cover of episode 231. 5 ways to reinvent yourself in your 20s

231. 5 ways to reinvent yourself in your 20s

2024/9/17
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The Psychology of your 20s

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Jemma:二十多岁是人生变革和重塑的时期,每个人都需要不断重新发现自我,并弥合理想自我与现实自我的差距。这期间,我们会经历无聊、停滞、孤独和不适等负面情绪,这些都是需要改变的信号。自我重塑始于识别生活中令人不满意的现状、日常习惯和感受。我们可以通过将负面情绪转化为其对立面(例如将无聊转化为兴奋),制定30天计划,积极体验与当前感受相反的事物,并利用这种动机来改变生活。新奇的体验能让人感觉时间变长,并摆脱平淡乏味的生活。针对停滞感,建议改变日常工作或生活习惯,积极寻求新的机会和人脉。想象未来理想的自我,并规划如何行动以实现这一目标。可以通过视觉化的方法,例如制作视觉版,来明确未来的目标和方向。选择一个主题来指导未来六个月的行为和决策。长期目标设定应更注重行动性和可持续性,而非过于宏大和严苛。“改变的时间线”方法将长期目标分解成年度、半年、月度和每日的小目标,更易于执行。大多数新年计划失败是因为目标过大且缺乏持续的积极反馈。为了实现自我提升,需要承担风险,即使感到害怕也在所不惜。承担风险是自我重塑的加速器,虽然结果可能不确定,但能更快地进入新的阶段。那些值得敬佩的人也曾经历过迷茫和不确定,而正是这些艰难的抉择促进了成长。风险如同健身过程中的肌肉撕裂,虽然痛苦,但最终会带来成长。二十多岁是承担风险的最佳时期,因为责任少、时间多,且损失也相对较小。风险是投资而非成本,不承担风险更容易留下遗憾。对于风险规避者,建议从小风险开始,逐步提升风险承受能力。微型冒险,例如独自旅行或参加新的活动,有助于提升风险承受能力。一些微小的改变,例如分享爱好或开始储蓄,也能被视为一种风险,因为它挑战了固有的安全感。将“如果怎样”的担忧转变为“还有什么”或“那又怎样”的思考方式,以更积极地面对挑战。恐惧和担忧源于对他人评价的顾虑,以及对改变的害怕。“如果怎样”的担忧通常是焦虑的体现,而非真实的预测。用“那又怎样”来反驳担忧,从而看清问题的本质,并减少焦虑。用“还有什么”来拓展思维,寻找更多可能性,而非只关注负面结果。不要习惯于负面情绪,应积极行动,抓住机会进行自我重塑。

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Reinvention in your 20s often stems from feelings of boredom, stagnation, isolation, or discomfort. These feelings signal a need for change, and it's crucial to address them before becoming habituated to the discomfort.
  • Boredom, stagnation, isolation, and discomfort are key indicators of a need for change in your 20s.
  • Habituation can lead to accepting these negative feelings as normal.
  • It's important to act on these feelings before becoming comfortable with them.

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Hello everybody and welcome back to the psychology of your 20s, the podcast where we talk through some of the big life changes and transitions of our 20s and what they mean for our psychology.

Hello everybody, welcome back to the show, welcome back to the podcast, new listeners, old listeners, wherever you are in the world, it is so great to have you here back for another episode as we of course break down the psychology of our 20s.

If nothing else, our 20s are this kind of beautiful time of transformation and reinvention that is a universal truth, a universal statement for me that each of us, no matter what we're going through, what we're struggling with, what we do or don't achieve, we will have to rediscover time and time again who we are. And we also have to rediscover how far off that is from who we want to be probably 100%,

hundreds of times during this period of emerging adulthood. We spend so much of childhood and also our teenage years

being the person that others want us to be or rebelling against this version entirely to carve out what we think is our own space. And I think our 20s is when we start to find balance and we really get the chance to do that all over again and independently. And we approach, you know, self-discovery with a new maturity and a new sense of truth and

things about us become a lot more clear and what we're likely to experience is a bit of a metamorphosis and a shedding of the old into the new. This is definitely a rite of passage and sometimes it's deeply uncomfortable but when you get to the point of not really enjoying your life, not liking who you are, not knowing what you stand for, what your dreams are, who you even want to be,

You are really, I think, called to a place of reinvention. And that is what I want to talk about today.

How can we reinvent and rediscover ourselves in our 20s when things start to feel stagnant or off or we start to feel a sense of disconnection between who we are right now and who we really want to be? How do we kind of shake things up? How do we find our path? How do we have that refresh where we fall back in love with our lives through our old actions?

Well, we are going to talk through five tips that you can work through either step by step or you can kind of choose one or the other for reinvention during this decade. This includes some methods for visualizing your next chapter and how to use psychology to really motivate yourself to get there, how to use psychology to motivate a sense of confidence and

Also how we can use that discomfort, use the boredom, the isolation, the stagnation, the uncertainty in our favor rather than fighting against it. How can we actually take all of those things that are making us crave reinvention and help us get there rather than kind of, I don't know, burden us.

We are also going to discuss the power of risk and this construct called the timeline for change and how to shift from very anxious what-if thinking to a what-else-or-so-what mentality, which is honestly one of my favorite ways to think about this. One of my favorite ideas in this space is that switch, that mental and cognitive switch between

from seeing things in a disaster scenario lens or from a disaster scenario lens to an abundant lens, from an abundant position of excess and authenticity and growth. I've got to say this is one of my favorite episodes that I've done as of recent because it just combines all my favorite like nuggets of advice and theories into one package and I

Truly, it really represents so much of my philosophy towards this period in our lives. You know, our 20s are for exploration. They are for reinvention, rebuilding, transformation, more so than any other time. So I really want us to be able to unlock that for ourselves, even if it's through small steps, even if it's not as drastic as you're picturing.

Also, I guess whenever I get the opportunity to talk about risk and our approach to uncertainty, that is like a favorite topic of mine because it's

Something that I deeply, deeply think is important that we stop seeing risk as scary and we start seeing risk as investment. It really falls into this overall concept and topic of reinvention. So I am very excited to talk about this. I'm enthused. I'm invigorated. So I think without further ado, let us get into the five ways that we can reinvent ourselves in our 20s.

Reinventing yourself, changing your life, I think it really has to begin with identifying what it is about your current circumstances, your day-to-day, your habits that are dissatisfying to you.

What is the main feeling that you have towards your life at the moment that is giving you this itch to change things up, that is making you restless? There are a few big ones that I think are specifically noteworthy in our 20s. The first one is boredom. Boredom, feeling like not much is happening in your life, nothing exciting is happening, nothing is changing, you're not changing, and

The things that really elevate our day-to-day experiences like adventure, like excitement, like spontaneity. It's just not there. It's this sense of just like plainness. Boredom is the first one. Then we have stagnation and this is very similar to boredom. But it's more so centered on a sense that you've kind of become complacent in some domain of your life even if you're still doing fun things.

This is particularly to do with our careers or to do with some larger goal. Finding that, you know, you're really not working towards something the way that you anticipated that you would be or the way that you have in the past. Feeling very stuck. Then we have isolation, lacking connection, lacking community, feeling lonely and maybe with that, you know, some FOMO that you're missing out on. The experiences that others seem to be having during this time.

And then the final feeling that I think also makes us quite itchy for change is just a general discomfort. A feeling that's probably very similar to anxiety, that something about your life just isn't quite right. You don't seem to fit in your current circumstances anymore. You know,

You have these habits, these friends, these situations that your body is very instinctually telling you, this is not what we want. We're not comfortable here. We're not happy here. And often it does that through heightened sensitivity, being very nervous, repetitive thoughts that again and again bring you back to some issue that you're having, a sense of detachment between who you know you can be and who you are now.

So these feelings, boredom, stagnation, isolation and discomfort, they tell us something very useful, even though it's unpleasant. And what they're telling us is that we need to change. We need to shift. We need to be doing something different and hopefully sooner rather than later.

The reason that I say sooner rather than later is because if you don't do something, not instantly, but pretty soon, the alternative is that we begin to get quite comfortable with the discomfort. We get comfortable with being bored, with being lonely, with being stuck. And we think that that's normal.

In psychology, this process is actually called habituation. And it refers to our tendency to get more and more used to something that used to frustrate us or bother us as time goes on. You know, I think about, so I, for example, I actually live under like a plane line. What's it called? Like a flight path, right? And when I first moved into this house, like the sound of planes going overhead was

was so, would just bother me so much. It was all I could think about.

But the longer that I've lived here, I don't even notice it anymore. Like I'm sure that about five planes have probably flown over the skies above my house in the time that I've been recording this, but I've become habituated. And that is the same thing that happens when we get comfortable with something that we should not be comfortable with. You should not be comfortable with being bored in your life or being isolated or being, you know, stagnant.

And we have a really small window to stop that habituation from happening and to act. Otherwise, it does get harder and harder. It's like breaking a bad habit. What we want to explore is what life would look like if we flipped those emotional states to be the complete opposite. So when we felt bored, we made a commitment to pursue excitement.

When we felt stagnant, we made a commitment to pursue growth, to pursue connection over isolation, to pursue peace and boundaries over discomfort. So what I want from you is to really, to begin with, notice what is driving you to want to reinvent or refresh your life and then make a plan for the next 30 days to do all the things that feel the exact opposite to that initial feeling.

We're going to really shake up your life whilst you're still feeling motivated by the discomfort. For example, if you are just feeling so bored with your life right now, I want you to make a list in your notes app or on a sheet of paper to put on your fridge or

of a series of activities that you've always wanted to do in your city or your town that you haven't. And I want you to be committed to doing one every two days, every three days. Or if there is a class, a hobby you've always wanted to pursue, sign up for a six-week course that you have to go to week after a week. Get a new gym membership. Just do something different every

Novel experiences quite literally give the impression of creating more time in our lives. And there's a 2016 study around this that has become quite well known that found that the older we get, time does seem to actually pass quicker. Not because it's actually going any faster, but because we are learning less. We are exposed to fewer new things. We become more accustomed to what we already know.

But what actually creates the mental experience of more time is novelty and newness. And that is what we need to reintroduce to kind of pull us out of the path towards indifference and monotony. So put the excitement back in your life because that is a choice for you. You know, that is something that you can change on your own to reinvent how you feel about your circumstances.

The same goes for if you're feeling stagnant, you know, identify what area that's in and make yourself a list of a series of things that you know would help you break out of that. If it's work related, which I find it often is or career related, I want you to change your routine. I want you to spend 30 minutes a day applying for new jobs instead of scrolling. I want you to be networking. I want you to be, you know, reaching out to people that you admire online, shooting off those emails, etc.

so that when you go to bed, you have a sense that you've done something. You know, sign up for the networking event, contemplate what you could do next. I think reinvention is all about movement and picking the direction you want to go in and actually pursuing it. Once you've kind of tested sliding the dial to your boredom, your stagnation, whatever it is in the opposite direction,

It's time to really begin to visualize your next era and who this new version of you will be, but also how this new version of you will act. You know, in your wildest fantasies, your greatest, largest dreams, who is your authentic self?

Who is the character staring back at you? If you still are unsure about who that is, how to even visualize this version of yourself, I have some questions to really help you bring elements of this person forward. So what are some of the dreams that you've had for as long as you can remember that you've always put off? What truly excites you? What could you talk about for hours? In five years time, what would your ideal but average day in your life look like?

And how is that different from now? What chapter of your life are you ready to close and what is holding you back from closing that chapter? Or what is holding you back from putting everything behind the truest version of yourself? Your answers to these questions should really begin to direct you to what this next era of your life is going to bring.

You know, if you were to look back, I think, and if we were to look back at past versions, you know, past parts of our life story, you start to really see in hindsight these strange lines or periods that are carved into your memories. You begin to notice that life isn't one long sequence of events. And I guess it is, but actually it's...

A series of seasons and a series of periods within which you've had different goals, maybe different friends, different ambitions, different, you know, sense of style. You maybe even lived in a different place. Your routine was different. We each have these different eras or chapters of our lives that represent who we were and what we were going through at that time.

And this next era for you is going to be one of authenticity. It's going to be one where you're going to channel all of those deeply rooted, deeply

dreams and values and goals and actually just spend the next six months to a year prioritizing them. That is how you're going to bring yourself into this next chapter and reinvent yourself. We can be in the business of deciding when a new season begins for us, regardless of what is happening externally. And that really starts with being able to see, feel, touch, hear,

here, experience what this new era represents for you before it even emerges. And you've already done that in a way by focusing on those questions that we were talking about before, you do already have an idea.

but then you have to get it out of your mind into some physical form, either through action or through something like visualization. So some ways that people do this is through like vision boards, you know, spending an afternoon really putting to page or to poster what this next chapter looks like for you, you know, with pictures of destinations that you'll visit and accomplishments and the nature that you'll see, the mornings that you'll have, the hobbies that will relax you. You need to have an idea of what you're actually aiming for here.

And visualization is extremely psychologically powerful. There was a recent study that said about a quarter of successful entrepreneurs use vision boards or a similar process to map out change for themselves. And there was a 2019 study that also suggests that vision boards, as much as we sometimes think that they're silly, are

Actually, no, they almost double an individual's level of confidence in their ability to effectively execute actions necessary to achieve a desired outcome.

And it really promotes people to seek out supportive resources. And it keeps this vision of who they want to be, who they're working towards very squarely in the front of their mind. Because life is full of distractions. There are lots of things pulling us this way, that way. You know, you're busy. You know, there's people's expectations. There's money to worry about. There's, you know, relationships to worry about.

But this method really squarely says, very deeply says, no, this is what we're working towards right now. This is who we want to be. Another way to do this, if visualization and, you know, mood boards, vision boards, sorry, aren't really your favorite method.

It's to identify a theme for your new era that you really want to embody and that you will use to charge, motivate, direct everything that you're doing in this new season. As in, you know, when it's time to make a decision or you have a hard choice ahead of you, I want you to have that one theme, that one word that

decisively chooses for you. Let me explain this a little bit more. So with this new era, your theme could be discipline. It could be reinvention, rebirth, passion, creativity, authenticity, exploration, intuition, focus, courage. I want you to choose one of those or one of your own, a theme that is going to sit at the core of everything you aim to do for the next six months.

Let me use the theme of reinvention here to explain why this works. You know, it's very appropriate for this episode, but anyway,

To embody reinvention, that really means doing things differently, right? Making space for what's new, making space for things that you haven't tried before. Maybe because you're scared, you're embarrassed, you're held back by the judgments of others, but you're going to do it anyways. You are stepping into this new era, you're reinventing yourself. So if someone invites you to a party that you'd normally not go to and you're kind of umming and ahhing about whether you want to go there,

You have an easy solution here. What decision would best align with that theme, reinvention? The decision that best aligns is to go to the party. That is your directive. If you're, you know, back and forthing over leaving the house in, I don't know, an outfit that you probably never wear,

and you're like, maybe I should take this off. I don't really know. Well, you have to be guided by reinvention above all else. Everything is coming back to this theme for the next six months. It is a very simple, you know, compass for you, a decision-making tool that's like, okay, if I'm faced with two choices, the one that best aligns with my theme is the one that I have to do, is the one that I need to pursue.

This is just such a powerful, I think, mental trick because sometimes we like set out to reinvent our lives and like, you know, you kind of try and do a whole a whole overhaul and you want to change everything right now at once. And eventually, like this version of you that you're actually aiming for gets a little bit lost.

in all the chaos, when you simplify it, when you bring it back to one theme and one theme only, you are just better able to truly focus and not get caught up in the clutter and not get caught up in the chaos that transformation often brings. Moving beyond this method, let's now turn to some longer term activities for refreshing, recharging your life in your 20s, specifically to do with goal setting.

Now, I'm going to say something that might be controversial, that might be unexpected, but goal setting to me is one of the most boring things to talk about in the world. And that might surprise you, but I really struggle to, you know, be around people who have a million goals for every single thing in their life.

Because it just feels so intense and disciplined to me. And my natural inclination is and was to really feel my way through things and to like go with my gut rather than having like a two year, five year plan. You know, I could work very hard at things for a long period of time. But, you know, I wasn't really into resetting goals every six months and planning out where I wanted to be and doing distinct things to make that happen.

I have slowly begun to retire that philosophy that, you know, I think I was misguided. I thought that goal setting had to be really intensive when actually, no, it doesn't have to be that way. It doesn't have to make you an ultra disciplined person. Actually, it's really about change, right? And, you know, as we always say, nothing changes if you don't. And in a similar vein, I

Nothing changes if you can't imagine them changing. And that is really what goal setting is all about. Saying to yourself, this could be different. This part of my life, my routine, my lifestyle, my job could be different and I could be happier and I'm going to trust myself and I'm going to believe that I am capable of doing that, of bringing about that change.

I think instead of having one big goal that is miles away, I was recently introduced to this concept called the timeline for change. And the timeline for change is another way of conceptualizing your goals or setting up benchmarks that is a bit less intensive and

and more daily and broken down into these small pieces. You have a one-year goal, a six-month goal, a monthly goal and a daily goal or what we would typically call a micro habit, the thing that you do each day that hopefully builds to the big win at the end.

You can really then apply this like timeline for change to whatever area you desire, whatever area needs reinvention, needs a refresh. It could be career, friendship, health, finances, a creative passion, whatever.

Think about, you know, transforming your health, for example. You know, perhaps your timeline for change would be to every day walk for 30 minutes and then your one month goal would be to go to the gym twice a week. Your six month goal is to run a 5K and by one year to have a gym routine and be able to run 10K. I think fitness related goals slot very easily into the timeline for change. But you can kind of see how this method really allows you to combine both momentum and

and sustainable habit building with that long-term planning. Because your goals are sitting along a journey. They're sitting along a timeline rather than just consisting of a start line, an ambitious big dream and a finish line, a sense of what it's going to be like when you get there.

And, you know, nothing in between. And I think that is exactly why most New Year's resolutions often fail. You know, there was a poll done by the University of Ohio that showed 23% of people will quit their New Year's resolutions by the end of January 7th and almost 50% by the second week because we underestimate how much progress we're going to make. So we think too big and we lack the positive reinforcement along the way because we're only thinking about the beginning and the end.

And B, to enact those significant and immediate changes, you know, psychologically and physically speaking, is very, very difficult. It's very difficult to just come in all guns blazing and change everything about your life. You need to build that foundation through consistency, not through new peaks with random, you know, dashes of effort. So to summarize, our third tip is

Give yourself the necessary space for reinvention by making things actionable, by making things realistic and really implementing a sustainable timeline for change that you are both excited about but is also very, very doable. Okay, my lovely listeners, we are going to take a short break. But when we're back, I want to discuss some more of, you know, more of our spontaneous rebellious moments.

maybe refreshing paths for change, a more energetic, you know, perspective on reinvention. We have a lot more to talk about, so please stay with us. A perfect day when you're feeling your best, you're ready to get out the door, always starts with an outfit from Abercrombie. My favorite jeans are a staple. They are the Abercrombie low-rise baggy jeans. Let

Let me say this, they have the perfect fit which is loose but still looking nice and impossible ask these days and they go with everything including the Abercrombie Cozy turtleneck sweater which is so beyond soft, has the perfect oversized fit that is very hard to find but also timeless.

You can also pair with a staple A&F denim jacket. Those are the pieces that you can wear over and over again. They never go out of style. I think we could all do with a few more classic pieces like that in our wardrobe. And you can find them at Abercrombie. There is just so much to mix and match. Curate this season's capsule in-store or online at Abercrombie.

Taking care of my body using natural ingredients is an act of self-care. More importantly, self-love when the products I'm using are kind to my skin and the planet. That's why I love using Wilde and their refillable natural deodorant, body wash and lip balm, which are vegan, cruelty-free, and use high-quality natural ingredients without any nasties. Not only do Wilde's refill scents smell delicious...

They also have the smoothest cream formula and leave you feeling fresh for 24 hours. Check out some of their best-selling scents, Fresh Cotton and Sea Salt, Ocean Mist and Cherry Blossom. We all know that taking care of the planet means taking care of ourselves and Wild makes it so easy to swap your everyday deodorant, body wash and even lip balm for a more sustainable alternative. Their cases are

100% reusable with compostable refills meaning no more single-use plastics I have the B case for my deodorant and I just need you to go online and see how adorable it is like I never thought deodorant could be so decorative and smell this good wild is truly shaking up the throwaway culture of everyday bathroom products with refillable products that actually work

Get 20% off your order with my code POY20. Go to wearewild.com and use code POY20 at checkout for 20% off all products or head to the podcast Instagram at thatpsychologypodcast to find a direct link on my link tree. Enjoy.

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At some stage, you are going to have to do something that really scares you or that you didn't think was possible if you want to grow into your next phase. Long-term goal setting, having a planning phase, visualizing, articulating what you want, labeling this new era for yourself is

is so wonderful. You know, by that stage, you really, you can't go wrong. But one of the easiest ways to almost guarantee transformation and to speed up your reinvention, your realignment is to take risks, big or small.

Risk, in my mind, is like the fast forward button. There's less accuracy about where you're going to end up, right? Like you're skipping through a movie, you want to get to the action quicker, but it means that you really propel yourself even faster into this new era.

There is not a single person that you admire, that you respect, you idolize, whether that is professionally or personally, that has gotten to where they are without being a little bit daunted and unsure of whether they made the right decision. You know, actually for me, if you're questioning whether you've made the right decision, you are exactly in the place you need to be because those are the decisions that really contribute to growth.

Easy decisions feel great because they don't require you to really question anything fundamental about yourself. But hard decisions, risks, that is where you really have to look in the mirror and question, what do I actually want for my life? A lot of people don't do that.

Another way I think about it is, you know, how when we build muscle at the gym or when we're working out, what is actually happening are these micro tears. You know, things are ripping, space is being made, it's painful. But then those holes get filled with new mass and we grow and

It's a strange analogy, I know, but it's how I think about risk. You know, small tears that are sometimes sore, that are sometimes uncomfortable. I don't really know what you're doing. You know, you don't really know what you're doing, but it needs to happen in order to bring about strength. And psychologically, risk is scary naturally, right? Because anything that's unfamiliar will cause our brain to have quite a natural hesitancy because it is hesitant towards things

the unknown but just because your mind says something is scary doesn't necessarily mean it should be avoided actually it might mean the opposite if you're going to do one thing to reinvent yourself during this decade it's to take a risk that you've always wanted to but never imagined that you could

And I'm going to give you like a rapid fire list as to why I believe this truly and deeply. And I want you to seriously try and rebut my reasons with the reasons why you shouldn't. Number one, you will never have as few responsibilities as you do now. Number two, you are the youngest that you will ever be, probably with the least to lose. You will never have more time than you have right now.

I also think that risks are an investment. They are not a cost. They will benefit your life and your foundations way more than the risks that you don't take and way more than playing it safe. And finally, in a very similar vein, you are more likely to live with regret over the risks you didn't take over the ones that you did. And if you want some anecdotal primary evidence of this risk,

Ask your parents or your grandparents next time you see them what their biggest regrets are. And I would say 80% of the time, your parents are going to say, oh, you know, the time I didn't travel, the time I was too scared to do that thing that I should have, the time that I didn't tell that person I loved them, the time that I said no to an opportunity that I really actually should have taken because of imposter syndrome. Regret often feeds off inaction rather than action.

Here's the thing, reinventing yourself through risk doesn't have to be dramatic. Some of us get really paralyzed by this idea that to move forward, we have to do something we are deeply uncertain of. And normally this is the case if you're quite risk averse, right? So in psychology and economics, even there are these different profiles of the types of people and their perspective on risk. There are risk positive people, people who will

Put it all on the line very frequently without really considering the costs. There are risk neutral people, people who are very practical, almost mathematical about the costs and benefits of a risk. And then there are risk averse individuals, those of us whose minds just naturally exaggerate the consequences and the costs of the risk over the benefits to the point where the risk actually seems entirely ridiculous. You know, we are convinced that we should always play it safe. And

And if that is you, if the idea of moving to a new country knowing no one, quitting your job without anything lined up, if that is really, really scary, what I want you to adopt is this idea of micro risks. Things that you can slowly incorporate to almost increase your tolerance for the uncertainty that comes along with these decisions.

You can go on solo dates. You can go on micro adventures on the weekend solo. You don't have to travel across the world. You can book an Airbnb for the weekend in the mountains near a national park somewhere like an hour or two away and just enjoy a new part of the world alone. My cousin Stella, actually, she was just messaging me about her solo camping trip that she's been on for the last two to three days. Literally, she's only like an hour or two away

From her home, but she's just having the most amazing time and she's doing something that she may not normally do. And it's just completely expanded her perspective on her life, like in the span of two days, just getting out of an old environment and into a new one.

These are small but mighty choices. Some more examples, you know, share your passion, your art, your hobbies, your lifestyle online to a private audience. Ask new people to go for coffee. Be spontaneous. Do something different this weekend that's not your usual Sunday reset. Start putting $20 a week aside purely for a dream fund. Just take, you know, those first steps without worrying about them being perfect.

And that might not sound like a risky thing to do for some people, but I think anything that goes against the habits, the systems, the routines that you have in place to keep you secure and safe that you are using as a crutch, anything that's like that, that is a risk. That is a risk that you are taking to go against what your natural, deeply ingrained intuition is telling you to do.

What I want you to remember is that you are in charge here of creating a reality you love, creating a version of yourself that you love even more. Sometimes that's going to take courage. The path to reinvention, I think, involves risk and it involves a little bit of fear.

So my fifth and my final tip for you today is to stop asking yourself what if and instead replace that with what else or my favorite, so what?

Each of us, again, has an idea of our truest selves, the person that we would be if no one else was watching. If this magical switch was turned that suddenly meant that you were free from others' opinions. If the only person we were focused on was ourselves. We all had this idea of who we would be in that situation. They're almost a fantasy. They're a character, you know, that we've created that we one day aspire to be, but we're not really focused on that right now.

Now, the things that are really maintaining that gap between who we are now and who we would really love to be is normally our fear of judgment, our fear of upsetting others and their expectations, our fear of embarrassment of being perceived. That's a huge one. And our fear of change. These fears are all maintained by these what if disaster scenarios.

If I start putting myself out there, if I start being loud about my hobbies, about my desires, if I start wearing what I want, if I start saying no to people, if I let myself be perceived as my truest, authentic self, what if no one likes this version of me? What if I'm ostracized? What if I tell someone about my dreams and I fail?

What if people don't like this reinvented version of me? I lose all my friends and I end up alone. You know, what if, what if, what if? Not only are most of these very social fears, meaning that we are being guided more so by the potential opinions of others rather than the reality that we are the only one who has to experience and enjoy our lives, but it's

They are also just anxious thoughts. They are not predictions. They most likely not come true. If you've listened to our most recent episode on anxiety, you'll know that the easiest way to distinguish between an anxious thought and a thought that you should pay attention to is if those thoughts begin with a what if. Here's how we counteract that.

we counteract it with what else or so what statements. So let's take this statement, what if I tell everyone about my dreams and I fail? You know, I'll be so embarrassed. I better play it safe. That's one way of thinking and it is a naturally limited way of thinking. But consider now ending that statement with so what? Okay, maybe I'll be embarrassed.

So what? What is the worst case scenario? I'm embarrassed. It's uncomfortable. So what? So people might not like me. So what? And then again, keep going. Keep going with the so what's until you get to the final conclusion of your fear and you realize that actually there is not much harm that embarrassment can really do.

This method is about taking an anxious, fear-based thought and actually interrogating it. Because so often we're too scared to even think about our anxious thoughts that we just let them get away with lying to us. But when we say, so what? Our anxiety kind of is like, oh, well, you've never questioned me before. So I don't really know. I don't really know what's going to happen. And that's when I think we see things more clearly. We see things for the

for what they really are, which is not as big in reality as they are in our minds.

The other option is to say, well, what else? What if people don't like this new version of me? Okay, that's one unlikely option, but what else? Let's expand that disaster scenario and go in search of some other alternatives. You know, what if I actually attract people who are really aligned with who I truly am? What if I suddenly meet the greatest friends I'll ever have? What if I suddenly attract a love that I deserve?

What if I completely level up every aspect of my life and I never look back? What if I am the happiest I've ever been? What else? Remember, the first thought that you have is probably not the most accurate.

And you can grab onto that thought. You can let it control you. You can let it dominate your choices. But you also have this extreme power and ability to be whoever you want to be if you just zoom out and question your fear, replacing that what if with what else or so what. During this, you know, brief time that we have on earth, you deserve at the bare minimum to actually be yourself.

Sometimes we do find ourselves in a loop of not knowing who we are, not liking who we are either, not liking our lives because of boredom, stagnation, you know, isolation. The longer you spend as this version of you, you will become quite used to the discomfort and you will no longer feel like you have to outgrow that shell. You'll just keep squeezing yourself back in, hiding away. And it becomes a lot easier to tolerate. I don't want that for you.

To be honest, I don't want that for anyone. I don't want anyone to be 80 and think, what if I just done it a little bit bigger? What if I just had one six month period of reinvention? Because you have no idea what that could do for your life. You have no idea, you know, how much growth and new experiences you could have in six months. How many weeks is that? Oh my God, I've got to do

quick maths, like 24 weeks. I could be completely wrong. Please correct me. 24 weeks, right? Yeah.

You could just be a completely new person. That's 24 weeks of time for you to reinvent, transform, invest in yourself. This is an investment. I really want you to take your dream seriously. Take responsibility for your happiness. Take responsibility for evolving into the most authentic version of yourself. Even if that requires a bit of a painful process.

metamorphosis. So I really hope that you got something from this episode. I hope that you can take on board this advice. You know, you can cherry pick it as you wish. If some things you already do, some things you don't, whatever you need, take what you need. That's what we always say at the end of these episodes and feel free to send it to someone else who you think might benefit, who you think might enjoy what we've been talking about. As always, um,

Five-star reviews are also appreciated, as is a follow either on Spotify or Apple Podcasts or on Instagram at That Psychology Podcast. If you enjoyed this episode or you have a future episode that you would like to suggest anything to do with psychology, self-help, wellness in our 20s, mental health in our 20s, I would love to hear from you. A final tidbit, we do have an event scheduled.

friendship event in Melbourne coming up on the 10th of October. I thought I would sneak that in here. So if you are a Melbourne based listener and you want to make some like-minded friends, you want to meet me,

I think we have a few tickets left on Eventbrite. You can go to our Instagram and there will be a link in our bio. I'm really excited to meet you guys. So let me know if I'm going to see you there, if you'll be there. We'll be doing heaps of other events in Sydney, Brisbane, in Perth, I believe, and then also in the UK and later next year in the US. So cannot wait to meet you all. Until next time, stay safe, stay kind.

Please be gentle with yourselves. You deserve a gentle life and gentle thoughts. And we will talk very, very soon.

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