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6 Foundational Things That Will Improve Your Mental Health

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    mental health is not the mystery
    that it once was
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    although there's a lot of things we
    don't know about how the brain works
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    or why people feel certain things
    or what makes it better,
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    there also is a lot that we have
    figured out since the days
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    of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung
    and those early pioneers of psychology.
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    There are many things that we can
    definitively say:
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    "If you do this thing you will see
    some amount of improvement ."
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    The problem is that a lot
    of these proven strategies
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    for improving mental health are difficult,
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    uncomfortable or unpleasant to implement;
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    and a trap I see people get sucked into
    all the time is they keep looking
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    for new solutions, new answers, new ideas,
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    not because they don't have any solutions
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    but because they don't like
    the solutions they have.
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    They don't want to implement the things
    that they already know
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    and so they spend hours and hours
    reading books listening to podcasts
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    watching YouTube videos to try to find
    an easier faster or more convenient way
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    to make the changes they already know
    they should be making.
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    The thing about this is it's at best
    this is procrastination
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    at worst it's avoidance.
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    Sometimes we need to stop acquiring
    new information and focus
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    on applying the information
    we already have.
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    And rather than looking
    for that magic bullet, so to speak,
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    work on creating a foundation
    combined with all of the things
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    we already know are definitely going
    to help us if we could get them going.
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    When I hear somebody in therapy say:
    "I've tried everything",
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    what they usually mean is:
    I've tried everything that I want to try".
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    So that's why today instead of presenting
    a new concept,
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    I'm going to review some things
    that you probably already know,
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    but what I am hoping to do is maybe
    present them in a new or novel way
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    that will make them feel more accessible,
    more attainable
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    or more applicable
    than they previously did.
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    So, without further ado
    here are seven things
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    that you probably already know
    you should be doing
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    but might be struggling to implement
    into your life.
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    And the first is doing things
    that you are scared to do,
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    in other words exposure therapy,
    facing your fears.
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    Your comfort zone only grows
    when you are not in it.
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    This is critical for you to understand.
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    And engaging in activities that cause you
    anxiety or that cause you discomfort
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    is a lot ... it's kind of like stretching
    your emotional range
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    in the same way that something
    like yoga or calisthenics
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    is like stretching your movement range.
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    It doesn't necessarily feel great
    while you are doing it.
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    In fact it can often be an unpleasant
    experience while you're doing it.
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    But if you do it regularly,
    navigating the world
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    becomes more enjoyable and less painful.
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    And you're less likely to get hurt:
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    if you stretch regularly,
    you are less likely to hurt your body
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    when you're out and about
    moving around
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    and there's fewer situations that you're
    unable to physically navigate, right?
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    When you practice regular exposure therapy
    and work on
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    in a sort of a planned strategic manner
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    facing, and hopefully eventually
    conquering the things you are afraid of,
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    the world starts to open up to you.
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    It becomes more accessible and less scary
    because there are fewer situations
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    you can imagine that you would find
    yourself in that overwhelm your anxiety.
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    This is a huge part of why I used to be
    so isolated when I was younger,
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    it's because I was terrified of doing
    literally everything
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    other than playing video games in my room,
    to be honest with you.
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    And so I avoided people I avoided
    opportunity, I avoided school,
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    I avoided work because I felt like
    I had so few skills
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    and so little coping ability that
    it was only a matter of time
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    before I'd encounter a situation
    that would completely overwhelm me,
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    so I didn't enter situations like
    literally I just didn't
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    The more confidence you have
    about your ability to navigate
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    these stressful situations
    the less scary life becomes
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    and the more opportunities you have.
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    The second thing that you probably
    already know you should be doing
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    but might be struggling to do
    is taking good care of your living space.
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    Unless you are an absurdly wealthy person,
    you are going to spend
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    the vast majority of your life
    in two environments:
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    the place that you work
    and the place that you live. ////
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    Now the place you live you might own
    your entire home, you might rent,
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    you might have a room
    you might have a condo.
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    Whatever you have you have
    an environment that you call home.
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    And so these two environments,
    your work and your home,
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    they have a tremendous impact
    on your mental health
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    if for no reason no other reason,
    I should say, than volume.
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    They're where you spend
    the majority of your time
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    and so the way they look,
    the way they feel, the way they function,
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    is critical to your emotional well-being-
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    We know that the environments
    that you spend your time in
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    have a huge impact on your mental health.
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    And basically, what it comes down to
    for me, my phrasing is,
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    if you're your home doesn't feel
    comfortable to you,
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    you basically never feel like your home,
    it's like you don't have a home,
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    you don't have a space: you have a home
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    but what you don't have is a space
    in this world that feels right to you:
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    that's what you're missing
    and we all need that
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    and I believe we all deserve that.
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    But you will not have one
    unless you make one
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    you're the one that has to create
    and maintain it;
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    and I don't always like that either
    but I don't make the rules,
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    I just report on them
    and this is the way we work
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    Taking good care of your environment
    can be a very time-consuming task
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    especially if you've neglected it
    for a long time
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    but remember that you don't have
    to do it all at once, right?
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    Start small do a little bit each day
    and before you know
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    it may be your heart will have a home again
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    and that's something that can be
    invaluable for our mental health journey.
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    The third thing you probably already know
    you should be doing
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    but might be struggling to do
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    is to actually Implement
    sleep hygiene techniques.
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    There are two types of insomnia:
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    there's clinical insomnia and
    there's behavioral insomnia.
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    Clinical insomnia is when for the most part
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    you are doing things right:
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    your day is structured in a way that
    should allow you to fall asleep
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    and stay asleep reasonably well
    but you are unable to do so
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    and it takes hours to fall asleep.
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    Behavioral insomnia is when
    you have a double shot at 300 p.m.,
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    you get into bed at 11:00 p.m.,
    you scroll on your phone till midnight,
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    then you toss and turn
    until 3 in the morning.
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    In other words, you have insomnia
    but it's because of choices you're making,
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    it's not because your brain doesn't know
    how to go to sleep,
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    it's because you're not letting it
    go to sleep
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    and you've set up your life in a way
    that simply does not support sleep.
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    Most people who struggle with sleep
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    have behavioral insomnia,
    not clinical insomnia
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    Clinical insomnia is actually
    relatively rare and it's usually a matter
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    of lifestyle and habits
    that are primarily facilitating
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    the experience of insomnia.
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    So my question to you would be:
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    "Are you actually practicing sleep hygiene
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    and suffering clinical insomnia
    as a result
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    or are you self-sabotaging
    and then complaining about it?"
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    Because -- not to put
    too fine a point on it --
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    but that's basically what behavioral insomnia is:
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    you are -- unintentionally I know, I'm
    oversimplifying things a little bit --
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    you're making it as difficult as possible
    for your brain to fall asleep
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    and then being, like:
    "Brain, why didn't you fall asleep?"
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    I mean you're you're kind of gaslighting
    your sleep cycle in a sense.
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    It's a weird way to think of it. I know,
    but that's kind of what you're doing.
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    If you struggle with insomnia,
    take a real honest inventory
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    of your nighttime routine
    and ask yourself:
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    "Do I think it's reasonable that I should
    be able to fall asleep pretty quickly
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    or am I basically taking everything
    I know about sleep,
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    throwing it out the window
    and thinking that's still going to work?"
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    Because it won't.
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    You're -- you have a brain
    and you have a nervous system
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    and we know a lot about how these factors
    affect our ability to fall asleep
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    and stay asleep.
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    And so sleep is not really a mystery,
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    it's just that most people
    aren't doing it right and that's really
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    what I want you to consider if you're
    struggling with insomnia:
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    "Am I am I doing it right or am I just
    gaslighting my own sleep cycle?"
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    The fourth thing that you probably
    already know you should be doing
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    but might be having trouble with
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    is minimizing or eliminating
    drug and alcohol use
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    Now this one's a little bit different,
    I know, because this one is harder
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    for a person to control directly
    than some of the other topics
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    we're going to discuss here and
    believe me, I am understanding of that.
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    Most people who use drugs and alcohol
    use them because they want to feel
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    anything other than what it is like
    to be themselves
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    and it seems like nothing could possibly
    worse than just waking up today
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    and feeling like me -- and frankly I know
    what that feeling is like.
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    substances put you on a physical
    and mental roller coaster though
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    where instead of changing
    what it feels like to be you,
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    which is ultimately the reality
    that you are struggling with
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    you are temporarily escaping
    what it feels like to be you
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    and when the escape wears up off
    you often feel even worse than before
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    and therefore you feel an even stronger
    desire to escape from yourself,
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    which manifests as increased substance use
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    and creates a downward spiral that
    the longer it goes on
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    becomes harder and harder
    to extricate yourself from.
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    So if this is you, and I have a little bit of a
    different idea for you here,
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    because everything else in this video
    has been all about here's what you can do.
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    if you're struggling with drug and alcohol
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    use and the pattern I just describ kind
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    of sounds like you maybe it's time to
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    admit that you cannot do this alone and
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    that you need some help with this
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    problem substance misuse is probably the
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    hardest mental health condition to treat
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    without support maybe tied with eating
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    disorders because they're very similar
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    neurologically and I think that's mainly
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    because it's so easy to lie to yourself
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    and you know most people aren't
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    deceiving themselves about their
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    depression or their anxiety so like well
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    it's not that bad like usually you face
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    those things pretty head on you're like
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    no this is awful and I need help but
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    when it comes to that produce a
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    momentary sense of reward like eating
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    disorders and substance misuse you tend
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    to rationalize you tend to explain you
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    tend to minimize you tend to make
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    excuses and if you've had several
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    unsuccessful attempts at changing those
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    habits for yourself maybe it's time to
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    stop putting so much pressure on
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    yourself to accept some help and to
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    accept some support in this domain there
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    is no shame in that this is typically
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    not a solo Endeavor and it might be time
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    to think about asking for for help the
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    fifth thing that you probably already
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    know you should be doing but might be
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    having a hard time doing is being
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    Physically Active every day so I mean
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    this one is no mystery right you
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    probably had a million people tell you
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    this already including your doctor every
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    time you see them and every other
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    Medical Professional you interact with
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    you've probably heard it so many times
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    that you're sick of hearing it and you
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    have an innate automatic defensive
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    response when someone says this to you
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    so sorry about that because I probably
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    just triggered it but here's the thing
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    your brain needs blood your brain does
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    not work very well if it does not have
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    healthy accessible blood flow it's
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    literally one of the resources your
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    brain runs on it's like gasoline for
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    your brain and most of us have very
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    sedentary Lifestyles which negatively
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    impact our cardiovascular health I mean
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    that's that's just the way Society has
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    it's not your fault that's the way
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    Society has gone most jobs don't use our
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    bodies if you have a very Physically
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    Active job you probably don't need to
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    worry about this because you are
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    Physically Active every day it doesn't
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    have to be extra right it doesn't have
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    to be prescribed exercise if you get
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    this in from your job or from your kids
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    or whatever fine but if you're like me
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    and you literally just sit on your butt
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    for nine hours a day at work you need to
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    add this in your predefined life doesn't
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    have enough of it it's I'm not a fan of
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    how Society has made us so sedentary but
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    it is what it is since your brain needs
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    blood to work right cardiovascular
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    health is brain health if you constantly
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    feel foggy forgetful distracted or Moody
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    it might be because your brain doesn't
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    have enough blood flow it might be
  • 12:03 - 12:04
    because your brain doesn't have one of
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    the resources that needs to keep your
  • 12:05 - 12:08
    prefrontal cortex powered on because all
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    the things that I just said live there
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    and when your brain is lacking in any
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    essential resource blood oxygen rest or
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    caloric energy it enters a low power
  • 12:19 - 12:21
    mode much like what's on your phone or
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    your tablet or your laptop and certain
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    processes don't work as well as they
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    normally do the first part of the brain
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    that takes the hit when we're low on
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    resources is the prefrontal cortex it's
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    executive functioning its emotion
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    regulation it's social engagement so if
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    those are things you're struggling with
  • 12:38 - 12:39
    it's probably because your brain doesn't
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    have all the resources it needs to do
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    its job properly the one thing I always
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    try to emphasize with physical activity
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    too is like the way you do it really
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    doesn't matter if you want to lift
  • 12:51 - 12:52
    weights lift weights if you want to run
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    run if you want to do team sports do
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    team sports like if you hate some
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    certain type of exercise don't do it
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    it's not it's not huge
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    critical how you do it it's just
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    critical that you do it so find
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    something that you either like ideally
  • 13:08 - 13:10
    if there's nothing like literally
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    nothing find the thing you hate the
  • 13:11 - 13:14
    least it can be some weird obscure thing
  • 13:14 - 13:17
    maybe you want to get into hobby horsing
  • 13:17 - 13:18
    and if you don't know what that is you
  • 13:18 - 13:20
    should look it up on social media it's a
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    fascinating world if you do know what it
  • 13:22 - 13:24
    is I appreciate the people who
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    understand my obscure references because
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    there are many of them just do something
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    to get that that blood going to your
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    brain you might be amazed how much it
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    helps you really might be amazed the
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    sixth and final thing that you probably
  • 13:39 - 13:41
    asteris did this one probably know you
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    should be doing but are probably having
  • 13:43 - 13:45
    trouble doing is to stop beating
  • 13:45 - 13:48
    yourself up about how long it is taking
  • 13:48 - 13:50
    to get your life in order now I realize
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    that you might have been doing that
  • 13:52 - 13:55
    throughout this video already because as
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    I'm saying things that you probably
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    already knew you should be doing you
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    might have been beating yourself up
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    guilt tripping yourself shaming yourself
  • 14:01 - 14:04
    and if you were knock it off right now
  • 14:04 - 14:07
    sorry I had to say it that way but
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    seriously you're not doing yourself any
  • 14:09 - 14:12
    favors we all have enough pressure on us
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    already probably more than enough
  • 14:14 - 14:15
    pressure probably a maladaptive amount
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    of pressure and changes hard our brains
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    actively resist it because they're wired
  • 14:19 - 14:23
    for homeostasis we associate familiarity
  • 14:23 - 14:26
    with safety and with security and on a
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    very basic survival level we fight back
  • 14:28 - 14:30
    against our own attempts change putting
  • 14:30 - 14:33
    too much pressure on yourself tends to
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    keep you stuck so try patience and
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    gentleness instead and see what happens
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    it is amazing what people can do when
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    they finally feel understood and are
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    treated with respect and compassion and
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    it is very possible that the person most
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    standing in your way of feeling those
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    things and experiencing those things is
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    you
Title:
6 Foundational Things That Will Improve Your Mental Health
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Duration:
14:53

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