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hi i'm casey welcome to my talk debugging your brain
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uh before we jump into the topic i want to introduce myself i live in dc this is dupont circle where
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i sometimes host bubble parties when we're not in a pandemic i miss it i can play an instrument in
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every color at least i can play bad romance by lady gaga that's my benchmark for myself i can see me
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dancing there at the bottom i dressed up as a pirate playing bass drum this is very me
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i love to teach there's me at the top teaching intro to programming at yale university from
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a long time ago now and on the bottom you see me at a meet up in dc teaching electron
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i may assign homework during this as my teacherisms might show
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i've worked in tech for 10 years including recently at uscis working on immigration and at heroku
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i've been a product manager an engineering manager an engineer i've worked in a whole bunch of sectors
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too i studied neurobiology at yale
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university and i'm co-author in a few papers they're not related to today's talk in
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particular but i thought you might be interested in a little taste of the science language you have to use in this
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field i wrote a book about this talk actually
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i've been giving this talk for five years different forms of it always getting better and then i finally sat down and
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turned it into a book so that i could reach more people with the content the techniques that i want to share
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lately i'm working on turning that book into a board game because it's very practical and hands-on all the
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techniques so i'm working on a mental framework of how to process your experiences
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with cards and tokens
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all right we'll do a quick little intro section before i give you the road map of the talk anxiety versus excitement if you've ever
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given a presentation like this in public you probably feel one of the other uh
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they're physiologically similar you could be anxious or excited and have the same set of physiological experiences
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physiological arousal is a term for a bunch of the overlap including increased heart rate which i
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probably have now whether i'm anxious or excited dilated pupils talking fast which takes a lot of
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practice not to do when giving presentations like this i'm definitely inclined to talk fast and i'm
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trying not to whether it's excitement or anxiety is
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depends a lot on which outcome is expected if you expect a bad outcome you'll
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probably feel anxious but if you expect a good outcome you might feel excited
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often we don't know whether the outcome is going to be good or bad there's a big uncertain trunk in the middle and by default
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humans tend to be anxious if you're uncertain about the outcome we tend to focus on what could go wrong
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and usually most possible outcomes uh we don't know if we're uncertain how it's going to turn out we just
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don't know unless we've done the same thing over and over so most people presenting feel much more
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anxious than excited at least the first times but with this trick reframing
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you could be more excited so instead of focusing on what could go wrong like i could say something
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wrong i could stumble over my speech and waste seconds of my presentation time
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i could focus instead about what could go right like if i have an impact on someone listening to this talk and they learn
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something valuable and i think you'll learn a lot of valuable things i think a lot of audience members will when i start focusing on what positive
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impact i'm having i get much more excited and less anxious
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so my uncertainty in the middle i'm focusing on all those positives and it gets so much brighter when i do that reframing trick i'm
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excited to be talking to you all here thanks for coming
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all right in this talk uh half the talk is going to be framing
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like grounding topics and then the other half will be concrete techniques you can use
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we'll start with some example challenging experiences you can use to go through to use these techniques on
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then we'll talk about the inner versus outer brain which is a useful dichotomy when processing experiences
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we'll have you model the brain like a system in the kind of way programmers tend to do
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and then i'll explain the big ideas of cognitive behavioral therapy which the techniques are
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largely based on so starting with the challenging experiences
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so challenging experience um by that i mean one where you might experience a downward spiral
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of negative thoughts leading to negative feelings leading to more negative thoughts and just feel worse and worse and worse
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by the way i made that in blender last month i'm very proud
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another term is rumination and the definition for this was really interesting when i looked it up finally
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rumination is focusing on the causes and consequences of a bad situation it's like the negative stuff in the past and
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the negative stuff in the future instead of uh the solutions the positive
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future that you might be able to get uh ruminating is often counterproductive because you're just downward spiraling
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often and the way out of rumination is what we'll cover this whole talk
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all right let's have some examples of challenging experiences for one having an argument at work
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if you have an idea how to solve a problem but your co-worker has a different idea you might get heated you might really uh
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butt heads on it and that could be very stressful and then you could potentially think negative thoughts and feel negative
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feelings and feel worse about it and say i should have said that if only they weren't so something or other anyway
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that's an example hopefully it's relatable to a bunch of you second example if you're a parent you
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might accidentally snap at your kids sometime when they frustrate you and then you might potentially downward spiral
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thinking i'm such a bad parent why would i say that i wish i hadn't like it could make you feel worse and
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worse for a third example this one i'll dig
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into a later in this talk i was going to a meet-up and i was hangry hungry and angry both i was wet because
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it was raining and i was running late and i thought all sorts of negative thoughts
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i have a couple of activities i'm going to cut most of them out for this format but this one i do want us to do in the chat
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sidebar please come up with five challenging experiences of your own from the past month when you had or almost had a downward
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spiral i have some ideas here for like topic areas if you'd like if you are comfortable sharing please do
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if not you can write them down on your own i'll set a timer for three minutes and
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this will be what you'll think about as we go through the rest of the
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presentation three minutes start
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all right for time i want to cut it a little shorter than i said 30 more seconds feel free to share what
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you have as you go if you'd like
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all right and time thanks for sharing some challenging experiences in the side
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if you didn't get a chance yet go ahead and read through to see what other people are thinking
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all right so those challenging experiences are what you'll use these techniques on
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next i'm going to go through two different mental models you can use universe out of brain and system
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modeling of the brain our outer brain this gif demonstrates
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pretty well this cat turns around sees a potential threat
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and jumps away from it and then i like to imagine a moment later the cat investigated and discovered that it's
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just a cucumber so there are two levels of reaction here
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the fast one the jump out of the way and the slower investigation
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that fast part happens inside the inner brain emotions tend to happen there and the path as you can see drawn on the
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brain is much shorter the thought path has to go a lot farther
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i took the scale of milliseconds on the left and the scale of seconds on the right it's like a huge difference
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specifically the inner brain is often called the limbic system it's the older part of the brain more animals have it
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fewer animals have the cortex the outer brain
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roughly speaking feelings happen in that inner brain and they're faster than thoughts which happen in the outer brain
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that are much slower that's probably intuitive but there are some interesting takeaways
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like when you have a feeling and a thought which one came first often the feeling came first
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even if you uh maybe think the other way around
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all right we're skipping that one so that's the interverse outer brain fast and slow thoughts and feelings
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next up is system modeling the brain software developers you probably think
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about functions a lot these have an input they do something and they have an output they return a value
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this is the simplest model of a system is something that has an input a process and an output it's called the input process output
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model the ipo model sometimes you also incorporate a feedback loop from the output to the input
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applied to psychology a simple one is characterized by pavlov's experiment
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where he rang a bell when feeding a dog and the dog learned the bell meant food was coming
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and then he noticed when he rang the bell the dog salivated in anticipation of food even if there was no food
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present so that was an uh association a model in a very simple way there's an input the bell and the
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output which is the salivation and he even measured how many milliliters of saliva the dog produced
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to see how strong the correlation was like this is empirical
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we like to think in general that humans we aren't just input output machines we actually think and the thinking
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changes the output the things that we do to the world and that happens in this middle part of the
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api model the process but of course we humans aren't always so
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thoughtful sometimes we are just input output machines like that animal model we just described and
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often animals probably do think we don't we can't ask them they can't tell us but if they have the
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cerebral cortex it's very possible anyway often humans are on autopilot and
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habits run things it's not really in your control but we can flip to a mindful state
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and then we're in more manual control of how we respond to those inputs
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so in summary autopilot is when our habits are in control and then we're just simple input output
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there's not much control in the middle and when we're mindful that's what this is what the word means to me is it's when we can influence
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things in the middle there we can respond to our inputs according to how we think we should instead of just doing it
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all right so that's my systems model of the brain input output model and defining the word mindful
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next i'll explain cognitive behavioral therapy cpt is the nickname for that cbt treats
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many mental illnesses so many in fact that it's maybe more interesting to list ones it doesn't treat
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in undergrad psychology it was the most common answer on every test if i wasn't sure i could just say cbt and i often
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got a lot of points for that cpt is just uh very powerful
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it's not necessarily the best or most effective therapy for everything but it is helpful for so many mental
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illnesses for one example for treating depression
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some studies show that cpt is just as effective as antidepressant drugs
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the combination might be even more powerful so i'm not saying this is i'm not suggesting anything you do or
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don't do but it's very powerful talk therapy alone is can be as powerful as anti-depressant
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drugs and the talk therapy skills you get kind of stay with you forever a lot of ways that's more powerful
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all right you might be wondering why are you talking about therapy i am not someone who needs therapy there's a stigma around therapy still
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for sure but the the skills from cpt apply to really everyone
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i would reframe cbt to be targeted behavioral training and if that helps make it more palatable
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to you that's great these skills should be learned by everyone
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all right so what are the techniques a lot of these are from cbt a couple of them are my own anyway some
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are from dbt dialectical behavioral therapy this is my synthesis of the biggest ideas the core ideas that
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i want you to take away from these we'll go through these in order uh
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introspection is kind of like hitting your debugger break point so you can see what's going on in the first place identifying inputs
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is kind of like becoming aware of what the inputs to your function are what any local variables are that you have to work with
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verbalizing experiences so in the mind if you can describe it
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it's much easier to manipulate and work with and understand
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and then validation it's kind of what it sounds like in programming too like make sure the thing is right and often this is
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done with someone else if someone else tells you that makes sense you can have much higher confidence than if you're trying to convince yourself that you do make sense
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and then lastly there are some thought patterns that get in the way that aren't helpful cognitive distortions we call them but
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you can counter those with cognitive restructuring all right we'll go through each of these in depth starting with introspection
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i'll tell you a story about a time when it helped my mom to introspect
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so she had a problem my little brother had left the door open again and she was very frustrated about it and
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yelled but then she felt bad and wanted us to catch catch this kind of thing next time
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so it happened again maybe a week later she got very frustrated about it and then we all went whoop
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we yelled woof at her and that helped her realize she didn't want to have this kind of stressed lash out response she wanted to take a
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moment think about it so she entered the whoop state she became mindful
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she decided to take a moment figure out what her inputs were to process them and all that and this is huge this is amazing like if
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you could take a moment in the middle of a frustrating situation to step back if you can get good at that you can
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really change the course of a lot of events in your life a lot of situations
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doing the whoop you're basically switching modes from the habit autopilot mode down into the mindful manual mode
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switching gears once you're there you might or may not know what to do but i want you to
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celebrate any time you notice you should or would like to get into this group state to become mindful
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if you just notice that it's an opportunity to do it and you go whoop that's a moment for celebration
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all right skipping that technique all right identifying inputs is next so
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when you enter the loop it helps to take stock of what you've got to work with here
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there are four inputs we'll go through and two non-inputs two things that you do have control over
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two of the inputs are your automatic thoughts and automatic feelings to illustrate this imagine you just
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stubbed your toe and you thought crap ow that hurt the automatic thought might have been all those curse words you
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thought in your head the automatic feeling might be frustration maybe anger a whole bunch of feeling words there and
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you didn't decide to think those thoughts or to feel those feelings they just happen to you your conscious mind gets that as an
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input to work with your conscious mind can choose what thoughts to respond with though
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i'd call those deliberate thoughts ones that you chose to think you can say i should move that piece of furniture
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or something like that maybe you think that deliberately and if you think deliberate thoughts
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that change the way you feel you could say that those are influenced feelings so that's within your control some amount too
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all right what are the other two inputs thoughts and feelings is everything right kind of another category is external
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stimuli so like the fact that the furniture was there for your foot to stub on
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or at the disagreement at work or stuff happening in the news all these external stimuli their real
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inputs and to treat them as such is helpful
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the fourth category is bodily state so this is kind of none of the other three my favorite word to explain bodily state
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is hangry this is a portmanteau a combination of two words that makes a new word
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uh hunger and anger put them together it's angry i wish we had more words like that i
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think this is super useful i'm thrilled that people have vocabulary to describe how your bodily state affects
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your emotional state so once i get into a whoop state when
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i'm in this mindful uh position i like to take stock of all of these types of inputs
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and just treat them as data try not to judge them try not to be upset at myself for automatically thinking them or
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automatically feeling them because i didn't choose to do that they happened to me
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i would do an activity here i just want to say to do this later
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for one of your situations try to go through and find something in each of those four categories and the categories aren't strict i don't
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you don't need to decide each word or statement you write down which one it is this just helps you brainstorm and make sure you get the full breadth
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of things like for my mom the fact that she was hangry was a big factor in why she was frustrated with my brother
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and if she had missed that she may have focused some thoughts and feelings instead she'd be missing out on a big chunk of it
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all right that was identifying next up verbalizing experiences or
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processing yeah verbalizing is a great way to process them i'm going to go through six techniques
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with you by the way i drew these and i'm proud even if they are not beautiful
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because uh they're not licensed i can use them for however i want
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uh one technique technique one is to expand your emotional vocabulary uh so when you're writing out your
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thoughts or trying to think about how to describe it it helps to have nuanced emotional vocabulary words to do
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so there's a bunch of references that i have here i'll show you some examples this is just a chart giving like
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synonyms that are more nuanced for each of the main feelings here a bunch of those words are in a
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visual seeing how they relate to each other on a couple of axes there
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my favorite is actually this table from the wikipedia article on emotion classification
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uh let's drill into one of these so let's say i'm feeling angry and i can go through this and say am i
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feeling rage no not rage disgust nope irritable yeah that's close
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okay sure then i can drill into irritable and discover i'm feeling grumpy i like this tree a lot
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for finding new emotional vocabulary words cross patch i've never used i think that might be british
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i'm curious all right so uh that was emotional vocabulary expanding that
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having more nuanced speech can help you understand yourself technique two is to talk to a friend
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this is my favorite technique i love doing this when you talk to a friend you have to put your experience into words
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so that it can convey to the other person in the first place they also help you realize if you're
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speaking clearly if you're enunciating and articulating your experience in a way someone else can
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understand that's helpful and sometimes they even can tell you ways they are interpreting what you're saying so
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you can refine how you're describing it and how you understand it it's huge they can also validate you and
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say your experience makes sense to me but we'll come back to that at the validation section
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if you don't have a friend handy you might want to talk to a duck
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a rubber duck this is a common programming trick so let's say you're working on a hard work
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problem and you might want to talk to a co-worker but you're not sure if anyone's available
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you could try to explain the situation to a duck and give them all the contacts they need to catch up to where you're at
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to troubleshoot it with you and by the time you enunciate the whole problem you might discover you don't need to talk to the co-worker at all
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because by articulating it you've come to your own answer i end up doing this a lot in the form of
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i'm slack messaging a co-worker and then i delete it completely so if you ever see me casey is typing then i
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stop maybe i solve my own problem i didn't have to message you
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it applies to experience processing too you can talk to a plant or a pet like a cat or a dog and talk to
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them even if they can't respond to you just by articulating it out loud and hearing your own voice in the air you
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might get deeper
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alright next technique is writing journaling and i don't necessarily mean a journal by your bedside table i mean
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writing your thoughts and feelings somewhere i often open a gmail draft just because that's the quickest opening
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text editor i have word and google docs are so much slower when you journal not only do you have to
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put your thoughts and feelings into words you also have the chance to reread them and edit them if you want to be more
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accurate or explain it more clearly journaling's super powerful
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all right next one reading fiction is really helpful to get
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you better at the general skill of it because when an author wants to convey a character's thoughts and feelings to you
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they have to put it into words and hopefully they use accurate understandable words that convey exactly how the character is
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thinking and feeling so you get a lot of good examples of that one of the words in psychology of
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research around reading fiction is emotional transportation where if you identify with the character
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a lot on a deep level then you like learn things about other people you get maybe better at empathy it
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correlates with a bunch of things anyway fiction is useful if you've written it off as a not useful
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uh way to spend your time consider it again maybe even the top 20 books of last year
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would be a good place to start because i imagine if they're popular they probably have some emotional
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transportation all right last technique here is
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meditation specifically mindfulness meditation and this is particularly good at getting
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you comfortable viewing your emotions as data so your automatic thoughts and your
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automatic feelings to not judge them and just get comfortable with those as inputs that's one of the focuses of mindfulness here
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all right those are the six processing techniques to help you work through your problems
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i i find it difficult to think of them when i need them sometimes and so i find a reference like this
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really helpful i wrote out a bunch of the ideas on this google doc which you can download make a copy of
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including those six techniques we just talked about
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next section is about validation
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right validation is the recognition and acceptance of another person's experience as
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understandable the key word there is understandable to say that it makes sense and you can do this whether or not you
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agree with what their conclusion is if you can just say if i believed x
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then y would make sense to me that's validating or that you're like with them through that thought process
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my favorite way to think about validating a friend who wants support is through the six levels of validation
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i have the six named down on the right and then i kind of group them on the left here we'll go through these um one is about
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being available two or about verbalizing like we did before a little bit and three are about making sense telling
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them that they make sense all right the first one being present so
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you can make someone feel validated by just being with them if you just sit with them while they're sad or upset or
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frustrated not you don't have to say anything even just your presence is helpful uh in the this
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time period we're in uh phone calls video calls or even texting can also be a form of presence that makes someone
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feel comforted uh oh by the way the validation levels
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here go from be present is the lowest one and radical genuineness is the highest one
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in terms of its potential impact but you can't always do the highest one sometimes being present is all you can do and
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that's okay so this is a range this is a tool belt you can use these in different situations it's good to have all six
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available all right so number two sometimes you can do better than just sitting with
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them if they're telling you how they are thinking and feeling their experience you can reflect back to them sounds like
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you're feeling this and you're thinking that at the extreme i think of a caricature of a therapist
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that just echoes back everything you say just parroting and that's not super helpful it's something it's it's good but
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you can do better and that's what the other levels are going to be for all right so just saying it back to them
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is helpful and better than just sitting with them the third level here is to carefully
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guess that they're unstated feelings this is like exploring how to explain it with them
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it can be really validating to guess correctly but you could also guess incorrectly and invalidate them which is
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dangerous it's hard to do this very effectively and you can't do this with everybody you
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can't necessarily get this comfortable with someone but hopefully you can with your closer friends i i believe if you work on it
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with them and if they're open to it you probably can develop it but it's hard
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the key here is to leave plenty of room for correction so that they feel like they can correct
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any guesses that you make that aren't quite right and again like you might not be able to do this with everyone so caveats are
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plenty i have two different tools you can use to make space for correction to make
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space for them to feel comfortable correcting you the first one is the open closed spectrum so an open-ended
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question is one where it's open for any answer the person wants to give
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and at the farther end the closed at the bottom is not even a question it's just a statement so for them to correct that the last one
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that is so unfair for them to correct that they would have to say no and like completely stop the statement that you
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had in the air and like shift gears it's so much easier for them to correct you for the open one what did that feel like they just share what they felt like
00:30:53.679
i often reach for ones in the middle though so they say if i have an idea that it might have been unfair did that feel unfair and they
00:31:00.559
could very easily correct that if it wasn't quite right but i'm still like giving them something i'm thinking about it with them i'm
00:31:05.760
guessing with them how it might have felt i use the full range but often something in the middle is pretty
00:31:12.320
powerful my second tool here is the confidence level spectrum so if i have high
00:31:19.360
confidence i can say something like must have and if i don't know maybe i don't even
00:31:24.559
say at all it's a very open-ended question kind of thing how do you feel i can't imagine that i have such low
00:31:30.159
confidence that i'm not even going to suggest something in the middle sometimes i say like i
00:31:35.200
imagine or i guess that might have felt a certain way so that's the way to do it without questions necessarily but there's still
00:31:41.360
room for correction it can be helpful if you i mean you
00:31:46.720
might think okay so if i want to be very correctable i should always just ask open-ended questions
00:31:51.840
but it can be really validating for someone to guess correctly so like if you can safely do that and
00:31:57.679
they can safely correct you it's helpful to be able to say sometimes that's unfair
00:32:02.880
i'm sure you can imagine a time of friends agreed with you strongly like that and it was right and it felt pretty good so this whole
00:32:09.760
range is there for you to use
00:32:16.080
that was guessing uh guessing unstated feelings next up
00:32:22.399
because of the three four five and six are the three that are about saying that makes sense so four here validating
00:32:29.039
based on their past the example i like to use is i had a friend growing up who was afraid of my
00:32:35.279
pet dogs i had two sweet dogs that just loved to be pet all the time they liked cuddles and affection
00:32:41.279
but he was afraid of them and i eventually figured out he was
00:32:46.640
attacked by a dog as a kid when he was even younger it's of course he would be afraid of dogs even if he doesn't want to be even
00:32:52.799
if he believes my dogs are safe and cuddly he still might not want to that makes sense ah do
00:32:59.200
you see that it makes sense that he would feel that way based on his past
00:33:05.519
but if we're walking past a dog on the street that's snarling trying to defend someone's front yard i
00:33:12.720
could do even better than just saying it makes sense you're afraid of that snarling dog based on your past i could say anyone
00:33:19.039
would be afraid of that dog it looks like it's trying to protect its area it doesn't it doesn't want us here
00:33:24.640
anyone would be afraid of the snarling dog so you can do a little bit better than just based on your past this surprised me
00:33:31.600
because i thought the more personal answer is generally better it's like pointing out that i know his history with dogs might be supportive
00:33:38.159
but this when i've tried it actually did make people feel even better than
00:33:44.240
the personal one anyway these are all tools in your tool belt you can apply them as makes it
00:33:52.399
that seems like a lot that's almost everything right what could six possibly be
00:33:57.760
radical genuineness is the term for this one this is like if you have
00:34:02.799
the same experience or similar very similar experience to one that someone else is going through and you can relate to it very deeply
00:34:10.320
so with the dog example i guess if i had been attacked by a dog as a kid maybe i would feel the same and i could relate to that a lot
00:34:17.200
for a more extreme example if you had a parent pass away and someone else had a child pass away
00:34:22.720
uh i mean you could relate to family death some amount but the tricky part with this is the
00:34:29.679
other person has to believe your experience is very related or it doesn't quite work it could invalidate them say
00:34:34.800
oh i know exactly how you feel if they don't believe it that could be counterproductive
00:34:41.919
so the key for this to share your experiences that relate to theirs is to make sure they think it agrees and it relates
00:34:49.760
and that they are open to hearing it and often you need to go through the other levels first to get on the same page for this to be helpful
00:34:56.320
but if you can this can be the most powerful of all
00:35:01.680
it's a lot about validation this is another thing that i don't expect you to memorize based on what i just said
00:35:07.280
so you might want the reference for these just list the six out
00:35:16.160
i love talking about validation but anyway switching gears next up is cognitive restructuring
00:35:23.040
that's the process of correcting cognitive distortions
00:35:29.119
there are some thought patterns that are just counterproductive they get in the way
00:35:34.320
this graphic has 10 of the most common ones we'll go through some examples to look at these so for the scenario i
00:35:41.440
shared earlier i was going to meet up i was hangry and wet and late and i stepped on a pothole and i thought lots of bad things to myself lots of
00:35:48.560
negative thoughts here's one of them wet shoes are the worst i heard myself snarl to myself
00:35:55.680
and then i went whoop and i thought about it i said all right that statement doesn't seem quite right
00:36:00.960
it's not quite true and identified that it was uh magnification that i was doing here
00:36:08.079
magnification i was blowing it out of proportion not only is it uncomfortable and i'm not in a good happy state right
00:36:13.760
now uh it's also the worst i feel like really blowing out a portion
00:36:21.440
all right second thought if i'm late i shouldn't even go i thought that i thought about not going so i was running late
00:36:28.079
and i noticed ah that seems like all or nothing thinking it's black and white thinking uh it's
00:36:33.680
like it's not acceptable to do the thing in the middle for some reason i thought about it people go late sometimes it's always fine i never even
00:36:40.320
really notice it's not like such a big faux pas i'm glad i caught that so i'd believe my
00:36:45.520
automatic thought i might not have gone i heard myself say this too today sucks
00:36:53.839
oh this is a doozy it's got a bunch for one it's over generalizing the whole day
00:37:00.720
it's also disqualifying all the positive things that happened to me earlier that day i had a great latte that morning i'm sure
00:37:06.880
so not the entire day sucked it's also jumping uh i guess fortune telling is
00:37:12.640
the subtype of this it was predicting the future the rest of the day wouldn't be good either which i didn't know what i did know is
00:37:19.359
that i was in a bad state right then being angry and wet and late
00:37:24.960
all right so to counter on the left those original thoughts that we just went through what shoes are the worst elena shouldn't go and today
00:37:31.119
sucks i can counter those kinds of thoughts that i noticed had cognitive distortions going on
00:37:36.960
with some more adaptive thoughts i have on the right i said i am feeling frustrated
00:37:42.320
that wasn't so cathartic to say to myself but it stopped me from downward spiraling
00:37:47.359
which was my goal here anyway i told myself it's okay to go late people do it all the time and today can get better
00:37:54.400
i wanted to say today will get better but i i did what i could i countered what i could
00:38:04.000
uh this list of 10 is super useful i suggest you print it there's a link to it from the notes too
00:38:10.800
i also listed my handout although i like their icons a lot
00:38:19.280
all right time for the summary you just whirlwinded through a ton of concepts let's review uh
00:38:26.480
oh yeah first of all the all the big concepts are in this handout if you'd like to get that
00:38:32.800
i'm just gonna um i'm also gonna read the techniques
00:38:37.839
yeah we'll just do that so the first technique you learned about going whoop
00:38:43.200
to switch gears into your mindful state you learned about a list of different
00:38:49.359
types of input that you can think through to take stock of what's going on once you're in that whoop state
00:38:56.640
we covered six processing techniques that you can pull out as needed
00:39:02.400
cover the six levels of validation which i imagine is new to a lot of people has
00:39:08.079
not discussed too much and i wish it was we also touched on some of the 10 most
00:39:14.560
common maladaptive thought patterns those cognitive distortions and how to counter them with other thoughts
00:39:22.000
i want to call out some other tools you can reach out for if you're interested uh first of all
00:39:27.680
a therapist it's like a brain trainer they can train you on all these ideas and more whether or not you have a mental illness
00:39:33.680
uh this is just their specialty i mean most people have an amount of anxiety whether it's clinical or not
00:39:40.560
uh anyway and therapists also do screenings if you just want to get screened to see if this
00:39:45.599
approach would be helpful any of these another tool is the cbt book the one
00:39:52.240
that popularized it is called feeling good by david burns that one has a ton of examples it goes
00:39:57.599
into the cognitive distortions in depth it's super thorough but it's it's a
00:40:02.960
little long and dense so that's one if you really want to dig into it the reason i wrote my book which is similar is because i wanted a
00:40:10.560
really short version that was concise to cover all the big ideas so plugged from my book mine is super short and digestible like that was my main goal
00:40:17.440
when writing it i think it's a good overview and then you can dig into other resources from there
00:40:23.520
there's also two apps or two types of apps i want to call out one is a meditation app headspace is a popular one com is
00:40:30.400
another one and they can take you through not judging your thoughts and just being sitting with your inputs and being aware
00:40:36.880
of them another app is if you have social anxiety or if that term
00:40:42.240
feels relatable whether or not you have it there's an app for that called enjoyable that i've had some friends use
00:40:47.839
that they had some success a lot of it is going through hard end of distortions and like it gives you some prompts to answer at
00:40:54.960
certain times i like that structure i wish there was something like that for general cbt and not just social anxiety but i haven't
00:41:00.640
found it yet if you find it let me know
00:41:06.160
oh yeah i have to plug my book i even made it an audiobook i'm very proud it was fun to narrate my own book
00:41:14.720
all right if there are questions in the sidebar since this is pre-recorded i can't answer them by voice but i'll be in the chat
00:41:21.760
let me know alright thank you all hope you learned a lot