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Why we all need to practice emotional first aid

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    I grew up with my identical twin,
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    who was an incredibly loving brother.
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    Now, one thing about being a twin is,
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    it makes you an expert
    at spotting favoritism.
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    If his cookie was even
    slightly bigger than my cookie,
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    I had questions.
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    And clearly, I wasn't starving.
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    (Laughter)
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    When I became a psychologist,
    I began to notice favoritism
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    of a different kind;
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    and that is, how much more we value
    the body than we do the mind.
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    I spent nine years at university
    earning my doctorate in psychology,
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    and I can't tell you how many people
    look at my business card and say,
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    "Oh -- a psychologist.
    So, not a real doctor,"
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    as if it should say that on my card.
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    [Dr. Guy Winch, Just a Psychologist
    (Not a Real Doctor)]
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    (Laughter)
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    This favoritism we show the body
    over the mind --
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    I see it everywhere.
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    I recently was at a friend's house,
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    and their five-year-old
    was getting ready for bed.
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    He was standing on a stool
    by the sink, brushing his teeth,
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    when he slipped and scratched his leg
    on the stool when he fell.
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    He cried for a minute,
    but then he got back up,
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    got back on the stool, and reached out
    for a box of Band-Aids
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    to put one on his cut.
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    Now, this kid could barely
    tie his shoelaces,
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    but he knew you have to cover a cut
    so it doesn't become infected,
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    and you have to care for your teeth
    by brushing twice a day.
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    We all know how to maintain
    our physical health
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    and how to practice dental hygiene, right?
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    We've known it since
    we were five years old.
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    But what do we know about maintaining
    our psychological health?
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    Well, nothing.
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    What do we teach our children
    about emotional hygiene?
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    Nothing.
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    How is it that we spend more time
    taking care of our teeth
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    than we do our minds?
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    Why is it that our physical health
    is so much more important to us
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    than our psychological health?
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    We sustain psychological injuries
    even more often than we do physical ones,
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    injuries like failure
    or rejection or loneliness.
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    And they can also get worse
    if we ignore them,
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    and they can impact our lives
    in dramatic ways.
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    And yet, even though there are
    scientifically proven techniques
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    we could use to treat these
    kinds of psychological injuries,
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    we don't.
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    It doesn't even occur to us
    that we should.
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    "Oh, you're feeling depressed?
    Just shake it off; it's all in your head."
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    Can you imagine saying that
    to somebody with a broken leg:
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    "Oh, just walk it off;
    it's all in your leg."
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    (Laughter)
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    It is time we closed the gap
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    between our physical
    and our psychological health.
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    It's time we made them more equal,
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    more like twins.
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    Speaking of which,
    my brother is also a psychologist.
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    So he's not a real doctor, either.
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    (Laughter)
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    We didn't study together, though.
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    In fact, the hardest thing
    I've ever done in my life
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    is move across the Atlantic
    to New York City
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    to get my doctorate in psychology.
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    We were apart then
    for the first time in our lives,
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    and the separation was brutal
    for both of us.
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    But while he remained
    among family and friends,
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    I was alone in a new country.
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    We missed each other terribly,
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    but international phone calls
    were really expensive then,
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    and we could only afford to speak
    for five minutes a week.
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    When our birthday rolled around,
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    it was the first
    we wouldn't be spending together.
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    We decided to splurge,
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    and that week,
    we would talk for 10 minutes.
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    (Laughter)
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    I spent the morning pacing around my room,
    waiting for him to call --
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    and waiting ...
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    and waiting.
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    But the phone didn't ring.
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    Given the time difference, I assumed,
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    "OK, he's out with friends,
    he'll call later."
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    There were no cell phones then.
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    But he didn't.
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    And I began to realize
    that after being away for over 10 months,
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    he no longer missed me
    the way I missed him.
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    I knew he would call in the morning,
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    but that night was one of the saddest
    and longest nights of my life.
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    I woke up the next morning.
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    I glanced down at the phone,
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    and I realized
    I had kicked it off the hook
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    when pacing the day before.
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    I stumbled out of bed,
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    I put the phone back on the receiver,
    and it rang a second later.
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    And it was my brother,
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    and boy, was he pissed.
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    (Laughter)
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    It was the saddest and longest
    night of his life as well.
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    Now, I tried to explain
    what happened, but he said,
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    "I don't understand.
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    If you saw I wasn't calling you,
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    why didn't you just pick up
    the phone and call me?"
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    He was right.
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    Why didn't I call him?
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    I didn't have an answer then.
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    But I do today,
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    and it's a simple one:
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    loneliness.
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    Loneliness creates a deep
    psychological wound,
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    one that distorts our perceptions
    and scrambles our thinking.
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    It makes us believe that those around us
    care much less than they actually do.
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    It make us really afraid to reach out,
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    because why set yourself up
    for rejection and heartache
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    when your heart is already aching
    more than you can stand?
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    I was in the grips
    of real loneliness back then,
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    but I was surrounded by people all day,
    so it never occurred to me.
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    But loneliness is defined
    purely subjectively.
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    It depends solely on whether you feel
    emotionally or socially disconnected
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    from those around you.
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    And I did.
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    There is a lot of research on loneliness,
    and all of it is horrifying.
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    Loneliness won't just make you miserable;
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    it will kill you.
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    I'm not kidding.
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    Chronic loneliness increases
    your likelihood of an early death
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    by 14 percent.
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    Fourteen percent!
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    Loneliness causes high blood pressure,
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    high cholesterol.
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    It even suppress the functioning
    of your immune system,
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    making you vulnerable to all kinds
    of illnesses and diseases.
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    In fact, scientists have concluded
    that taken together,
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    chronic loneliness
    poses as significant a risk
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    for your long-term health and longevity
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    as cigarette smoking.
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    Now, cigarette packs come with warnings
    saying, "This could kill you."
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    But loneliness doesn't.
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    And that's why it's so important
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    that we prioritize
    our psychological health,
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    that we practice emotional hygiene.
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    Because you can't treat
    a psychological wound
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    if you don't even know you're injured.
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    Loneliness isn't the only
    psychological wound
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    that distorts our perceptions
    and misleads us.
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    Failure does that as well.
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    I once visited a day care center,
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    where I saw three toddlers
    play with identical plastic toys.
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    You had to slide the red button,
    and a cute doggie would pop out.
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    One little girl tried pulling
    the purple button, then pushing it,
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    and then she just sat back
    and looked at the box
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    with her lower lip trembling.
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    The little boy next to her
    watched this happen,
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    then turned to his box and burst
    into tears without even touching it.
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    Meanwhile, another little girl
    tried everything she could think of
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    until she slid the red button,
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    the cute doggie popped out,
    and she squealed with delight.
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    So: three toddlers
    with identical plastic toys,
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    but with very different
    reactions to failure.
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    The first two toddlers were perfectly
    capable of sliding a red button.
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    The only thing that prevented
    them from succeeding
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    was that their mind tricked them
    into believing they could not.
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    Now, adults get tricked this way
    as well, all the time.
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    In fact, we all have a default set
    of feelings and beliefs
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    that gets triggered whenever
    we encounter frustrations and setbacks.
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    Are you aware of how
    your mind reacts to failure?
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    You need to be.
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    Because if your mind tries to convince you
    you're incapable of something,
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    and you believe it,
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    then like those two toddlers,
    you'll begin to feel helpless
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    and you'll stop trying too soon,
    or you won't even try at all.
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    And then you'll be even more
    convinced you can't succeed.
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    You see, that's why so many people
    function below their actual potential.
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    Because somewhere along the way,
    sometimes a single failure
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    convinced them that they couldn't
    succeed, and they believed it.
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    Once we become convinced of something,
    it's very difficult to change our mind.
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    I learned that lesson the hard way
    when I was a teenager with my brother.
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    We were driving with friends
    down a dark road at night,
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    when a police car stopped us.
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    There had been a robbery in the area
    and they were looking for suspects.
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    The officer approached the car,
    and shined his flashlight on the driver,
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    then on my brother in the front seat,
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    and then on me.
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    And his eyes opened wide and he said,
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    "Where have I seen your face before?"
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    (Laughter)
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    And I said,
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    "In the front seat."
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    (Laughter)
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    But that made no sense to him whatsoever,
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    so now he thought I was on drugs.
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    (Laughter)
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    So he drags me out of the car,
    he searches me,
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    he marches me over to the police car,
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    and only when he verified
    I didn't have a police record,
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    could I show him
    I had a twin in the front seat.
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    But even as we were driving away,
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    you could see by the look
    on his face he was convinced
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    that I was getting away with something.
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    (Laughter)
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    Our mind is hard to change
    once we become convinced.
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    So it might be very natural
    to feel demoralized
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    and defeated after you fail.
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    But you cannot allow yourself
    to become convinced you can't succeed.
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    You have to fight
    feelings of helplessness.
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    You have to gain control
    over the situation.
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    And you have to break
    this kind of negative cycle
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    before it begins.
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    [Stop Emotional Bleeding]
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    Our minds and our feelings --
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    they're not the trustworthy friends
    we thought they were.
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    They're more like a really moody friend,
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    who can be totally supportive one minute,
    and really unpleasant the next.
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    I once worked with this woman
    who, after 20 years marriage
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    and an extremely ugly divorce,
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    was finally ready for her first date.
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    She had met this guy online,
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    and he seemed nice
    and he seemed successful,
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    and most importantly,
    he seemed really into her.
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    So she was very excited,
    she bought a new dress,
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    and they met at an upscale
    New York City bar for a drink.
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    Ten minutes into the date,
    the man stands up and says,
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    "I'm not interested," and walks out.
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    Rejection is extremely painful.
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    The woman was so hurt she couldn't move.
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    All she could do was call a friend.
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    Here's what the friend said:
    "Well, what do you expect?
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    You have big hips,
    you have nothing interesting to say.
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    Why would a handsome,
    successful man like that
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    ever go out with a loser like you?"
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    Shocking, right, that a friend
    could be so cruel?
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    But it would be much less shocking
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    if I told you it wasn't
    the friend who said that.
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    It's what the woman said to herself.
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    And that's something we all do,
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    especially after a rejection.
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    We all start thinking of all our faults
    and all our shortcomings,
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    what we wish we were,
    what we wish we weren't.
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    We call ourselves names.
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    Maybe not as harshly, but we all do it.
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    And it's interesting that we do,
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    because our self-esteem
    is already hurting.
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    Why would we want to go
    and damage it even further?
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    We wouldn't make a physical injury
    worse on purpose.
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    You wouldn't get a cut on your arm
    and decide, "Oh! I know --
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    I'm going to take a knife and see
    how much deeper I can make it."
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    But we do that with psychological
    injuries all the time.
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    Why? Because of poor emotional hygiene.
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    Because we don't prioritize
    our psychological health.
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    We know from dozens of studies
    that when your self-esteem is lower,
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    you are more vulnerable
    to stress and to anxiety;
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    that failures and rejections hurt more,
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    and it takes longer to recover from them.
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    So when you get rejected,
    the first thing you should be doing
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    is to revive your self-esteem,
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    not join Fight Club
    and beat it into a pulp.
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    When you're in emotional pain,
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    treat yourself with the same compassion
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    you would expect from a truly good friend.
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    [Protect Your Self-Esteem]
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    We have to catch our unhealthy
    psychological habits and change them.
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    And one of unhealthiest and most common
    is called rumination.
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    To ruminate means to chew over.
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    It's when your boss yells at you
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    or your professor
    makes you feel stupid in class,
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    or you have big fight with a friend
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    and you just can't stop replaying
    the scene in your head for days,
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    sometimes for weeks on end.
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    Now, ruminating about upsetting events
    in this way can easily become a habit,
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    and it's a very costly one,
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    because by spending so much time focused
    on upsetting and negative thoughts,
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    you are actually putting yourself
    at significant risk
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    for developing clinical depression,
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    alcoholism,
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    eating disorders,
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    and even cardiovascular disease.
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    The problem is,
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    the urge to ruminate can feel
    really strong and really important,
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    so it's a difficult habit to stop.
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    I know this for a fact,
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    because a little over a year ago,
    I developed the habit myself.
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    You see, my twin brother was diagnosed
    with stage 3 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
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    His cancer was extremely aggressive.
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    He had visible tumors all over his body.
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    And he had to start a harsh course
    of chemotherapy.
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    And I couldn't stop thinking
    about what he was going through.
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    I couldn't stop thinking
    about how much he was suffering,
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    even though he never complained, not once.
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    He had this incredibly positive attitude.
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    His psychological health was amazing.
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    I was physically healthy,
    but psychologically, I was a mess.
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    But I knew what to do.
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    Studies tell us that even a two-minute
    distraction is sufficient
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    to break the urge to ruminate
    in that moment.
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    And so each time I had a worrying,
    upsetting, negative thought,
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    I forced myself to concentrate
    on something else until the urge passed.
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    And within one week,
    my whole outlook changed
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    and became more positive and more hopeful.
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    [Battle Negative Thinking]
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    Nine weeks after he started chemotherapy,
    my brother had a CAT scan,
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    and I was by his side
    when he got the results.
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    All the tumors were gone.
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    He still had three more rounds
    of chemotherapy to go,
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    but we knew he would recover.
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    This picture was taken two weeks ago.
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    By taking action when you're lonely,
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    by changing your responses to failure,
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    by protecting your self-esteem,
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    by battling negative thinking,
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    you won't just heal
    your psychological wounds,
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    you will build emotional resilience,
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    you will thrive.
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    A hundred years ago, people began
    practicing personal hygiene,
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    and life expectancy rates
    rose by over 50 percent
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    in just a matter of decades.
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    I believe our quality of life
    could rise just as dramatically
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    if we all began practicing
    emotional hygiene.
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    Can you imagine
    what the world would be like
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    if everyone was psychologically healthier?
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    If there were less loneliness
    and less depression?
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    If people knew how to overcome failure?
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    If they felt better about themselves
    and more empowered?
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    If they were happier and more fulfilled?
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    I can, because that's the world
    I want to live in.
  • 16:54 - 16:58
    And that's the world
    my brother wants to live in as well.
  • 16:58 - 17:03
    And if you just become informed
    and change a few simple habits, well --
  • 17:04 - 17:06
    that's the world we can all live in.
  • 17:07 - 17:09
    Thank you very much.
  • 17:09 - 17:11
    (Applause)
Title:
Why we all need to practice emotional first aid
Speaker:
Guy Winch
Description:

We'll go to the doctor when we feel flu-ish or a nagging pain. So why don’t we see a health professional when we feel emotional pain: guilt, loss, loneliness? Too many of us deal with common psychological-health issues on our own, says Guy Winch. But we don’t have to. He makes a compelling case to practice emotional hygiene — taking care of our emotions, our minds, with the same diligence we take care of our bodies.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:24
  • NG

    Hi English LC,

    There's a typo at 16:08 - 16:12.

    The word 'build' is spelt as 'bulid' in this subtitle:

    you will bulid emotional resilience,
    you will thrive.

  • The English transcript was updated on 1/4/2016. On-screen text was added:

    10:46
    [Stop Emotional Bleeding]

    13:21
    [Protect Your Self-Esteem]

    15:30
    [Battle Negative Thinking]

English subtitles

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