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This is the Iheart Podcast. Guaranteed Human Checking off the boxes on your to do list is a great way to keep your mind clear. That's why a State Farm agent is there to help you choose a coverage option that's right for you. As you go through life getting that new house, car, boat, motorcycle or even rv. Helping Protect it is always a good idea. Whether you prefer talking in person, on the phone or on the award winning app. State Farm is there to help protect what's important to you. And with so many coverage options, it's nice having help to find what fits for you. Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there When Radhi and I started Jooni, our sparkling tea brand, I realized pretty quickly building a business isn't just about big ideas. It's the small details that make people trust you. Come back and actually buy. For us, Shopify has been the foundation. It's where we built our storefront and where our customers experience the brand. And one thing I really appreciate is shop pay. You've probably seen the purple button at checkout. It makes everything simple, fast and seamless. As a business owner, that means fewer abandoned carts. As a customer, it just feels easier. And that trust matters. If you ever thought about starting a business, this is your sign. Get started today@shopify.com J on eBay every find has a story. Like if you're looking for a vintage band tee. Not just a tee, the band tee. You wore it everywhere until your ex stole it. Now you're on ebay and there it is. Same tee from the same tour. The things you love have a way of finding their way back to you. Especially on ebay. Where else can you find that mint trading card you searched everywhere for? Or your first car, the one you wish you never sold? It has to be ebay. Shop ebay for millions of finds, each with a story. Ebay Things People Love I want to be honest with you about something before we start. Most mindset content is is forgettable. Not because the ideas are wrong. Some of them are genuinely good, but because they're delivered like fortune cookies. They're punchy, quotable, and gone by Tuesday. You've read the book. You highlight the line. You feel something shift. And then life comes back. The argument, the deadline, the 3am spiral. And the highlight in the book means nothing because the idea never got deep enough to actually change anything. You might see yourself feel this way. You're still reacting the same way. You're still choosing the same kind of people. You're still telling yourself the same stories about why things aren't working. The mindsets I'm going to share with you today are actually going to shift something and change something for you. For real. They're the ones that, when they finally landed, really landed in the body, not just in the head. Change something that stayed changed. Changed how I see a difficult conversation. Changed how I move through failure. Changed how I love people. There are seven of them, and I'm going to give you them straight. With the science, with the wisdom traditions behind them, and with the stories from my own life, and with the specific way you can use each one immediately, not next month, not when things calm down immediately. Let's get started. Mindset 1. Pain is a postcard, not a permanent address. The first mindset that changed my life sounds almost insultingly simple, or when I say it out loud, but I need you to hear what's underneath. Pain is a postcard, not a permanent address. Here's what I mean. When I was at my lowest, when the career I thought I wanted had fallen apart, when I had moved back home after failing at the monastery in a way that felt permanent, when I was surrounded by people who had expected more from me and I had expected more from myself, I made a mistake that. That I think almost everyone makes when things go badly. I moved in, not literally mentally. I took the painful chapter and turned it into my identity. I stopped treating it like something that was happening and started treating it like something that was true. Like the failure wasn't something I'd been through, like it was something I was. And here's what the neuroscience says about that distinction, because it's not just poetic, it's biological. The psychologist Martin Seligman spent decades studying what he called explanatory style, the way people explain bad events to themselves. And he found that when people experience setbacks, they tend to explain them in one of two fundamentally different ways. Some people explain setbacks as temporary, specific and external. This happened in this situation for these reasons. Others explain them as permanent, pervasive and personal. This is who I am. This is what always happens. This is what I can always expect. The first group recovers faster, more completely, and often stronger than before. The second group gets stuck not because they're weaker, because they moved into the pain and started decorating. The Vedic tradition has a concept that maps onto this perfectly. Anitya, the Sanskrit word for impermanence. Nothing is permanent, not the good and not the bad. The ancient teachers weren't saying this to comfort you. They were saying it as a precise description of reality. Everything passes, everything including this. The postcard. Mindset is this. When pain arrives, and it will, it always does. You read the postcard, you sit with it, you feel it fully. Because unfelt pain doesn't leave, it just goes underground. But you do not unpack your bags, you do not redecorate, you do not forward your mail. You are a visitor in this moment, not a resident. This too shall pass. Here's how you apply this immediately. The next time something painful arrives, a rejection, a failure, a loss, a conversation that goes badly, ask yourself one question before you do anything else. Am I feeling this or am I becoming it? Feeling it is healthy, necessary, human. Becoming it is the decision, often unconscious, often always costly, to let a moment define you instead of shape you. You are allowed to feel everything. You are not required to become it. Pain is a postcard. Read it, learn from it, then put it down. Mindset 2. You are not your thoughts, you are what you do with them. This one took me years to actually understand. You may have heard it before, but I don't just want you to understand it. Intellectually, I understood the theory almost immediately. But to actually understand it in the way that changes behavior. Here's the version. I was living before this mindset. I believed that because I thought something, it meant something. That because a thought arrived, you're not good enough, they don't really respect you. This is never going to work. It was delivering truth. I was taking delivery of every thought like it was a certified letter from reality. I was wrong and it was costing me everything. The cognitive psychologist Aaron Beck, the founder of cognitive behavioral therapy, one of the most evidence based psychological frameworks we have identified, something he called automatic thoughts, rapid reflexive mental commentary that runs continuously between below the level of deliberate thinking. And he found that in people experiencing depression, anxiety and relational difficulties, these automatic thoughts shared consistent characteristics. They were distorted, they were negative, they were experienced as unquestionable truth. The thought arrives, it feels true. Therefore it is true. Beck's entire therapeutic revolution was was built on one insight. The thought is not the truth. The thought is a hypothesis. And like any hypothesis, it can be tested. Marcus Aurelius wrote in his Meditations, you have power over your mind, not outside events. Realize this and you will find strength. Here's the immediate application. It's three words and I want you to use them. Every time a thought arrives that feels like an indictment. Is this true? Not. Is this possible? Not. Could this be true? Is this actually demonstrably, evidentially true? And if you can't answer with concrete evidence, if the thought is a feeling dressed as a fact. You are not required to take delivery. You are not your thoughts. You are what you do with them. And what you do with them starts with the radical act of questioning whether they deserve your belief. Mindset 3 this is a rough one. The people who trigger you the most are your greatest teachers. I hate this one. It hurts me. It pains me. It worries me. I'm like God. Do I have to learn it that way? And I need to be careful with this one, because it can be misunderstood in a way that causes genuine harm. I'm not saying the people who hurt you deserve a medal. Just to be clear. I'm not saying abuse is a lesson you should be grateful for. I'm not saying that toxic behavior is secretly your spiritual curriculum. What I am saying is something more specific and more useful than that. The emotional reactions that hit hardest, the ones that seem disproportionate, the ones that linger longer than make sense, the ones that make you behave in ways you don't recognize as yourself, are almost never fully about the present moment. They are signals. And the person who triggered the signal is pointing, without knowing it, at something that was already there. Here's the psychology behind this the concept is called transference, first identified by Freud but significantly developed and validated by modern relational therapists. Transference is the unconscious redirection of feelings from a past relationship or onto a present one. When someone in your life provokes a reaction that feels too big, too intense, too immediate, too hard to let go of, it is frequently because they have activated a wound that predates them entirely. The partner who dismisses your feelings isn't just a dismissive partner. They are also for your nervous system. Every person who ever dismissed you, the parent who didn't have the emotional bandwidth, the teacher who made you feel stupid, the friend who chose someone else. The reaction you're having right now is the sum of all those reactions. Which means the most triggering people in your life are giving you a map. A map to the places that still need your attention. A map to the wounds that haven't yet healed. A map to the patterns that keep repeating, not because you're broken, but because the nervous system keeps seeking resolution for what was never resolved. The Jungian concept of the shadow is essential here. Carl Jung believed that every person carries a shadow, the parts of themselves they've disowned, suppressed, or refused to acknowledge. And he observed that what he most disliked in others is frequently what he most refused to see in himself. The person who infuriates you with their arrogance. Do you have arrogance you've been trained to suppress? The person whose neediness exhausts you? Do you have needs you've convinced yourself not to have? The person whose anger frightens you? Do you have anger you've never allowed yourself to feel? This is not accusation. This is cartography. You're mapping yourself through your reactions. Here's how to use this sensitively. The next time someone triggers you, and I mean really triggers you, the disproportionate reaction, the one you can't shake. Instead of asking why are they like this? Ask two different questions. First, what specifically is being activated in me right now? Not what did they do? What got activated. Name the feeling as precisely as you can. Second, where have I felt this before? Not in this relationship. Earlier, Younger? Way back when? When was the first time you felt this particular flavor of hurt? The answer to that second question is not the person in front of you. And when you know that, when you can see that trigger is a door to something much older, you stop trying to solve the present moment and start attending to the actual source. That is where the real healing is. And the most aggravating person in your life is often the one holding the door open. You're doing all the right things. You're eating better, sleeping earlier, moving your body, and still you wake up tired. That's not failure. That's your body asking for real support. One of the most common nutrient gaps I see is magnesium. And not all magnesium is created equal. That's why I recommend Magnesium Breakthrough for from bioptimizers. It's a blend of seven essential forms of magnesium designed for better absorption and real results. People take it to sleep deeper, feel calmer and recover faster mentally and physically. So here's my Try it. Track your sleep and notice how you feel. See if you wake up more rested and refreshed, you have nothing to lose and a lot to gain. Go to buyoptimizers.com purpose and and use the code purpose15. You'll get 15% off your entire order plus a free bottle of Maszymes, their best selling digestive enzyme. A $20 value. This offer isn't on Amazon or in stores. It's only@bioptimizers.com purpose CodePurpose15. Hey, it's Jay Shetty. You know, recently I was thinking about how far we've come with staying in touch. It's hard to believe that the first phone call ever happened over 150 years ago. Just think about that one moment that started billions of conversations the other day, I called a friend that I hadn't spoken to in months. We spent a few minutes just catching up, talking, laughing, sharing what's going on in our lives. That short conversation reminded me how powerful a single call can be. It doesn't take hours to make someone feel seen. It just takes picking up the phone. Those moments felt simple, but they stay with you. And you know, over all these years and phone calls, AT&T has been there, connecting people in meaningful ways. This is more than a story of technological innovation. It's a story of human connection. So today, call someone you care about. One conversation can mean everything. Connecting changes everything. AT&T. I've been thinking a lot about how the spaces around us affect how we feel. And for the longest time, my outdoor space just wasn't somewhere I wanted to be. It kind of became this place I'd walk past instead of sitting in. The seating wasn't that comfortable. The setup felt a bit off. And I kept saying I'd make it nicer, add some lighting, make it feel calmer. But I never actually did. And then I found Wayfair. What I liked was how easy it was to actually find things that fit the vibe I had in mind. I could filter everything, read real reviews, and feel confident about what I was choosing instead of second guessing it. Now it's completely different. I actually look forward to being out there, having my morning tea, slowing down in the evening, catching up with friends. It finally feels like an extension of my space, not an afterthought. If you've been meaning to create a space that feels more like you, this is a really good place to start. Get prepped for the patio season. For way less, head to Wayfair.com right now to shop all things home. That's W-A-Y-F-A-I-R.com Wayfair Every style, every home Wayfair Every style Every home. Mindset number 4 clarity is not found. It's built through action. This is for anyone who's waiting. Waiting for the sign. Waiting to feel ready. Waiting for the path to become clear. Take the first step. I have to tell you something that I wish someone told me 10 years earlier. The clarity is not coming before the action. The clarity is the product of the action. You do not think your way to a clear life. You live your way to a clear life. The path doesn't become clear by just looking. The path becomes clear by putting one foot in front of the other and. And then it appears. Here's the science. The psychologist MIHALY Csikszentmihalyi, whose work on flow states we've referenced before, found that people most commonly experience their deepest sense of purpose and meaning not in moments of reflection, but in moments of engaged activity. Not when they're thinking about what they want to do, but when they're doing it. This maps directly onto what neuroscience now knows about how the brain generates meaning. Meaning is not a conclusion the brain reaches after sufficient contemplation. It is a byproduct of engagement, of doing, creating, building, moving. The brain makes meaning retrospectively from the raw material of lived experience. You cannot think yourself into a meaningful life. You have to live yourself into one. The ancient Sanskrit concept of karma is entirely misunderstood in Western culture. We think of Karma as cosmic justice. What goes around comes around, and there's truth to that. But in its original philosophical context, karma simply means action. Karma is the act itself, and the Bhagavad Gita is perhaps the world's most sophisticated treatise on action, specifically on the relationship between action, identity and liberation. Krishna's central teaching to Arjuna in the Gita is not figure out your purpose and then act. It is act without attachment to the outcome, and purpose will reveal itself. Listen to that again. Write it down. Think about that. The action comes first. The clarity follows. So many people are paralyzed, waiting to know, waiting to be sure, waiting for the vision to be clear enough before they risk moving toward it. And the painful irony is that the waiting is the very thing preventing the clarity from from arriving. Here's the immediate application, and it's simply enough to do today. You don't need to know the five year plan. You just need to know your next five steps. You don't need to know where you'll be in 10 years. All you need to know is what you're going to do next today. Whatever it is, whether it's a phone call, an application, a conversation, an hour spent doing the thing instead of thinking about the thing. The clarity you're waiting for is hiding inside the action you keep postponing. Stop waiting to know. Start doing to find out. Mindset 5. You don't rise to your goals. You fall to your environment. This one changed how I designed every aspect of my daily life. And it is the mindset that I think most people resist the hardest. Because accepting it is means accepting something deeply uncomfortable. Your willpower is not the problem. Your environment is. Let me say that again, because it runs counter to everything productivity culture tells you. Your willpower is not the problem. Your environment is. The psychologist James Clear, building On decades of behavioral science articulated something in atomic habits that has now been validated across hundreds of studies. Human behavior is far less driven by conscious intention than we believe and far more driven by environmental cues. What we see, what's accessible, what's around us, what the people around us do, these are the primary drivers of behavior. Not goals, not motivation, not discipline. The person who wants to eat better but keeps their kitchen full of food that undermines that goal is not going to succeed through willpower. The person who wants to read more but keeps their phone on their bedside table instead of a book is not going to succeed through discipline. The person who wants to grow but surrounds themselves exclusively with people who are comfortable with stagnation is not going to succeed through intention. This is not pessimism. This is power. Because if the environment is the primary driver of behavior, then designing your environment is. Is the most powerful thing you can do for your goals. More powerful than motivation, more powerful than a vision board, more powerful than any amount of willpower. The ancient Indian concept of sangha understood this completely. Sangha, or satsang, literally means the company of truth. This was the practice of deliberately surrounding yourself with people whose presence pulled you toward your highest self. Not just people you liked. People who, by virtue of who they were and how they lived, made it easier for you to be who you were trying to become. The tradition understood that humans are profoundly, inevitably influenced by their environment, especially their social environment. And rather than fighting that influence through discipline, the wisdom was to design the environment so that the influence worked for you rather than against you. Research by social psychologist Nicholas Christakis at Yale confirmed this at scale. In a landmark study tracking thousands of people over decades. He found that behaviors including happiness, obesity, smoking, and even loneliness spread through social networks like contagion. You're not just influenced by your friends. You are influenced by your friends. Friends, friends. Three degrees of separation. The environment is that powerful. Here's the immediate application. You don't have to quit on all your friends. Three questions to ask about your current environment. First, does your physical space make your most important behaviors easier or harder? If you want to meditate, is there a clear, quiet space that invites it? If you want to create, is your workspace organized around creation, or is everything arranged around distraction? Second, does your social environment, the five people you spend the most time with, make you more or less likely to become who you're trying to be? Not whether you love them, whether their orbit is pulling you forward or holding you in place. Third, what is the single easiest change you could make? To your environment today, right now. That would make your most important goal more likely, not a dramatic thing, the smallest possible environmental adjustment that removes friction between you and who you're trying to become. You don't rise to your goals. As James Clear says, you fall to your environment. So build an environment worth falling to. Mindset 6 the most dangerous story you tell is the one about yourself Every person walking the planet is a narrator of their own life. And like all narrators, we're unreliable. We edit. We emphasize certain chapters and minimize others. We assign causation where there's only correlation. We cast ourselves in roles, sometimes the hero, sometimes the victim, always the protagonist, and we mistake those roles for truth. The story you tell about yourself is the most powerful force in your life. More powerful than your circumstances, more powerful than your talent, more powerful than your opportunities. Because the story decides which opportunities you see, which risks you take, which relationships you believe you deserve, and which version of your future you allow yourself to move forward. The psychologist Dan McAdams at Northwestern University has spent his career studying what he calls narrative identity, the story each person constructs about who they are and and how they came to be that way. And his research has found something both obvious and profound. The content of your self narrative predicts your psychological well being, your resilience, and your capacity for growth more reliably than almost any other variable. Not what happened to you, how you story what happened to you. Two people can go through almost identical experiences the difficult childhood, the professional failure, the painful relationship and construct completely different narratives from the same raw material. One person stories it as evidence of their damage, the other stories it as the origin of their depth. The experiences were similar. The narrators made different choices. McAdams identified what he called the redemption narrative, a story structure where difficult chapters are told as leading to growth and insight or strength. He found that people who naturally organize their self narratives around redemption are significantly more psychologically healthy, more generative, and more resilient than those who organize around contamination, where a good thing was ruined, where a hopeful beginning led to a bad end. The difference is not in what happened. The difference is in how it is told. Here's what I want you to do with this Immediately think of the story you most consistently tell about yourself. The one that comes up in therapy or with close friends or at 3am when you're being most honest. The one that explains why things are the way they are, why you are the way you are. Now ask is this the only story the evidence supports? Or is it one story, one edit, one emphasis of many that could be constructed from the same facts. What would the story look like if you're telling it as evidence of your strength rather than your damage? As evidence of your wisdom rather than your wounds, As a chapter rather than a conclusion? You are the narrator. The raw material's fixed. The narration is yours. This isn't toxic positivity. Choose a story that is honest, that gives you somewhere to go. Mindset 7 Mindset Love is not a feeling. It is a daily decision A student once asked a teacher, what's the difference between I like you and I love you? The teacher replied, when you like a flower, you simply pluck it. But when you love a flower, you water it every day. Love is a daily act, a daily decision, not just a feeling. I've saved this one for last, deliberately, because I think it is the most important, and I think it is the most misunderstood. And I think getting it wrong is responsible for more human suffering than almost anything else I could name. Here's the story our culture tells us about love. Love is a feeling that arrives, a lightning bolt, a chemistry, a sense of recognition. There you are. That happens to you rather than being made by you. And when the feeling is there, the relationship works. And when the feeling fades, which it inevitably does, because all feelings are temporary, the relationship is over because the love is gone. This story is everywhere. In every rom com, in every love song, in every dating app designed around the initial spark. It is so pervasive that most people have never questioned it. The psychologist Robert Sternberg at Yale developed what he called the Triangular Theory of Love, a framework that identifies three components of genuine, durable love passion, intimacy, and commitment. And his research found that of the three passion the feeling, the spark, the chemistry has the shortest lifespan. It peaks early, often within months of a relationship beginning. And it declines predictably, regardless of how compatible, how suited, or how deeply in love two people genuinely are. This is not a bug. This is biology. The neurochemicals responsible for the early intensity of romantic love do dopamine, norepinephrine, are designed to initiate bonding, not maintain it. They're a starter motor, not an engine. The relationships that last, the ones that deepen rather than erode, are built on what remains after the starter motor quiets. And what remains is not a feeling. It is a series of daily, often mundane, often imperfect choices. The choice to be curious about this person rather than certain about them. The choice to repair the rupture rather than catalog it. The choice to see them fully, not just the version you fell for, but the complex contradictory, sometimes maddening, whole person in front of you and choose them anyway. The difference between a relationship that survives and a relationship that dies is not the absence of conflict. It was the presence of what John Gottman calls bids for connection. The small, daily, often trivial attempts one person makes to reach toward the other. A joke. A question. A touch. A look. And the critical variable was whether those bids were met, turned toward, in Gottman's language, rather than turned away from. The relationships that lasted were not the ones with the most passion or the best compatibility scores or the fewest arguments. They were the ones where both people, most of the time, in the small moments that feel like they don't count, choose to turn toward each other. That is not a feeling. That is a practice. Here's the immediate application. Think of the most important relationship in your life right now and ask what is the smallest, most available, most concrete bid for connection I could make toward this person today? Not a grand gesture. Not a difficult conversation. The smallest genuine movement toward them. A text that says I was thinking of you. A question that shows you've been paying attention. Five minutes of eye contact without a phone in the room. The choice to be curious rather than reactive in the next disagreement. Love is a daily decision. Make it today. Here's what I know about mindsets. They don't change your life by being interesting. They change your life by being practiced, by being returned to again and again until they stop being ideas you agree with and start being the lens through which you automatically see. That process takes time, takes repetition, takes the courage to keep applying an idea even when the situation is hard. And the easier thing is to react from habit. Thank you so much for listening today. I hope you'll share this with a friend, and I hope you'll choose a mindset and to practice for the next seven days. Remember, I'm forever in your corner and I'm always rooting for you. If you enjoyed this conversation, you're going to love my episode with Arnold Schwarzenegger on how to make your visions a reality and how to stop having a limited mindset. I never believed in Plan B. If I start having a Plan B, that means now that I'm saying, well, maybe this isn't working out. There's nothing like escaping to your happy place, and Celebrity Cruises helps you do just that. From the Caribbean to Europe and Alaska, you'll eat in restaurants known for good taste, enjoy all day date nights, and dive into the best pool days around. Celebrity Cruises doesn't just build ships, they build vacations. You'll Never forget. Visit celebrity.com, call 1-800-celebrity or contact your travel advisor. Ships Registry Malta and Ecuador Making space for ourselves is one of the most important things we can do, giving ourselves the time and the room to try new things. Well, it turns out our feet benefit from more space, too. That's why I just picked up a pair of Ultra Running Shoes. The Ultra Fit design has more room for my toes, so they're comfortable, they keep me balanced. And seriously, my feet actually feel stronger. I've even started running more because of it, and honestly, I didn't expect to notice it this quickly, but from my first walk, it just felt different. Lighter, more natural. I've been wearing them on my morning walks, and it genuinely makes getting out there feel easier. Treat yourself to a pair of ultras@ultrarunning.com and use code PURPOSE10 for 10% off. That's a L T r-running.com stay out there we spend so much time managing stress and wellness, but sometimes it's the unseen things around us and that throw us off, like allergens hiding in the air we breathe at home. That's where Clorox Pure Allergen Neutralizer Daily Air Spray comes in. Developed with allergists, it neutralizes common household allergens like pollen, dust, mite matter, and pet dander right where they can linger most in the air. There's also Clorox Pure Allergen Neutralizer Fabric and carpet spray for carpets, couches, and bedding, where allergens can lurk. Add Clorox Pure to your daily routine to stop allergens before they become allergies. Find it in the Air care aisle at a retailer near you. This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
Podcast: On Purpose with Jay Shetty
Episode: 7 Mindset Shifts That ACTUALLY Work (Finally Change How You Think, React & Show Up)
Date: May 22, 2026
Host: Jay Shetty
Jay Shetty, host of On Purpose, shares seven transformative mindset shifts designed to provoke real, lasting change in how listeners perceive themselves, relationships, and life's challenges. Unlike fleeting “fortune cookie” wisdom, Jay pulls together neuroscience, wisdom traditions, and personal stories to offer practical, immediate applications for each shift—a toolkit for sustained personal growth.
Timestamp: 05:25
“Am I feeling this or am I becoming it?” (08:50, Jay Shetty)
Feel everything, but don’t let it define you.
Timestamp: 12:45
“You have power over your mind, not outside events. Realize this and you will find strength.” (15:10)
“Is this true?” (13:30, Jay Shetty)
Question thoughts, require evidence, and reject those that don’t serve.
Timestamp: 17:09
“This is not accusation. This is cartography. You’re mapping yourself through your reactions.” (22:40, Jay Shetty)
Timestamp: 27:30
“Act without attachment to the outcome, and purpose will reveal itself.” (30:00)
“You don’t need the five-year plan. You just need to know your next five steps.” (32:10, Jay Shetty) Do something today instead of waiting to figure it all out.
Timestamp: 36:00
“You don’t rise to your goals. ...You fall to your environment. So build an environment worth falling to.” (41:08, Jay Shetty)
Timestamp: 43:00
“Is this the only story the evidence supports? ...What would it look like if you told it as evidence of your strength, rather than your damage?” (48:30)
“You are the narrator. The raw material’s fixed. The narration is yours.” (48:44, Jay Shetty)
Timestamp: 50:05
“What’s the smallest, most concrete bid for connection you could make toward this person today?” (54:05) Think: a text, attentive question, undistracted five minutes.
“Love is a daily decision. Make it today.” (55:01, Jay Shetty)
“They don’t change your life by being interesting. They change your life by being practiced, by being returned to again and again until they...start being the lens through which you automatically see.” (59:05, Jay Shetty)
Recommended next episode:
Jay Shetty’s interview with Arnold Schwarzenegger on vision, commitment, and the dangers of a “Plan B.”