🍪 En cliquant "Ok", vous acceptez le stockage de cookies sur votre appareil afin d'améliorer la navigation sur le site, d'analyser l'utilisation du site et de nous aider dans nos efforts de marketing.
Okay, since I've been on the topic of therapy lately, I would like to know what is like the most profound thing that your therapist told you or that you learned from therapy that kind of like changed your perspective or changed your life in a big way.
Well you know therapy really helps me out a lot especially when it comes do you know slapping slapping kids on call of duty ranked you know what I mean you know just a just a you know snake every corner like Celiam like you're not real it really like open my eyes you know what I mean and Dom I'm just I'm just happy that you know I took the time out of my off my days and then got therapy
So I went to therapy for a couple of sessions 10-11 years ago because I had a lot going on and My therapist was like with everything you've been through I'm surprised that you even smile a lot and it was like she didn't help at all And she was trying to pin me against my parents and my parents and against me I don't know it was weird but I didn't let anything from her
I'm sorry you've had that experience. That sounds really strange. I assure you they're not all like that. I found a really good therapist, but But yeah, that would definitely turn me off therapy if I had that kind of an experience.
I would say you don't even have to forgive. Just like acknowledge that it happened, acknowledge that it already happened and that there's no going back or changing anything. So that fact alone should be enough for the person to be to realize like okay there's no reason to stay hung up on this.
It's easier said than done, but it's a slow process. And you gotta see it, like, you gotta see pieces of it at a time because you can't just like take in the whole thing and be like, oh yeah, I understand what you mean. Like, no, it's a process. And you gotta slowly start letting go. And it's gonna take a while, but it's worth it because in the end, you'll be mentally in a better place and you won't be like having to think about that past event.
This is such good advice, especially when you say it's a slow process, because I relate to that. I went through that as well, and it's kind of like eventually you start learning that you're just hurting yourself more by continuing to have a reaction to something that already happened that can't be changed. So you're only hurting yourself by continuing to be upset about it or things like that. easier said than done though, but...
I don't know about the most profound but for me personally the thing that's helping a lot right now is my social anxiety is crazy high Doing things like stand-up comedy on the outside you couldn't you won't be able to tell anything's different But for me it's much different than like a performance because as a performance you're doing a character and I'm not nervous about that But with comedy it's you know it's different through video where no one's watching and it's different in front of people where it's like it all comes down to you So we've really been helping with that and it's really been nice.
Well that is really awesome and I know what you mean about like playing a character is different. I used to do theater and I was always so extroverted because it just felt like it wasn't me so it didn't matter. But yeah like doing stand-up comedy where it's just you and it's your own personality in front of people live like that. That would be nerve-wracking. So that's awesome that you're getting into that and doing that and it's helping.
Yeah, and that's cool you did theater. So yeah, you probably know a little bit of kind of what I mean and I didn't even get to what the therapy helped with but basically just like trying to Help you give yourself affirmations not lie yourself not be like you're the funniest person ever But just to tell yourself like you've accomplished a lot to get here You know, this is all the stuff you've done with hard work people you've gotten here because some people like you obviously and You know at the end of the day, this doesn't matter. It's just a branch off you're just having fun and you'll go home and everything will be the same.
I love this and I wish that more people would like base their accomplishments not on like the outcome of things but more on the journey. Like you said how like you got up there, you got in front of people, you just enjoyed the experience and like it was a new thing for you. Like that in and of itself is an accomplishment whether or not the audience received it or you made a lot of money doing stand-up comedy or whatever. I feel like people are too focused on like the outcome comments.
I also feel like that's when I really started like moving forward in my life and getting more confident was when I focused on that journey when I was just like, okay, the accomplishment is like getting myself out of my comfort zone and not even like caring what the outcome was. Like I'm going to try this thing in business and I don't care if it works or if it flops, I'm going to try it and then see what happens and the whole confidence comes from the act of trying.