Every Monday at 2.
Speaker:45 in the afternoon my alarm goes off My alarm goes off to remind
Speaker:me to go down to the gym in the office where I work for my personal
Speaker:training session at 3 o'clock.
Speaker:Now it's at 3 o'clock because there was no other time in the week we
Speaker:could fit it in and It's on the day where I reserve to do all my
Speaker:prep my podcast planning, all my deep work and my deep thinking.
Speaker:Nine times out of ten when my alarm goes off, I snooze it so that I've
Speaker:got an extra nine minutes because I'm so engrossed in what I'm doing.
Speaker:And then what happens is I end up running down to the changing rooms,
Speaker:being really stressed because I'm late and missing the first five
Speaker:minutes of my training session, which I paid a lot of money for.
Speaker:Now I don't know if this is ringing bells with any of you.
Speaker:Why is it that we decide we're going to do something and then when it comes to
Speaker:actually doing it, no matter how many alarms we put on, we just don't do it?
Speaker:So in this quick tip today I want to talk to you about how to back your
Speaker:wise self and I've got some hacks that I'm going to share with you,
Speaker:things that have helped me or I've heard that have helped other people.
Speaker:Because most of us feel that making change, doing things that we
Speaker:really want to do, or things that we know we need to do, involves
Speaker:making a decision in the moment.
Speaker:But I think we get that really, really wrong.
Speaker:I think that making changes and doing what we know we need to do
Speaker:involves making a decision in the past and sticking to it in the moment.
Speaker:So the only decision in the moment that you need is
Speaker:deciding to back your wise self.
Speaker:So when I set that alarm at 2.
Speaker:45, my wise self was saying, Rachel, you need five minutes
Speaker:to tidy all your stuff away.
Speaker:You need to get down to the changing room.
Speaker:You need to get all your stuff on and get up to the gym.
Speaker:That's going to take you around 15 minutes.
Speaker:And even if you're a couple of minutes early, what does that matter?
Speaker:That's great.
Speaker:You get your buffer zone, don't you?
Speaker:And that's a very trivial example.
Speaker:But there are other things like you're going to have that conversation with
Speaker:a team member and in that conversation your wise self have decided that
Speaker:you're going to give some feedback that they really need to hear.
Speaker:But in the moment, it feels too uncomfortable, doesn't it?
Speaker:Or you just don't want to ruin the rapport you've got going with the
Speaker:person in front of you or upset them.
Speaker:And so you don't back your wise self, your wise self that knew
Speaker:he needed to do that thing.
Speaker:Now we've talked a lot about why this is.
Speaker:It's all to do with your amygdala who's trying to keep you safe.
Speaker:It's trying to keep you protected.
Speaker:But the amygdala depends on trying to avoid the short term discomfort
Speaker:and completely ignores the long term consequences of not doing that thing.
Speaker:And a lot of what we talk about in the podcast is how to overcome this
Speaker:amygdala hijack we get in the moment.
Speaker:But I want to talk about a very simple technique for when you've already
Speaker:done all that thinking and you just need to get over that discomfort.
Speaker:Because if we don't manage to do this, we're constantly going to
Speaker:be stressed, rushing all over the place, no buffer zones for anything.
Speaker:We're constantly going to be avoiding doing the things we know we need to do.
Speaker:It'll make things worse, which will amplify our overwhelm,
Speaker:because we just haven't dealt with situations that need dealing with.
Speaker:It means we never get time for that self care stroke necessary
Speaker:care that we need to do.
Speaker:And we're always at the beck and call of other people's demands
Speaker:because the amygdala loves to please other people but it doesn't
Speaker:really look at pleasing ourselves.
Speaker:And when I say pleasing ourselves, side note, that
Speaker:seems self indulgent doesn't it?
Speaker:But what I'm talking about is looking after yourself is doing
Speaker:the things that you need to work sustainably and actually have a
Speaker:good impact and a good performance.
Speaker:This is a You Are Not a Frog quick dip, a tiny taster of the kinds of things we
Speaker:talk about on our full podcast episodes.
Speaker:I've chosen today's topic to give you a helpful boost in the time it
Speaker:takes to have a cup of tea so you can return to whatever else you're
Speaker:up to feeling energized and inspired.
Speaker:For more tools, tips, and insights to help you thrive at work, don't
Speaker:forget to subscribe to You Are Not a Frog wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker:If we get this right, we get really intentional about how we spend our days.
Speaker:We get really intentional about the conversations that we have.
Speaker:We can really be proud of ourselves because we've pushed through and
Speaker:done something despite the discomfort and things will start to change.
Speaker:You'll also get this positive feedback loop.
Speaker:So that difficult conversation that you've been absolutely dreading,
Speaker:you pushed through, you had it, it didn't go as badly as you thought.
Speaker:And even if it did go as badly as you thought, the consequences probably
Speaker:weren't as bad as you thought.
Speaker:We often overestimate the bad stuff that's going to happen.
Speaker:And we will just feel less reactive as we go through life.
Speaker:So some of the ways that I know I need to start backing my wise self
Speaker:more is firstly giving feedback to people, having really open and honest
Speaker:conversations, saying what I really think and I really mean, giving myself
Speaker:a time buffer, not working right up to the last minute before sort of rushing
Speaker:onto the next thing, not rescuing people when people come to me for help,
Speaker:but actually just taking that time to have that conversation with them, ask
Speaker:questions and empower them, rather than just jumping in and giving advice.
Speaker:But how do we do this?
Speaker:Well, one thing I've started to realise is I really should not
Speaker:rely on my decision in the moment.
Speaker:Because a decision in the moment it's often going to be made from that
Speaker:amygdala adrenalised zone, from that amygdala sympathetic nervous system.
Speaker:So now it's not always bad.
Speaker:It could be excitement.
Speaker:It could be engrossment, it could be that I really want to do something.
Speaker:Now, I have ADHD, I'm quite impulsive, so for me, this is quite a big thing.
Speaker:In the moment.
Speaker:I want to do this.
Speaker:I want to do that.
Speaker:And I rely quite a lot on this amygdala, which is like
Speaker:the chef barking out orders.
Speaker:What I need to do is rely on that butler the butler that is my prefrontal
Speaker:cortex that has already decided what I'm going to do in a very slow and
Speaker:methodical manner and doesn't panic.
Speaker:So I've made a list of 11 strategies and what they do is they help
Speaker:you pre make the decision and help you stick to the decision.
Speaker:My first strategy is hack it.
Speaker:So make it so that you have to do that thing that you have decided to do,
Speaker:that your wise self has decided to do.
Speaker:So, one good way to hack it is to pay for something.
Speaker:So, if you've paid for something, you don't want to be late.
Speaker:I know that I don't want to be late for a massage that
Speaker:I've paid a lot of money for.
Speaker:I'm not going to be even a single minute late because that
Speaker:represents lots and lots of money.
Speaker:You've paid for it, you value it, you get there.
Speaker:If you're meeting somebody to do something, it makes it very inconvenient
Speaker:to the other person if you're late.
Speaker:So actually scheduling it with somebody else means that you're going to do it.
Speaker:I have lots of yoga apps on my phone and sometimes when I can't make it out
Speaker:to do some exercise I say to myself right at lunchtime I'm going to do
Speaker:an hour of yoga as a break because I know it's really good for me.
Speaker:But I've never once done an hour of yoga at lunchtime because there's
Speaker:no consequence for not doing it.
Speaker:The app's always there, I'm not missing out, I've already paid for it.
Speaker:Because I've noticed I will do the yoga when I've booked into it at the gym.
Speaker:It gives me a deadline.
Speaker:I'm doing it with other people and I get a penalty if I don't turn up.
Speaker:So that's the first thing, hack it with some accountability
Speaker:and maybe pay for stuff.
Speaker:And side note, that's why you do courses and things that you have paid for and
Speaker:you don't do the free stuff, because you've paid for it, you value it more,
Speaker:you're more likely to do it and you get a better return on your investment.
Speaker:Next hack, just alert it.
Speaker:So put reminders on your phone, put alarms on your phone.
Speaker:I now put alarm reminders all through the day, otherwise when
Speaker:I'm working on something if I've got a call to do or I'm presenting
Speaker:a session, I'll forget to do that unless I have an alert in good time.
Speaker:Now I found that if I alert myself too early, I just
Speaker:snooze and I forget to do it.
Speaker:So you need to work out what your sweet spot is.
Speaker:I've found that alerting myself three minutes before a phone call I have
Speaker:to do is just about enough time that I don't think, Oh, I've still got
Speaker:another couple of minutes to do this thing before I get on the phone.
Speaker:No, it's actually.
Speaker:Gosh, I've got to stop now, but I've still got a minute to sort of
Speaker:find out what the phone calls about.
Speaker:So put an alarm on.
Speaker:If you want to boost this, you can put your phone or your alarm device
Speaker:across the other side of the room.
Speaker:So it's really inconvenient.
Speaker:You've got to stand up to go and get it.
Speaker:You've got to do something to go and turn off the alarm, which will mean
Speaker:that you're already taking action towards the thing you're going to
Speaker:do and you're less likely to get stuck in what you were doing before.
Speaker:Next hack, block it.
Speaker:Just make it impossible or very difficult to do something.
Speaker:Now, I have taken my work emails off my phone.
Speaker:That stops me checking them.
Speaker:Now that my wise self has said, Rachel, you've got to stop checking work
Speaker:emails all weekend and all evening.
Speaker:I can't get it on my phone.
Speaker:Well, I could, I could log in online, that'd be really, really difficult.
Speaker:But just by taking that off my screen, not having the account in my mail app.
Speaker:It means that I'm not doing it.
Speaker:If you want to boost this, you can get these things called bricks.
Speaker:They go on your fridge.
Speaker:They stop you from getting into social media.
Speaker:They essentially turn your phone into a, one of those Nokia bricks.
Speaker:I've got some friends who found they're quite addicted to doom scrolling.
Speaker:They've used the brick to block social media at certain points in the
Speaker:day, and it's really, really helped.
Speaker:If you want to stop eating a certain type of food,
Speaker:don't have it in your house.
Speaker:Don't have it where you work.
Speaker:All those sorts of things just make it really difficult to do stuff.
Speaker:Next, motivate it.
Speaker:So you can create some extrinsic motivation.
Speaker:This is a little reward that you're going to get if you do that thing.
Speaker:So for example, I could say if I manage to finish that project, I'm
Speaker:going to go out for a nice cake or I'm going to buy myself something nice.
Speaker:So you've set up this reward.
Speaker:Now it's even better if it's actually something with a negative consequence.
Speaker:Apparently there are some apps that you can get where you donate some
Speaker:money, and if you fail to do something, that donates it to a cause that you
Speaker:really hate, like, I don't know, re election campaigns for a despicable
Speaker:politician or something like that.
Speaker:So if you don't do it, it has a negative consequence, which means a lot to you.
Speaker:So that's quite interesting.
Speaker:I've never done that myself.
Speaker:If anyone has done that, I'd love to hear from you.
Speaker:But extrinsic motivation, yeah, it works to a point, but actually
Speaker:we know that intrinsic motivation, i. e. the reward is in doing that
Speaker:thing itself is much, much stronger.
Speaker:So I know that if I go and see my personal trainer once a
Speaker:week, I'm going to get stronger.
Speaker:At my age you need to build up your muscle.
Speaker:My back pain might get better.
Speaker:My ankle pain might get better.
Speaker:And I just feel better in myself.
Speaker:So that's its own reward.
Speaker:So if you're doing stuff that feels difficult at the time, but
Speaker:you can really tease out what the intrinsic rewards are going to be
Speaker:for you, what is the motivation?
Speaker:Why are you doing that?
Speaker:And remind yourself about it even better.
Speaker:My next hack is just to ignore it.
Speaker:So I have trained myself now that when my alarm goes off, I'm going to ignore
Speaker:the voice that says, come on, you've got another couple of minutes and go, no,
Speaker:I'm ignoring that because I know that that has not worked for me in the past.
Speaker:So that takes a little bit of discipline.
Speaker:It takes having done it a few times, but that is something you could just make a
Speaker:pact with yourself for the next couple of days, you are not going to ignore any
Speaker:of the alarms or the reminders or the packs that you've made with yourself.
Speaker:Another thing that I found helpful is just to name it.
Speaker:So for example, if I've decided with my wise self to set off at a
Speaker:certain time to get to a meeting or a training session or something like
Speaker:that, and I think, well, I don't really need to be there that early.
Speaker:I think to myself, buffer zone, buffer zone.
Speaker:I have done that.
Speaker:So I have a buffer zone.
Speaker:Yes, I might get there early.
Speaker:I can do stuff when I'm there, but it's going to make me much less stressed.
Speaker:I have named my thinking time, which I really need to prepare my
Speaker:talks to prepare these podcasts, I've named them creative time.
Speaker:So when I'm tempted in the moment to put in things that just eat into
Speaker:that creative time, I go, no, that is creative time that I have blocked.
Speaker:And that's really important for the podcast.
Speaker:Or sometimes when I have to have a conversation that I really don't
Speaker:want to have I'm like right I'm gonna put my big girl's pants and I'm just
Speaker:gonna do it and for me that means you know I'm gonna, I'm gonna actually
Speaker:own what I'm gonna talk about.
Speaker:And I have these mantras in my head like Brene Brown, clear
Speaker:is kind, unclear is unkind.
Speaker:All those things if you can just name it that helps.
Speaker:Next hack, prep it, prepare for it.
Speaker:So if there's something that you really don't want to do, like
Speaker:that conversation, we'll write down three things that you want
Speaker:to get out of that conversation.
Speaker:Three things that you really want to say.
Speaker:And then you can hold yourself to it.
Speaker:You say, well, I might avoid other stuff, but these are the
Speaker:three things that I really, really need to talk about.
Speaker:Or if you're planning your day, If you're planning your work
Speaker:around your surgery, your clinic or whatever, you can say these are
Speaker:the three priorities I will do.
Speaker:And then when anything else comes at you like, well, okay, have
Speaker:I done these three priorities?
Speaker:Even if it's urgent to other people, even if the urgency trap
Speaker:springs on me, you can say, well, I've already prepared that I am
Speaker:going to do these three things.
Speaker:The next hack, ride it.
Speaker:So you can ride these things out.
Speaker:They talk about this with sugar cravings, with alcohol cravings.
Speaker:At the time, the craving for that thing seems really, really strong.
Speaker:Or the craving to distract yourself and scroll through social
Speaker:media rather than go on to that project that you need to do.
Speaker:Or the anxiety and worry about the people pleasing
Speaker:or maybe I should do that.
Speaker:Actually, if you can just ride that wave, often the wave settles down.
Speaker:And you'll find this if you've ever tried to give up sugar, you
Speaker:get these huge sugar cravings but they're not the same all day,
Speaker:you'll get one at one point and then it will dip and you'll think
Speaker:oh gosh half an hour I was desperate for some sugar but now I'm not.
Speaker:So you can just ride that wave, ride out that real impetus, the chef shouting
Speaker:at you saying do this, do this, do this, you can ride it out and just
Speaker:ignore it and think to yourself well maybe in 10 minutes if I still feel
Speaker:like this but often that is gone.
Speaker:Next hack.
Speaker:Promise it.
Speaker:Make a promise to yourself, a pact with yourself.
Speaker:Now most of us hate it when we have to break our word to other people.
Speaker:So let's Keep our word to ourselves, let's promise ourselves we are
Speaker:going to do something no matter what and then keep our promises.
Speaker:Make a pact with yourself that you are going to do the thing that your wise
Speaker:self decided that you were going to do.
Speaker:And have some sort of ritual around it saying, right, I promise that I
Speaker:am going to do that no matter what.
Speaker:No matter what my amygdala is saying, no matter what the chef shouts at me.
Speaker:The butler is just going to do it this way because that's
Speaker:what the butler has decided.
Speaker:Another hack, gamify it.
Speaker:And this is what the makers of all your apps do.
Speaker:They try and gamify everything.
Speaker:So the other day I was having dinner with a friend and she told
Speaker:me that she had done yoga every single day for about three years.
Speaker:I was like, how on earth did you do that?
Speaker:She's like, well, cause I got a streak.
Speaker:I've got a streak.
Speaker:And even if it's just five minutes a day, she had made sure
Speaker:she wasn't breaking that streak.
Speaker:So getting badges, getting things for the app, just like keeping a
Speaker:chart where you can tick stuff off that just gamifies it in your mind.
Speaker:Gamify what your wise self wants, what your wise self has decided to do.
Speaker:And for gamify it and promise it, well you can remind yourself with
Speaker:post its all over the place, with mantras, with pictures, with things
Speaker:that just remind you what you have promised, what you're going to
Speaker:do and why you have promised it.
Speaker:And finally, try it.
Speaker:Try it for one day.
Speaker:Try making the decisions before the things actually happen and promise
Speaker:for one day, I'm going to stick to what my wise self has decided.
Speaker:And see, experiment.
Speaker:What's happened?
Speaker:How do I feel?
Speaker:Did that go better?
Speaker:Did that go worse?
Speaker:It'd be really interesting to see what happens.
Speaker:Now, of course, there are loads of mistakes we can make in all of this.
Speaker:Firstly, is to beat yourself up.
Speaker:So, please, this is just not another stick to beat yourself with.
Speaker:It's not a, I should, I should, I should, I should, I should.
Speaker:This is all about, I want to, I have decided to.
Speaker:My wise self knows that this is what I really, deep down, want to do.
Speaker:Okay, so there's no shoulds, there's no oughts here.
Speaker:And understand that sometimes things change.
Speaker:Circumstances in the day change.
Speaker:genuine emergencies come in.
Speaker:Things happen.
Speaker:So it's okay to change your mind.
Speaker:But make sure you're changing your mind for the right reason.
Speaker:Not icky, uncomfortable, or you just can't be bothered.
Speaker:And another mistake is make sure your Y self isn't too boring.
Speaker:Leave room for some spontaneity, right?
Speaker:Because I know that I can sit down and make all these plans and then
Speaker:I look at it and think oh that's just really really boring, or I've
Speaker:turned into such a boring person but actually it's not about that.
Speaker:Because your wise self knows what you really need but also you can
Speaker:make room for spontaneity make sure that your wise self gives you space
Speaker:and time and is it that you can never just do stuff on impulse of
Speaker:course not of course not, but again make sure it's for the right reason.
Speaker:Because if you know your why, if you know why you have decided to
Speaker:do something, it's so much easier.
Speaker:I heard a quote the other day that actually if you get a
Speaker:compelling enough reason that will overcome any procrastination.
Speaker:And the most compelling reason is a really drastic consequence.
Speaker:So if we know we don't get that thing done or we don't do that,
Speaker:we're going to lose our job or get a fine or something like that,
Speaker:we'll probably get on and do it.
Speaker:So if you can ramp up the consequences of not doing that thing that
Speaker:you have decided that you want to do, that will motivate you.
Speaker:So that's a negative motivation.
Speaker:But understanding your values.
Speaker:Understanding what's really important to you in life, and understanding how
Speaker:backing your wise self can actually impact on other people too, because
Speaker:it will make you more effective.
Speaker:It will help them.
Speaker:You'll have more impact in the world.
Speaker:And this is for that.
Speaker:It's not just for you to feel good, is it for you to be able
Speaker:to perform well, to stick at peak performance by protecting your time,
Speaker:your energy, your capacity, all those different sorts of things.
Speaker:So how about you try this?
Speaker:You think about next week, you think about all the things you've got to do.
Speaker:Make sure you're in your rest and digest zone, your parasympathetic zone.
Speaker:So you're thinking straight and you're thinking, okay, what are the things
Speaker:I really need to achieve next week?
Speaker:What are the things I really want to do?
Speaker:What are the conversations I want to have?
Speaker:How am I going to look after myself?
Speaker:And how can I apply some of those hacks to make sure that I'm backing
Speaker:my wise self and I'm hacking my present self to make it more
Speaker:likely that they actually happen?
Speaker:I would love to hear any hacks that you have to back your wise self
Speaker:to mean that you actually do what you want to do rather than what
Speaker:your amygdala says you ought to do or you should do in the moment.
Speaker:It's all about working out what we want to do, who we want to be, where we
Speaker:want to go and backing that decision.