Date Yourself Instead - it’s okay to be depressed
Episode Date: October 17, 2022It’s okay to allow yourself to feel your feelings. Lyss tells the story of entering therapy and the lows she had to let herself fully experience in order to get to the root of her issues. The only w...ay out is through and Lyss talks about the loss and shock she felt before finding her purpose and reinventing herself. Don’t put off moving your body, trust the process & lean into what make you feel alive. Connect with the Date Yourself Instead Movement: Website | Instagram Connect with Lyss: TikTok | Instagram | YouTube
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Welcome to day yourself and set.
Day yourself and set.
What does it mean to day yourself and set?
I'm just gonna learn how to love myself and that's it.
A negative emotion only arises when you are ready to be free of it.
I read this line from the greatest secret.
It's a really amazing self-help book.
And it instantly resonated with me.
When I turned 28 years old,
I went through a really big turning point in my life. And it was a huge mental transformation that was super difficult on me. When I turned 28 years old, I went through a really big turning point in my life,
and it was a huge mental transformation that was super difficult on me. Every single
emotion that I had ever suppressed probably since childhood and every core memory that
I had pushed down and never really healed and dealt with, as an adult, I had pushed everything
so far in my subconscious, and now it was suddenly bubbling to the surface of my thoughts and driving me crazy. And it felt like I needed to go straight into therapy out of nowhere. It just hit
me like a ton of bricks and I was so caught off guard and I didn't know what was going
on. But suddenly every day I would wake up and have like crazy anxiety, all these crazy
emotions eating at me. And I needed help. It truly felt like for months, my thoughts were literally uncontrollable,
and I would do everything in my power to think positively,
and talk to friends, talk to family,
just try to distract myself and do whatever I could
to heal myself, but nothing seemed to be helping me.
And I was trying so hard to feel good all the time,
but I felt so heavy and so sad,
and I fell into a really big depression,
and I never really understood depression, like serious depression, until this turning point
in my life.
My mind was always all over the place.
I felt like there was nothing I could do to feel better.
I felt completely out of my own skin.
And the more self-help books I actually read, the worse I typically felt, because I was
trying so hard to just get my mind off of these emotions.
I wasn't actually directly dealing with any of them.
All of my biggest fears about myself and my future and my life and like a lot of things
that I never really addressed were just plaguing my mind and I couldn't escape them.
For the first time in my life, I could not actually just strike myself with work or with
a guy or with anything.
Like, they were just there.
The emotions were eating at me and I knew I finally needed to confront them and actually
heal them and deal with them.
When I entered therapy for the first time at 28 years old, I realized that a lot of my
emotional issues stemmed from childhood, but just from suppressing so many emotions that
I had never actually spoken about.
I was always for some reason constantly holding back my voice and afraid to truly speak my mind.
And the truth is, it's completely normal to have these emotions because we are all human
and sometimes we need to feel these emotions in order to work through them
and actually release them and let them go to ascend to a higher level
and to actually become a better person and a stronger and more resilient person.
The only way out is through.
That's what I took from this experience.
And sometimes going through a process like this can be extremely painful.
And I definitely empathize with people now who talk about depression because I thought
depression was really just being really sad and upset.
But it's not.
It's almost something that you cannot
control because there's just so much going on and so much happening internally, and it's so hard
to actually vocalize how you're feeling to someone else when you're actually living inside of it.
So I wanted to get into this episode by talking about how I dealt with my depression, anxiety,
how I dealt with this difficult time for me,
and also just share some of my wisdom and what I learned along the way.
So let's get right into it.
I started seeing a therapist in the midst of feeling like there was literally nothing
anyone could do to help me.
I was super doubtful.
I resisted therapy for a while because I thought I could handle everything on my own and I
didn't need anyone's help.
I do not like asking for help.
I'm the type of person where I just don't like burdening people with my problems.
I've always been that way.
I just bottle everything in and deal with it internally on my own because I don't want
to bring other people into my mental battles.
It could be really scary.
And yeah, I don't know.
I just love helping people and getting my own advice out there.
But when it comes to people helping me, I've always kind of shied away from that and avoided it at a whole cost.
I'd rather deal with the problem myself. But it got to the point where I really,
I really did need help. And I finally had to just let my guard down and be like, okay,
it really is okay to ask for help. If you're really going through an insanely difficult time,
it's okay to ask someone for help. So here are really going through an insanely difficult time, it's okay to
ask someone for help. So here are some things I took away from entering therapy that really
made therapy all worth it in the end. It's okay to feel. It's okay to go through a grieving
process, whether you're going through a really bad breakup or you just lost your job or you
lost someone close to you like a family member, just feel, like just feel, feel your
emotions and allow yourself to let those emotions take their course in whatever form they need
to take their course, whether it be crying, whether it be laying aimlessly in bed, whether
it be turning your social battery off and just not socializing for a while, like just
unplugging, whether it be a week in silence, and you're not really answering people's messages.
Even if that means not talking to anyone for a week
and playing sad music in your room,
it's so important to feel your emotions.
I used to try to play it cool
after something bad would happen to me
where I would just brush it off.
I didn't allow myself to heal through anything in my life.
I was just always bottling shit in
or distracting myself with something else.
So when I actually went into therapy, I just could not stop crying during my sessions.
Like the tears would just like flow out of my eyes without me even.
Like I literally could not control myself.
And I think it's just important to note, it is okay to feel your emotions.
So allow yourself to grieve and process things.
There is no shame in that.
And it's better to heal now and feel in the moment
than in six months from now or six years later.
Like truly, it will eventually catch up to you.
So just feel.
During this season of depression for me,
I realized a lot of the reasons I was so depressed
is that I lost my purpose and my meaning in life.
Like I genuinely did not know what my purpose was
and taking a step to actually navigate my purpose
and figure out where my passions actually lie.
And like, what my purpose actually is
was so crucial to slowly bringing myself
out of that depressive state.
When you feel like you don't have a purpose
and you don't know why you're here
and you're just waking up every day
not being productive or doing anything or working
towards a goal, it can eventually start to eat at your mental health.
Like, it's not to say like you can't take breaks
and like there's gonna be periods of time in your life
where you don't wanna work and like that's totally fine.
Like everyone deserves a break,
but I went through a significant period of time
where I really wasn't working towards anything.
And when you're not working towards a goal
or like some sort of purpose with meaning,
it can really eat at your mental health.
In 2020, I lost my job.
I used to be a travel blogger. For a lot of you who don't know this, I used to travel full time and make money shooting travel content
with my ex boyfriend. And not only in 2020 did mean my ex officially stopped talking and seeing each other like the relationship
Completely came to an end. But my career was also down the drain overnight, basically.
I had all these work deals lined up in 2020,
and obviously they all didn't work out
because the world shut down.
We were in a global pandemic.
So I had to figure out a new way to reinvent myself,
and I started to get super stressed out.
I just remember being super excited to take on the year.
I think a lot of people experienced this.
We all thought 2020 was gonna be the time of our lives,
and then it was like a shock to our systems.
And for a while, it really felt forced
to do any other line of work for me
because I had been doing this for five years.
I had been doing social media
since Instagram first came out 10 years ago,
and I had been doing the travel stuff
for five years straight.
So, to just kind of have everything come to a complete stop was definitely a shock to my
system.
So I had to find a new way to completely reinvent myself, and for a while it felt so forced
because TikTok came out, and everything was like dances, and I was like, I can't dance.
I don't know what I'm doing.
It kind of just made me reassess my entire life, and it was like, I can't dance. Like, I don't know what I'm doing. It kind of just made me like reassess my entire life
and it was a forced career change.
Like, I had to rebuild an entirely new brand
from scratch in order to make money.
I wasn't making any income.
Like, I literally made to be fully transparent.
I made $0.20 doing social media.
Like, I had to start doing other things.
It was a whole life transition.
It was just like the
start of my depression. I just remember that was really the start in the beginning of when this
all started to happen. Then I got into a relationship with someone new that ended up being a really toxic
situation for me at the time. And when we broke up, I fell into an even deeper depression. So it
was like one thing slowly on top of another thing, and then another thing.
And like, it was just like a domino effect.
I just remember slowly over time.
Like, it felt like my life started to fall apart.
I didn't know what I was doing for work.
I didn't know what my purpose was still,
and I lost another romantic partner.
And then everything was stripped away from me.
And I felt like I was pretty much left with nothing,
and I had to completely rebuild myself from the ground up.
Like I had no relationship, no career, no purpose.
Like I really did not know what the fuck I was doing.
I also wanna clear something up.
I think people assume just because you have
a large social media following,
you're getting like crazy brand deals left and right.
You're making millions of dollars a week.
Like I think people just assume that
because they see like high numbers on social media. And they're like, oh, every influencer is making crazy of dollars a week. I think people just assume that because they see high numbers on social media and they're
like, oh, every influencer is making crazy money at all times.
But it's so inconsistent.
This industry is very inconsistent.
It comes in waves.
So it's like an entrepreneur type of lifestyle where like one month you could be getting a
ton of work and a ton of brand deals.
And the next month you'll be getting literally zero and nothing.
And it's like, you're literally banking on brands to want to work with you.
So it's a super high stress thing if you're not used to like inconsistency.
I was pretty much used to it but during COVID it really got to the point where there was like
really not a lot of work coming in.
Like I'm just going to be real and it just took a toll on me mentally. And it was also like just trying
to figure out and navigate a new purpose and a new career path can really take a lot
on your mental health. If you're not actually ready to make that career jump, like I was
by no means ready to give up everything that I had built for myself. Like I felt like
I had built this entire travel brand and it completely kind of went down the drain.
Anyways, so finding a purpose,
I ended up somehow eventually in Mexico,
which I'll get to in a later episode,
I'll cover everything I did in Mexico.
It was an amazing trip.
And I did a spiritual retreat.
And during that retreat, I realized I wanted to help people
with their relationships and their lives and their problems.
And I wanted to actually help people
through the same experiences that I was currently going through.
I was like, no one deserves this type of mental pain.
It's so hard to deal with.
And I didn't know who to turn to.
I'm like, who do I look to?
That's my age or a little bit older.
That's been through this shit.
Like, I didn't know who I could look up to
that was just like me for advice.
So I was like, I need to become someone
that other young women and men can go to in times of hardship
and in times like these. Like, I wanted to step into that role young women and men can go to in times of hardship and in times like these.
Like, I wanted to step into that role
for the next chapter of my life.
And after the spiritual retreat,
I just felt like I had found some sort of purpose
and an end goal and set the foundation
for starting a new chapter of my life.
And that's why I created the podcast.
And by no means did this like revelation in Mexico
cure my depression overnight. Like, I didn't come back to New York and I was like, oh my god
Like I'm a completely new person even though I did feel a lot better
But I just created a new path for myself and I remember like once I
Ked into my purpose and once I was like this is what I'm gonna do
And this is why I'm gonna wake up every day that really did help me get out of bed and
Kickstart a new chapter of my life. The third thing that really helped me feel better at times was working out every day
Like I know I mentioned this before in previous episodes
But I cannot emphasize enough just like one or something go for a run
I know exercising is like not probably not a lot of people's thing. I really hate exercising
Like I'm in the gym all the time
But I still don't like it like the actual process of getting up and going is the hardest part
But once you're actually in the gym like you will not regret it even if everything in your brain is telling you not to go
You will not regret going to the gym and I always regret not going by the end of the day if I haven't worked my body
And I wasn't active and I haven't really moved I do end up feeling like shit because the gym creates a really
mentally strong foundation for you. Like lifting weights, I just feel like a boss. I'm like,
no one can stop me in the gym. Like once I'm actually there and moving and sweating, I'm like,
why did I, like why did I struggle with even coming here in the first place? Like, I always end up
feeling amazing afterwards.
We know it's so good for us, but when we put it off,
it's just easy to put off and say, oh, I'll go tomorrow,
oh, I'll go the next day.
And then it becomes a habit of just not going.
But once you make it a habit, I promise you,
it changes your actual reality around you mentally.
Everything mentally starts to feel better
when you're staying active and when you're
constantly moving your body.
Guaranteed.
The next thing that really helped me feel better was just trusting that nothing will
fuck up what's actually meant for you.
Seriously, you could do no wrong by making the decisions that feel right for you in the
moment, by trusting your intuition.
And if you're genuinely a good person, I really believe that nothing can fuck up what's
actually meant for you. The universe or God or whatever higher power you believe in is going to
cater to your best interests and support your journey and your growth as long as you're a good
person and you're making the decisions that you feel are right in the current moment. And if someone
had to make a decision for you, for example, if you're in a toxic relationship and that person breaks
up with you, good.
Trust the fucking process.
It's a blessing in disguise.
You deserve the world.
You deserve someone who's going to love you and all the ways you need to be loved.
And you don't want to settle for a shitty situation for the rest of your life.
So just trust the process and look at the pain as a learning experience.
And look at the pain as something to grow from and say, you know what, I never want to
get to this point ever again.
So I'm not going to tolerate a shitty person or situation in my life ever again.
Bye. And lastly, just fucking lean towards the things that make you feel alive and
that make you feel good and that make you happy.
If your ex didn't like the way you did your hair or the way you wore a red lipstick,
or he commented on your weight or had an opinion on anything or she had an opinion on anything
It goes both ways seriously do whatever the fuck makes you happy and tune into that lean into that as much as you possibly can
I always say this life is too short and we get so caught up in the bullshit and what our partners or friends or parents tell us to do and
No, like just do you. What do you want?
What are your needs for yourself? Who are you? Like, who do you want to be when you wake up every
single day? Do you want to constantly be pleasing everyone else for the rest of your life? It's exhausting.
Like, who are you without any opinions? Write it down if you need to process it. Who are you?
Like, once you establish your power and your self-worth and you were like,
this is who I am and no one can fuck with me, you will have a better experience taking on your life.
I can guarantee you that. Life just gets so much better and easier when you stop giving a fuck
about what other people's needs are for you. Attend to yourself, date yourself instead.
I hope everyone loved today's episode.
I did get a little passionate there at the end.
I'm just really passionate about these topics
because I know what it feels like
and I've been through a lot of shit as well.
And I hopefully can inspire some of you
to live a better life and just empower you and motivate you.
I love you.
Thank you so much for listening
and have an amazing day.
Stay tuned for the next one.
Thank you so much for listening and have an amazing day.
Stay tuned for the next one.