Financial Feminist - 134. Small Habits to Change Your Life with Liz Moody
Episode Date: January 16, 2024“If you are stacking your day with so many habits and routines that you don't have any time to sit and just be or to enjoy your life or to play or to run into spontaneity, that's not wellness.” In... this episode, we explore how integrating small changes into your life and building small habits can help us lead richer, more rewarding lives. Our guest today is Liz Moody, host of the top-rated “The Liz Moody Podcast” and author of the book 100 Ways to Change Your Life: The Science of Leveling Up Health, Happiness, Relationships & Success.” In this deeply insightful conversation, Liz is sharing her own wellness journey, what she’s learned along the way, and giving us actionable tips we can use to cultivate meaningful change. Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://financialfeministpodcast.com. Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Changing your entire life doesn't work because, first of all, your entire life is not messed up.
There are parts of your life that you love, even if at certain moments you're not aware of that.
I always remind myself of that when I'm jealous of somebody,
is that I would never swap my entire life with their entire life.
And that always gives me a sense of perspective of like, oh, I'm not really jealous of that thing. Like, I'm not jealous of all the things that come with that thing. And it gives me a sense of perspective of like, oh, I'm not really jealous of that thing. Like,
I'm not jealous of all the things that come with that thing. And it gives me a sense of peace. So
first of all, you don't need to change your entire life. You're wonderful. You're lovable.
You have a lot of good things about you. So let's enjoy those first.
Hi, team. Hi, financial feminists. Welcome back to the show. Thrilled you're here. Thrilled to talk about
habits today in 2024 and beyond. But first, a couple of housekeeping things. You know the drill,
subscribe, rate, review the show. It truly helps us. There's a reason I say it almost every episode
and it's because we need your support for this show to continue doing well and continue getting
amazing guests. So
if you like the show, go ahead and rate and review it. Share it with your friends. Subscribe
to make sure you don't miss an episode. And if you have questions, comments, concerns about
money, about paying off debt or saving money or investing, our voicemail box is open. We would
love for you to submit your questions all about anything personal finance
or running a business or anything like that. Link below for you to send in your voicemail and we
might answer it in an upcoming episode. Today's guest is a friend of mine and truly one of the
best recordings for me in a while because I ask a lot of my burning questions that I have about these small ways
that we can change our life. And this is not going out and purchasing something in order to better
our life. This is not the TikTok shop version of wellness. This isn't over consuming or even
spending more money in the hopes that we can fix all of our problems. This is instead small, mindful actions that we
can take to actually commit to something that we're going to stick to for the rest of our lives
to make these things sustainable. And we talk in the episode about how a lot of times when we
say we're going to do something and we break it, how actually damaging that is because we've made
a promise to ourselves and then we've broken that promise. And so we're talking today about
small ways you can change your life that involve you spending no money and don't involve you buying
the miracle cure to your problems because of course that does not exist. Today's guest is
Liz Moody, who is the host of the top-rated Liz Moody podcast
and author of the best-selling books, 100 Ways to Change Your Life, The Science of Leveling Up
Health, Happiness, Relationships, and Success, Healthier Together, Recipes for Two, Nourish Your
Body, Nourish Your Relationships, and Glow Pops. Yes, that was three different books. Fucking
badass. She is a veteran journalist for publications including Vogue, Marie Claire, and Goop, an online creator with a social media following of more than a million who has helped
millions of people transform their lives, and the founder of Healthy Convo Co., a conversation game
company designed to facilitate fun and life-changing conversations. She sent me her
Healthier Together deck about a year ago, and it's been one of the best ways, or maybe two years ago,
it's been one of my favorite things to bring out at dinner parties to have conversations with
friends that are deeper than just, how's work going? How are your kids? And I also do them
with my partner and they're very, very insightful and enlightening. Liz previously served as food
director for MindBodyGreen, a leading wellness website where she led content strategy for the
food section. A regular speaker, panelist, and podcast guest, Liz shares her own deeply personal anxiety journey
that led her to where she is now, as well as actionable, fun, and science-backed ways for
everyone to lead their best lives. So excited for you to hear this episode about creating
these small habits for yourself. Without further ado, let's go ahead and get into it.
But first, a word from our sponsors.
We just got a place for the first time in three after three years of nomading.
Wow. Yeah, that's got to feel really nice and grounding. Wow.
It feels nice and grounding. It also feels very it's more anxiety inducing than I thought it would be because I think I used nomad life to assuage my anxiety in some ways. And being in
one place is trying those parts of me a little bit, but I think it's going to be great overall.
Cool. Yeah, I nomaded for a year and. But I think it's going to be great overall. Cool.
Yeah, I nomaded for a year and that was enough.
I was like, I'm done.
Did it for a year and about six to nine months in, I was like, all right, I'm ready for my
own stuff and a bed that's consistent and all of that.
I think that's a good thing to say, though, too, because I do think that people glamorize
nomad life.
And I think there's a lot of really tricky parts of it.
You're away from a community. You're away from routines. Everything feels a little bit more
destabilized. And I don't think people talk about that. You're buying new stuff all the time.
And like, yeah, it was just it's such a weird example that I give. But it was like I spices
like I had to keep buying paprika because it was like I'd be in the place for.
We traveled with our spices because we're insane.
No, but that's smart.
But that's a that's a personal thing on our part.
Yeah.
It was like, OK, every month.
OK, I'm in a new place.
I got to buy my paprika again.
It's another round of paprika.
Thank you so much for coming on the show.
I want to talk to you first about your career in the health and wellness space. You have a long career working from Vogue to Marie Claire to Goop and then Mind,
Body, Green. Talk to me about how much the wellness space has changed. It's changed and
transformed a lot in the last 10 years. So walk me through some of those changes and how they've felt.
Obviously, I think the biggest change that's happened in the media space, in the traditional
media space, is this transition from print media to primarily digital media.
And while that can have some positive effects, I think there's a little bit of a democratization
of voices that are able to be heard.
And that's absolutely wonderful.
It can also have some negative effects that I think we all are really feeling right now, which is that you constantly
need to write articles. The pressure on writers and editors to churn out articles, to get clicks,
to get traffic is so, so, so immense. And because of that, you're always looking for new angles,
new things to be scared about, new things to be excited about.
You're pulling tiny little pieces out of studies that maybe don't have any real world
significance because you need something to write about.
And I think we feel that in the wellness world as consumers where our heads are turning this
way and that we're like, do I need to be trying this?
Do I need to be eating this?
What should I actually be doing on a day to day basis?
Yeah.
this, what should I actually be doing on a day-to-day basis? Yeah. And I think also just the wellness industry in general has been highly commodified and at times very, I'm just going to
say it, at times very predatory. And I think very focused on a lot of the green juice form of
wellness, not how to actually take care of yourself. So tell me a little bit about that
transition in the last
decade, too. Well, I always say two things. One, wellness is a tool. It's not an end unto itself.
So the second that wellness is making your life worse, it's no longer wellness. If you are
suffering in the name of getting well, if you are not going out to dinner with your friends because
you're afraid there's not going to be something cooked in the right oil on the menu.
If you are stacking your day with so many habits and routines that you don't have any
time to sit and just be or to enjoy your life or to play or to run into spontaneity, that's
not wellness.
So I always, always tell people to look out for the times when wellness tips and wellness
is actually making your life worse and you're suffering more as a result of trying to suffer
less.
The other thing that I always say is to be really, really careful with figuring out your
why behind anything.
This is one of my first tips in my book because it is so, so important.
You need to know the reason for every habit,
everything that you're purchasing, supplement you're consuming. You need to know the reason
behind that and what your goal with that thing is. Otherwise, we so quickly bloat our medicine
cabinets, our pantries, our daily routines with things that aren't a good fit for us.
And we run out of time to do the things that actually matter and money to do the things that aren't a good fit for us. And we run out of time to do the things that actually matter
and money to do the things that actually matter to us.
So for me, I'm always working on my mental health.
Anxiety is something that I've struggled with
for a really, really long time.
My routine is really designed around
how does this help me mentally feel the way
that I want to feel every single day.
But somebody who doesn't have the same mental health struggles
who maybe has an energy struggle or a gut health struggle or they feel lonely and they really want to work every single day. But somebody who doesn't have the same mental health struggles, who maybe has an energy struggle or a gut health struggle, or they feel lonely and they really want
to work on their relationships, their routines and what they're purchasing and what they're doing on
a day-to-day basis, it's going to look so, so different. So I'm always telling people,
ask yourself why. And the why cannot be because an influencer does it or because society has told me
that I need to be thinner and take up less
space and that will make me have more value in the world. You really need a why that is going to
resonate with you. Otherwise, you won't stick to something. I think that's a huge thing that people
run into when they're going to the gym or trying to eat differently because they want to look a
certain way. And then you ask them, well, how do you think your life would actually be different if you looked differently? And they don't have a real answer
for that because they know that everybody who loves them is going to love them regardless.
They're not loving them because of a lack or a bounty of cellulite. You know what I mean? And
so you need a why that is like, I'm going to work out so that I have more energy. I'm going to eat
well so that I can feel the way that I want to feel. And that's so much easier to stick to. Just plus one on all of that.
Could not agree more. I think I also my follow up question to that. You said, you know, if you're
doing something just because an influencer is telling you to do it, that's not a good enough
reason. Let's talk about the overconsumption in the wellness industry. We joke our team,
her first inKs team,
like I think every other TikTok we see now
has a little TikTok shop thing of like,
this is the thing that you need in order to change your life.
And then you're suddenly like, do I need this thing?
So talk to me about overconsumption
in the way that products are offered as solutions.
How do we just stay mindful of that
and mindful of the temptation?
And I'm asking for myself as well, when I buy a product and I'm like, cool, this will change my entire life and make me
a new person. That's not realistic. So talk to me about that. I think it's about being mindful about
where the information that you're getting is coming from and what are the motivations of
anybody who's giving you that information. That's really important for media literacy in general when we're talking about
misinformation spreading about political things or world events, but also with shopping, literally,
who is giving me this information and what do they stand to gain from me having this information?
I'm incredibly proud of the fact that in my book, you don't need to buy anything
to do a single one of the 100 ways to change your life. I'm very, very firm on the fact that we have
all of the tools that we need to live our best lives. We just need to know how to utilize them.
But on social media, they make their money off of having us buy products. That's a huge, huge, huge part
of the financial strategy for these large social media companies. And so obviously,
like TikTok shop, they're pushing that because that's a huge strategy for how they're making
their money right now. And I think that there are certain things that you can purchase that
will make your life better. I jokingly talk about how I bought a $70 pregnancy pillow when I'm not
pregnant and don't plan on being pregnant. And I love that thing. Fucking love my snoogle. But there's other things that I've bought
that like don't make my life any better. And that I did buy expecting to like fix all my problems
and fix my life because I was trying to fill some sort of emotional void. And yeah, it was feeling
gross about my body or gross about, you know, me not working out. And so I'm like, cool, I will buy a bike desk. Like that's a thing I bought in the pandemic. Like, do I still use it
occasionally? I actually used it this morning. But I can I tell you the last time I used it
other than this morning? Probably not. Well, and I think that if you ask yourself the finder,
why thing is so applicable to like, because I'm not getting very much movement into my day,
I'd love to be able to build more movement in. But this is all I have time for right now. I'm not getting very much movement into my day. I'd love to be able to build more movement in, but this is all I have time for right now.
I'm going to get a bike desk.
I think if you're looking through as TikTok shops are coming up
on your feed over and over, instead of just being like,
ooh, ooh, ooh, because that's just preying on you getting that quick dopamine hit.
And there are other ways to get that dopamine hit.
There are other ways to bring your dopamine into more of a state of balance
so that you don't need that quick dopamine hit. There are other ways to bring your dopamine into more of a state of balance so that you don't need that quick dopamine hit. But I think if you're always confronting those moments
with awareness, you're going to purchase really different things. Totally. So you mentioned your
book. Your book is called 100 Ways to Change Your Life. I thought it'd be fun to go over a couple of
the key areas and the chapters that stood out from the book and break those down, especially as the
whole like New Year's resolution
excitement starts to wear down. But first, let's talk about your thesis for why you wrote the book.
I wrote the book for a number of reasons, some of which were deeply personal. So I changed my
own life and I did it through incremental research back steps, much like the ones that I present in
the book. There was a period of time
where I was experiencing really extreme levels of gorophobia. I could not get out of bed without
having panic attacks for months. And there was a point where I was like, if I have to be this
uncomfortable in my body and my mind for the rest of my life, my life is no longer worth living. It was a real horrible period for me.
And I like talking about it because during that period, it was so important for me to find other
people who had been where I was and were living lives that seemed full and thriving and rich to
me. So it's very important to me to constantly say I was there and I am now here so you can be there too to anybody else who might be there. But when I was
laying there in bed, when I couldn't get out of bed without having panic attacks, I'd been a
journalist for a really long time at that point. So I was laying there with my head on my pillow
and my computer like propped up next to me. And I started emailing experts because that was the
only thing that I really knew how to do. I started finding expert sources and I would ask them, what is happening when you get anxious?
Where's that located in the brain? What's happening when you have a panic attack? How
does food impact anxiety? And I started to put together a plan for myself. And to be fair,
not everybody wrote back. I was emailing the the head of neuroscience at Stanford and like all these people.
I really is a real never be the one to say no to yourself, which is another one of my
life mottos moment.
But a good handful of people wrote back and I was able to cobble together this plan.
And when I started to do these things, my life started to change, not overnight.
There was not a, oh, my gosh, I woke up and I'm a different person and I still have anxiety and I want to be really open about that.
But little by little, I started to piece together a life and piece together a state of mental
health where I could get out of bed, where I could walk downstairs, where I could go
around the block, where I could go out to a lunch outside, where I had easy access to run home if I needed
to with a friend. And that laid the foundation for the life that I live now. So I have this very
personal motivation. And then I have this other motivation, which is that there's all of these
amazing books out there that talk about things like your gut health or your hormone health or
your friendships or your relationships
romantically or things like that, but they tend to exist in a silo. And I think all of those books,
all of those resources are so, so, so important. But I wanted to make the connection of your gut
health, your microbiome, say, is impacting your mental health via the gut brain axis. We know
this. This is well researched. Your mental health is impacting the way that via the gut-brain axis. We know this. This is well-researched.
Your mental health is impacting the way
that you're gonna show up at work,
show up in your relationships.
The way that you show up at work,
show up in your relationships
is going to impact your stress levels,
which is going to impact your microbiome.
It's all connected.
So I have 18 different categories in the book.
You don't have to go through all of them.
You can do them piecemeal.
If one week you're feeling really lonely, you can flip to the section about how to make
your relationships better, how to make your friendships better.
If another week you're having gut struggles, you can flip to that section.
But by having all of the resources, you're able to make your life better from a holistic
perspective and people will be able to see better results.
I love this idea of viewing things truly holistically, because one of the things that make your life better from a holistic perspective and people will be able to see better results.
I love this idea of viewing things truly holistically. Because one of the things that I've, and this is the classic thing where I literally have just opened another tab to order
your book, is like I am realizing in my own life, I worked with an energy coach for a couple years
and I was not a woo-woo type person and that felt ridiculous. But I was very similar to your story
in a different way. Like I
was really emotionally struggling and at a really low point in my life in late 2020 and grieving a
lot of shit. And I didn't know what to do and was like, okay, I haven't tried this. Let's see what
happens. And one of the most beneficial things I learned from that is truly how connected our
brains and bodies are. And I've always been the person that's like very cerebral and makes decisions based on what my brain thinks, but also has a very good gut instinct
and yet was not realizing that these things have to correspond together. And that every time,
you know, I have pain somewhere, it's my body trying to tell me something, but also that,
you know, not all of my decisions have to be made logically.
They can be made with and through my body.
And so, you know, what you just said is something that I think that I've started to learn and
want to learn more about of how all of these things are interconnected and how when we
feel a certain way, our body carries it.
And when we when we're in a particular mindset, it changes how our
bodies react to things as well. So I just appreciate all of that. I have so many thoughts on that. My
first thought is 2020 is when your career was really taking off, wasn't it? Uh huh. I just find
that so interesting. So many of the most successful people that I know in the moments where everybody
is jealous of them, everybody is like, I wish I
was where she is. That's often the moment they're struggling the most. And I really like daylighting
that because it gives a little peek behind the curtain. And I think it can make the rest of us
who are sometimes on the outside being jealous feel a little bit better. Yeah, it's something
that I'm not sure when we'll release the episode, but I recorded an episode about my grief experience during that time.
And yeah, publicly, I talk about like very publicly, we were killing it.
Like nothing, things were going great.
Privately, I was crying on the bathroom floor all the time and feeling completely and totally
numb and not suicidal, but just questioning if I was ever going to feel joy again.
And as a joyful person, that was one of the most terrifying things I've ever experienced.
Yeah. I don't want to dive into that too far, but I do think there's an interesting thing
that happens, especially when the outside world starts validating you immensely.
And then you almost are like, become a little bit reliant on that and it can make your internal
validation a little bit trickier and I've noticed that with a lot of people whose jobs offer a lot
of outside validation that they're really struggling with that internal validation and
it can make life feel really hard oh I mean anybody who knows me really well personally
knows I'm a little validation monster I'm just like I'm words of affirmation. I'm like, if you want to tell me
anything nice, I will just eat it like Cookie Monster. Just like, but yeah, that's a whole
other conversation. Yeah, that's a whole other conversation. The other thing I will say is that
there's a great research that I share in my book that's I believe it's London Stock Exchange
workers. And it essentially showed that they were able to make more money if they were able to tap into the signals that their body was giving them. So if they could sense their body,
they could sense their gut, they could sense their heart rate, things like that,
they would literally make more money on the stock exchange. And it's a really wonderful
research example of how tapping into your body's intelligence literally can be validated from a
fiscal perspective.
It's not just like, oh, trust your gut, trust your intuition. It's not really woo woo. It is
proven that that has huge, huge benefits. And learning how to do that is one of the most
powerful tools that we can have. So we talk about in the book, tuning into your body signals after
you make a decision, literally writing down how you feel in your body. And then later,
when you see how that decision pans out, revisiting those feelings and say, oh, what were those
signals of?
Like literally training yourself to tune into your body on a regular basis can help you
tap into a type of intelligence that is really, really helpful.
Can we talk more about that?
Because when we discuss body intelligence and understanding that, I can hear that and know that sometimes I'm good at that. Other times I'm really good at gaslighting myself or I haven't been in tune with my body for years. And so I don't know how to actually get there. Talk to me a bit. And if there's a listener out there who's also wondering, like, how do I actually make that mind body connection?
And how do I trust myself when I do feel that way?
I have a few tips for this, and I am definitely there as well.
I think it's incredibly hard for all people, but especially women who have been fed messages
from the second that our eyes are open about who we're supposed to be, what we're supposed
to feel on a moment to moment basis.
Of course, it's going to be hard for us to listen to ourselves. How are we supposed to differentiate
our own voices when we have never had a single moment where we get to just hear our own voices?
So a few things I think are really helpful. One, you mentioned self-trust. I think that self-love
and self-trust really go hand in hand, and those are built from keeping tiny
promises to ourselves. It seems very simple as a concept, but if you look through your day,
I bet most of our days are littered with a string of broken promises. This looks like,
I'm not going to look at my phone first thing in the morning. And then you roll over in bed,
and you're feeling kind of groggy, and you don't really want to get up and you reach for your phone. You're
like, it's fine. I deserve it. I'm going to just look at it this time. That's a broken promise to
yourself. That is you diminishing your trust in your own word and your ability to trust yourself.
It's connected to self-love because then later, if you're saying, I love myself, I believe in
myself. I know I can make this decision.
I know the right choice.
Like you've broken that trust.
Why would you listen to that voice?
So I think one of the most helpful pragmatic things that we can do to build this relationship,
because I need pragmatic steps.
People are like, trust your gut.
I'm like, right, right, right, right, right.
Like, OK, where is that again?
And like, how do I do that?
But the most pragmatic thing we can do is notice or even intentionally make these small promises to ourselves and then keep them and if
you find yourself breaking them day after day after day set the bar lower if it's not I'm going
to go to the gym every single day it's I'm going to walk around the block every day if it's not
I'm going to meditate for 20 minutes it's I'm going to meditate for 20 minutes. It's I'm going to meditate for two minutes. Do it until you can keep the promise to yourself. You can
build that foundation of self-trust and then you can amp up the habits that you want to have.
And you can amp up your ability to tap into your gut to figure out what you want in this world.
If you're not watching on YouTube, Liz just read me for fucking filth. Jesus Christ.
list just read me for fucking filth. Jesus Christ. It's so funny you say that because right before we hopped on this podcast, I ate lunch and I had a like mini lunch at 1130.
And then I knew I was going to have calls. So then I had a bigger lunch. And after mini lunch,
I had my chocolate for the day. And then I said, no, we're not going to have any more chocolate
because you had like half a chocolate bar and that's enough. And then what did I do? I had more chocolate, which is not a bad
thing, but I had already had chocolate. I didn't need more chocolate. The thing is, it's not a bad
thing inherently. It's a bad thing because you told yourself that you weren't going to do it.
Right. And then this morning I had signed up for a bar class at 7.15 in the morning,
which I don't normally do because it's too early. And last night I was like, nope, I'm not going.
I'm not gonna do it.
I think, and that's a great example
of your gut was trying to tell you something.
Your gut was saying, that's too early.
I don't do bar classes.
Even the way you explained that to me,
you're like, I don't do bar classes that early.
That's true.
But you're trying to become the type of person who did that.
And so that's fine.
I completely am on board with evolution and transformation.
And I don't think that we're fixed i think that i believe very strongly in a growth perspective in a carol
dweckian sense but i think you can set the bar lower maybe you put on a bar youtube right for
15 minutes and you do that right roll out of bed in your pajamas which is what i was supposed to
do that was the happy medium i was supposed to do. But then I sat in bed and watched Survivor instead, which was also great. Outlive, outplay, outlast. Yeah,
yeah, baby. But it was not the thing that I had intended on doing. So, you know, okay.
And I think we have to be gentle with ourselves too. Totally. No, but I love what you just said,
which is if it is a promise, I think the difference is if I had said to myself,
But I love what you just said, which is if it is a promise, I think the difference is if I had said to myself, you are a bad person and you are gross.
So you don't get chocolate.
Like that's a punishment.
That's not a promise.
It is Tori.
Hi, I love you.
And you had some chocolate already because that's what makes you happy. And that's what you wanted.
But you don't need to eat the entire chocolate bar.
Like you're OK.
You don't need to eat the entire thing.
And now I didn't.
But I ate more than I promised myself. And I think that that's the difference is
it's like, I'm not shaming myself or I'm not like punishing myself, but I have made a promise. And
I really appreciate that. I've never heard it phrased that way of like, I've broken a promise
to myself. And going back to what we talked about earlier, I think this is why finding your why is
so important because it is so much easier to keep those promises to yourself if you know the motivation behind those
promises and if that motivation actually resonates with you and isn't just something that you've been
told that you should do. Right. Well, I'm going completely off script here but then my next question and this is a personal
question as well is i get caught in the treat mindset which is like life is hard and you
deserve a little treat and i completely agree and i will treat myself but then it's like my
fourth treat of the day and like i don't know if I needed four treats but like that's the
justification is it's just like life's hard you get to have more chocolate and so we're not we're
gonna love ourselves and we're gonna give ourselves more chocolate even though we don't really need
that I don't know am I asking you to fix my life kind of but like I'm here what what is the balance
there right what's the balance there because it's like yes we deserve treats and we
shouldn't be punishing ourselves but also we want to hold ourselves to a higher standard i don't know
i think what we've been sold and what you're talking about is a false dichotomy that treats
are treats because they're not inherently good for us and i don't think that that's true i think
that there's a lot of ways that we can treat ourselves that will make us feel
good now and make us feel good later.
So from a really pragmatic perspective, I would ask what treats make you feel really
good in this moment and genuinely feel rewarding and feel good later?
That's a real question.
Washing survivor in bed.
That was honestly really a really lovely way to start my day as I woke up earlier than I normally do. And I think that's beautiful.
That can say to yourself, like, I'm not rushing around right now. That can say I deserve a moment
for of peace before I'm jumping into my day. I think treats can look like different things for
different people. So one, I would say, let's try to build a life that we're not trying to escape from
so that our treats can feel genuinely fulfilling instead of like some type of escapism.
And if your treats are consistently a type of escapism, I think then it's time to step
back and look at the life that you need the treats to get through.
And then beyond that, I would say, can we evaluate this false
dichotomy of treats have to be things that are essentially bad for us or make us feel worse
later? Because I think that a lot of treats can feel really good now and taste really good now
and feel really good later. Well, you talk about in your book, this idea of temptation bundling.
Can we talk a bit about that?
Yeah.
Temptation bundling is based off the work of Dr. Katie Melkman.
She is a Wharton professor.
She is absolutely amazing.
She studies behavioral change.
So temptation bundling is a really wonderful way to get yourself to do the things that might be a little bit harder to do.
And it is via little treats.
So this is a great way to use your little
treats. It actually can cut back on using the treats and times that you may not want and use
those treats to get to what you want to do. So what you do is you take the things that you dread
doing, but you know that you need to do things like folding laundry is one for me. I don't have
that many chores. My husband does far more of the household labor, but my one chore is laundry and I
still am terrible at it. So what I do is you take the thing that you hate the most and you bundle
that with the thing you love the most. And this can't just be, I like listening to podcasts,
so I'll listen to a podcast while I fold my laundry. This needs to be, I reserve my favorite podcast. I only listen to her first 100Ks podcast when I am folding my
laundry. So you are saving that podcast for the time that you're doing the thing that you don't
want to do. Maybe you have a favorite snack. You only eat that snack when you're doing your email
inbox clearing once a week or something like that. Although I'd really like if you ate your snack
mindfully. But things like that. You're taking the thing you hate the most and you're combining it
with the thing that you love the most. And you're only doing the thing that you love the most during
the time of the thing that you hate the most so that you are motivated to do it.
Right. Maybe it's listening to your favorite album while looking at your money.
Yeah. Honestly, that's a great association.
And I think that we have so many negative associations with money that we need to
tip the balance on. And I love the idea of being in a really beautiful, relaxing environment or
listening to a really wonderful album, things like that, that make dealing with your money
a beautiful
sensory experience. I think there's something really lovely about that.
Well, and I like the idea too of it's the thing that it's only that, right? Because I can go,
oh, I like listening to podcasts and I'll do it. For me, it's taking out the trash.
And my partner knows this, taking out the trash and the recycling. I refuse to do it. I hate it.
And so he will often come in and do it for me because I hate it so much and so yeah it's not just like oh I'm gonna
listen to podcasts but I cannot listen to the Liz Moody podcast I can't listen to maintenance phase
I can't listen to whatever podcast I'm looking forward to unless I'm doing the thing that I know
I need to do even if I hate it imagine if you could only watch Survivor when you were doing
something that you absolutely hated right okay but question. Does that make me hate Survivor
then if I'm doing the thing that I hate? Or does it on the flip side make me actually love the
thing? It hasn't for me. Does it make me love taking out the trash? Because you're doing the
thing you hate. Like that's the thing is like I feel so good after I fold the laundry. I feel
like I'm finally a contributing member
of my household.
And so the fact that my favorite podcast can get me there
or an episode of Real Housewives of New York
can get me there, it makes it even more wonderful.
And I actually think saving things,
having things not constantly available to the us
increases their value in our minds.
That's something that marketers use
over and over and over again. So I think the idea, oh, I can only engage with this media
when I'm doing this thing actually would increase its value, not decrease it.
Well, it's something you look forward to, which is the idea of treats, right? It's not a treat
anymore if it's just things you're doing all of the time. It doesn't feel special. It's just
your lifestyle now, which can be fine, but that's not a treat anymore. That's just the thing that you're doing
all of the time. Also, there's incredible psychology around the fact that we enjoy
anticipation of excitement and pleasure far more than we enjoy the pleasure itself. So like we get
more happiness out of planning a vacation than being on vacation. And I think that looking
forward to your favorite podcast or looking forward to your favorite show can be as powerful
as actually watching it or listening to it. I was just about to cite the vacation example.
I'm literally going to California tomorrow for four days in a hotel, really nice hotel with my
partner. And I'm just like, I'm looking up. I'm like, Ritz Carlton dot com. What are the like? Tell me all of the features of the hotel. Tell me what
the spa looks like. Like, I'm so excited. Well, and such an interesting part of the human experience
is that when we go on the vacation, because it's real, because the weather might not be perfect,
because we might not sleep perfectly through the night because there's a noise.
Because we get sick.
Yeah, we get sick, which is one of my biggest fears when I travel.
All of these things, we literally do enjoy the anticipation more.
So I tell people that doesn't mean you shouldn't like obviously go on the vacation and enjoy the vacation as much as you possibly can.
But I do tell people to lean into the planning element of it because that is part of the
joy of the vacation.
Going on the hotel website, reading all the restaurant menus ahead of time and looking
at the pictures of the food on Instagram like that is part of the vacation and you shouldn't
treat it like it's a chore or burden to get through.
You should enjoy it as part of the vacation.
I love that.
Let's talk about, if you are listening
when this episode comes out, the new year, new you mindset is starting to wane. Maybe you're
just looking to build some new habits this year. How do we stick to our habits and why is it helpful
to achieve some of the bite-sized goals you talk about in the book as opposed to saying,
okay, tomorrow I'm going to change my entire life. Changing your entire life doesn't work because first of all,
your entire life is not messed up. There are parts of your life that you love, even if at
certain moments you're not aware of that. I always remind myself of that when I'm
jealous of somebody is that I would never swap my entire life with their entire life.
I would never swap my entire life with their entire life. And that always gives me a sense of perspective of like, oh, I'm not really jealous of that thing. Like I'm not jealous of all the
things that come with that thing. And it gives me a sense of peace. So first of all, you don't need
to change your entire life. You're wonderful. You're lovable. You have a lot of good things
about you. So let's enjoy those first. But second, the more that you try to change it
once, the harder it's going to be and the less reward you have built in of feeling like you are
achieving your goals, the less likely you are to stick to these things. So bite-sized goals are a
tip in the book and they're essentially looking at your greater goal. So something like, I want to
write a book. If I had sat down one day and just said, I want to write a book. If I had sat down one day and
just said, I want to write a book, and I'd pulled open my computer, and I'd started typing, it would
have felt so intimidating. I would have been like, where's the finish line? How am I going to do this
every day? But instead, I said, I'm going to write 1,000 words a day. I'm going to write 1,000 words
a day until this book is done. And if you're a writer, a second little hot tip is like those a thousand words can be absolutely trash, absolute garbage. You will edit it later. It will be great.
So every day I wrote a thousand words. They were often truly hot garbage words, but they were a
thousand words on the page. And that was my bite size goal. So I would encourage anybody to zoom
out a little bit in a year. Where do you want to be? What do you want your life to look like?
to zoom out a little bit in a year, where do you want to be? What do you want your life to look like? Pick one thing and then walk it backwards. What's something that you can do on a weekly or
daily basis to get you towards that larger goal? It's also going to be much more helpful. It's
going to be really, really helpful for avoiding procrastination because you can procrastinate on,
oh, in six months, in a year, I want to have this done forever. But if you've broken that down
into every single day, I need to do this, you can't procrastinate on that because you know what
you're actually doing and you know what you need to achieve in that 24 hour period.
Oh, and I think that's how we sabotage ourselves, of course, is it's like,
okay, because we get motivated, which is very lovely and exciting. We're like, okay,
I want everything to change. And because we don't have patience, we're like, I want it to change
tomorrow. And again, I'm just now just calling And because we don't have patience, we're like, I want it to change tomorrow.
And again, I'm just now just calling myself out.
And then of course it doesn't happen because that's unrealistic.
And it's also the recipe for us giving up because we don't see immediate results and
we don't see an immediate complete lifestyle change.
And so we're like, well, fuck this.
This isn't worth our time.
We need to have rewards for our habits.
So those can either be things that are intrinsic to the habit.
So one of the ways I've been able to stick to a workout routine, which took me over 30
years, well, I guess I wasn't walking for some of those years, took me a very long time
to be able to stick to a workout routine.
And that was after years of working in the wellness space and editorial.
But the way I was able to do it was noticing the immediate after effects before I
was doing it to essentially have a different size body. And every day I'd go do my workout and then
I would look in the mirror and my body looked the exact same afterward. And I was like, well,
this is stupid. Why am I even doing this? But when I switched it to, oh, on the days that I work out,
I have significantly more energy. I feel significantly calmer. And I tap into that.
And I noticed that that builds reward system where I actually want to do the workouts.
The same if you can't find an intrinsic reward for your habit, then I think you can add in a
little bit of an extrinsic reward. You can have the commitment devices, you can have the album
listening, you can have the Real Housewives, all of those types of things. But your habits that you have, they need to have
rewards. Otherwise, you won't keep doing them. So intrinsic rewards are my favorite. And that
goes back to the find your why. I don't mean to keep pressing it, but I just think it is
so, so, so important. I know that my why is about my mental health and it's about being able to live
the experientially rich life that I want to live. So energy and calm are top, top, top of my list. So when I tap into, oh, I've found something and
it is free and I can do it in my living room and my sweatpants every day that will give me that
sense of calm and give me that sense of energy. I'm all about that. That is so motivating.
We had Sadie Lincoln, who is Bar 3's founder on the show,
and I have talked many, many times about how Bar 3 completely changed my life and changed my
approach to fitness and working out in my body. And one of the things that, speaking of rewards,
yes, I feel better and I can see the change 100% and I can also feel myself getting stronger.
But I especially, after COVID, have realized the importance of going and doing something in
person with other people where I my phone is not involved where no technology is involved I run an
entirely digital company that is virtual and I love my team but I don't get to see them in person
and I show up to class and I've made friends. And at least even if I don't know
anybody in the class, I have other human beings around me for that 45 minutes to an hour where
I'm not touching my phone, where I'm focused on my body and where also there's other people and
other people's energy. And like that truly is just made such a difference. And I've only
just understood in the last six months to a year, like how much I desperately
missed that and have needed that.
I want to point out something you said, which is that you're not on your phone because you
essentially can't be on your phone at a workout class.
And I hear this from people all the time.
I love going to my yoga class.
I love going to my workout class because I can't be on my phone.
And it almost feels like people are apologetic, as they say.
It's like, oh, that's like a silly reason to enjoy going to a workout class. But I think it is such an important thing to realize, especially if one of your goals is redefining your relationship with your phone, which I'm just not going to do it. But our phones are so
incredibly addictive. They have been designed from the ground up to be so incredibly addictive.
So if we want to stick to that habit, to that goal, we need to literally put boundaries between
ourselves in that situation. We need to not rely on our willpower because our willpower was never
designed to withstand the pull of this technology. That is not a failing on our willpower because our willpower was never designed to withstand the pull of this
technology. That is not a failing on our part. That is by design how the system works. So I think
doing things like going to workout class, building in times of your day where you literally can't
reach for your phone, plugging your phone in in another room at night that's not cheating or you being weak that is how we have
to do it because these things are designed to hijack our brains i want to just highlight you
can tell you're talking to two podcast hosts i just realized that we're doing the thing where
we're like hold on what you just said is so crucial and important we're doing the hosting back and forth i love it no i fucking love it it's great you can
just tell it's like two pot we could do a whole parody spoof of this wait i just want to write
what you just said hold on just give me we have to highlight what you just said oh my gosh we
should do that like the tiktok like the i'm a what what is it like where it's like oh i'm a podcast
host yeah i'm gonna like tell you to like i'm
gonna say hold on i have to call that out really quick yeah but i do want it i'm gonna call it out
really quick what you just said i think is so crucial is like i think when it comes to money
too is we think oh it has to be hard because then we've quote unquote earned it yeah i often tell
people is it's like you don't you don't get an extra gold star
for making this harder than it has to be.
And I think about this in my own life all the time.
I will force myself to not write things down
because I'm like, well, you should just remember it.
And then of course I don't remember it.
And then I'm fucked.
And then I'm like, why didn't I just write that down?
Oh, cause I thought it was weakness.
I thought it was weakness
if I had to write something down in order to remember it. And it's the same thing with money.
It's like, oh, well, I should remember to pay my credit card every month. I'm like,
just set up an automatic transfer. Just set up an automatic payment. You don't get an extra gold
star if you make this harder. Same thing with your phone. It's like, okay, I should just be
able to not look at it. Well, unfortunately, we're at the point where that's not going to work. So it's not it's not you being weak.
It's not an apology.
It's something that you have to do.
And that's OK.
Well, and then you have to question what societal messages we've internalized to make us believe
that suffering is strength.
Like, I honestly, suffering is not strength, but we have internalized that it is.
And I would ask who's benefiting from
that. And I think there are a lot of people and the people we want to benefit as ourselves. So
I think deprogramming that messaging a little bit can be incredibly beneficial.
Yep. I want to skip down to you have a chapter in creativity. Let's talk about gesture and fidget
with intention and do nothing with intention because I'm really bad at the do
nothing. And I will also say that my team wrote that question with an I pronoun because again,
they're also reading me for film. So tell me more about doing things with intention,
especially like doing nothing with intention. So we'll start with the gesturing and fidgeting.
That's a really easy one. This is also from Annie Murphy Paul. She's the author of The Extended Mind, and she's a science journalist who studies how
we can tap into types of intelligence that are not as lauded on a societal level or that
we might not even be aware of.
And her work shows that gesturing and fidgeting actually helps us make connections in our
brains that we wouldn't otherwise be making.
Our motions can lead
our thoughts often and our thoughts can lead our emotions. So the way that that can be beneficial
in our day-to-day life is instead of forcing yourself to sit there and keep your arms clasped
tightly on your chest, allow yourself to make big movements, to talk broadly, and that will help you
piece together the connections in your brain
that will help you think more creatively and think more intelligently. I think this is especially
important for children in schools. We tell them they have to sit there and stay in their desk and
don't fidget and don't squirm. And we're actually impeding their intelligence and also, I think,
getting in the way of a lot of the natural energy that they have as children.
But I think that if we said to ourselves, like, let the children squirm a little bit,
it's actually helping them think that would be a nice reframe on a societal level. And I know when I'm doing like interviews or I'm even writing my book, I'll say something
out loud and be talking to myself.
And I allow myself to move my arms really broadly, even though it feels a little silly sometimes, especially if I'm alone in my room, but it does help my brain work a
little bit better. So that's just a really fun and easy tip to implement. Doing nothing. That's a
little bit harder. That's a little bit of a harder tip. And that's because we are mired in a culture
that tells us that our value is based on our productivity and our worth is
based on our output. And I think that we really need to examine those messages to feel comfortable
in our value of just being, of just sitting. But one of the ways that I at least find helpful to
do that is to know the real benefits that doing nothing has on my brain. So doing something active like meditating or
working out, these are great. These have known brain effects. But just sitting in the in-between
moments and not actively trying to like do a mantra or something like that, just literally
sitting is so beneficial for your brain. It essentially allows your neurons to do kind of a reset. It's a very
colloquial way to say it, but like you're literally allowing your brain to kind of wipe itself clean
to reset. And then it'll be able to think in different creative ways and to fire in new and
exciting ways. So I look for tiny opportunities to do this in my life. One of my absolute favorite
ones is that stoplights when I'm driving. I used to always,
always reach for my phone, red light reaching for my phone. I just couldn't be alone with myself.
And now I use that. It's a very quick opportunity. So it's not scary. It's a promise that I can keep
to myself. I don't reach for my phone. I just sit there. It's uncomfortable. It's weird. I don't
like being alone with myself. I have to get to know myself in a way that I
haven't had to do in a really long time, but it's gotten easier. We become better at what we
practice. And the more that we practice being with ourselves and knowing that we have value
just for being ourselves, the better we'll get at it.
at it. I wrote in a book once very similar to the stoplight is that every time you touch a doorknob,
just take a breath. I don't do this. I should do this. But I kind of love that of just like these little tiny moments that again are not I'm not asking you to go to a silent retreat for a weekend.
I'm not asking you to sit on a yoga mat for eight hours and meditate just at a stoplight.
Just don't reach for your phone.
Although I will say and I completely agree.
Obviously, I think that those little moments are so, so powerful.
And the little moments are what make up our lives.
Like fundamentally, we are spending eight hours a day
doing the rest of our lives and 20 minutes a day
meditating at best.
And we are a result of the thoughts that we're thinking,
the things that we're practicing constantly.
So that eight hour to 20 minute ratio,
the thoughts you're thinking all day,
those little moments are going to be the things
that matter most.
But just as an interesting side note,
I just interviewed Dr. Alyssa Epple my podcast, and she is a stress expert. She's one
of the world's leading experts on stress. And one of the things that she said in the episode that I
found fascinating is that doing those longer periods of retreat, like doing the eight-hour
meditation thing or going away for a retreat weekend, has incredible effects for like a year after you do it. So
sometimes if you aren't a person who can incorporate these things on a daily basis,
I actually found it kind of heartening to know like, oh, maybe I can do a weekend thing if I
can't do a daily thing. And that weekend thing won't just pay off for that weekend or a week
or two after, but for a year afterward. As someone who's about to spend four days at the Ritz-Carlton Santa
Barbara and hardly leave, I'm very pumped about that. A little different kind of retreat,
but I will be sitting and doing nothing. So I'm pumped about it. Talk to me about a failure resume.
Oh, a failure resume is fascinating. And so I first heard about this when I had Dan Pink on
my podcast, and he did this incredible book about
the power of regret. And a failure resume is a really great tip to harness the power of regret.
So it's essentially you make a list of all your failures, all of the things that you perceive as
failures in your life. And then you do another step, which is what did you learn from that
failure? And so you're taking something that you view as a negative in
your life and you're saying this had a purpose, it had a function. A very interesting journey
that I have had with this is around my anxiety and my agoraphobia. For years, I was weak when
I moved to London. If only I had built a community faster, if only I'd done this, this, and this,
I wouldn't have had this period of intense anxiety that derailed the path of my entire life.
And it's only recently in being able to reframe this perceived failure into my life now exists
because of that period of my life that I can appreciate the way that the connections
have worked on my path. So the failure resume is a really, really useful tool to understand that
we get to where we are via where we've been. And then also, if you're like, well, what if I don't
like where I am? How can we look back at the perceived failures and learn from them and make
new steps and new choices for the next phase of our life.
I think about that all of the time. I think that's one of the things I actually do really well
is even mistakes I've made or failures I've had or decisions I'm not proud of,
I can always find the thing I learned from it. Or like, oh, yeah, that's the reason we did that
at that time. And yeah, it's probably cringe now, no we did that or like for me it manifests a lot
in dating of like oh i stayed with that person for way too long and rather than just being like oh
tori you piece of shit i'm just like yeah she was she was her first relationship she didn't know any
better she was dealing with her own stuff and that's okay and we know better right what is it
maya angelo when you know better you better. And like learned a lot from that.
So I love that practice.
Also, if you were looking back at your past self's choices and they were all the exact
same choices as you would make now, that means you haven't grown or evolved at all.
Right.
Which is not an ideal way to live.
So I view looking back at choices that past me has made, which some of them were insane.
I'm like, girl, you did not need to be like doing cocaine at 8am in Buenos Aires, you know, but if I were going to
make those choices now, like, you know, if I were back then saying the things that I was saying now,
it would mean that I had learned nothing and I had evolved in no way in the last decade of my life.
So I'm excited to look back on those choices because
they're a reminder of how far that I've come and how much work that I've done.
Totally. That's how I feel too. And I, I like talk to little me all the time. I talked to
20 year old me. I talked to seven year old me. She and I are in constant contact and like,
yeah, rather than being like, oh my gosh, she was so cringe or like, how could she make that
choice? That's so embarrassing. I'm like, you know what?
You were just doing the best you can with what you had.
You're just doing the best we can with what you had.
What a powerful sentence, though.
Truly what you're doing the best you can with what you had is, I think, one of the most
powerful sentences and the most radically accepting of ourselves sentences that we can
utter.
Oh, well, asking myself to hate the younger version of myself, how heartbreaking, right?
That'd be like yelling at a child or yelling at, you know, me a couple years ago when she
was struggling like that.
That's insanely cruel of me to do.
And maybe that's a call out for a listener.
But you you don't deserve the abuse that you're giving yourself either past you or present
you, right?
Like you are doing the best with what you can and what you have right now as well. Talk to yourself how you
would talk to your best friend. Talk to yourself how you would want future self to come back and
comfort you. Talk to yourself as if you were that child. You have that five-year-old, 10-year-old,
20-year-old inside you because you still do. We talk to ourselves so cruelly. And again,
we get better at what we
practice. If you practice talking to yourself like you're a piece of shit all day, every day,
and then you try to look in the mirror and say, you got this, girl. I love you. You're great.
You're not going to be good at that. You have not practiced that.
Right. Liz, you might know this already. Have you heard about the practice of writing,
not just letters to yourself, but writing back and forth as some people call it God, some people call it love
or like the higher version of yourself? Have you heard about this? Yes. So incredibly powerful.
We've talked about on the show before, I think, but whenever I am struggling and this I forget
about this all the time, but I forget to do it. But when I do do it, it's so helpful of just
literally giving myself what I need. And
it's like, hey, love, what's going on? Oh, I'm really stressed. Oh, I'm so sorry to hear that.
What's going on? And it's like back and forth. And it's me giving myself the validation and the
comfort and the care I need or the clarity that I need because I always know, like Tori always knows
it's just either really loud in here or I, you know, I can't figure it out for myself or I just need somebody to validate me. And like that's been one strategy that's been so helpful in building my own self-love and my own self-confidence is just realizing like, oh, I already know I just need permission or I need validation or I just need to hear it from all of the noise that's going on around me. Are you familiar with IFS?
What is that?
Internal Family Systems.
It's a type of therapy.
It's founded by Dr. Richard Schwartz.
I had him on the podcast.
It's an incredible type of therapy that would, I think, really resonate with you based on
what you're saying.
But it's about how we have all of these different parts inside of ourselves.
And the therapy is to go in and essentially talk to the different parts
and have the different parts talk to each other. And it's incredibly transformative for people.
There's wild studies around it with suicidal people. There's wild studies around it with
people who've experienced really intense forms of trauma and it working when very few other
types of therapies have worked. Interesting. I'll go listen to that episode after we're done.
Yeah.
And you should have him on your podcast.
You would really like him.
He'll probably do.
So you'll hear this if you listen to the episode that I did with him.
He'll probably do a little IFS session on air,
which I had heard about beforehand.
But I was like, no, he won't do that with me.
It's okay.
And then it didn't devastate you. Yeah, it definitely did. And I was like, no, he won't do that with me. It's okay. And then he definitely did. And I
was like, wow, this is very vulnerable and very personal. But I think it's helpful to see it in
practice. So just be warned, he probably will do that. But that's part of the fun.
Cool. I'll have Kristen, if you're still here, take a note of that.
Let's do a little bit of rapid fire. If we're talking about changing our life with these small habits, what are a few things
that someone can implement today without having to go out and purchase anything or, you know,
swipe up on a Instagram ad?
It's not swipe up.
It's tap.
But you know what I'm saying?
Tell me the quick and dirty, like a couple things that someone can do right now after
listening to this episode.
OK, so a few quick, easy ones. Micro workouts. One of my absolute favorite things to do. If I
had to choose between my larger workouts and my micro workouts, I would choose my micro workouts
every time. This is literally a walk around the block, a five minute walk every hour. So this is,
if you don't have time to go on the block or it's freezing out, just stopping and doing some squats,
doing some jumping jacks, getting your heart rate up. These micro workouts are going to improve your ability
to regulate your body's glucose. They're going to enhance your creativity. They're going to enhance
your problem solving. They're going to enhance your general brain function. They're going to
improve your mood. So many benefits and they happen so, so quickly. So I'm always looking
for opportunities to fit in just a quick jolt of getting my heart rate up
throughout my day-to-day life. I love that one. Taking a cold shower. I know that cold exposure
is kind of like overhyped, but there are some really great benefits. And one of my all-time
favorite benefits is that it can balance your dopamine levels. So doing something hard like
taking a cold shower, but also, and this is so interesting, I interviewed Dr. Anna Lemke for my podcast. She's one of the world's leading experts in dopamine and doing
something like getting caught in the rain, carrying your groceries to your car. That's a hard thing.
And that's going to balance your dopamine levels and make it easier for you to not reach for your
phone to find pleasure and motivation in your day toto-day life. So I love that because it's completely reframed for me when I accidentally run into these
hard moments in my life instead of being like, why is it raining when I'm trying to carry
my groceries?
I'm like, oh, I'm balancing my dopamine.
This is excellent.
So I love that little bit of a reframe.
And I also think cold showers are a powerful way to bring that dopamine balance into your day-to to day life. I just end on cold. I don't think you need a cold plunge. I
don't think you need to do it for as long as you think. There's also really interesting research
that shows it doesn't need to be as cold as you think. Just do your normal shower and end on about
two minutes of as cold as your tap water can go. And you'll experience a lot of benefits from that.
Trying to think I have so many.
I'm like, what do you want? What problems can I solve? No, those two are already great. I had
kind of forgotten I used to do this back when I worked a nine to five. I invented for us a squat
squad. And whenever it was usually me yelling squats, I was probably annoying as hell. I'm
sorry to any of my coworkers,
but if one of us just yelled squat,
we had to step away from our desk and do 20 squats
and then go back to whatever we were doing.
And like you could opt in,
you could opt out at any time,
but I'm now thinking her first 100K squat squad
and I'm going to literally pitch it to the company,
but I completely forgot I did that.
Like somebody who slacks squat,
everybody has to go squat. Right, have the squat squad channel and anybody can opt in and then if you can't obviously don't do it but
like if you're in the middle and you see it cool bang out 20 squats call it good i will also say
like putting on your favorite song and dancing wildly to it for the duration of the song counts
as a micro workout and is a wonderful way to improve your mood in the middle of the day
i will say also with all of this what what I'm realizing too, I've heard this advice before
and I just need to do it is I've already said this, right? I forget a lot of the things that
make me feel good. And in moments of stress, like I don't know what to do. I think I need to make
myself a list. And then if I'm feeling stressed or I just need a little bit of a boost, I can go to that
list and be like, OK, we're going to do one of these things because I can never think of them
in the moment. But then I have twenty five things. So I have to list prompts for you in the book.
I have the life is never boring list, which is essentially you making a list of ways to spend
your interstitial moments or the moments where you're like, I want to do something, but I don't know what. And that's a list of things that are pleasurable or fun for you.
And you keep that on a list. You keep it on your phone. You just open it in those five minutes
while your pasta water is boiling or in the time where you got home from work, but you're like,
not quite sure what to do that time. You open it, you can consult the list and you can do something
fun. So we have a whole prompt for how to make that in the book. And then we also have a mental health checklist, which I think is really, really helpful.
And that's essentially looking at the things that are most researched to have an impact on our
mental health so that you're trying to do those every single day to set yourself a mental health
baseline. Things like having time with your community, making sure that you've eaten a
vegetable, making sure that you've moved a vegetable, making sure that you've moved
your body in some way. And we have five things on that checklist in the book. But it's really
helpful on those days when you are feeling down, you can just pull open that checklist and say,
I haven't done two of these in two weeks. And it gives a little bit of clarity into maybe where
you should start and why you might be feeling the way that you're feeling. Liz, holy shit.
This has been so helpful.
One of my favorite episodes I recorded in a long, long time.
Where can people find out more about you?
Where can people buy the book?
Tell me all of it, plug away.
So the book is available wherever books are sold
or on 100waystochangeyourlife.com.
We have 18 different categories.
The book covers every single part of
your life as you can probably glean from this conversation. We've got gut health, we've got
longevity, we've got relationships, we've got friendship, we've got your sex life, we've got
your success, we've got how to choose what habits you want to have, how to go after your goals. We
have literally every single part of your life covered in this book. And it's really developed
so that you can go to the different sections and pick and choose as you need them of your life covered in this book. And it's really developed so that you can
go to the different sections and pick and choose as you need them in your life. It's a long-term
companion, not something that you just read once and you're done. You leave it out. You're going
to need different things at different points. You can flip to it. And then I am also the host of the
Liz Moody podcast, which is available wherever you listen to podcasts. We have a great episode
with Tori. It's a little bit of an older one, but I still absolutely love it. And I really, I believe this back to the holistic
wellness point that we were talking about earlier. I've been saying for years, finances is such a key
part of our physical health, of our mental health. I think it's as important to be talking about and
should be included in the wellness conversation as much as your microbiome or things like that,
because you can't take care of your microbiome if you don't have money. And if you're stressed
out all the time about your finances, that's literally impacting your microbiome. So thank
you for sharing your wisdom with our audience. That was so appreciated. And we have tons of
different episodes covering all types of different topics, anything you need to
live your richest, most rewarding life. And then I'm Liz Moody on
TikTok and on Instagram, and I share bite-sized tips for different ways to change your life.
Amazing. Go change your life. Thank you to Liz for joining us for this episode. You can find her
work linked in the show notes. You can also find her books, especially 100 Ways to Change Your Life
wherever you're getting your books,
wherever you read books. Thank you to Liz for joining us. And as always, thank you for being
here, Financial Feminists. This episode in particular is such a good one to share with your
community, share with your friends and family to spark conversation about habits in the new year
and about how to actually keep the goals that you set out and the resolutions you set out for
yourself this year. So feel free to share it with a friend and get talking. Thank you so much for joining us, Financial Feminists.
We'll see you back here soon. Have a great day. Okay, bye.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields,
associate producer Tamisha Grant, marketing and administration by Karina Patel.
Sophia Cohen.
Khalil Dumas.
Elizabeth McCumber.
Beth Bowen.
Amanda Lefeu.
Masha Bakhnikeva.
Kaylin Sprinkle.
Sumaya Molokurio.
And Harvey Carlson.
Research by Arielle Johnson.
Audio engineering by Alyssa Medcalf.
Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton.
Photography by Sarah Wolf.
And theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound.
A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show.
For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, and episode show
notes, visit financialfeministpodcast.com.