Episode 47 - Habits
Transcript
00:00:04 Alison
Welcome to mental wealth, the podcast to invest in your mind. Here I will help you make sense of your mind and behaviours, giving you the tools to have your best life. There is so much to share, so let's get into this episode and explore another great topic.
00:00:22 Alison
So I am delighted to be joined by Danny Greeves and he has a book out called 6 Steps to self-confidence but also has a great story to share, one which I hope will resonate for lots of people. So welcome Danny, please introduce yourself.
00:00:39 Danny
Hello, thank you so much for having me. Yeah. My name is Danny Greeves, and I'm a coach and hypnotherapist. And I mainly.
00:00:46 Danny
Help people.
00:00:48 Danny
Discover if you like their feelings of inner peace and just to tap into their own self-confidence.
00:00:54 Alison
Nice, nice. And obviously that's something I think that we're all aiming for. I spend a lot of time working with people who think they want a better job, more money, a better relationship, and I'm sure those things are really important and the cost who want those. But the key to it all isn't it is that, isn't it that happiness? Tell us a little bit more about your journey because I know you've.
00:01:14 Alison
Share a little bit about your own journey in terms of that.
00:01:17 Danny
Yeah. So and to follow up on your point, I think really what we want is the feeling that those things give us, isn't it? So we're.
00:01:25 Danny
We we find.
00:01:25 Danny
Them many different ways, but we're we're looking for the feeling and what I found was when I was younger, so I actually trained as a physio. That was originally sort of my.
00:01:37 Danny
Way in and when I was younger and my parents were divorced and that was quite.
00:01:43 Danny
That was quite a.
00:01:43 Danny
Big challenge for me and that kind of set.
00:01:46 Danny
Off lots of different challenges in terms of feeling quite anxious, doubting myself lacking in confidence, particularly around relationships and that kind of makes sense in terms of where the challenges come from.
00:02:00 Danny
From - I was very, very young. I knew I wanted to help people in pain, didn't quite know how that was going to work, but I knew that was something that I was really aware of and I found myself in the field of physiotherapy.
00:02:13 Danny
And I was working in that field for about 10 years and I was just working with more and more people struggling with chronic issues. And I could do all the treatment that they recommend, and yet they've still got this chronic pain. And it was then then I started to ask like.
00:02:32 Danny
What is going on with these people that's causing this? And then it really came down to a lot of emotional issues that weren't being.
00:02:39 Danny
Addressed so when I tapped into that side of things, I had some wonderful mentors along the way. I then transitioned away from being a physio and then started working with sort of people as a coach and hypnotherapist.
00:02:52 Alison
I love that and I think it's so powerful to be for people to to really focus on the fact that it's.
00:02:59 Alison
So often physical pain is so linked to emotional pain. Mental pain.
00:03:04
00:03:07 Alison
All that trapped.
00:03:08 Alison
Emotion that is so often missed, isn't it? People often know that they feel unhappy, but they're so focused on their physical pain that they don't necessarily pause and think, well, what is the deep cause and the.
00:03:21 Alison
Deep breath of that.
00:03:21 Danny
Yes. And there's there's definitely been quite a big stigma in the past in terms of if anyone has a a chronic pain, the idea that it could be emotional was actually quite challenging for a lot of people. Whereas at least now the science is showing that emotions play a role. So it's not in every case. And it's not for everyone.
00:03:42 Danny
But actually, being aware that emotions use the same pain pathways, I think open things.
00:03:49 Danny
Up a little bit.
00:03:49 Alison
Yeah, definitely. Do you have a little story or a little example that you think is the real one that resonates with most people around pain? Cause not everybody's walking around with chronic pain, are they? But they're often walking around with some level of pain that they're not necessarily sure, do you?
00:04:07 Alison
Have a sort of an.
00:04:08 Alison
Example that you often use when you're talking to people.
00:04:10 Alison
Help. So they I like it that.
00:04:12 Alison
People can really resonate with what we're.
00:04:14 Alison
About on the show.
00:04:15 Danny
Yeah. I think one of the and it's quite a common pattern that I see, but there's one lady in particular because I stay in contact with her. And initially she was really struggling with some degree of anxiety and she was aware of that symptom and she was.
00:04:35 Danny
Also aware that she was needing to go see a massage therapist almost once a week to help with neck and shoulder pain.
00:04:43 Danny
And she was also going to see her GP on sort of like a monthly basis with quite significant IBS symptoms. So really struggling sort of with stomach pain, cramps, bloating that type of thing and.
00:04:58 Danny
She was aware.
00:04:59 Danny
Of these different problems, but she hadn't actually managed to connect them.
00:05:04 Danny
To notice that when anxiety flared up.
00:05:08 Danny
Her neck pain increased and her abdominal symptoms got worse, and so she was looking for these various different treatments, and she was doing everything she could, but that was involving sort of medication from the doctor to help the IBS massage from the therapist to calm the muscle tension and then dealing with the anxiety, the best way.
00:05:30 Danny
She could, whereas when we sort of actually worked on resolving the anxiety and that was based on some sort of painful past experiences.
00:05:39 Danny
That she'd had.
00:05:40 Danny
As soon as those issues were resolved, the neck pain released, the abdomen relaxed and all of the other symptoms just cleared up. So I think it is a challenge sometimes because we do box things off, but I think the the emotional side of things really is the link that can connect a lot of things together if that makes.
00:05:59 Alison
Sense. No, I think that's a great example.
00:06:01 Alison
And and know knowing in my work it'll be one that most people can make sense of.
00:06:07 Alison
And I know for me personally, my clinic when I work 1:1 when when we do see people face to face is is a physiotherapy clinic and often we we cross refer you know I get a lot of their patients who come and see me because exactly as you've just described.
00:06:24 Danny
That's a wonderful thing to have, I think more therapy clinics should have that. I think it's so important.
00:06:28 Alison
Yeah, definitely. So let's move on to a.
00:06:31 Alison
Bit more about your.
00:06:32 Alison
Work now and the fact that you've realised that let's focus on the mind. Yes, we still need to focus on the body too, but the mind and tell us a little bit about.
00:06:42 Danny
So when I was working as a physio, I actually bumped into a neurosurgeon. He was a a Mexican chap, about 6 foot 5, built a bit like a Thor from The Avengers movie and we were sitting down and having sort of a few chats over lunch and he asked me.
00:07:03 Danny
Do you ever say to your patients at that time you just have to live with your symptoms? You know, like knee arthritis or something like that? And I said, well, yeah, as a physio, we say that quite a lot. And then he started to ask me some questions about if I really wanted to help people to change on the inside as well as the outside.
00:07:24 Danny
I was going to have to learn how to help people change their mindset.
00:07:28 Danny
So he taught me some particular tools, and then I was really fortunate to learn with master hypnotist who really opened my eyes to the power of language. And then I also was really fortunate to be mentored by another couple of behavioural change experts. And so from each one of them, I kind of.
00:07:48 Danny
Extracted what I thought was most important, and then kind of put it together into a process. So what I do now is really niche in terms of helping people to resolve anxiety to to feel that inner peace and.
00:08:02 Danny
Incidents and it's about clearing those emotional pains from the past and developing a more positive mindset. So that's really what I I love doing now.
00:08:11 Alison
Nice. And I love the way you've.
00:08:14 Alison
Sort of taken the bits that you felt were were right for you and work for you because that's that's sort of my story too. I've got lots of different approaches that I use, and I often describe I've got a tool.
00:08:25 Alison
Kit and in the toolkit I've got lots of different disciplines, different approaches. I started off as a CBT therapists in the NHS and then I moved into NLP and hypnosis also, although I don't do as much of that now and also clean language which I use a lot of and certainly when I'm working with teams and businesses I've combined.
00:08:46 Alison
All these things, and I like that I think instead of just being.
00:08:48 Alison
One thing you.
00:08:50 Alison
Know it's it's helpful.
00:08:51 Alison
To be able to bring in different aspect.
00:08:53 Alison
Of of it all, so that you've got this really as I described this great toolkit. So it sounds like you've got.
00:08:58 Alison
Something quite similar.
00:08:59 Danny
And I use the same word so but one thing that I have noticed is that one of the main reasons people struggle is that they don't have their own toolkit, so they might have maybe one thing that they rely on.
00:09:01 Alison
Ah, I mean.
00:09:15 Danny
But that doesn't always work because you know, circumstances are different. Life happens, there's family changes and things like that. So when we have no tools or we have one tool, we can get unlimited quite quickly, whereas when we have like a toolbox.
00:09:31 Danny
As you described.
00:09:32 Danny
Then depending on what's happening, we've got a variety of different skills.
00:09:36 Danny
And I think that helps us feel more in control because what we've got we've got choices. So I think that that talk is really, really important.
00:09:41 Alison
Sure.
00:09:45 Alison
And I think something else that's important for everyone to remember is to have their own toolkit.
00:09:50 Alison
Because we can often be shown something that works brilliantly for one person, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it's gonna work brilliantly for you. And I think that's something else that I'm keen for people to do is to think about what's their one small thing that they can get going, and then once you've got that going, what's the next one small thing you'll hear me on this show talking about what's your one small thing that you can take.
00:10:10 Alison
Our conversation now, Danny, what's the one small thing that you can just do this today and and then you can build on it, because otherwise it becomes overwhelming, doesn't it, with all of the things that you could do to help yourself. And I think that's sometimes what happens to people.
00:10:24 Alison
They get a lot of information about what they can do. They know what they need to do to make themselves feel better and feel happier. But actually it feels overwhelming because there's just too many options.
00:10:34 Danny
Yeah, there's definitely a huge difference between having an idea and then implementing that idea. And I think one of the challenges.
00:10:45 Danny
Just as humans is that we love learning and we love novelty so often we crave lots of new information, but it's actually not the information that helps us make the change. It's actually implementing it in small, manageable chunks.
00:11:00 Danny
And then celebrating along the way.
00:11:02 Danny
And I think that applies to habits. It applies to mental health. It applies to so many different areas, whereas we tend to just crave more and and one of the mentors that I work with gave me this analogy. What I think is really nice is when we tend to struggle, what we tend to do is become a white belt.
00:11:22 Danny
In about 10 different disciplines.
00:11:25 Danny
Rather than becoming a black belt in one of them and then adding the next one to it, so which kind of fits into just what you said, but that analogy is really nice because there's a lot of white belts out there, but actually it's the the black belt that really helps us change.
00:11:39 Alison
Yeah, I like that.
00:11:41 Alison
I think something that I see a lot of people do is they'll start something.
00:11:44 Alison
They'll they'll start having a little go at.
00:11:47 Alison
Meditation or mindfulness, or.
00:11:49 Alison
Getting to the gym or eating healthily, or reading some books or whatever it is, whatever they've picked up.
00:11:55 Alison
Along the way. And then they give up because it hasn't worked quick enough that the novelty factor I think is really something we should key key into, which you shared. Definitely we love something new and it wears off and it's at that point that then people get disheartened. Ohh, it didn't work out.
00:12:16 Alison
I tried that and a lot of people say I've tried that.
00:12:19 Alison
Well, how long did you try it for?
00:12:19 Alison
Did you feel the benefits yet? We often give up, don't we so much? Yeah, just on that brink of it. Starting to work. I know. Fitness is definitely like that. I lots of people.
00:12:29 Alison
Say they've been.
00:12:30 Alison
Been going to the gym. They haven't seen the results they wanted and then they sort of give up.
00:12:34 Alison
A bit, and I always describe again a little metaphor that I use again is the mind is like a muscle and we need to take it to the mind gym. And when we go to the mind gym, we need to do lots of.
00:12:44 Alison
Reps we need.
00:12:45 Alison
To do lots of regular exercise, lots of different variety, just like you would again going to the gym. But it's not giving up, but equally not being overwhelmed.
00:12:55 Alison
With how much and you know, I think it's something. It's really key for people to remember.
00:12:59 Danny
Yeah. One of the things that.
00:13:02 Danny
I help people do is create healthy habits and productive habits, and one of the authors that I read is a chap called James Clear and he has a book called Atomic Habits and one of his ideas in there. It's a bit of a a fancy phrase I.
00:13:17 Danny
Think, but it's called the.
00:13:18 Danny
Period of latent potential, and it's essentially when you're doing the right things.
00:13:24 Danny
But actually the right things haven't had enough time to make a change yet.
00:13:28 Danny
So so many times, just as you mentioned, we give up in that period, but that's actually when everything's working correctly. We just haven't built enough momentum yet. So I think at least if we know that that this is normal, it's it's sort of part of the journey and we might be able to just push through it a little bit more.
00:13:48 Alison
I think you're right and it's that people have the knowledge, they know what they should be doing, but getting it into a habit, getting it as a skill 1st and then having it as a habit takes time, you know, and I and I think that's something I'm often remembering myself and and others is that these things take time. They they don't fix.
00:14:06 Alison
Something like this overnight and I think how do we then that's my question always to people.
00:14:12 Alison
How do we?
00:14:13 Alison
Keep that going. What is it that you're gonna do? And and yeah, the toolkit idea of let's have lots of different things in there that you can rely upon.
00:14:21 Alison
At different times.
00:14:22 Alison
One size doesn't fit all. Is my other big thing, remembering we are all.
00:14:27 Alison
Individual and we all need different things.
00:14:29 Danny
Absolutely. And if we can approach that sort of toolkit with the idea of we're gonna explore and we're just gonna be curious and find out what works for us. Then if we come across something.
00:14:42 Danny
That doesn't work.
00:14:43 Danny
We don't get disarmed. We OK? I I explored that. Then we can move on to the next one.
00:14:48 Danny
So I think that's a that's a helpful thing.
00:14:50 Danny
To think about.
00:14:51 Alison
Definitely because otherwise we are giving up too easily or we're comparing ourselves to others, which, yeah, also a lethal combination because we are.
00:15:00 Alison
We're not each other.
00:15:01 Alison
And just because you're looking at someone.
00:15:03 Alison
Else they might be able to do something that isn't right for you.
00:15:06 Alison
Or they've been doing it for a long.
00:15:07 Alison
Period of time and that's why they can do it.
00:15:08 Danny
Yeah. Yeah. We we often make a snap judgement, whereas actually that other person might have had 10 years extra experience and now it looks easy.
00:15:21 Danny
So are you willing to do the 10 years to get there and then a lot of people go - Maybe not.
00:15:24 Alison
Exactly, but if you're comparing yourself rather than comparing yourself to yourself yesterday or what was it like yesterday? Well, I I did better than today. Great. Let's build on that rather than be comparing ourselves unless we are looking to be motivated by.
00:15:40 Danny
Yeah, yeah. I mean comparisons we didn't want to make them all bad as you mentioned, because sometimes they do give us a nudge to think. Ohh alright, maybe my life isn't quite what I want it to be and sometimes that that can give us a push. But I think it's the it's the healthy comparison that we need.
00:16:00 Danny
And when we've got a meaningful goal, that's when we compare to ourselves.
00:16:04 Danny
Because then it doesn't.
00:16:05 Danny
Matter what's going on? We're just comparing to our own.
00:16:07 Danny
Progress. So I think it's a, it's a really good point cuz.
00:16:10 Danny
A lot of the time comparisons does just get bookmarked as all bad, but actually we do need it sometimes to give us a little bit of a nudge. There's been many a times after our Christmas holiday where I've looked over people getting fitter in January and then thought, yeah, OK, it's time for me to do something.
00:16:30 Danny
So it does have a role.
00:16:31 Alison
It definitely does, but making sure we are being kind to ourselves while we are comparing.
00:16:37 Alison
Yeah, we're telling them a little bit about your.
00:16:39 Alison
Book. You've got a book out.
00:16:41 Danny
Yeah, my book is called 6 steps to self-confidence and it fits really naturally in terms of what we've been talking about because it's helping you build your own series of tools to help you systematically build confidence. So it kind of gives you a manual of sort of variety of different techniques.
00:17:01 Danny
That you can then implement and then experiment to find your own morning routine.
00:17:07 Danny
So one thing that I found is that if we can set things up in the morning, that tends to be a more productive time. Some people it just doesn't work, but for a lot of people, if we can do something productive in the morning that will set us up for the rest of the day. So the book is all about helping you to get that morning bit.
00:17:27 Danny
Planned and prepped so you can enjoy the rest of your day.
00:17:31 Alison
Nice. Sounds brilliant.
00:17:33 Alison
OK, so tell everyone where they can find you.
00:17:35 Alison
Danny.
00:17:37 Danny
So I'd recommend first of all going to my website which is www.dannygreevescoaching.com and on my website there's a score card which is all about helping you to discover your own inner peace. So it'll give you a new view about where your blocks are at the moment and then we'll give you some action steps to actually get moving.
00:17:56 Danny
So that's probably a great first step and that will get.
00:17:59 Danny
You going towards your goals?
00:18:01 Alison
Thanks. Thank you. Thank you so much for coming and talking to us. It's been I could chat to you all day because obviously we have a lot of common common ground. I think our backgrounds in terms of training are quite similar. So for me personally, it's always lovely to have somebody who we can have lots of ideas bouncing around.
00:18:18 Danny
Yeah, absolutely. Pleasure to be.
00:18:20 Danny
Here, thank you very much for having me.
00:18:21 Alison
Thank you. Thank you so much.
00:18:27 Alison
Thank.
00:18:27 Alison
For listening and sharing in this episode of Mental Wealth, Remember You can subscribe wherever you get your podcast. My last question to you is what is the one small thing that you can take action on from this episode?
00:18:43 Alison
Message me on Instagram or through our website with questions you'd like.
00:18:47 Alison
Me to explore.
00:18:49 Alison
We'll find the links in the show notes. I'll be back with more tools and tips to make sense of your mind in the next episode. In the meantime, be kind to yourself. Bye for now.