Welcome to the Peak Revival Podcast.
Speaker:My name is Vesna.
Speaker:Today I'm gonna talk about the antidote to stress, and I'm not
Speaker:talking about supplements or sleep.
Speaker:So quite often most of the advice for stress management is, you
Speaker:know, sleep, more, meditate.
Speaker:You know, there are supplements to take for cortisol or for the nervous system.
Speaker:Take a regular break, have your boundaries, all of that kind of stuff.
Speaker:And there's nothing wrong with any of those.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:And it's certainly things that I prescribe for the physical body to restore the
Speaker:physical body with excessive stress.
Speaker:But there is something that comes even before them because when
Speaker:you're looking at those things, they are used after the fact.
Speaker:And that means that after you've been through an excessive period of
Speaker:stress, well you need the supplements for the nervous system and for the
Speaker:cortisol, you need to have more sleep.
Speaker:You need to have, you know, regular breaks.
Speaker:Or maybe you do need to set up boundaries, but that's.
Speaker:Really not going to be the biggest needle mover in the moment.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And so meditation is great though.
Speaker:Meditation I feel like is something that we can use, as a preventative as well.
Speaker:But there are two other areas that can actually antidote stress.
Speaker:So what is stress to begin with?
Speaker:Because most people will say.
Speaker:Things going wrong in my life or things happening in my life or the amount of
Speaker:work that I have to do people that I have to look after, whatever it is.
Speaker:But actually stress is something that's more unknown and something
Speaker:that we dunno what will happen or we don't want what did happen, right?
Speaker:So it's an outcome that we don't want and it creates tension in the body and.
Speaker:When I talk about stress, I'm not talking about life challenges.
Speaker:And again, that's what people think, right?
Speaker:This didn't work out for me, I might lose my job.
Speaker:Or, have have enough money this month.
Speaker:Life challenges and stress are different challenges in life.
Speaker:We cannot.
Speaker:Avoid a lot of them.
Speaker:And life is a series of challenges, okay?
Speaker:And that helps us to stretch and grow.
Speaker:And if you're a driven woman like me, you're gonna put yourself into
Speaker:situations that you want to grow.
Speaker:You want to reach your highest potential.
Speaker:So you wanna grow your business.
Speaker:You wanna develop personally, right?
Speaker:There are things that you wanna do, and you're gonna put yourself into situations
Speaker:that's going to be challenging, and it's gonna help you to stretch and grow.
Speaker:So that's something that, I see successful women, they really put themselves
Speaker:into, they're not afraid of that, but the stress isn't coming from that.
Speaker:the stress that we feel is within our mind and it's driven by thoughts.
Speaker:And so the first antidote to stress is really
Speaker:understanding the nature of thought
Speaker:so our experience of life comes from.
Speaker:Our thinking, right?
Speaker:Our thinking creates our feelings, which then creates our experience.
Speaker:We create meaning in things.
Speaker:We anticipate what could go wrong, and that drives a lot of stress, Dr. Robert
Speaker:Polsky, he wrote the groundbreaking book, why Zebras Don't Get Ulcer, he said.
Speaker:You know, human beings, we've developed so much that we've become
Speaker:so, advanced that we can use our own minds to drive ourselves crazy and
Speaker:drive ourselves into a stress response.
Speaker:And he called it anticipatory stress.
Speaker:So we anticipate what could go wrong.
Speaker:We, we may say, I may not have enough money this month, or I may
Speaker:lose my job, but we already live as if that's happened, right?
Speaker:Our mind is already trying to work out.
Speaker:How do we resolve this problem?
Speaker:But the problem hasn't even happened yet.
Speaker:We're just anticipating that it could happen and because our thinking
Speaker:activates this process, we, our body doesn't know the difference.
Speaker:And so it's, living in this moment that doesn't actually
Speaker:even exist in the real world.
Speaker:We feel like it's going to happen, and therefore we create
Speaker:and generate the stress response.
Speaker:and you would've noticed this yourself, and I notice this
Speaker:all the time, we do very well.
Speaker:In the challenge, meaning we do very well when something has gone
Speaker:wrong, not when we think it can go wrong, but when something goes wrong.
Speaker:We are like, oh my gosh, this is so bad.
Speaker:But then in that present moment, we actually have access to so many resources
Speaker:that can help us to overcome those issues.
Speaker:But when we anticipate it, we're pretty useless, right?
Speaker:We're pretty useless in trying to resolve a problem that doesn't
Speaker:exist, which kind of makes sense, right, when I say it like that.
Speaker:But that's what we do every day and we drive our stress response.
Speaker:If we don't see the nature of thought, that our thinking shapes
Speaker:our experience regardless of the situation that's happening, right?
Speaker:If we don't see this and we think we need everything to be in a certain
Speaker:order or in a certain way, in order for us to feel calm and on top of things,
Speaker:but we don't see that we are driving that stress within our own thoughts.
Speaker:So when I speak to a lot of women who have a lot going on, you know, they're
Speaker:juggling business and family and they're taking care of people, there's financial
Speaker:stress or there's so much going on, right?
Speaker:But underneath that situation or that challenge in life, and
Speaker:again, we, you're not going to be immune to those challenges.
Speaker:Nobody is, right?
Speaker:Everyone has to navigate life in the best way possible
Speaker:because life is always kind of.
Speaker:Throwing curve balls at us.
Speaker:But underneath, when I speak to women underneath that challenge or that
Speaker:situation, there is a lot of thinking, The pressure that women feel, the
Speaker:expectations from others, that it's all on me or I have to be the best at this.
Speaker:I can't fail.
Speaker:I have to do more.
Speaker:What about if I look like an idiot?
Speaker:What about if I look fat?
Speaker:Whatever it is.
Speaker:If you look at the situation that's going on and look at the thinking
Speaker:that's underneath that, and if not for that thinking, right?
Speaker:If not for that thinking, you would have a completely different
Speaker:experience to that business challenge, life challenge to do list, right?
Speaker:So everything that's created, all of our thoughts that are created are changing
Speaker:our experience of that challenge and actually robbing us of the ability to.
Speaker:Access resources to overcome that situation.
Speaker:So again, if we don't see that, we have a lot of this thinking
Speaker:that's tainting the experience.
Speaker:We don't get access.
Speaker:So as much access to fresh thinking.
Speaker:cause fresh thinking at the end of the day is what helps you
Speaker:to overcome or find solutions, helps you to find the next step.
Speaker:And I'll explain more about that.
Speaker:So I wanna give you an example.
Speaker:Like if I was to do this podcast and think.
Speaker:Y oh gosh, I'm gonna look like an idiot doing this podcast.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:But and I don't, but you know, if I did, but if I showed up to the
Speaker:podcast without that thinking, like without the thinking that I'm gonna
Speaker:look like an idiot every time, then I would speak more authentically.
Speaker:I would open, I would share more.
Speaker:The content would be richer, it would be more engaging.
Speaker:It would connect more with people, right?
Speaker:Because I wouldn't be in the head, in my head, or editing myself.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But if that thinking was there, I'm not gonna have the same podcast
Speaker:content that I do without that.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And so you have to see the thinking or the thoughts that
Speaker:are underneath that experience.
Speaker:so that takes me then to, we often have habitual thinking about stuff, right?
Speaker:We go through the worst case scenario.
Speaker:We see the negative or the negative thinking how things can go wrong.
Speaker:What are that, what's that gonna mean, And the only thing that can
Speaker:release stress in that moment is for you to have a new thought.
Speaker:A new thought carries a new feeling, carries a new experience.
Speaker:So fresh thinking is kind of our superpower, right?
Speaker:We have this ability to have fresh thinking about something
Speaker:and we get a fresh perspective.
Speaker:We get.
Speaker:Fresh ideas.
Speaker:we know the next step.
Speaker:We, we, there are things that come to us that we're like, oh, I can't
Speaker:believe I didn't think that before.
Speaker:Of course I should check in on this, right?
Speaker:And when we're so consumed with our habitual thoughts and our negative worst
Speaker:case scenario thinking and catastrophizing and all of that, we are less able
Speaker:to hear the fresh thinking, right?
Speaker:We still have access to it, but we are less able to hear it, and
Speaker:therefore we get stuck in this habitual negative loop and that generates
Speaker:a lot more stress for us, right?
Speaker:The more stress creates more cortisol, cortisol.
Speaker:Moves us outta the prefrontal cortex where we can make decisions,
Speaker:where we can think rational.
Speaker:It moves us into that fear part of the brain, and we're just not in a
Speaker:good place to make any decisions or to help ourselves out of this situation.
Speaker:but you have to see that, right?
Speaker:You have to understand that, that actually, when I'm stuck in this
Speaker:negative loop, I'm not going to know the best way forward because there's.
Speaker:Always fresh thinking.
Speaker:There's always a solution.
Speaker:There's always something that you can do or see differently that will
Speaker:help you to navigate that challenge.
Speaker:And this is something that we rely on, and that's why I
Speaker:call it an antidote to stress.
Speaker:When you can see the nature of thought to create your reality, and
Speaker:that fresh thinking allows you to see things differently, come up with
Speaker:new ideas, see the next step, well, that's what you're gonna rely on.
Speaker:Right, because your habitual thinking just keeps you stuck in the state of
Speaker:permanent stress and burns you out, right?
Speaker:It doesn't give you anything fresh or new.
Speaker:It's just the same stuff you think every time, right?
Speaker:Different scenario, but same kind of negative thinking,
Speaker:Fresh thinking is something that we can rely on
Speaker:and if you do rely on it, if you do see this for yourself, then that
Speaker:becomes an antidote because when a stressful situation comes up or
Speaker:a challenge comes up, you're like, I need fresh thinking around this.
Speaker:I need to see this differently.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Instead of burying yourself in your mind with so much dread and worry and concern.
Speaker:So that's the nature of thought.
Speaker:So understanding the nature of thought creates our feelings and
Speaker:experience and fresh thinking will help us to find the next steps.
Speaker:it is our superpower and it's not often talked about.
Speaker:So that's the first antidote to stress.
Speaker:When you can see that you can yourself out of stressful situations very fast.
Speaker:The second antidote to stress is
Speaker:trust
Speaker:often we think about.
Speaker:The antidote to stress is something that can make us feel calm and
Speaker:confident or relaxed, right?
Speaker:But
Speaker:when you trust yourself that you have the resources to overcome anything,
Speaker:it takes the stress away.
Speaker:Like not, maybe not completely, but it massively takes the edge off it, right?
Speaker:So I remember years ago, so in my business, you know, we have different.
Speaker:website pages that, um, create this whole funnel if you don't know what a funnel is.
Speaker:But it's just a series of steps.
Speaker:And my funnel was completely optimized in a working funnel.
Speaker:I'd had it running for two years and perfected it.
Speaker:And then one day someone that was working for me deleted all the pages.
Speaker:I don't know why.
Speaker:It was an accident.
Speaker:I dunno what happened then.
Speaker:But all the pages had disappeared, so you can imagine was quite stressful.
Speaker:And I remember thinking, oh my gosh, this is the end, right?
Speaker:This is absolutely the end.
Speaker:Now, I've had different scenarios where my Facebook page was shut down,
Speaker:my ad account was shut down, like.
Speaker:Different scenarios where I have overcome those.
Speaker:In those moments I thought, this is it.
Speaker:This is me done.
Speaker:Oh my gosh, how am I ever gonna come out of this?
Speaker:Can you come out of this?
Speaker:How do you, because that's where the mind goes, right?
Speaker:And each time I've come through that, it's built my trust, it's built my
Speaker:confidence and trust to know that I have the resources to overcome this.
Speaker:And so I hear my business clients, you know, they go through other
Speaker:periods of, you know, financial stress because, you know, cash flow
Speaker:and business is always up and down.
Speaker:It's the nature of business.
Speaker:It's normal to have that a hundred percent.
Speaker:I will often remind my clients like, you've been in business for a long time.
Speaker:Like you've been in worse scenarios than this.
Speaker:And they'd think back and they'd be like, oh yeah, one time I just didn't even
Speaker:think I could pay my staff, like I was going to getting money out of the, from
Speaker:my credit card, from the cash machine.
Speaker:I was like, right, so you overcame that, right?
Speaker:And they're like, yeah, actually that was way worse than this.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And I'm just sharing examples because when you trust that you have the
Speaker:resources to overcome anything, when something goes wrong, you lean in on that.
Speaker:You're not gonna catastrophize and lose your head and think,
Speaker:oh my gosh, this is the end.
Speaker:I can't do anything here.
Speaker:You are going to lean in on that because you have trust in yourself.
Speaker:You know that you've overcome so many different adversities in business and in
Speaker:life that you could overcome this too.
Speaker:So trust in yourself, like whether you've been through a health scare or a divorce
Speaker:or a bankruptcy, you've overcome these events and landed back on your feet.
Speaker:And that's what you rely on.
Speaker:That's what you remind yourself.
Speaker:That's what I remind myself When things go wrong, I think, okay,
Speaker:been worse, scary scenarios.
Speaker:We, we, we got this right.
Speaker:I just have to figure, I can figure it out.
Speaker:It'll, it'll come to me.
Speaker:But there's also trust in your body to heal itself.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:So if you've been stuck with a chronic illness for a long time, it can feel
Speaker:very hard to trust yourself, but you must cultivate that trust in yourself because
Speaker:your body is well equipped to heal itself, and then you have to trust in life.
Speaker:There is an intelligence behind life, and that intelligence is guiding us all the
Speaker:time through the power of our thought.
Speaker:It's guiding us all the time, and we can have trust in that rather than our
Speaker:insecurities and our fears and our doubts.
Speaker:So trusting in yourself, trusting in life, trusting in your body, trusting in your
Speaker:mind that it knows how to solve problems.
Speaker:Is what you can lean in on when things go wrong, and that releases a lot of the
Speaker:stress because you know, you just have to remind yourself, I've been through
Speaker:worse, I've overcome so many things.
Speaker:This I will overcome too.
Speaker:So they're my two unusual antidotes to stress.
Speaker:I grant that they would be not something that you'd maybe think that I was gonna
Speaker:talk about, but they're really powerful because they're fundamental things that
Speaker:you can understand and lean in on and use.
Speaker:And as you see this more and more for yourself every day.
Speaker:You won't be so stressed, you won't catastrophize so much.
Speaker:You won't get stuck in this habitual negative loop of
Speaker:worry and negative thinking.