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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,
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you might rent, you might have a room
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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 it
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maybe 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
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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 4th 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 about "here's what you can do".
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If you're struggling with drug
and alcohol use
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and the pattern I just described
kind of sounds like you,
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maybe it's time to admit that
you cannot do this alone
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and that you need some help
with this problem
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Substance misuse is probably
the hardest mental health condition
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to treat without support,
maybe tied with eating disorders
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because they're very similar
neurologically
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and I think that's mainly because
it's so easy to lie to yourself.
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And, you know, most people
aren't deceiving themselves
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about their depression or their anxiety
so, like, well, it's not that bad.
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Usually you face those things
pretty head on
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you're like no this is awful
and I need help
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but when it comes to things that produce
a momentary sense of reward
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like eating disorders and substance misuse
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you tend to rationalize,
you tend to explain,
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you tend to minimize,
you tend to make excuses.
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And if you've had several unsuccessful
attempts at changing those habits
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for yourself, maybe it's time to stop
putting so much pressure on yourself,
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to accept some help and to accept
some support in this domain.
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There is no shame in that: this is
typically not a solo endeavor
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and it might be time to think
about asking for for help
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The fifth thing that you probably already
know you should be doing
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but might be having a hard time doing
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is being physically active every day.
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So I mean, this one is no mystery right?
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You probably had a million people
tell you this already,
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including your doctor every time
you see them
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and every other medical professional
you interact with.
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You've probably heard it so many times
that you're sick of hearing it
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and you have an innate automatic
defensive response
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when someone says this to you.
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So sorry about that, because I probably
just triggered it but here's the thing:
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your brain needs blood your brain
does not work very well
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if it does not have healthy
accessible blood flow.
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It's literally one of the resources
your brain runs on,
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it's like gasoline for your brain and
most of us have very sedentary lifestyles
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which negatively impact
our cardiovascular health.
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I mean, that's that's just the way
society is, it's not your fault.
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That's the way society has gone:
most jobs don't use our bodies.
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If you have a very physically active job
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you probably don't need to worry
about this because
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you are physically active every day,
it doesn't have to be extra,
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it doesn't have to be prescribed exercise
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if you get this in from your job
or from your kids or whatever: fine.
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But if you're like me
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and you literally just sit on your butt
for nine hours a day at work,
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you need to add this if your
predefined life doesn't have enough of it.
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I'm not a fan of how society
has made us so sedentary
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but it is what it is since your brain
needs blood to work right.
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Cardiovascular health is brain health.
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if you constantly feel foggy, forgetful,
distracted or moody,
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it might be because your brain
doesn't have enough blood flow
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it might be because your brain
doesn't have one of the resources
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that it needs to keep your prefrontal
cortex powered on.
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Because all the things that I just said
live there
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and when your brain is lacking in any
essential resource
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-- blood, oxygen, rest
or caloric energy --
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it enters a low power mode, much like
what's on your phone
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or your tablet or your laptop,
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and certain processes don't work as well
as they normally do.
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The first part of the brain
that takes the hit
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when we're low on resources
is the prefrontal cortex:
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it's executive functioning,
it's emotion regulation
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it's social engagement.
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So, if those are things
you're struggling with,
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it's probably because your brain
doesn't have
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all the resources it needs to
do its job properly.
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The one thing I always try to emphasize
with physical activity too
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is the way you do it
really doesn't matter:
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if you want to lift weights, lift weights;
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if you want to run, run; ////
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if you want to do team sports,
do team sports;
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if you hate some certain type
of exercise, don't do it.
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it's not it's not hugely critical
how you do it
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it's just critical that you do it.
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So find something that you
either like ideally.
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If there's nothing,
like literally nothing,
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find the thing you hate the least.
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It can be some weird obscure thing:
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maybe you want to get into hobby horsing,
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and if you don't know what that is,
you should look it up on social media.
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It's a fascinating world
if you do know what it is.
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I appreciate the people who understand
my obscure references
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because there are many of them.
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Just do something to get that blood
going to your brain.
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You might be amazed how much it helps,
you really might be amazed.
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The sixth and final thing that you probably
-- asterisk to this one --
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probably know you should be doing
but are probably having trouble doing
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is to stop beating yourself up
about how long it is taking
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to get your life in order.
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Now I realize that you might
have been doing that
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throughout this video already
because as I'm saying things
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that you probably already knew
you should be doing,
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you might have been beating yourself up,
guilt tripping yourself, shaming yourself,
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and if you were knock it off right now.
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Sorry I had to say it that way,
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but seriously you're not doing yourself
any favors.
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We all have enough pressure on us already,
probably more than enough pressure
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probably a maladaptive amount of pressure,
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and change is hard.
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Our brains actively resist it
because they're wired for homeostasis
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We associate familiarity
with safety and with security
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and on a very basic survival level,
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we fight back against
our own attempts to change.
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Putting too much pressure on yourself
tends to keep you stuck
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So try patience and gentleness instead
and see what happens.
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It is amazing what people can do
when they finally feel understood
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and are treated with respect
and compassion.
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And it is very possible that the person
most standing in your way
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of feeling those things and
experiencing those things is you.