anything goes with emma chamberlain - standing up for yourself
Episode Date: March 24, 2022for so long i struggled with being a pushover and a yes man. i hated conflict, i hated thinking people could be angry with me, and i let people walk all over me. it sucked, and i know a lot of people ...struggle with this too. finally i had enough and started standing up for myself, and all those fears i had about how people would react never actually happened. so i’m here to help you guys out with the confidence to do it too, and explain why it’s the best thing you can do for yourself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. I hope you all are having a gorgeous day, a gorgeous, gorgeous, gorgeous day.
My drink of the day today is a bottle of water and a cold brew. Nothing, nothing crazy
today. I made my cold brew using the Chamelink coffee, cold brew, elephant bags. They're like these massive bags filled with coffee that you throw into
a mason jar, cover with water, put it in your fridge overnight, wake up and you have multiple
cups of coffee in the morning, kind of a gorgeous thing. Why do I keep saying gorgeous today?
That's my fourth gorgeous of the episode and we are 45 seconds in. You guys, this is scary.
fourth gorgeous of the episode and we are 45 seconds in. You guys, this is scary.
Anyway, those are my drinks of the day to day.
The reason why I have a bottle of water next to my bed
is because I woke up this morning,
it's severely dehydrated.
And the reason for that is that I don't drink water.
I don't know how I'm alive. I'm serious, I don't drink water. I don't know how I'm alive.
I'm serious.
I do not drink water.
It's so weird.
I just don't drink water.
I never think to do it.
I always forget.
I like drinking other things.
I just don't drink a lot of water.
And it's not good.
But today I woke up and felt genuinely ill. And it only took me
a moment to realize why. And it was because I hadn't consumed more than a glass or two of
water in the past two weeks. And so, you know, I'm just kind of hitting rock bottom a little bit,
and I really need to prioritize my water consumption.
Anyway, you don't care. You don't care.
Let's get into today's topic, which is,
how to be nice without being a pushover.
How to stop being a yes man?
How to stop letting people walk all over you?
How to stand up for yourself without feeling guilty?
All of this, all of this is today's episode.
I'm going to be giving some advice.
I'm going to be telling you about my journey as to how I stopped being a pushover, yes, man.
And why I think it's an important thing to work on.
And we all are on different parts of this journey in life.
You know what I mean?
Some people were never a pushover.
They always stood up for themselves.
They don't have an issue with this.
Some people struggle with this
severely on a daily basis and it controls their life and some people are a little bit in the middle.
So, you know, take all of this advice with a grain of salt and let's discuss. Let's discuss.
So, I want to start by giving some examples of how I used to be kind of a pushover and
a yes man in my everyday life.
A good example would be that I never used to enforce having people pay me back.
Like let's say I had good to dinner with a group of people.
And we would agree that we were gonna split dinner.
If somebody would forget their card
or forget their wallet or something like that,
I would always be the one that ended up paying.
And they would always say,
oh, I'll pay you back, I'll pay you back, I swear, I swear.
And then they wouldn't.
And when I was younger, I didn't have an income.
I was spending my parents' money when I would go out to eat with my friends or something
like that.
I didn't have a job.
So I'm not spending my own money.
And so when someone else doesn't pay me back, they're not paying my parents back.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, this wasn't my money to be spending, right?
So my parents would be like,
hey, like, can we be paid back for this dinner
that you paid for or whatever?
And I would be too scared to ask my friends to pay me back.
Even though, I know their family situation
they could have paid me back.
It wasn't like,
because I'm not somebody who ever has been like,
oh, I'm not paying for someone's meal, ever,
even if they need help.
Like, no, if somebody needed help
and they needed me to pay for their dinner
and that was the situation,
like I would do that in a heartbeat. Like I would do that in a heartbeat.
My parents would do that in a heartbeat.
No questions asked.
But if somebody just isn't paying you back
just because they don't want to
or they don't feel like it or they're too lazy
or they forgot, that's not an excuse.
You know what I'm saying?
There's no excuse for that.
And if it was a agreed upon,
then that's a fully different situation.
But I used to never ask anyone to pay me back.
And, you know, that didn't really directly hurt me and hurt my parents,
which is shity or for them.
But I just never could get myself to do it,
because I was so scared that they were going to get mad at me,
that they were going to think I was being annoying,
that I was going to be that girl that asked to be paid back and I just like couldn't bear to do it.
Another example of me being a pushover when I was younger would be, when I would be at
a store, let's say a Barnes & Noble. And I would be picking up a few books for school.
And I would be checking out and purchasing the books. And the cashier checking me out
would say, hey, do you want to sign up for a Barnes & Noble credit card, you'll get 10% off of your purchase now and moving forward,
you'll get coupons in your email every week, whatever.
I literally did not know how to say no to these things when I was younger.
If somebody would ask me that, I would not know what to do.
And half the time, I would use the excuse
that my mom didn't let me sign up for promotional deals.
But if that wasn't flying
and the cashier wasn't taking no front answer,
I would end up like signing up for things
and then having to like make my mom cancel the membership
so the credit cards or the loyalty programs later.
Because I could not say no.
Could not say no. I felt too bad and I was scared. I was like, well, what if like, what if, you know,
this cashier like makes a commission off of this and what if they're really struggling and I don't know and like blah blah
You know, and I was stressed out and I would feel so bad and so I'd end up just signing up for shit and then canceling it a week later.
I also feel like I used to let people take advantage
of my kindness a lot when I was younger.
Like, people would go out of their way
to ask me for a ride somewhere
or ask me to cover their dinner
or ask me to let them borrow clothes that me to, you know, let them borrow
clothes that they were never going to return back to me or anything in that sort.
Like, I think a lot of people used to kind of prey on me a little bit, not
intentionally. I'm not saying like, everybody was out to get me, but I think that
subconsciously, when I was younger, a lot of people
would take advantage of me
without even realizing that they were doing it
because they were like, well, Emma says yes to everything.
So let's just use that to our benefit.
Like, see how far we can test the limits.
I don't think anybody meant to do it.
I'm not saying that
because I don't think that anybody meant to do it.
But I think that it happened
just because people knew that I was such a pushover and such a yes man,
and I could not say no.
And I would do whatever I could to just please everybody
because I just didn't want conflict,
I didn't want drama, I wanted everybody to be happy.
And, you know, I'd rather inconvenience myself or
put myself out than to have any kind of drama, right? The reason why I was so adamant about being as accommodating to everybody as possible was because I was living in fear
of people being angry at me. And I don't know why that is, but I had this genuine fear growing
up of people being angry at me. I was constantly avoiding anger at all costs. And I also was living in constant fear
of people turning on me as well.
Now again, I don't know what that stems from either,
but I was living in this never-ending prison
in my mind where I felt like I couldn't stand up for myself.
I couldn't say no to anything. I couldn't say no to anything.
I couldn't make a selfish choice every once in a while
because if I did, then people would be angry at me,
people would turn on me,
people wouldn't wanna be my friend anymore,
people wouldn't wanna hang out with me anymore
and I would be alone, surrounded by people
who are angry at me.
And that was so scary to me that I just refused
to even try to stand up for myself
or try to say no every once in a while.
It was also one of those things where I had lived
my whole life as a pushover,
just letting people push me around, walk all over me, you know, take
advantage of me if they want, whatever. I had lived like that for my whole life. So I
didn't know what would happen if I tried to say no. I didn't know what would happen
if I tried to stand up for myself because I genuinely had never done it before. So I was
like, this is an unknown. And in my imagination, I've convinced myself
that if I shift my behavior in a way
that's a little bit more self-serving,
I'm going to be screwed.
Like my life will be ruined.
And I will regret it, right?
I think it also kind of relates to the
confidence and self-respect that I had as a child.
I think that I felt very
unworthy as a child. Just in general, I
think a lot of children feel like that, but I just always felt like I needed to earn
love and respect, right? like I needed to earn love and respect, right?
Like I needed to earn kindness towards me and respect and love towards me.
Like I needed to earn that.
And in my mind, I felt like, okay, in order to earn that, I need to be the most
agreeable, easygoing, yes, yes, yes person on the planet.
I didn't feel confident that I had enough to offer
to be able to say no every once in a while.
I felt like I wasn't good enough to say no.
I was like, oh, I'm not a valuable enough person
to be able to say no if I want to.
And I don't know why.
I think most young people don't think of themselves
as like the most amazing, perfect person on the planet.
I think most young people feel really uncertain
of who they are and really uncomfortable in their own skin.
And I think that's a common issue, right?
So I'm not saying that like this is like a very unique
to me sort of situation.
I think a lot of people can probably relate to that.
But I think that for me personally, that's why I was such a pushover.
But after years of being a pushover and just saying yes to everything and just trying
to please everyone and living like this, I found that it had some negative effects on me personally.
For one, it made my confidence plummet even more because as I continued to be a pushover,
people kept pushing me over and every time somebody would take advantage of me in some way,
or I would say yes, and inconvenience myself,
my confidence would drop a little bit.
I felt like there was a direct correlation between my confidence
and whether or not I told the truth when somebody asked me,
hey, can you do this for me?
Or, hey, can you sign up for this membership at our store
so that we can make more money?
Like, every time I lied to those people,
and I said, yes, I can do this.
Yes, I can do that for you.
Yes, I can sign up for your scam of a membership.
Sure, yes, I can do that.
And I lied to them. I would end up
feeling like shit about myself because I started to see myself as someone who was almost dishonest
because I was saying yes to everything when my real answer was no, I can't do that. Well, I could,
but no, I don't want to do that. You know, I don't want to do that. That's not something I want to do.
That's something that's very inconvenient for me
and something that I don't want to do.
Every time that I wouldn't say that,
which was my truth, right,
I would feel really bad about myself.
So that wasn't very good.
On top of that,
I started to notice that every time somebody would ask me for a favor or something like that, and I would lie and say that it was something that I wanted to do.
And then I would do that favor for that person. I would end up feeling angry at the person.
Let's say for example my friend and I are going to a party and my friend says, hey can I borrow
a pair of pants from you for this party? I don't want to let my friend borrow that pair of pants because those are my favorite
pants. And if my friend wanted to wear any other pair of pants in my closet, sure, but not
that pair because that is my favorite pair of pants. But let's say I said yes anyway because
I just wanted to take the path of least resistance and I wanted to be easy going and I wanted to be a yes man.
And let's say I said yes.
And then my friend wore those jeans, those pants, whatever, to the party that night.
Even though I'm the one that let my friend wear those pants, for whatever reason, I would
still find myself being angry at the friend.
Which is actually unfair, right?
Because my friend asked and said,
Hey, can I wear these pants?
I said yes.
As far as they know,
those are just any other pair of pants my closet.
They don't mean anything to me.
And then all of a sudden,
my friend notices,
why is Emma kind of being weird?
Like, why is she kind of like angry at me or annoyed with me?
I don't know, like, what could it be?
Like, I don't think anything's going on, like,
what's going on?
In my head, I'm all pissed off,
then I'm letting my friend wear my pants
because I didn't want that to happen.
But yet, this was a whole self-inflicted issue.
I could have just said, hey, you know what?
Those are my favorite pants.
I don't let anyone wear those,
but like, you can wear this pair.
I could have just said that in the moment.
And then I wouldn't be resenting my friend
and my friend would still have a great pair of pants
for the party.
You see what I'm saying?
By me being a pushover, I was then getting angry at others because I said yes when I didn't want to.
And that's not fair because that's not their fault.
I felt very out of control as well because I I mean, obviously, I felt like a spineless
idiot.
I felt like I could just be pushed around, you know, in any which way, and I didn't have
control over it because if somebody were to ask me if they could borrow a thousand dollars,
you know, I might say yes, even if I don't have a thousand dollars to give.
And that's, and feeling like I'm out of control of my own responses made me feel very scared
because I was like, I don't know how to handle these situations
that are uncomfortable.
I don't know how to say no, so I feel out of control.
I also felt like I didn't know how to protect myself.
I didn't even care to protect myself.
I just let people do whatever they wanted
to me. You know what I mean? Like, use my money, use my belongings, use my shoulder to cry on,
whatever it may be. And whether I wanted to do it or not, I was going to do it regardless.
And that was unsettling for me because it almost felt like I was living robotically and just
doing whatever other people told me to do.
And it just was not good.
Because in a way, I think that humans,
or at least some humans,
kind of have a split brain.
One side of your brain is your emotional side of your brain.
And one side of your brain is your more logical side of your brain, right?
And a lot of times your emotional side will say, well, I just want to help everybody and be nice to
everybody and do nice things for everybody. But then the logical side of your brain says, no, you
can't always do that. Sometimes you need to prioritize yourself. Sometimes you need to put yourself first, period.
And you know, you might have to say,
no, every once in a while.
You might have to say,
that's not gonna work for me every once in a while.
You might have to say, no, thank you.
I don't wanna do that every once in a while.
And that's okay.
But for majority of my life,
I didn't listen to the logical side of my brain as much as I should have.
In majority of the time, I was listening to, you know, the more emotional side of my brain
that just wanted to help people and avoid any conflict or drama.
The moment that I realized that something needed to change was that number one, I found
that I hated almost everyone.
I still struggle with this now.
I don't hate people, actually hate is, I don't know, hate's not a good word, but I didn't
really like many people. So I found myself in this period of my life where number one, I didn't like very many
people.
Number two, I avoided as many in-person contacts as possible.
Like for example, if I could order something to be delivered to my front door, I'm going
to do that instead of going into a store.
Unless it's a store like Whole Foods that has self-checkout, I would prefer to avoid
human-to-human contact.
And last but not least, people in my life were starting to say to me, Emma, you need to
stop saying yes to everything. Like people in my life were starting to be to me, Emma, you need to stop saying yes to everything.
Like people in my life were starting to be like,
this is actually a problem, and they were bringing it up to me.
And that was embarrassing to me.
And those three things combined made me have this realization
that I can't be living like this anymore.
And something's got to change.
I would say that like the first few months of really trying to be true to myself and
tell the truth about what I want to do and what I don't want to do was the hardest because
it was like trying something completely new.
I had never said no when it was uncomfortable to say no.
I'd always said yes.
And so I didn't really know what was going to happen,
right? When I would tell somebody that I couldn't really know what was going to happen, right?
When I would tell somebody that I couldn't help them out with something or that I needed
them to pay me back for that vacation we went on or that dinner we went to or that pair
of shoes that I let them borrow and they never gave back.
Like when I'd be asked to be paid back, when I would tell somebody that I was too tired
to go to dinner and I needed to cancel, whatever it may be, my first few months of saying
no finally for the first time in my, was very scary for me because I expected people
to be angry at me every time I would do it.
And every time I would do it, I was scared.
I was like, this is the time that someone's going to get mad at me.
But you know what I found?
No one got mad at me.
Nobody got mad at me when I would ask somebody to pay me back
when I would tell somebody that I'm too busy to hang out
when I would say that I don't have time to help them move this week
because I have too much work to do.
When I would say that I just don't have it in me emotionally
to talk on the phone at a certain given moment.
Like, when I started saying, no, nothing bad happened.
Everybody would just be like, oh, okay, no problem.
Every time.
I can't even one time when I've stood up for myself or asked for something or said no to something where someone's been angry.
I can't name one time. Nobody got angry. Nobody's ever gotten angry. And that gave me confidence. I was like, wait a minute.
People still want to be my friend. People still want to hang out with me. People still like me. People still think I'm a valuable person in their life, even when I say no.
Or even when I'm
Not a pushover. And in fact what was crazy was people actually started to respect me more And they started to one hang out with me more and people
just generally liked me more and
It was beautiful and my confidence grew because I was like,
you know what?
I'm a valuable person in people's lives,
even when I don't say yes to every single thing
that they asked me for.
Even when I stand up for myself
and I don't always let other people get their way,
they still like me.
Even if they don't get their way
with something in regards to me
Because I didn't want to do something. They still like me, you know
I'm not just a valuable person in people's lives because I'm a pushover. Holy shit. Wow. This is awesome and
It was a beautiful beautiful thing. It was a beautiful thing. I was like, wow, I mean, it was life changing for me.
And I think really what it all comes down to
when it comes to standing up for yourself in life is delivery.
How do you stand up for yourself
in a way that is respectful and kind and rational, it's all about the delivery because let's
use an example here.
Let's say your friend didn't pay you back for dinner and you want them to pay you back.
You have two ways of going about getting this money.
One way, we'll make your friend angry
and one way, we'll make your friend feel neutral
and they'll just be like,
oh, okay, yeah, sorry, I forgot to pay you back.
Okay, here's the money.
You know what I mean?
If you wanna make your friend angry,
approach them with a frustrated tone.
Be like, okay, dude, you didn't pay me back.
It's been a week and you told me you'd pay me back the night that we went to dinner.
You never paid me back.
What the fuck?
Okay, now your friend's gonna get defensive and be like, whoa, they're gonna feel attacked
and then they're gonna get angry and then there will be an argument.
But if you go to your friend and you say,
like, hey, I haven't seen the Venmo payment
come through for dinner last week, comma,
it's no worries, just let me know.
I mean, that's so chill.
That's a text message version.
Or in person, just be like,
hey, by the way, like,
no rush on pay me back for dinner, but
just, you know, wasn't sure if like you forgot
or the payment didn't go through or whatever, you know.
You can go about it in a way that's like nice, you know what I'm saying?
My favorite thing to do is be like,
Hey,
like no worries at all, but like,
I just want wanna make sure
that you didn't send the payment to the wrong person.
Like I'm looking out for you, but I didn't get paid back at,
so I'm just like wondering if you like paid back the wrong person
cause that would be so bad.
And like you need to check up on that
because you don't want your money
in some random person's bank account.
That would be so bad, right? Like I'm just looking out for you. But yeah, it doesn't show that you
paid me back. So you probably accidentally paid back someone else. Oh no, wait, that's so bad.
You're going to need to get that money back. I'm, you're welcome for helping, though, helping you
notice that. Like I still kind of like beat around the bush a little bit. Sorry, sorry, but
I still kind of like beat around the bush a little bit. Sorry, sorry, but yeah, as long as you deliver things
with kindness and rationality and peace,
nothing bad's gonna come of it.
And you standing up for yourself is only going to help others respect
you even more. And also help people understand what you are willing and are not willing
to do. If you're constantly lying to yourself and to others about things that you're willing
to do, then other people are gonna start to think,
oh, well, Emma doesn't mind driving me
to and from work every day,
because my car's in the shop.
Like, Emma doesn't mind doing that.
It's not an inconvenience,
because she keeps saying yes, so it's probably fine.
When deep down, you're like,
this is a huge inconvenience in my day.
I don't have the time to be driving this person
to and from work every day while they're
cars in the shop, but I'm doing it because I don't want to say no, and it's really inconveniencing
me and I've been late to work three times this week because of, you know what I'm saying?
Like, if you're honest with yourself and everybody else, good things will come.
And there's only good that can come from it. I think especially in relationships,
this is huge because I know that it's one thing to stand up for yourself in real life with
your friends, with your family, with strangers on the street. But it is the hardest to stand up for yourself
in relationships, in my opinion.
Because when love enters the equation,
you turn a little bit softer than usual,
a little bit more vulnerable than usual,
a little bit more agreeable than usual, a little bit more vulnerable than usual, a little bit more
agreeable than usual, especially in the beginning of a relationship.
I would say this applies in the beginning of a relationship for some,
throughout an entire relationship, it just depends on you.
But I know that for me, I was such a pushover in my first few relationships.
I said yes to everything and anything and everything.
I would help them out, do things I didn't want to do.
Agree with things that they would say that I didn't agree with.
Blah, blah, blah.
Just because I wanted them to continue to like me, and I felt like if I wasn't on the
same page as them saying yes to every thing that they would ask me to do for them, that
they would no longer like me, and everything would go in the trash can. But the funny thing was,
is that in my first few relationships,
the guys did not respect me, like at all.
And you know, they should have anyway,
you know, like it's like one of those things
where I was kind of at fault,
but also they were kind of at fault in a way.
They were at fault because you should just respect people, no matter what, period.
But I was at fault because I wasn't being honest with them.
And I was, you know, constantly agreeing with everything, blah, blah, blah, blah.
That doesn't demand respect.
When you stand up for yourself and you say, you know what, No, I'm not going to do that. And you make them work
around your schedule and your life like you do for them. Then that makes them respect
you because not only did I use to say yes to everything in relationships. But I also would go out of my way
to schedule my life around whoever I was dating.
So like, if a guy would say to me,
hey, can we hang out on Friday?
I would look on my calendar and see,
oh God, I have a meeting on Friday for work.
And I would reschedule that meeting just so that I could
respond to the guy at the time and say, yes, I'm free on Friday.
I'm just so that I wouldn't have to say, can we maybe like,
hang out another day?
I don't know what was wrong with me, you guys.
I mean, listen, nothing was wrong with me.
I was just scared of rejection and people being angry at me and people hating me.
Blah, blah, blah, blah.
But I mean, like living like that is not good.
Living like that is not good.
And I know that, you know, when you're in a new relationship,
especially, or you're just in a relationship in general
and you just happen to be more of a yes man type of person,
it can be really exhausting to keep up
the yes man persona in a relationship
and you're gonna end up finding yourself frustrated
and exhausted and it's just not a good thing.
A person that you're dating is not gonna stop liking you
because you say, I don't wanna do that.
I don't wanna help you with that right now.
I'm busy that day. Blah, blah, blah.
It's just not going to happen.
Like, unless you're being out of line genuinely in some way,
chances are nobody's going to get mad at you.
And that applies to relationships and the rest of life.
Relationships just being the rest of life.
Relationships just being the hardest of them all.
In my opinion, once you learn how to stand up for yourself, you truly do feel liberated.
And it's an amazing, amazing feeling, just to feel like you're only doing stuff that you really want to do in life,
and you're never inconveniencing yourself beyond what you're capable of.
And you have more time for yourself at the end of the day. You know, you have more time to focus
on you when you're not saying yes to every little thing that everybody else is asking
you to do all the time.
And your confidence will naturally grow from it as well.
And you'll just feel more true to yourself and confident in your own skin.
Now all of this is to say that we all have moments when we don't have the courage to stand
up for ourselves.
I still have moments like this.
There are still moments when I'm in a store and the cashier asks me if I want to sign
up for their membership program where I get 20% off a month and free coupons in my email every
single week where I have to literally force the word no out of my mouth.
There are still days when it's tough.
There are still days when somebody will ask me for a favor or will ask me to go to dinner
and I won't be feeling it.
And I'll say yes because I just feel bad.
There are still times like that.
I still have moments like that, but they're far and fewer between.
And I hope to eventually reach a point where I only do things that I truly want to do in
life.
Because I think that by doing that,
it just creates a happier life.
Being a pushover is only saying yes
when you want to say no.
There are gonna be a lot of times in life
when somebody asks you for a favor.
Somebody asks you, if you like something or not, someone asks you for a favor. Somebody asks you if you like something or not.
Someone asks you if you want to sign up for their membership at their store, there
are maybe moments where you want to say yes. So, you know, it's not like now that you're
no longer a pushover, you say no to everything. No, not at all. There are still endless opportunities to
say yes, to help people, to be agreeable in many ways. But it's just about being a little
choosier about when those moments are. Putting yourself first is very different from being selfish.
Being selfish is being careless.
It's rooted in anger a little bit more.
It's rooted in ego a little bit more.
It's rooted in
maturity a little bit more.
Being selfish is
not helping others
because you're too hyper focused on yourself
and you see yourself as the most important
person on the planet and nobody else matters, blah, blah, blah. That's being selfish.
But putting yourself first is just making yourself a priority instead of making everyone else
a priority.
It's kind of like splitting the difference. It's like, now you give yourself the same attention
that you give everybody else.
Instead of you giving yourself no attention
and giving everybody else all the attention.
Being selfish is like only giving yourself attention
and then not giving anyone else any attention.
Like almost not even seeing other people,
being almost oblivious to other people.
That's being selfish, but putting yourself first
is kind of putting everybody on an even playing field.
You and everybody else, and on a case by case basis,
choosing what's best for you and the other people.
You know what I mean?
I don't know.
Sometimes I go into these metaphors and it gets so abstract that like I even start to lose
what I'm like, what am I even really going for here?
What does this mean?
You know, like whatever.
All right, to wrap up this episode,
I thought we would do a little Q&A about standing up for yourself.
So I asked you guys on the Twitter at AG podcast
to ask me questions about how to stand up for yourself,
et cetera, et cetera.
So let's get into it.
How to know if you should stand up for yourself or if you're just being too sensitive slash defensive?
This is such a good question because there have been many times in my life when I've
been upset about something and I've almost brought it up.
But then I've taken a second to sit back and really think.
Am I upset because this person did something wrong to me?
Or am I upset because I got my own issues going on?
And if I sit back, give myself a few hours, maybe even sleep on it for 24 hours.
And I revisit the situation and I'm still angry, then I'll bring it up.
But more often than not, if I sleep on it, I might wake up the next day and say, you know
what, I'm not really
angry anymore.
Actually, I was just taking out my anger on this person and my frustration on this person
so that I didn't have to address the real issue, which could be a number of different things
in my personal life.
You know what I'm saying? So I do think that it's important when standing up for yourself
to make sure that you're coming from a place of calm as much as possible.
Obviously, if your boyfriend cheats on you, you can go
bang on his door and scream at him.
I give you permission to do that
because that's like the ultimate betrayal. Or if your best friend
like spreads a really evil rumor about you around the school and you know for certain that she's the one that did it again, you have permission to approach that with anger. But with something
that is a little bit less evil like forgetting to pay you back for dinner, or
something of that sort.
It's good to sleep on it.
And try your best to approach it with a cool, calm, and collected headspace, because not
only will that be received the best by the other person, but also
you can be more certain that you are
Acting out of rationality rather than anger. You want to be rational in as many areas of your life as possible
It just is it's better. It's better to be rational than emotional in most scenarios, I would say.
Yeah, I think I stand by that claim.
Again, I'm just a child when we really look at it.
I'm just 20.
Okay.
Sometimes I'm in the middle of giving advice and I'm like, who is listening to me?
Do I even know what I'm talking about?
I think I do.
I hope so.
Whatever, listen, all of this is a legend.
All of my advice is a legend,
but also I mean I stand by it.
I would say subject to change though, you know,
you never know.
Anyways, okay, moving on.
Somebody said, I have a friend who shared stuff
with my ex
that I didn't want her to,
and is now acting like it was what was needed.
How do I tell her it really wasn't without hurting her feelings?
I say, you know, you just need to have a conversation with her.
Maybe it's even shooting her a little text,
depending on how deep of a situation this is.
I'm not sure.
And just say, listen, I know that you had my best interest
at heart, but I just want you to know that the way
that you handled this situation hurt me.
And it didn't make me feel good.
And I want your loyalty to be with me,
rather than my ex, boyfriend,
because that makes me feel the most comfy in our friendship.
And I totally forgive you for this,
but I just wanted you to know that it made me upset
so that we can just avoid this happening again, period.
Somebody said, how do you get your point across in a way that it actually gets understood?
I think that this circles back to approaching a situation in a rational, calm way rather
than in angry, emotional way.
Because angry conversation never leads to any sort of solution. I know
personally when I'm being yelled at, I immediately stop listening or absorbing
information immediately because I just go into defense mode. When somebody comes
at me in a calm and rational way and explains something to me, whether it's a
really good thing or it's a really bad thing, I'm able to fully absorb what they're saying
because they're approaching me in a way
that does not feel like I'm being attacked.
So my defense doesn't go up.
I am receptive to information
when somebody approaches me in a cool, calm and collected way.
Also, when you're cool, calm and collected
and you're relaxed and you're honest and you're cool, calm, and collected, and you're relaxed, and you're honest, and you're rational, whatever,
you're better able to organize your thoughts.
When you're angry, your brain is like a jumbled mess.
So, that's what I would say about that.
Somebody said, literally, why is it so hard
to stand up for myself?
I honestly think it's hard because it's scary.
Most people don't like conflict. They don't like drama.
And saying no or disagreeing or standing up for yourself
is something that has the potential to cause conflict for
sure.
And if done correctly, most of the time it won't, but even if done correctly, it can still
cause conflict.
There is potential for conflict with every disagreement, with every no, with every instance
of standing up for yourself. But what it really comes down to is that short-term saying yes and being a yes man is the
safest bet.
But long-term, it's not.
Long-term, you'll lose respect for yourself.
Other people will lose respect for you.
You'll grow resentment towards people.
It's not worth it long term.
Short term, it's easy. Long term, not so good.
Somebody said, are you standing up for yourself if you're standing up for your ideas?
I would say yes. All ideas, all creations that come from you are an extension of you,
and standing up for your ideas is very much standing up for yourself.
Somebody said, how to stand up for yourself in a work environment while still trying to
remain professional.
Again, I think that this really comes down to delivery. I think in a work environment, you need to approach it in an even more rational way than
you do in your personal life.
Like imagine how you approach a confrontation with your friends in an ideal way, which would be cool, common
collected.
Now imagine that, but times 10, you're even more cool, common collected.
You're even more rational.
You've thought about it even more.
You've, you know, marinated in it even more.
Maybe you've written down some notes in a journal
about what you wanna say when you stand up for yourself
in this work environment.
Maybe you sat in the bathroom and took deep breaths
and thought about it.
Maybe you write it all out in an organized email
instead of going in and directly confronting the situation.
Whatever it may be, I think that the best way to handle
standing up for yourself in a work environment is to just prepare yourself even more.
And I think that that preparation will make you feel more confident.
If you have something planned,
if you have what you wanna say planned out,
and you're in a headspace where you feel
as cool, calm, and collected as you possibly can be,
then I think you're in a great spot.
Somebody said, how to stop feeling guilty
when I stand up for myself?
I think you need to remember that you are a valuable and amazing human being yourself,
because I know it's easy for some of us to put other people on a pedestal around us,
and we see ourselves as below everyone.
We see ourselves as less important. But that is not true.
We are just as important and special and awesome, I don't know, as everyone else. And so we don't
need to feel guilty for putting ourselves first sometimes because sometimes and for some
of us most of the time we put everybody else first. Every once in a while it's our turn
to be first in line to get what we want, to have our voice heard properly. Every once
in a while we deserve that. As much as possible we deserve that. You know what I'm saying?
And so you shouldn't feel guilty about standing up for yourself, we deserve that. You know what I'm saying? And so you shouldn't feel guilty
about standing up for yourself
because you deserve it.
Just like everyone else that you know does.
Okay, you guys, that's all I got for today.
Thank you so much for listening.
I hope that you enjoyed.
I loved hanging out with you per usual.
Can't wait to talk again next week again per usual. If you want to
subscribe to anything goes or follow anything goes you can do so on any place
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We have a lot of fun stuff over there, including the cold brew bags that I mentioned at the beginning
of the episode.
If you've stayed this long, I love you so much.
Here's my cat.
She's not making sounds.
So sorry about that.
You do not get cat purring sounds in today's episode. Unfortunately, maybe next episode, stay tuned for that. You do not get cat, cat purring sounds in today's episode. Unfortunately, maybe
next episode stay tuned for that. It's possible. It might happen in the next episode.
And what else? That's all I got. I appreciate you guys so much and I hope you all have an
amazing rest of your week. We will talk soon. Bye.
And I hope you all have an amazing rest of your week.
We will talk soon.
Bye.