your cues. Try and think through the habit loop that you’re in. It’s all this structural stuff and that solves a lot, a lot of problems.

Catherine Gray 00:58:49  Yeah, it’s about creating new normals. So one of them experts in the book, Doctor Kessler, he as soon as he sits down in a restaurant now, he says, please don’t bring the bread.

Speaker 4 00:58:59  Because.

Catherine Gray 00:59:00  They automatically bring the bread. And that’s just become a habit for him. And so he’s not going to eat the bread, you know. So it’s yeah, it really is just about installing new ways of doing things. And actually I spoke with one expert called Shirou Azadi, and she’s a behavioral change expert. And I said, look, I’ve got a real problem with biscuits. I just love biscuits. I could I could eat ten, you know, I want to eat three, but I eat ten. And she really turned it on its head. And she said, is there ever a time when biscuits aren’t a problem? And I was like, yeah.

Catherine Gray 00:59:35  I mean, of course, all the time. And she said, okay, so you’re not powerless over biscuits. You know, I want you to go away and reclaim that untapped power over biscuits. So I did I kept biscuits in my house for the following week and.

Speaker 4 00:59:51  Did.

Catherine Gray 00:59:52  Eat them in a moderate way. But what I discovered was I don’t want them in my house. I actually don’t want to have to even think about it. You know, I want to eat the odd cookie when I’m out and that’s it. I don’t actually want to entertain them and host them. So, you know, I think a lot of the time we we have more power than we realize than it is about reclaiming that.

Speaker 4 01:00:15  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:16  The thing with the biscuits is you are having to exercise self-control when they’re there. Yeah. And and that’s sort of like, you know, the first point being we get everything structurally as best we can. then we do need to rely on some self-control and learning how to work with ourselves in that moment.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:35  Some of the things you talk about, about how we shift back to our prefrontal cortex, it’s kind of having both those skills, the ability to pre-plan our environment and then the ability to, in the moment, resist temptation. But we’re going to have a lot better chance of doing that if we are at that moment far less. And your book does a great job of teaching us how to do both those things.

Catherine Gray 01:00:58  Oh thank you. And something that’s also really interesting is the shift from I can’t to I don’t. So I used to think I can’t have biscuits in my house because I can’t resist them. Now I think I don’t have biscuits in my house because I don’t want to have to resist them. And there’s been many studies that show that that is a compelling change. You know, the I don’t drink is much more attractive to our brains than I can’t drink. And that’s why that works.

Eric Zimmer 01:01:28  That that is a really valuable switch. Okay. I would like you to read as we close here, a section from your book.

Eric Zimmer 01:01:37  It’s on page 309 as a closing.

Catherine Gray 01:01:40  Okay. All right. We’ll do. Once you step into your untapped power, then not doing the thing can become more of a rush than the sugar or alcohol or nicotine or gaming or porn, whatever it was ever was. Because we pick it. You feel that small push of pride in your chest, that pulse of slow dopamine from what you choose to do instead, which sustains you for much longer than instant gratification ever did. It’s a home cooked protein breakfast rather than a shop bought sugary pastry. Our rebelliousness, our mischief, our kicks start to come from the not doing, and we don’t find ourselves as darkened as we expected to by the deprivation. We’ve reframed the refrain as the bigger, better choice for us. The reward from it isn’t the flicking on of spotlights. It is a steady, flickering oil lamp.

Eric Zimmer 01:02:36  That’s beautiful.

Speaker 4 01:02:37  I love that, thank.

Catherine Gray 01:02:38  You, thank you. I’ve really enjoyed this chat.

Speaker 4 01:02:41  Thank you.

Eric Zimmer 01:02:41  Yeah, I think that’s a great place to wrap up.

Eric Zimmer 01:02:44  Thank you so much. As always, until we do number six.

Catherine Gray 01:02:47  Yeah, absolutely I can’t wait.

Eric Zimmer 01:02:49  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity. But we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom. One episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

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