Key Takeaways
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Real-Life Insights and Takaways
- Cortisol is a real hormone and if you get too much of it, it can contribute to visceral fat production, also known as belly fat.
- Belly fat is more of a concern than fat on other parts of your body because it causes problems with your organs.
- There is no such thing as a bad hormone. You have hormones to do specific things and they exist because they are required for your body to function. It is when we have too much or too little of a hormone that we start to experience problems.
- There isnât something you can put into your body that does just onething.
- If you take a medication to alleve a pain for example, it will affect your body in many ways. Often the effects we donât like we call side effects.
- Thea Singer, MIT professor, makes a distinction between real stress and perceived stress. We canât always change our circumstances, but we can change our perception and how we process stress.
- In The Upside of Stress, author Kelly McGonigal recommends thinking of the story you are telling yourself.
- Consider the blessings and opportunities in your life and write a ânew storyâ to describe the good in your life. Read your ânew storyâ every morning. It will help your day go better, help you to sleep better, and make you happier.
- Consider how you communicate your reality to yourself. We canât always change reality, but we can change our perception.
- Manâs Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Franklis the story of an Austrian psychotherapist who choose to find meaning and purpose while suffering in a concentration camp.
- The book, Overachievement, explains how your body reacts physiologically to help optimize a perceived stressful experience.
- You can choose to embrace stress and use it to your advantage.
- Antifragile changed Jonathanâs perception of problems as the book discusses the difference between living things and mechanical things, and how adversity makes living things stronger.
- The Obstacle Is the Way recommends using challenges as leverage to become better.
- We can control our perception, our attitude, and find meaning in stressful situations.
- The stress you feel in any area of your life just might push you to find long-lasting solutions.
- Instead of using the term âstressâ, use the phrase âThis matters.â We get stressed about things that really matter.
SANE Soundbites
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- 2:17 – 2:42, âThere is no such thing as a bad hormone. You have hormones to do specific things. Â If you have too much of any one, thatâs bad. Â If you have too little of any one, thatâs bad. Â But there is no such thing as a bad hormone. Â It exists because itâs required for something in your body. Â Now if it gets out of whack or thereâs too much of it or too little of it, thatâs when we have problems.â
- 3:14 – 3:50, âThere is not something you can put into your body that does one thing. While it seems like taking Aleve just makes your headache go away, itâs not as if your brain sort of knows you took Aleve and knows that Aleve just does this thing to your headache. Â Thatâs the problem with statins. Â Statins do lower your cholesterol, but they also lower the form of cholesterol you donât want lowered and they also cause neurological issues. Â Theyâre called side effects. Â But there really are no such thing as side effects, there are just effects, and the ones we donât like we call side effects.â
- 6:12 – 6:40, âThere has to be the sort of distinction in your brain about how events are perceived. Â That is what we can control and that, I think, is really — rather than taking a pill or trying to be like, âIâm going to quit my job and make all these changes and then everything will be perfect.â Â Thereâs an old saying which is, âNo matter where you go, there you are.â Â So the one thing that you can change is your perception and the way you process stress and I think thatâs the area we need to focus on.â
- 7:26 – 8:22, âI was telling myself this story of how tired I am and how overwhelming my life is and I looked at that story and I thought, âWell, April, hello. Â What are you doing to yourself? Â Why are you telling yourself this story?â Â So I rewrote the story. Â I actually read it to Eric the other day. Â I wonât read the whole thing here because itâs pretty personal but the way it starts is, âEvery day, I have the privilege of waking up to live a beautiful story.â Â And then I went on and explained everything reversed — the blessings I have, these opportunities that I have to help other people, how even when Iâm not enough, itâs okay because thereâs power coming from heaven and here on Earth to help me make it happen. I rewrote the story and every morning, Iâve been reading my new story. Â I canât even tell you how that has helped me. Â I feel like itâs completely changed how I look at my day.â
- 12:00 – 12:36, âAll of us want a transformation. All of us want to grow and develop. Â We donât want to be the same as we were when we were toddlers; when we were in high school. Â We want to grow and continue and develop and learn. Â I think when you can look at nature, look at the science of why your body is giving you this stress and anxiety, seeing it as fuel, seeing it as a reason to continue to grow and do better and work your purpose, I feel like thatâs just helped me so much and not ever even having to think âI need to reduce my stressâ anymore. Â Iâve used that term my whole life. Â âIâm going to reduce my stress. Â Iâm going to lower my stress.â Â Now itâs like, âIâm going to embrace this stress and Iâm going to use it to my advantage.â
- 13:55 – 14:06, âWhat I have right now, how can I use that or leverage that to either strengthen myself, strengthen the world, or make the world a better place and give some meaning and purpose?â
- 14:41 – 14:51, âThatâs the last thing we can control — our perception and our attitude and our meaning. Â Itâs the opposite of rose-colored glasses. Â Itâs as scientific and real as it gets.â
- 14:54 – 16:09, âI think back to my life and even just thinking back to a couple of years ago, I had a huge stress in my life in that I was tired of counting calories; I was tired of feeling guilty if I couldnât exercise and break a sweat every day; if I couldnât run four to six miles a day; I was tired of going to bed hungry or eating to fill myself and then despising myself because I thought I was weak. Â I mean, I was struggling and I was listening to all kinds of podcasts. When I think about it, that stress I was feeling because I felt that stress and because I wanted it to end, thatâs what helped me to find you, Jonathan. Â Whatâs so neat is, because I found you, I didnât even know that my then thirteen/fourteen-year-old daughter was experiencing way more stress than I was because she was twenty-five pounds overweight and she didnât ever want to look in the mirror and she didnât want to be around her friends at the mall. Â I didnât even know what was going on in her head that because of my stress and because I found the way out of it, I was now able to help my daughter to completely revolutionize her life.â
- 17:57 – 18:08, âThat set point of stress may vary a little bit based on our life circumstances, but we ultimately–the mental processing, the meaning that we attribute to that stress, is what determines that set point. â
- 18:51 – 19:10, âWhen you think about it, the reason you get stressed about something is because you care about it or it matters or it has the impact. Â You donât get stressed about stuff thatâs irrelevant and meaningless. Â So a stress-free life, in some ways, is a life full of meaningless, irrelevant things. Â Well, thatâs not good.â
- 19:18 – 19:32, âFigure out what it takes to lower your stress set point. Â What do you need to do — whether itâs reading one of the books we recommended here in the podcast or whether itâs writing down your current story and then rewriting it/making a new story.â
- 19:39 – 20:20, âIdentify the stress set point, maybe do some reflection in your life. âIs there ever a time you havenât been as stressed as you are right now?â That kind of a thing. Â Then there are things like meditation, things like exercise, things like deep loving relationships — these things will objectively — just like we talk about eating vegetables will lower your weight set point; meditation will lower your stress set point. Â So do some research into those things. Â Meditation doesnât necessarily mean, âOm, om, om.â Â Walking in forests can be a meditative activity but things along those lines, I think, are great to explore.â
Read the Transcript
April: Hello, itâs April Perry and Jonathan Bailor back with another episode of the SANE Show. How are you, Jonathan?
Jonathan: April, I am so stressed out for todayâs show. Iâm super stressed. Tell them why Iâm stressed.
April: Youâre so stressed because weâre talking about stress today. Just the word — does it just make your shoulders tense? No, just kidding. Jonathanâs doing great. Weâre doing great. Weâre talking about what stress has to do with weight loss and how we can actually get good at stress — yes, you heard me right. Weâre talking about getting good at stress and how that can help us to be more SANE. Are you super excited for this show, Jonathan?
Jonathan: I am super excited about this show because stress is very real and it does have a huge amount to do with weight loss and it also has this fun dynamic where itâs like, âWait, stress causes me to gain weight? That makes me stressed. Now Iâm gaining weight which makes me more stressed. Oh, downward spiral.â
April: Exactly. I even watched a whole documentary about stress, explaining how bad it was for you. By the end of the show, I was — I couldnât even tell you. Watching that show was worse for my stress level than not watching the show. But things have revolutionized so letâs talk about how weâre going to get good at stress. Before we start, I need to tell you I see advertisements all the time for these pills or supplements that help you to reduce cortisol because cortisol is caused by your stressed-out life, and then if you take this pill, then it reduces the cortisol and then you wonât get belly fat and youâre going to be super slender. What do you have to say about all that?
Jonathan: There are elements of truth and elements of horrible falsehoods in it.
April: Okay, clarify.
Jonathan: Cortisol is real. It is a hormone. If you have too much of it, it will contribute to visceral fat production, which is the type of fat which is on your belly, which is different. Thatâs the one that is correlated with health problems and so on and so forth versus, for example, if you just had fat on your hips or buttocks. Thatâs different than fat thatâs on your belly, which is more damaging because it causes problems with your organs. Cortisol, just like any other — this is worth writing down — there is no such thing as a bad hormone.
April: Okay.
Jonathan: You have hormones to do specific things. If you have too much of any one, thatâs bad. If you have too little of any one, thatâs bad. But there is no such thing as a bad hormone. It exists because itâs required for something in your body. Now if it gets out of whack or thereâs too much of it or too little of it, thatâs when we have problems.
April: When I see commercials that talk about taking some sort of a pill to reduce my stress, I think what can happen is some people think, âOkay, I can just keep eating the way Iâm eating; I can keep living the way Iâm living; I can just take this supplement, Iâm going to reduce my stress and Iâm going to be slender.â Whatâs wrong with that logic?
Jonathan: Well, thereâs many things that are wrong with that logic but I think one of the most important things that are sort of less obviously wrong is that there is no such — there is not something you can put into your body that does one thing. Thatâs really important.
April: Okay.
Jonathan: While it seems like taking Aleve just makes your headache go away, itâs not as if your brain sort of knows you took Aleve and knows that Aleve just does this thing to your headache. Thatâs the problem with statins. Statins do lower your cholesterol but they also lower the form of cholesterol you donât want lowered and they also cause neurological issues. Theyâre called side effects. But there really are no such thing as side effects, there are just effects, and the ones we donât like we call side effects.
April: I never thought of that.
Jonathan: For example, you can de-stress right now by taking all forms of illegal drugs. Like, marijuana is incredibly effective at reducing stress levels. But is its overall net effect on your health good? Thatâs the thing. Can these things reduce your stress? Possibly. But is that going to cause a net positive effect on your life? Questionable.
April: All right. So letâs say, somebodyâs been going SANE for a while. Letâs say they love your book; theyâre eating tons of vegetables or blending green smoothies; doing really, really well. But their life is super stressful. Super stressful. Maybe theyâre going through a divorce; maybe theyâre filing bankruptcy — thereâs just a lot of reasons why people get stressed out — emotionally, losing a loved one. What advice would you give someone whoâs kind of in that spot where theyâre doing everything right but theyâre just stressed out?
Jonathan: One of the most important books, I think, on this topic is actually by an MIT professor by the name of Thea Singer. I interviewed her a long time ago. The biggest distinction she makes is the distinction between âreal stressâ and âperceived stress.â One of the things thatâs really important is while we donât have always control — like, if our spouse is coming down with Alzheimerâs, we canât change that and that is objectively happening.
The one thing we can change is how we interpret that and the meaning we give to it — things like meditation, things like cognitive behavioral therapy. I mean, for example, personally, I have not yet been able to wrap my head around how the President of the United States is not crazy — like, how you can have that much power and that much responsibility and you make one decision and a thousand people die — and not just lose their mind.
April: Thatâs true, yes.
Jonathan: So there does have to be some way to — if you look at people who are like, âIâm so stressed,â it doesnât always correlate with people who, their decisions have the biggest impact on the world. There has to be the sort of distinction in your brain about how events are perceived. That is what we can control and that, I think, is really — rather than taking a pill or trying to be like, âIâm going to quit my job and make all these changes and then everything will be perfect.â Thereâs an old saying which is, âNo matter where you go, there you are.â So the one thing that you can change is your perception and the way you process stress and I think thatâs the area we need to focus on.
April: Do you want to hear my success story in this area?
Jonathan: I do, I do.
April: Okay, I actually have it. Well, itâs over here. I wonât go grab it but hereâs the deal. I was feeling really stressed about a week ago. I am listening to the audio book of âThe Upside of Stressâ by Kelly McGonigal that you told me about — amazing if you havenât read it yet — and one of the things that she talked about was thinking about what story youâre telling yourself. As I was feeling stressed out one morning, I actually went and I opened up my planner and I wrote down the story I was telling myself, which consisted of something like, âIâm tired and overwhelmed. Thereâs a lot to do. I donât have what it takes. My momâs dying of Alzheimerâs. Iâve got kids who need me.â
I was telling myself this story of how tired I am and how overwhelming my life is and I looked at that story and I thought, âWell, April, hello. What are you doing to yourself? Why are you telling yourself this story?â So I rewrote the story. I actually read it to Eric the other day. I wonât read the whole thing here because itâs pretty personal but the way it starts is, âEvery day, I have the privilege of waking up to live a beautiful story.â And then I went on and explained everything reversed — the blessings I have, these opportunities that I have to help other people, how even when Iâm not enough, itâs okay because thereâs power coming from heaven and here on Earth to help me make it happen.
I rewrote the story and every morning, Iâve been reading my new story. I canât even tell you how that has helped me. I feel like itâs completely changed how I look at my day. Itâs helped me be more patient with my kids. Iâve actually been sleeping better. Itâs made everything better. So thatâs just kind of my personal experience.
Jonathan: Thatâs a huge distinction, April, the way we communicate our reality to ourselves. Iâll give one personal anecdote but Iâll give a less personal anecdote as well. The most powerful example, at least Iâve seen, of this is the story of Viktor Frankl, which, if you havenât read âManâs Search For Ultimate Meaningâ, pause this and —
April: Go read it.
Jonathan: — right now because itâs the story — like, when I talk about stress, itâs the story of an, I think, Austrian psychotherapist who was in the concentration camps, lost all of his family members, and eventually developed an entire school of psychotherapy called logo psychotherapy, which is about identifying meaning and finding meaning in suffering. Religious traditions talk about doing this. They talk about giving it to God or whatever. And what April talked about here is the same kind of thing, like, âWhy are you doing this?â What Viktor Frankl found is that the thing that got him through the concentration camps was that he saw it as that, âI need to get through this so that I can tell this story to the world and then I can help prevent this from ever happening again.â So he attached a different meaning to that than potentially other people were.
A much more benign — not nearly as compelling — example for me personally, there is a great book called âOverachievementâ. Itâs very hard to find but itâs awesome and it talks about how people who, if theyâre going to speak publicly or do an athletic performance or any kind of performance, you might get butterflies and you perceive that as a bad thing. The book actually explains how whatâs happening physiologically is, your bodyâs releasing the hormone adrenaline into your body and your blood is being used differently and it makes your belly feel different. The reason your body is doing these things is to optimize performance.
Itâs like the perception of stress right before youâre about to do something important is actually like turbo fuel. Itâs like getting your body ready. If you can perceive butterflies as like, âOh my gosh, I have butterflies. This is going to make me do worseâ; whereas once you understand the science of those butterflies are like putting turbo fuel into your body thatâs going to make you do even better — the same reality has a totally different perception now and it changes your life. So while we canât always change reality, we can always change our perception. April, I think your story is a great example of that.
April: Did you see my butterfly hanging here in the office? Alia made this for me. Itâs a little sign for those of you who are watching that, just when the caterpillar thought the world was over, it became a butterfly. Iâve been doing this butterfly project. Itâs for my own personal transformation that I call it. Eric actually, who was standing here watching the video, got me caterpillars and this butterfly — look, I actually have butterflies in my office. They just came out today. He said, âNow you can tell your friends that I gave you butterflies.â So I got these butterflies and actually whatâs been so interesting is, as Iâve been watching them — and I actually watched them make the cocoon; Iâve never seen that before; itâs amazing. Iâm watching them and Iâm cheering for them, like, âCâmon, little caterpillars, you can do this.â I donât probably think so elementary but itâs been just a really neat thing for us, for my life, for my business, to think all of us want a transformation.
All of us want to grow and develop. We donât want to be the same as we were when we were toddlers; when we were in high school. We want to grow and continue and develop and learn. I think when you can look at nature, look at the science of why your body is giving you this stress and anxiety, seeing it as fuel, seeing it as a reason to continue to grow and do better and work your purpose, I feel like thatâs just helped me so much and not ever even having to think âI need to reduce my stressâ anymore. Iâve used that term my whole life. âIâm going to reduce my stress. Iâm going to lower my stress.â Now itâs like, âIâm going to embrace this stress and Iâm going to use it to my advantage.â
Jonathan: If you think about what you just said, April, itâs very true because, like, what is a stress-free existence? If youâve seen the movie âWall-Eâ, itâs these pseudo-humans are sort of having sugar and nonsense kind of pumped into their bodies and they have no worries and they have no concerns. There was even, I think, like a âTwilight Zoneâ episode of this back in the day where everything a person ever wanted happened and then the person ended up going crazy because the way — and this is one of the books that have been most foundational in my life, is a book called âAntifragileâ because it changed my perception of problems of saying that the way human beings develop, the way life â
The difference between life, organic things, and mechanical non-living things is that adversity hurts mechanical things. Like, if your car runs into a wall, it doesnât get stronger or better; thatâs just objectively bad. But if you run into a wall, you know what happens? You learn not to run into a wall anymore and youâre actually stronger and better because of it. So if you can sort of flip that and say â
Thereâs another book by Ryan Holiday which is called âThe Obstacle Is The Wayâ, which is the same kind of thing. Itâs the opposite of rose-colored glasses. Itâs like saying, âWhat I have right now, how can I use that or leverage that to either strengthen myself/strengthen the world/make the world a better place and give some meaning and purpose?â Thatâs Viktor Franklâs whole thing with logotherapy â âIâm going through a concentration camp. Thatâs happening; canât do anything about it. All I can do now is choose the meaning that I associate with itâ — and thatâs what he calls the last of human freedoms.
Stephen Covey talks about this; all major religious traditions talk about this — the last thing that no — Rubin âHurricaneâ Carter, a boxer who was wrongly convicted of a triple homicide many, many decades ago — when he went into prison, he was like, âLook, you can lock me up but I know Iâm innocent and Iâm not going to allow you to treat me as a prisoner. I can control that.â So thatâs the last thing we can control — our perception and our attitude and our meaning. Itâs the opposite of rose-colored glasses. Itâs as scientific and real as it gets.
April: I love that. I love what you just said. I think that as I think back to my life and even just thinking back to a couple of years ago, I had a huge stress in my life in that I was tired of counting calories; I was tired of feeling guilty if I couldnât exercise and break a sweat every day; if I couldnât run four to six miles a day; I was tired of going to bed hungry or eating to fill myself and then despising myself because I thought I was weak. I mean, I was struggling and I was listening to all kinds of podcasts.
When I think about it, that stress I was feeling because I felt that stress and because I wanted it to end, thatâs what helped me to find you, Jonathan. Whatâs so neat is, because I found you, I didnât even know that my then thirteen/fourteen-year-old daughter was experiencing way more stress than I was because she was twenty-five pounds overweight and she didnât ever want to look in the mirror and she didnât want to be around her friends at the mall. I didnât even know what was going on in her head that because of my stress and because I found the way out of it, I was now able to help my daughter to completely revolutionize her life.
You shouldâve seen her going to school today. Sheâs giving this oral presentation. She looks beautiful and confident and happy. And I watch it and Iâm seriously — my breathâs taken away every time I watch her thrive and watch how sheâs doing. Then I just think about — just right now, even being able to be on this podcast with you and being able to use my voice to go around the world to help other people who are struggling like I was. It just helps me look at my current stress, where Iâm not stressed about calories and food at all now; I love it — but now I stress in other ways but now it gives me hope thinking, âWell, maybe the stress that I feel in this other area, maybe thatâs going to bless my life too.â
Jonathan: I think youâre exactly right, April. One thing Iâve noticed as well, as we talk about tying this back to health, as we talk about your set point weight. Iâve noticed — and it seems like there is some science building around this — that some of us, we have kind of a stress set point. You can kind of notice this where you might have a friend — or someone who isnât a friend and maybe you wish wasnât a friend — that happens to be in your life, who is like super stressed all the time and you look at their life and youâre just like, âWhy are you stressed?â
You see sort of like Real Housewives of Hollywood, where theyâre like, âIâm going to have a level eight stress even if there is no real stressor in my life.â Like, no matter what, I have the set point of stress. Then you see people, like some Buddhist monk — this is a crazy example — but there are Tibetan monks that can set themselves on fire — which is a pretty big stressor — and not be stressed about it. Theyâre just like, âIâm on fire right now. Itâs okay. Iâm just going to sit here calmly.â
So that sort of set point of stress, I think it may vary a little bit based on our life circumstances but we ultimately, the mental processing, the meaning that we attribute to that stress, is what determines that set point. No matter we end this relationship, we do get a new job, this issue does — something else is going to happen and if that set point of stress isnât addressed, weâre going to still be — I mean, this happens all the time. Like, you win the Super Bowl and then youâre stressed about, âNow I have to win the second Super Bowl.â Itâs never enough. So the only thing that we can change is our perception of those things.
One last thing Iâll say is one of the most helpful things for me is, instead of using the term âstressâ — Kelly McGonigal kind of says this in the book — I donât remember where I heard it but itâs not like Jonathanâs unique idea â is, âThis matters.â When you think about it, the reason you get stressed about something is because you care about it or it matters or it has the impact. You donât get stressed about stuff thatâs irrelevant and meaningless. So a stress-free life, in some ways, is a life full of meaningless, irrelevant things. Well, thatâs not good.
April: Thank you for bringing that up. I love the idea of that stress set point. I think that should be our next action — to figure out what it takes to lower your stress set point. What do you need to do — whether itâs reading one of the books we recommended here in the podcast or whether itâs writing down your current story and then rewriting it/making a new story? I donât know. I think thatâs a great way to start. Any other ideas or a stretch goal for us, Jonathan?
Jonathan: I like that. Identify the stress set point, maybe do some reflection in your life — Is there ever a time you havenât been as stressed as you are right now? — That kind of a thing. Then there are things like meditation, things like exercise, things like deep loving relationships — these things will objectively — just like we talk about eating vegetables will lower your weight set point; meditation will lower your stress set point. So do some research into those things. Meditation doesnât necessarily mean, âOm, om, om.â Walking in forests can be a meditative activity but things along those lines, I think, are great to explore.
April: All right. Well, thank you so much for this conversation. I feel like itâs been a big one for me. This has been something that I struggled with my whole life but now I feel like Iâm finally getting there to the point I can lower my stress set point. So grateful for SANE; thankful for you, Jonathan. Thank you for those of you who are listening. Please share us with your friends. Tell them about the SANE show so that we can all enjoy a life healthy and in wellness the rest of our lives. Have a wonderful day and remember to stay SANE.