Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Science-Based Tools for When You’re Stressed, Obsessed, or Overthinking | Dr. Jenny Taitz
Episode Date: February 19, 2024Simple tools you can knit into your life both for when you’re actively freaking out, and for preventing future trips down the anxiety toilet. Dr. Jenny Taitz is a clinical psychologist... and an assistant clinical professor in psychiatry at the University of California, Los Angeles. Dr. Taitz completed her fellowship in psychology at Yale University School of Medicine and achieved board certifications in both cognitive behavioral therapy and dialectical behavior therapy. Her new book, Stress Resets: How to Soothe Your Body and Mind in Minutes, is out now. In this episode we talk about:The difference between stress and anxietyJenny’s take on the use of benzodiazepinesWhat she means by, “negative core beliefs”, and how to untangle ourselves from themHow to prepare in advance for stressful situationsThe benefit of giving yourself a deliberate panic attackAnd why stress, while uncomfortable, is actually part of a healthy and meaningful lifeAdditional Links: How to Be Single and Happy by Dr. Jenny TaitzBreathe • Calm down • Meditate Three-Minute Breathing SpaceRelated Episodes:Can Anxiety Be a Gift? | Dr. David RosmarinZach Braff On: Anxiety, Sobriety, Insomnia, Grief, Social Media, and the Meaning of the Tattoo on His WristFor tickets to Dan Harris: Celebrating 10 Years of 10% Happier at Symphony Space: click hereSign up for Dan’s weekly newsletter hereFollow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTokTen Percent Happier online bookstoreSubscribe to our YouTube ChannelOur favorite playlists on: Anxiety, Sleep, Relationships, Most Popular EpisodesFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/jenny-taitz-730See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hello everybody, how we doing? This episode is a bonanza, a bonanza of practical and evidence-based advice for dealing with
stress, anxiety, and overthinking.
Simple tools you can knit into your life, both for when you're actively freaking out
and for preventing future
trips down the anxiety toilet. I personally got a lot out of this conversation. My guest
is Dr. Jenny Tates. She's a clinical psychologist and an assistant clinical professor in psychiatry
at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her latest book is called Stress Resets, How
to Soothe Your Body and Mind in Min minutes. We talked about the difference between stress and anxiety.
Jenny's take on the use of benzodiazepines,
drugs or medications such as Valium or Clonopin.
What she means by negative core beliefs
and how to untangle ourselves from them.
How to prepare in advance for stressful situations.
The benefits of giving yourself a deliberate panic attack.
And why stress,
while uncomfortable, is actually a big part of a healthy and meaningful life.
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I'm Afwa Hirsh. I'm Peter Frankopin.
And in our podcast, Legacy, we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in history.
This season, we delve into the life of Mikhail Gorbachev.
This season has everything. It's got political ideology.
It's got nuclear Armageddon.
It's got love story. It's got betrayal. It's got economic collapse.
One ingredient that you left out, legacy. Was he someone who helped make the world a better place,
saved us all from all of those terrible things? Or was he a man who created the problems and the
challenges of many parts of the world today?
Those questions about how to think about Gorbachev, you know, was he unwitting character in history?
Or was he one who helped forge and frame the world?
And it's not necessarily just a question of our making.
There is a real life binary in how his legacy is perceived.
In the West, he's considered a hero.
And in Russia, it's a bit of a different picture.
So join us on Legacy for Mikhail Gorbachev.
Dr. Jenny Tates, welcome to the show.
Thank you so much, Dan. I'm so excited to be here.
You're writing about stress, and maybe it makes sense to start with some definitions.
How do you define stress and what's the difference between stress and anxiety?
Stress is when we feel like we don't have the resources to meet the demands that we're facing.
It's when we're feeling like those times where it's just too much, I can't.
And measures of anxiety really ask you questions about your level of worry or physical symptoms
like panic. And while there's a lot of overlap between the two, a lot of times stress comes from an outside trigger, but that being said, stress can certainly easily create anxiety if you
don't intervene early.
So one of my favorite things is really helping people manage stress so it doesn't lead to
an ongoing struggle with anxiety.
I don't know if I took away the right lesson from this, but not long ago right here on
the show we talked to a guy named Dr. David Russ Marin, who runs the Center for Anxiety
at Harvard. And I recall thinking that the way he delineated between stress and anxiety,
which sounds like it's basically the same way you are, is stress is a little bit more
reality-based, like you are expected to do something that you don't have the resources to do.
Anxiety may be more psychological in that you are creating a disproportionate response to a threat that may not be as real as you are perceiving it to be. That's totally correct and I would also
just add to that that we still can, even if something is external,
we can still increase our bandwidth to face what's in front of us.
Say more about that.
Yeah, so let's say I'm about to give a big presentation and I'm telling myself I need to calm down and
I need to be the best presenter that this audience has ever heard. That's going to really amplify my stress.
But if I say I just need to show up and live according to my values
and share information, that automatically will make
the situation less stressful.
And so much of our stress really has
to do with getting caught in really negative thoughts
or big expectations of ourselves that we can't possibly meet.
That creates physical sensations.
And then a lot of times we, you know, lose ourselves
in this cycle of big expectations plus physical symptoms kind of colluding against us. And then
we cope by avoiding. And so if we can learn to think more flexibly, allow ourselves to experience
the physical sensations is potentially helpful, or not judging them them even if they're uncomfortable. And then
strategically lean into opportunities we can kind of move from, it's too much I can't to,
yes I can, yes I will, here's my plan. So it might be worth dwelling on some of what you just said
there because this toxic troika that you just described, you also go into this in the book,
you basically say that where people get tripped up when it comes to stress is,
part one, we get stuck or the word you use
is mired in negative thoughts.
The second is that we start feeling
physical symptoms of stress.
And instead of just looking at it like
the body preparing us to act,
we freak out and judge these symptoms.
Oh my God, my heart's racing.
This must be really bad.
And then the third is we try to bail or avoid
whatever's going on instead of dealing with it.
And bailing or avoiding might feel good for a nanosecond,
but it actually sets you up
for more suffering down the road.
So is that a roughly accurate recapitulation?
Dan, that was perfect.
That was perfect.
That's what I was looking for, Gold Star. Thank you.
Yeah, and if we think about it, that's like exponentially increasing our stress. But the
good news is that when we have this opportunity to reduce our stress threefold by thinking more
flexibly, and which we could certainly talk more about how to do that, and learning how to allow
our physical sensations to be there, and even prepare ahead of time for them
and then really focus on how to help ourselves
in those moments so we're not avoiding
but we're strategically systematically approaching.
I wanna go into great detail about how we can talk
to ourselves in these moments and prepare ahead of time
for the physical symptoms,
which you just mentioned right there. But let's just stay with the problem for just a
second. You have a whole section at the beginning of the book about overthinking and rumination.
What do we need to know about that? And what's the difference between overthinking and rumination,
or are they just synonyms? I think that you could use them synonymously,
and some people even call it perseverative cognition. That's what stress researchers call it the technical term.
But the thing that we need to know about overthinking and rumination is that that is what turns
acute stress, something that's temporary, into chronic stress, something that is long-lasting.
And so this is mind-blowing. But if we can think about this, you can have an ongoing stressful thing in your life,
say caregiving or so many examples of things
that can be chronically stressful.
But if you're able to put down the overthinking,
you could transform something chronic to something temporary.
That said, we can also take something that's
temporary, like an upsetting incident at work,
and make
it chronic by playing it over and over again.
And one of the things that I love to think about is a story that Sharon Salzberg, a good
friend and I know a good friend of yours, shared with me that this is such a powerful
story that I think really illustrates this point.
You know, a man was trekking in Nepal and he had a blister on his foot, and he would anticipate the blister
before he stepped down, experience the blister
when he stepped, and then replayed it.
So we could experience our own distress once or threefold.
And so the reason that stress becomes a problem in our lives
is because we're carrying it with us,
replaying it, taking something that took 20 minutes
and marinating in it for many, many hours. And of course, it is likely something that was very legitimately upsetting, but
the most thoughtful thing we could do in those moments is be kind enough to ourselves to
learn how to unhook from the incessant re-experiencing, which also creates a cascade of physical
effects.
Yes. And then those two do a toxic duet, the thinking and the feelings.
But yeah, I mean, as I'm listening to you talk,
I just think about how many times I've re-upped
the negative emotion by making a little mental movie,
both of what happened in the past
and what's going to happen in the future
over and over and over again, sort of compulsively.
Yeah, and the crazy thing is,
is like if you're hooked up to all sorts of physiological stress
assessment measures, even something that happened 20 years ago, your body can easily go back
into re-experiencing in the present, and that's how stress goes from something that's unpleasant
to leading to something that's really destructive.
You mentioned Sharon Salzburg, her roommate, the guy she shares a house with, although it's two houses that are connected, but Joseph Goldstein,
another amazing meditation teacher, he often talks about how we can experience
all of this stress and anxiety, but what we're reacting to is often not something
that's happening in the moment. We're reacting to a thought. That's it. It is a
quantum burst of energy in the mind, as Joseph reacting to a thought. That's it. It is a quantum burst
of energy in the mind, as Joseph says, barely more than nothing. And it is producing this
cascade physically and psychologically for us.
Absolutely. And that's why I want to, I think one of the biggest things we could all do
is get really good at playing with our thoughts and seeing them almost like Play-Doh rather
than cement.
Yes. Okay. That's another thing I want to make a note to follow up with you on playing
with our thoughts. But just staying on the flow of the book here, you have a tool that
you use in your book called your abbreviated guide to breaking up with overthinking. Can
you take us through some of the steps?
Yes. Well, first of all, since overthinking can be something that most of us are really good at,
rather than deciding today that you're going to stop overthinking in general, which is really ambitious,
to actually develop a specific clear goal. Like, I'm going to not think about work between six and
eight when I really want to be with my partner or my family or enjoy a little bit of me time.
So, to create like a kind of a smart goal specific, measurable, attainable,
realistic, time-sensitive, something that's within reach.
And then rescheduling, ruminating.
A lot of times, our minds just run and ruin our lives.
We can be thinking all the time.
But what if you had a set time that you opened up
all of your worries?
Like let's say four to four twenty was your rumination time or your worry time rather than
like a news ticker that's constantly going in the background. If you actually sit with it with your
full attention, you go from kind of an all day stress habit to a mindful, it's called stimulus
control.
You kind of control it and it then has like parameters around it rather than being incessant
and endless.
And a lot of times people find that like if they have a set time and they really train
themselves to be really, you know, obviously if something's immediate that you can deal
with like, oh my gosh, I'm going to get a ticket if I don't feed my meter, then obviously
deal with that.
But if it's something like what if, what if, what if, I can never afford a house or what
if, you know, to actually have a set time to do that because during that time, you might
find it boring or forget to get into it.
And you might take something that's kind of like going on in the background, background
noise for hours over the day that you can just condense into like a 20 minute mini
session.
Yes. That makes a lot of sense.
There's also on your list, write it out.
Write it out is a wonderful technique by James Pennebaker.
He's a professor at the University of Texas in Austin.
And a lot of times people confuse ruminating with processing.
And so I really want people to have the full range of ways
of dealing with it, like pushing away things that
don't need immediate attention, problem-solving things
that do.
But we also need to allow ourselves to feel our feelings.
And so if you journal in a very specific way that
allows you to process your emotions,
so really going deeper, for example,
in a research study where college students
were asked to write about something that was very distressing with their full emotions
and then how that event affected their lives and in the past and how it's currently affecting
their lives. Really going through the process of allowing yourself to feel, people that
did that for three days had significant reductions in rumination and depression six months later.
And so sometimes we think like ruminating is kind of like grieving or processing,
but we're barely scratching the surface.
And so actually giving ourselves the sufficient amount of time and
headspace to go a little bit deeper and to kind of store something that's kind of splintered.
I'm picturing a journal that says, use this to freak out constructively.
It's not even freaking out.
It could be like self-validating.
This is another thing that I talk about in stress resets.
A lot of people confuse replaying something upsetting with normalizing.
Of course, this is really upsetting.
Of course, you feel this way, but self-validating allows for closure and improving how you feel
while ruminating is like, I don't know, letting
the suffering win.
Right.
That makes sense.
There is a difference.
And of course, I like being a little glib, but I do see the difference between, you know,
a miasmatic diffuse freak out that is generalized and running in the background of your mind
like static as opposed to a focused processing
that actually, as you said before,
can be validating because the stuff you're worrying about
isn't necessarily bullshit.
Yes, different situations call for different ways of coping.
And so if I know that there's just background noise,
I used to get into this thing when I was in graduate school
about worrying how I would do you want to
exam when I always did fine, like that could be good for my worry time or rumination time.
But if I was really dealing with like a loss, that would be better for the
expressive writing that actually allowing yourself to feel. And so I want people to have
the right tool for the right time. What's going to work is based on what you need at the moment.
Yes, that makes a lot of sense. Just so I don't miss another tool on your abbreviated
guide to breaking up with overthinking is get absorbed in something else. Are you basically
saying change the channel in your mind?
And this is the craziest thing, but this is true. People in a study were asked to talk
about the most upsetting thing that happened
to them, and then half of the participants were able to eavesdrop on researchers talking about
something else. And people like eavesdropping to strangers were suddenly able to stop thinking,
but the people that didn't have the opportunity to eavesdrop were still
huffing and puffing about the most upsetting
thing, understandably. And so doing something very simple, this is so crazy that these very
simple things work, but like looking at like a screen of colorful balls like could stop ruminating.
And so the very simple things, I mean, we go big, we like think we need like postmates and, you know,
big things, but like very small things like you know noticing three sites,
three sounds, three sensations you know so I mean and we all know this if we get a call right in
the middle of you know a stressful moment we might totally be in a different headspace by the time
the call is over but being able to know what are the ways that you can kind of re-enter the moment
and having concrete ways of doing so even if you don't have someone
Juicy gossip that you've dropped you. I mean we are ridiculous creatures
There's a line I heard from the comedian Theovon like we're amazing humans are amazing and we're also straight muppets like the fact that
We are so distractible can be used to our advantage and that's kind of hilarious
It's I always think about that movie Up where there are these bad guy canines
who are chasing, I think it's Up.
They're chasing the protagonists
and every once in a while the dogs
will get distracted by a squirrel and that's us.
Yeah and what I want people to know is
it's kind of like going to the gas station.
You just need to like refuel yourself.
You don't want to like live in distraction.
You know, if you're stuck on something
you need a quick reset, not the rest of the day out of office
and then a big pile up tomorrow.
Yes.
You keep mentioning the word reset, and we're going to get to your actual resets and buffers
coming up.
But let me just ask you about your story.
You referenced worrying about your tests in college, but what else about your biography
got you so deeply interested in
stress?
Yeah, I mean, there's so much I can say about this.
I think genetically I probably run a little more on the stressed side, but I really found
that so many of the things that I learned in training as a mindfulness-based behavioral
therapist really changed my life.
And one of the things that really breaks my heart and continues to really move me is the fact
that so many people are really struggling
and can't necessarily afford research-backed help.
And also not everyone needs a full course of therapy.
A lot of people could benefit from smaller doses
of self-help materials.
And during the peak of the pandemic,
when there were so many articles about people
struggling with their mental health and not being able to access care, a colleague of mine at UCLA
mentioned to me that there was this study run by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania
that found that people that were going into surgery, half of the people were given benzodiazepine and
half of the people were offered the chance
to listen to a song called Waitless by Marconi Union.
And remarkably, Dan, the song worked almost as well as the benzodiazepine.
And obviously, songs have no side effects.
And this got me really thinking a lot about what are the simple ways we can improve how
we feel without downsides.
And I wrote an article about the song and other similar
strategies for the New York Times, and it went viral.
And then I wanted to kind of expand on additional ways
we could all improve how we cope in difficult moments
and also how to create a life that feels more like a buffer.
But these are also certainly things
that I am always applying in my life.
I have three little kids, and I work
with a lot of people that are in crisis back to
back and these are all kind of the beads that I put together like routinely in my own life
and they've been incredible catalysts for change in my life and I want everyone to have access
to them even if they can't meet with a professional.
Yeah.
Just to quickly say if anybody's wondering what a benzodiazepine is, it's a class of
anti-exiety drugs that includes Xanax, Ativan, Clonopin, Valium, etc., etc.
And just back to you, it sounds like your goal here is, yeah, some people need a therapist,
many of us do, and almost all of us are stressed, and some decent subset may not actually require
therapy, so for those folks, for the worried well, this book.
Yeah, and some people that have been in therapy,
they need something to turn to in a tough moment.
A friend of mine, she did a course of DBT,
which is one of the therapies I specialize in,
and she has post-its all over her house.
It's like DBT skills reminders.
And so we all might need a quick reminder.
And I think one of the ironies is even the concept of a book on stress, because like when you're stressed, who's going to sit down
and start flipping through a book. And so this book is almost like a cookbook where you could
turn to any page and find strategies, depending on what you need to improve the moment.
That makes a lot of sense. And just to go back to Benzos, I know you write about them in the book.
And a lot of people listening probably do take them or have taken them
or might be considering taking them. What's your take on them?
There's so much to say about Benzo de Azepines. I mean, maybe we could start with their history
and then a little bit about their pharmacology and then a little bit on the irony in them.
In terms of the history of Benzo de Azepines, I find this really interesting.
in them. In terms of the history of benzodiazepines, I find this really interesting. And I learned a lot about this from Robert Whitaker, who wrote an Adam Bevan Epidemic. He is a science
journalist and he also runs a website called Madden America. But he explained to me, and
this is based on a lot of research, that benzodiazepines were developed by a pharmaceutical company
that was trying to treat bacteria.
And they discovered that mice on the verge of being electrocuted, who were administered
a specific compound, behaved passively.
So these mice are about to be electrocuted and their columns can be.
And then Arthur Sackler of the opioid crisis, notoriety, started marketing what turned out
to be benzodiazepines to women who were really
stuck by their days as housewives, as mother's little helper.
And it's really terrible that a substance is being pushed as a way to cope with a dissatisfying
life.
And pharmacologically, 30 million people take these and they act on a neurotransmitter known as GABA, which
is almost like the brakes of our nervous system.
They bind to a GABA receptor, amplifying its breaking power.
But then what happens to us is we naturally reduce our output of GABA.
So we become dependent on these external sources of anxiety relief that are very sedating.
And then we don't have that within us.
And so when people try to discontinue them,
it's really difficult.
It's a really difficult withdrawal,
and I just find it's so painfully ironic
that when we need to be our sharpest,
these medications really dull our ability to think clearly
and to be energized to do the things that we need to do,
and they perpetuate this belief that anxiety
is something that we need to run from.
And so a lot of people may not realize that to actually do behavior therapy, you need
to work on some sort of benzotapir.
And it can be very challenging and you need to work with a professional on that, but it
can also change your life and save your brain because long-term benzodiazepine use is associated
with cognitive decline.
Okay, one thing to say and then some questions.
I said what I'm about to say to you to Dr. David Russ Marin in the episode I referenced
earlier.
By the way, listeners, I will put a link to that in the show notes.
But here's the way I use benzos and just be interested in your take as a doctor.
I have panic disorder.
I had a big resurgence of claustrophobia a year ago. I was having trouble getting on
planes and in elevators. So for planes, when I went out of real, I needed to travel for
work. I really needed to travel and I was in the throes of this really severe cycle of panic. And so I used benzos as a bridge to get me on planes
while I did exposure therapy, riding in an elevator
with my shrink at the Westchester Mall
and slowly tapering the amount of benzodiazepine
that I took to get on the plane.
So I used it as a bridge as opposed to something
I just take as a standing dose all the time.
And so in that way, I found Benzos to be really helpful.
Am I off?
That makes a lot of sense.
And I would certainly recommend for someone, let's say someone is
having to give a eulogy tomorrow and they are worried that they're not going to be
able to sleep well tonight.
There are certain instances a couple of times a year, maybe, where
something like that could be helpful and I don't want to presume arrogantly that I want to make broad recommendations for everyone.
But I truly believe that there are ways to treat panic relatively quickly.
And if you're taking a benzodiazepine a couple times a year, a couple times a month, that's
okay.
That maybe it's not going to be habit-forming.
But a lot of people I've worked with have found that it works too well,
and they took it on the plane and then they want to take it tomorrow
because there's going to be a stressful thing tomorrow,
and then they want to use it the third day to sleep,
and then it can easily become something more than that.
In relatively quick ways,
there are alternative methods to treat panic that are really empowering.
Yes, I have found that. I got lucky with benzos in that, There are alternative methods to treat panic that are really empowering
Yes, I have found that I got lucky with benzos in that and I do have an addictive personality I struggled with cocaine many years ago
I was taking clonopin which is a flavor of Benzo it makes me feel like shit the next day
And so I was powerfully disincentivized because I didn't want to feel like shit the next day
So I just I used it as minimally as possible.
But I could see how it would be addictive
because it feels good in the moment.
It's like the, as I've written somewhere
that you could like march an army of chimpanzees
with ninja stars through the room
and I would not freak out and that feels really good
as somebody who has like a baseline,
you know, anxiety all the time. And I recognize, A, I don't want to be addicted to anything and B, the
price I'm paying the next day after I take a benzo is so high that I really want to
cut it out as much as possible.
Yeah, and I worry that even just taking it, and I may really appreciate you talking about
this because it takes a lot of courage and vulnerability to do that.
But even just taking it has a little bit of a flavor of there's something wrong with
feelings certain ways.
And one of the things that we know is that really accepting is kind of the way, huh?
I agree with that powerfully.
One of the things, I've mentioned this on the show before, a thing that I talk about
with everybody, most especially my nine year old son,
is I think the assignment of being alive
is getting more comfortable with discomfort.
And as Esther Perel has pointed out on this show
and other places that we've created,
I think her term is a kind of assisted living
in modern society where technology has made
so many things so free of friction
that we freak out if we're
freaking out, if anything's difficult.
And so, absolutely, I don't think, for me, I don't take a benzo if I'm mildly anxious.
I take it if I'm worried I'm going to have a panic attack and can't get on a flight with
my kid.
And then when you worry about having a panic attack, can I ask what you're worried about
happening?
Like what are the physical symptoms that scare you the most or that you most read?
Oh, what's so interesting is that, you know, and I've done a lot of work on this and when
you're doing exposure therapy, you know, you get questions like the question you just asked
me. And what's so interesting that I kind of knew, but I never really had it pointed
out to me explicitly, is that the thought I often have when I'm worried
about getting claustrophobic in an elevator
or an airplane is other people are gonna think I'm insane.
And I thought that maybe it was idiosyncratic,
but no, it is classic.
And it makes a lot of sense because the number one fear,
justifiably, for most humans is social rejection.
Why? Because we evolved to be communal creatures,
and if you were rejected on the savannah
during evolution times,
you were gonna get killed by a saber-toothed tiger.
I don't even know if they had saber-toothed tigers
on the savannah, but with some sort of predator.
So that's a thing that goes through my mind,
is like, I'm gonna freak out,
and everybody's gonna point and laugh at me.
And what would freaking out look like?
Freaking out is I need to get off
of this fucking plane right now.
Like I am trapped and I need to get out.
I'm gonna start banging on that door
even though we're on the tarmac
and the door won't take me anywhere
because we're not hooked up to the skybridge anymore.
I am trapped, I'm in hell.
That's what I worry about.
And what's the hell in your body?
Just so everybody knows. This is what happens if you go to a doctor when you have panic disorder.
Hell in my body is honestly not that bad.
And I'm sorry, is this okay?
No, it's totally fine. It's great. I think it's just really good for people to hear what this is like.
Hell in my body is a set of uncomfortable sensations that I have learned over time.
I can absolutely survive.
So racing hard, dizziness,
a feeling of the walls closing in, blurry vision,
sweaty palms, dry mouth, shortness of breath.
So all of that happens,
and it's your nervous system sending you the signal, you're gonna
die but you need to get out of this situation.
Of course, there is no objective threat in those moments I've now learned and so I've
learned to talk to myself in a way that, you know, I can tell myself there is no threat
here.
And by the way, just doing that brings the prefrontal cortex online and deactivates the
amygdala as you know.
And I can also tell myself,
I've experienced these sensations a million times
and I'm still alive.
I can experience it now.
Great. And so you're doing like all the things
and there's maybe even more things that we can talk through
but I love the idea that someone could lean on things
within themselves and that really comes with this added dose of self-efficacy,
which is like this priceless feeling of mastery,
whereas taking something outside of you
and you kind of feel lousy the next day is a missed opportunity.
But again, if you need to, someone listening
needs to take a benzodiazepine to do something that's
a really core value of theirs, far be it for me to opine on your life, but I really want people to know that when I meet
someone that has long struggled with panic attacks, I feel equal parts like heartbroken
and like elated.
I'm devastated that so many people haven't been able to find treatment because treatment
works relatively quickly and I'm elated because there are really exciting things that people
may not know about that work well, very well. Yes, and the self mastery part of it is true.
And it's also true that the process sucks. Like it sucks to systematically face your fears. It's
not fun. I would much rather avoid it through not getting on planes or not getting in elevators or,
you know, taking a climb in or whatever. But that makes your life small, and there are other massive prices to pay, like potential
for addiction, hangovers, etc.
And by the way, nobody, literally nobody promised us that life was going to be easy.
In fact, just the opposite, a proper understanding of life is that it is challenging.
So shying away from that is
to miss out on really on the good stuff. Yeah, and I would say it's it's a little
bit like working out. Like some people could say that it sucks but some people
feel so hopeful and excited that like often people help me help them like
rev up their panic symptoms and like at that point they've won and anxiety is
lost and so you could say it sucks or you could say
that it's really like exciting that you're about to like
win, you know, put panic in the trunk
and you in the front seat.
Yes, yes.
That's a little rah-rah for my taste,
but you're absolutely right.
I used to like hate some of the panic treatment stuff
or exposures.
I know I feel like doing it, I like people and I don't want to bother people or
make people uncomfortable.
But now I feel like privilege, like how lucky am I that we get to do this thing together
that's going to help you and you know isn't going to harm you.
And the worst thing is like feeling like you can't do the things that you want to do.
Coming up, Dr. Jenny Tates talks about what she means by a stress reset,
the difference between resets and buffers,
and practical examples of many, many resets that you can use in your daily life.
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Okay, so Stress Resets, it's the name of the book.
It's the subject of the ensuing discussion between you and me.
What is a stress reset?
A stress reset is a quick thing we can do in the moment
to either improve our thinking,
improve how we feel in our body, or improve our behaviors.
So in just a matter of minutes, no long meditations,
medications or martinis required,
you can give yourself a little bit more wiggle room
to live a better life.
So the book is called Stress Resets, but you actually spend the book talking about resets
and buffers, which are separate ideas.
Can you describe the difference?
A reset is what we do in the heat of the moment when we are really struggling.
It's almost like urgent care, if you will.
And a buffer are things that you can do preventatively to live a life where
you're less likely to go from crisis to crisis. Just in case anybody's out there thinking about
this person's just making the shit up. This all comes from DBT, ACT, CBT. So that's
dialectical behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy and cognitive behavioral
therapy. These evidence-based psychotherapeutic modalities. And do I have that right?
Yes, nothing in this book is made up. The research reference section is pretty lengthy.
All of these things are things that have been found helpful in various clinical trials or
a part of evidence-based treatments. And not everyone is going to work for you, but you can
find your favorites because there's a lot of them to choose from.
And I also just want to let people know that, again, these things short-term are not going
to be as relieving as leaving work for the day or buying something really expensive online
or something that's like a quick, like big dose of dopamine.
But these are the things that longer-term will help you and and longer term will prove like a much better
investment.
A point well taken.
Just in no particular order, Lauren, the producer on this episode, identified a few that she
thought might work here.
So this is in the book, Mind Reset Number Two, Acknowledge Your State of Mind.
What do you mean by that?
How does it work?
We all metaphorically and also somewhat literally have three states of mind. What do you mean by that? How does it work? We all metaphorically and also somewhat literally have three states of mind. We have an emotion
mind where we're governed by our emotions. We have a reasonable mind where we're really
just logical and focused on the facts. And then we also have a wise mind where we merge
like our facts, feelings plus intuition intuition and this is a skill that's
taught in dialectical behavior therapy. And there's nothing wrong with emotion mind or
something wrong with reasonable mind. You don't always need to be in wise mind. But if
I'm about to try to work on my taxes, I can do myself a huge favor if I say I'm in a motion mind and I need to be in reasonable mind,
or if I'm just focused on facts when I need to be more focused on feelings, like I got to get
home, it's getting late rather than really enjoying my time with my friend who's never in town,
it might be helpful to just even notice like what state of mind I'm in because
we can get into this big thing of like really taking our thoughts very seriously, but if we can quickly say emotion mind, you know, when I face this particular situation,
emotion mind.
But categorically writing off that we're in a place where our emotions are running this
show because they're very high, we can kind of be able to see more clearly.
And even just taking a step back to think like, what is wise mind gives us a little bit of room to make a better decision. Does that make sense, Dan?
Yeah, it does, but I want to drill down on it a little bit. Run through with me, for
me, for us, again, the different minds. It's emotion mind, wise mind.
And reasonable mind, which is the facts.
Okay, reasonable mind is facts. Wise mind is.
The integration of facts and feelings and intuition.
And emotion is, we all know what that is.
Yeah, the feelings, the raw feelings.
And so it's simply putting a label on where we are right now
that can be a stress reset.
Absolutely, because if in the middle of the night
I start hearing noise or I start convincing
myself that if I don't fall asleep within minutes tomorrow is going to be terrible.
If I just quickly tell myself like a motion mind that is so much more helpful than continuing
to add on to the tornado.
And is that it?
Is it simply just a motion mind or do you then say,
okay this is emotion mind what I need now is reasonable mind and let me talk to
myself in the following way. Great question you you notice what state of
mind you're in, what states I deal for your situation and then try to shift
gears a little bit and there's also a skill of practicing accessing wise mind
for those times that you really need the integration.
How do we access wise mind?
Taking a moment to slow down and even breathing in wise, breathing out mind, like let's say
you're about to say something really mean to someone you actually really like, you know,
slowing down and breathing in wise, breathing out mind, asking yourself, is this wise mind?
Leaning into the pauses between your breaths
because there's something about emotion mind
that's really reactive and fast
and compulsive and impulsive.
I said this before, and it might have,
for people who don't have, you know,
aren't interested in or conversant
in the various parts of the brain.
Earlier I was talking about how I could be on a plane,
the panic could start, I could start feeling
some incipient physical sensations of panic, psychological manifestations, scary thoughts, talking about how I could be on a plane, the panic could start, I could start feeling some
incipient physical sensations of panic, psychological manifestations, scary thoughts, etc. etc.
And if I talk to myself in the right way, I said something to the effect of it can deactivate
the amygdala and bring online the prefrontal cortex. The amygdala is the stress center
of the brain. The prefrontal cortex is basically reasonable mind incarnate.
And that seems to me exactly what you're talking about here.
As soon as you put a label on emotion mind, you're jumping from the skittering amygdala
to a sort of reasonable, the newer part of the brain.
Exactly. You could go through all these things in your mind trying to convince yourself that's just a sort of reasonable, the newer part of the brain.
Exactly, you could go through all these things
in your mind trying to convince yourself
that's just turbulence, that's just wind,
that's whatever it is, but if you just say emotion mind,
you can kind of get the prefrontal cortex on board.
Just harkening back to something you said earlier
in this conversation that I made a note
of wanting to come back to,
you talked about playing with our thoughts. I don't know if you invoked clay as a metaphor,
but you invoked something as a metaphor, playing with our thoughts. And this maybe seems like
an apropos moment to bring it up, back up.
Yeah, so this is another, we said a lot of times we take our thoughts very, very seriously.
we said a lot of times we take our thoughts very, very seriously and most of our thoughts are more like spam than very important people speaking truths to us. And so even just learning to practice,
it's called cognitive diffusion of just like taking your thoughts lightly. And there's a lot of ways
we can do this. One of my favorite ways to do this is singing your thoughts. And so there's
different ways you can practice
this. But if you have the thought, you know, I'm a loser that shows up every Saturday night,
if you sing that to the tune of a song like Do You Believe in Magic, it loses its grip. It just
won't feel the same. And it's a nice reminder that thoughts are just combinations of letters and sounds.
They don't necessarily have a lot of value or credibility.
And a client taught me this and I love it so much.
But even just there's a had a way song, What Is Love?
Yeah.
And there's a great Saturday night live clip of Jim Carrey dancing to What Is Love.
But even like, what are thoughts?
Thoughts can't hurt me no more.
And so this is another way out of ruminating
is really seeing like, okay, like thoughts can't hurt me.
I can sing the thought because we snowball and spiral
and drown when we are taking these very unhelpful
emotion mind ideas and making them reality.
But if we can play, sing,
we automatically lose their grip.
I was at a psychology conference and this was the coolest thing,
but we instead of wearing name tags with our actual names,
we wrote our core beliefs about ourselves.
One of the best things about being a psychologist is you
get endless experiential opportunities.
But people that are truly like wonderful,
noble, inspirational, righteous people that might have even been on the show are wearing
name tags that say, I'm a bad person. And such a different thing to wear that on your
name tag versus like really believe that. And also such a enlightening experience to
realize that we all have these. this is part of our shared humanity
my Wife and child hate when they'll sometimes come to me with serious things and I will sing it back to them this reset
I did it to my son the other day and he looked at me and said daddy sometimes you are hard to love
It's so funny that you say that because when I do this with my kids they they start laughing
Maybe my singing is more laughable, but.
I think it's because like they're actually asking me
to do something that with an acute need,
like they're trying to get me to do something
that needs to happen right now.
And I sing it back to them and they hate that.
Okay, so those are mind resets,
acknowledging your state of mind, singing your thoughts.
There are body resets and one of them
is to cool down literally.
So this is another skill from dialectical behavior therapy, DBT, and basically if you
take a salad bowl full of ice water and you set a timer for 30 seconds, you hold your breath,
you submerge your face into the cold water, you activate the vagus nerve and you slow your heart rate and redirect blood flow
from your heart to other essential organs. If you were wearing an apple watch
your heart rate would come down significantly so people should not do
this if they have a heart condition but doing something as quick as a 30
second basically like a face ice bucket challenge or a cold punch for your face
only you quickly reset and
just very practically, if you jumped into a cold pool, you wouldn't still be thinking
about the same thing when you were in the pool or when you came out.
And again, this just takes 30 seconds and there's something really empowering about
realizing that it doesn't take very long and doesn't take anything too fancy, but there's
something about literally cooling down that quiets the mind and regulates your body.
Well, who has an ice bucket lying around?
You just need a salad bowl.
You just need something your face will fit in.
But it takes some forethought here.
You have to be freaking out and be like, okay, I need to go get a salad bowl and a bunch
of ice and make this happen.
If you want to do it in the technical sense, yes. But now they sell these little ice rollers for your face.
It's not going to have the same jarring effect.
There's like little ice rollers for your face
if you suck on an ice cube.
But I think even more powerful than the literal skill
is the bigger message that our body is incredibly resourceful
and resilient.
And there are quick ways to recalibrate.
So like if you're living in New York City
and it's cold right now and you wanted to take a walk
around the block, that might even reach some of it.
It's not going to reach the exact benefits of the,
it's called the mammalian dive response.
It's not going to do the exact benefits of that,
but there are ways to quickly do this.
But these days, so many people are working from home
and a lot of, I think, our stress can easily come up
when we're at home, but just knowing that this is out there there and I've also had people do things like have the dry ice
that you could just quickly access. I find this intriguing. I was on a meditation retreat like
a private one with just a couple of friends during the pandemic retreat centers were all closed and
so we basically just stayed at my friend's house in the fall in Maine and anybody's ever been in
Maine even in the summer the water there is unacceptably cold and this was the fall in Maine and anybody's ever been in Maine. Even in the summer, the water there is
unacceptably cold and this was the fall and every afternoon at this retreat we would jump off the
pier into the water and it was shocking. I mean it was terrible at first and then the elation that I felt every time was really remarkable.
Yeah, and that phase ice thing is much faster.
Again, 30 seconds, you could do it with frozen vegetables if you don't have ice.
Fast, easy, quick, and again, we do have this mammalian dive response.
We do have these incredible mechanisms within us that are almost like control all delete.
We just need to know how to access them.
Mammalian what response?
Dive response.
Dive response.
I mean, what does that refer to dive?
When a human body is submerged while they're holding their breath, when their
nose is submerged in water, it lowers your heart rate and redirects blood flow.
Is this why deep breathing also can have salutary effects?
I'm not sure, but deep breathing also activates the vagus nerve.
It wouldn't be the dive response,
but that's another very powerful tool of slowing your breathing down to five second inhale,
five second exhale can similarly activate
the parasympathetic nervous system and
slow you down. Can you define vagus nerve and parasympathetic nervous system? Yes, the vagus
nerve is the main component of the parasympathetic nervous system and that's the rest and digest
part of us that slows us down. And so if we're really revved up and we want to be able to access
like slow the bodily functions
that we have that help us regulate, these are some of the ways that we can from the outside
in.
So as a body reset, we talked about cool down, but it's possible that this deep breathing
that you just described five seconds in five seconds out for some period of time could
also be a reset.
Yeah, there's a very popular package of resets that's taught in DBT for people that are really
struggling with overthinking or intense urges. The acronym is TIP, which is temperature, which is
that ice face exercise. I is intense exercise, and that's not a gym class. That's like 90 seconds of
like squat jumps, burpees, doing something quickly to change your chemistry. So temperature intense exercise, paced breathing, which is
the five seconds in, five seconds out. So inhaling for five seconds, exhaling for five seconds.
So we're slowing our breathing from the average person, breathes about 18 breaths per minute.
So we're slowing down to a third of that six breaths per minute. And then the final P in tip is progressive muscle relaxation, which is
tensing and releasing, like tensing your forehead, releasing, tensing your neck by
bringing your chin to your chest, releasing. And so doing this combination of four exercises is
one of my favorite ways to either stop rumination or change your bodily
response if you are in a very high stress situation and for people that can't do the temperature
because they're somewhere that they can't access ice, you could certainly maybe do the two Ps or...
So any one of them might do the trick?
Yeah, yeah, and I think different ones work well for different people, so I hope you try them all.
Yeah, and I think different ones work well for different people, so I hope you try them all.
Coming up, Jenny talks about how to cultivate a willing attitude,
what she means by negative core beliefs and how to untangle from them, and how to prepare in advance for stressful situations.
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Okay, so we've talked about a few mind resets,
a few body resets.
There's also behavior resets
and the one that Lauren picked for us to discuss
and you can supplement if you would like.
The one that Lauren picked was
cultivate a willing attitude. Yeah, a lot of us approach our lives with willfulness, which is a
hell no sort of stance, digging your heels in, screaming or silently speaking, you know,
expletives or screaming them into, you know, Twitter or X. And willingness is having an attitude of like kind of hell yes.
And so to try all of these things,
like these things are not things that I want people to just read about,
but to actually lean into, it's really helpful to practice willingness.
And I think in any moment, if you're sitting in traffic and you're clenching
and you're compulsively, you know, moving in your car or hitting the horn,
just taking a second and asking yourself, am I being willing or willful? you're compulsively moving in your car or hitting the horn,
just taking a second and asking yourself,
am I being willing or willful?
And willingness is really what I think of
as the embodiment of acceptance.
And it's almost like if you spilled something on the floor,
like willingness is picking it up with a good attitude
and willfulness is like throwing something
after you spilled something.
And so it's a really incredible shift
into being more effective, agreeable, good sport in life.
Does that make sense, Dan?
It does.
I just want to clarify again, I'm sure this is true.
You're not saying we should act out every shitty idea
somebody gives to us, especially if they have more power
than us, we should accept any sexual advance
that's wanted or unwanted.
This is really about,
are we accepting what the universe is offering up to us in this moment or not?
I love that you asked that question. It's really willingness in the service of our values.
Got it.
So I'm willing to go the extra mile to be a good friend. I'm willing, it's things that
bring us closer to the life that we want to live rather than things that move us away from it. And in key moments
it's about like what's your relationship to reality in traffic for example. This
is what's happening right now so raging against it ain't so useful. Right and if
you're with someone that you love but you're annoyed with in the moment maybe
you need to be willing to be a little bit nice or give the benefit of the doubt or
stretch yourself
my wife who married an occasionally very annoying person has a tattoo on her wrist that says right now
it's like this and
That's basically the cultivation of a willing attitude like whatever's happening right now. I can feel this I
Love that and I forgot the quote but Zach Braf shared something beautiful about a tattoo
he has that's similar, I think.
A more or something?
Yeah, a more fate, which was to love your fate.
I think that's a nice way to also think about willingness.
Yeah, seven days to last again,
I haven't really unpacked this with her,
but she's a great meditation teacher,
but she has a tattoo that says trust life,
which as I've sometimes joked is a little earnest
for my taste, but, and this is a person
who's on her fourth bout of cancer
and had gone through a divorce
and had plenty of difficult family stuff.
And I think it's her way of saying like,
if this is happening,
it's what's supposed to happen on some level.
I might be mangling that
because I don't think she believes in creator,
God, or destiny or anything like that, but it is what's happening right now.
So you should trust that this is what's happening and cultivates
inequity in the face of it.
Seb, if I got that wrong, I apologize.
Yeah, dragging is not going to help anyone dance towards what they want.
Okay, so let's move into some buffers.
We've been talking about resets, which are more sort of, you know, you've got an acute
situation.
Here's what you can do.
Buffers are, I think, followed more in the preventive medicine bucket.
Here's mind buffer number one.
Untangle yourself from negative core beliefs.
This harkens back to your psychology conference.
Yes, so oftentimes because of our upbringing or painful experiences we've endured, we develop
core beliefs or fundamental ways we view ourselves.
You know, anything ranging from I'm unlovable to other people can't be trusted.
And these core beliefs really can affect the way we view ourselves and view the world, and rather than letting them guide us or become a self-fulfilling prophecy,
it's really helpful to know what they are and realize when they've been,
a hot button issue has been pressed.
The most important, I think, is to act in ways that transcend them.
If you think you don't belong to really purposefully pursue the communities that you'd like to belong in, even if they feel aspirational, or if you
think other people can't be trusted to lean in and strategically increase your trust in
other people. And so I think being super aware of the way you view yourself in the world
and then checking in as to how that affects your behaviors and then acting in ways that are counter to them and then also really being
compassionate and
Aware when certain core beliefs get triggered and being mindful that that's because it's a core belief that it's remains to feel very true
I see all these people that are incredibly successful
accomplished
like a book charismatic and they feel like awkward adolescents that are about to be made fun of
because they were bullied in high school or they were a poor fit in their class or they
struggled with shame because people didn't accept them growing up and to be just really aware of
how that affects their day to day rather than to be living that as if it's real in the current moment.
Yeah, I've been thinking about a problem that I've had for many years, which is when somebody criticizes me often, I hear that as you're a terrible person.
And so I freak out.
I have a disproportionate response instead of focusing on like the narrow issue that
somebody's trying to identify.
And I've worked on this, which leads me to the, I think the natural follow up question
is, is what exactly can one do to operationalize this buffer to
untangle from these core beliefs?
I think you hit the nail on the head when you said even just realizing that when someone
gives you feedback, your mind quickly goes to I'm a terrible person.
So knowing what are instances where this core belief is going to be primed and what are
ways I can act different than them. So if you just
took it as feedback, how would you respond differently in preparing ahead of time to,
you know, next time this happens and my mind is going to do this, I'm going to instead
thank the person for their feedback instead of become defensive, which would be the response.
If I was believing I was, they were calling me a terrible person. So it's really deliberately working on
creating a new habit.
And it's hard to predict when this is gonna happen,
but when you get some tough feedback
to train yourself to have a reflex of thank you,
I will think about that.
No matter what else is going on for you,
and then when your nervous system comes down,
you can really chew on what the person said.
Am I in the zone of accuracy here?
Absolutely, and Dan, I think an important first step is even just taking a minute to
think about if people are listening right now and thinking, what are my core beliefs?
How do I fundamentally view myself?
What are the stories I hold about other people to get really clear because then you're more
likely to be able to be on high alert when it gets pushed.
You have a nice phrase in the book that our core beliefs are things that we tend to make pervasive, permanent and personal.
That is something that Martin Seligman, a professor who wrote the book Learned Optimism, talks about.
So when we start to make things, you things, you weren't invited to the party,
isn't just I wasn't invited to the party, but I'm never invited, I'll never be
invited, everyone is terrible and no one likes me.
So step one is to think, take a minute and think. It can be right now, it can be
later when you're not listening to us talk. What are my core beliefs?
And then if I'm hearing you correctly,
the next step is to try to work on some new reflexes
for moments when those core beliefs are triggered.
Exactly, yeah, you're coping ahead
for ways to practice what I call opposite action,
acting different than what your emotions
want you to be doing.
Well, that reminds me of something you said earlier
that I promised to come back to,
which was thinking about situations
where we know we're gonna get stressed
and preparing in advance for them.
You made a reference to that
and I made a note of wanting to come back to it.
Does that sound familiar?
That does sound familiar.
And there are several ways we can do this.
I'll walk you through two of them.
So the first one is coping ahead.
So I really encourage people rather than dread,
cope ahead.
So if I know that I'm taking a red eye tomorrow
and I'm going to be really tired
and I'm going to have to get to the airport
and I'm not going to have the foods I usually like to eat
and so on and so on, rather than go through all of the things
that could go wrong and how things will just become problematic rather than rehearsing the outcome that I don't want,
I can mentally and logistically prepare for things to go right. And so rather than taking
something that's unproductive, again, we're making it useful. And there's something really powerful
about mental rehearsal, just imagining doing the thing, you imagining you're having a difficult conversation with
someone, and you respond with kindness when they say something
upsetting, I'm just imagining doing that uses the same part of
your brain that's needed to actually do that. So it's not
only kind of like a nice idea, but it's actually literal rehearsal.
And so that's one way to do that. And then another way to do
that is very specific to do that. And then another way to do that is very specific to people
that do struggle with physical sensations
that they don't like.
If you know that if you're in a tight space
or you're going to have a year end review with a boss
or you're going to be flying, if you're anticipating
that those situations are going to make you sweat,
make your heart race, make you feel dizzy,
rather than simply, again,
like praying that that doesn't happen or feeling like you need to take a pill to make those
sensations go away, you can practice panicking. You can practice, you know, getting really
clear on what are the symptoms that I'm anticipating that I don't like. And one of my favorite
things to do is help people recreate those symptoms. And so if you know that your heart's going to raise and you're going to get really hot
and you're going to feel short of breath, I can help you by helping you put on a jacket
doing jumping jacks and taking a straw, like a plastic straw, pinching it so it's half
the diameter, pinching your nose and just breathing from the skinny opening of the straw that
will make you feel like you can't breathe.
If by listing your specific stress bodily sensations, recreating the responses that you're
afraid of in a safe space, practicing each of them for a minute repeatedly, when these
come up, you have a kind of a been-there-done-that attitude about them rather than catastrophic interpretations, and you conclude that they're
really temporary rather than terrible.
Hmm.
And just to be clear from the book, this is body buffer number 12.
Give yourself a panic attack to feel less afraid of them.
Yes.
Yeah.
I've never been able to make this work.
My exposure therapy guy was trying to get me to do this.
I never, for some reason, like, I can't manage to really freak out unless I'm in the situation
for real.
But I do know this works for lots of people.
Yeah, I also want to say that it works across the board, whether it's public speaking or
test anxiety or traditional panic attacks or general anxiety that creates all sorts of other symptoms.
And the reason I want to talk about it is because I just feel like we're set up to fail when our body is doing something that intensifies our emotions and then our mind is escalating the bodily response. more flexibly and have learned experience about the temporariness of the body sensations
and we're so much freer to approach situations with more hope and learned optimism.
Yes. It's like a form of exercise. It's like a bicep curl of, yeah, I can do this thing. And so
when the sensations come up, whether it's stress, anxiety, or panic, then you're not completely
taken off guard. You're prepared. You're totally prepared. And you need to do this repeatedly. And the
goal is never for these symptoms to be tolerable. Tolerable is the wrong word. It's never for
it to be like you're not supposed to habituate to them. They're supposed to be distressing and
similar, but that you metaphorically have like put out a welcome mat rather than a do not disturb to them.
What resets and buffers do you find yourself using the most?
Oh, so many. I love stop, slow down, take a step back, observe, proceed mindfully. That's something that I'm constantly doing. And then I follow that up with anchoring, like feeling my
feet on the floor, doing a quick three point check check. What am I thinking, feeling doing, and coming back to what's helpful in the moment? I'm also
obsessed with half-smiling, which is a facial expression of acceptance where you
ever so slightly raise the upper corners of your lips, which automatically
releases tension in your brow, which I find it's very difficult to get lost in
judgmental thoughts or overthinking
with a facial expression of serenity. And opposite action is in another one.
Okay. You just list a bunch of things that I want to go back through. So stop, STOP,
that's an acronym. Can you just walk us through that again and how we might do that?
Sure. Stop is slowing down, taking a step back, observing and proceeding mindfully.
So literally like thinking to yourself, like, because a lot of the things that we do thinking
wise or behavior wise that are problematic or when we're going 100 miles an hour.
So truly slowing down because again, like we have a lot more space to, to damage control
if we're going like five miles an hour versus 150 miles an hour.
That's something very quick, just literally stopping and being more mindful.
And then anchoring is like digging your heels into the floor, really feeling the earth supporting
your feet, doing a quick three point check.
What am I thinking?
What am I feeling?
What am I doing right now? And come back to the demands of
the present moment or what's helpful in the present moment? And so like really kind of turning on
awareness when we're kind of slipping into suffering or responses that are going to make things
exponentially worse. Turning on awareness meaning in a mindfulness way. Yeah, seeing clearly what's happening because then we can change things.
Yeah, I mean that's jumping from the amygdala to the referental cortex.
From the emotions driving your life to your inner wisdom driving your life.
So you walked us through stop and anchoring. I think half-smiling is self-explanatory and very, very interesting.
You mentioned opposite action as being something
That's very useful for you. You explained it a little bit before but I'd be curious like how do you apply opposite action in your life?
Yeah opposite action is when an emotion is not helping us doing the opposite
So if I feel really tired and I don't feel like going to a gym class like getting up and going or if I feel really impatient and
Tired and I don't want to have a long chat with my nine-year-old to sit down and really pay attention to her as I would
if I wasn't tired and if I had some energy and if I wasn't stressed about other things,
really acting the way you want to live even if it's not what you want to do in the moment,
it allows you to design the life that you want to live and really embody that. So yeah, I'm doing it all the time. I feel like I'm juggling a
million things. I really try to do one thing at a time. If I feel annoyed, I really try
to give the benefit of the doubt and lead with kindness. If I feel nervous about something,
I run towards it if it's aligned with my long-term life goals.
You came to us through a mutual friend, Sharon Salzburg,
who's already come up in this conversation
and is a great meditation teacher.
To what extent does meditation help
with all of the resets and buffers we've been talking about
during the course of this conversation?
It helps so much in a lot of this.
I think a lot of people worry that meditation is going to be
really time-consuming. A lot of the things that I try to teach are very accessible. So the longest
meditation that I prescribe is like the 20-minute coherent breathing, but there's also a three-minute
mindfulness that people could do daily that's part of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy that
is a treatment that's found to be as helpful.
And preventing relapse into depression is antidepressants.
And so meditation is certainly very helpful.
And for people that don't like meditation
for any reason, there are other ways
to be more aware in your life.
And for people that don't like meditation
because they see it as a big thing,
it can also be something that you can access
in smaller bites.
And these 20 minute and three minute meditations you referenced, are those available anywhere
or are they just, you describe them in the book and people can do them on their own?
I personally love the Breathe app.
We could maybe link to it in the show notes because there's a lot of Breathe apps.
But that is my personal favorite app that I lead on for coherent breathing.
There's also box breathing on there for people that prefer that approach. That is my personal favorite app that I lead on for coherent breathing.
There's also box breathing on there for people that prefer that approach.
And the three minute mindfulness people could find on YouTube.
And I also have it on my website.
I like the one led by Zindal Siegel, who is one of the developers of mindfulness based
cognitive therapy.
Great.
We'll put links to everything in the show notes.
Jenny, is there something I should have asked but failed to ask?
I don't think so.
I'm so delighted to be here and I want people to walk away with knowing that stress can be really stressful,
but it's also an opportunity to chisel the virtues that we want to embody.
And a lot of times we think that we need something really big,
but like small wheels on a big suitcase,
a little couldn't go a long way when everything feels overwhelming.
Yes, I mean, I keep referencing Russ Marin
because he says something similar to what you're saying,
which is he argues that anxiety is like a gift, a blessing.
And it's similar to what you just said,
the stress, anxiety, worry, overthinking
that we can look at as an opportunity for growth.
Yeah, and stress is the price we pay for a meaningful life.
I mean, if we didn't have stress, our lives would be really boring.
We'd probably be pretty checked out.
Yes, another Pixar reference.
The end of the movie, Wall-E, where the humanity has moved up
onto these spaceships, where they're all on these little scooters
all the time with iPads dangling in front of them,
and turkey legs and coke in their hands.
And life is stress-free, but pretty boring and numbed out.
And so yes, we should look at stress as proof that we're alive.
And the end goal is doing something to improve this moment so you can do bigger things to
build the life you care about.
Finally, can you just remind us of the name of your book and any other?
We're going to put lots of links in the show notes.
So anything else you want us to link to in the show notes?
My book is called Stress Resets, How to Soothe Your Body and Mind in Minutes.
And I also wrote a book called How to Be Single and Happy.
And you can find me on drjennytates.com.
Awesome. Thank you for doing this. Appreciate it. Very helpful.
I'm going to go put my face in a bucket of ice right now.
Thank you, Dan. It was such a treat to meet you.
And I'm really grateful for the work you do.
Thanks again to Dr. Jenny Tates.
We have talked a lot on this show about stress and anxiety, including some conversations that I mentioned in the course of the conversation
you just heard,
including episodes with Dr. David Russ Marin and the actor and writer and
director Zach Braff. I put some links in the show notes if you want to go check
those out.
10% happier is produced by Lauren Smith, Gabrielle Zuckerman,
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and Tony Magyar is our director of podcasts.
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