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Episode: my emotional crutches, a talk with emma
Author: emma chamberlain
Duration: 01:03:30
Episode Shownotes
i've recently hit a rough patch in my life, and this one feels different. unlike past struggles with depression, anxiety, or burnout, this time, i'm just grumpy. my fuse is short, and my willpower is nonexistent. it took me a minute to figure out what it was, but once i
did, everything made sense. i'm grumpy because as of recently, i've eliminated almost all of my emotional crutches in life. what i used to use to soothe me is gone. so today we're going to be talking about emotional crutches. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Summary
In this episode of 'Anything Goes with Emma Chamberlain,' Emma discusses her recent feelings of grumpiness linked to the removal of her emotional crutches. She reflects on the concept of emotional crutches as coping mechanisms that lead to unhealthy behaviors and explores her personal struggles with nicotine, shopping addiction, and the impact of social media. Emma emphasizes the importance of facing reality to foster personal growth and recognizes that while eliminating these crutches is challenging, it leads to improved clarity and lower anxiety levels.
Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (my emotional crutches, a talk with emma) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.
Full Transcript
00:00:00 Speaker_00
I recently found myself in a rough patch, okay? I've been going through it a little bit. The last month has been a real challenge. Now, this is not unusual for me, right? I'm in my twenties. I'm a sensitive person.
00:00:17 Speaker_00
Honestly, I'm going through a rough patch more often than I'm not. And that's okay. That's just who I am and the phase of life that I'm in. It's all good. This is nothing out of the ordinary, right? Wrong.
00:00:32 Speaker_00
My most recent rough patch has looked very different to my rough patches of the past. This most recent struggle has been sort of unusual. Instead of falling into a state of depression or anxiety or panic or burnout, I'm just grumpy.
00:00:51 Speaker_00
And I know what you're thinking. Emma, being grumpy is not that big of a deal. Like we all get grumpy sometimes. No. Okay. What's so upsetting about it is that it's so out of character.
00:01:02 Speaker_00
I'm normally an incredibly patient person, but recently I have a dangerously short fuse. I'm normally a disciplined person. You know, I get my shit done and I don't complain about it.
00:01:16 Speaker_00
But recently I have almost no willpower to do anything in any category of my life. I'm normally a really gentle person, but recently I've been uncharacteristically harsh. Okay, not with random strangers.
00:01:33 Speaker_00
I have maintained a sense of humanity when it comes to people I don't really know, but when it comes to people I'm close to, I have no patience. I'm harsh.
00:01:45 Speaker_00
I keep catching myself being harsh, and I have to walk myself back and be like, oh my God, I'm so sorry. I don't know what that was. for the last few years, since I've become an adult, I've been a pretty even tempered sort of person.
00:01:58 Speaker_00
Like I definitely have my moments, right. But I don't know. Like I just have made it sort of a priority to be pleasant and patient with everyone. And recently all of that has gone out the window and I have no patience. I have no willpower.
00:02:17 Speaker_00
I have no softness. Like I don't know. Something weird happened. I'm so fucking grumpy. Now, this didn't just happen out of nowhere. This isn't like a completely random personality shift.
00:02:34 Speaker_00
It's not like I just woke up one day randomly and for no reason at all, I turned grumpy. There is a real reason for this grumpiness. And it took me a minute to figure out what it was, but once I did, everything made sense. Okay.
00:02:53 Speaker_00
I'm grumpy because recently I've eliminated almost all of my emotional crutches in life. What I used to use to soothe me, distract me, and satisfy me is now gone. Now, some of these emotional crutches have been removed from my life consciously.
00:03:13 Speaker_00
Like I've made a active decision to remove these emotional crutches from my life. And some of these emotional crutches have been removed subconsciously.
00:03:23 Speaker_00
Like I didn't even really realize certain things in my life were emotional crutches, but just subconsciously I knew that I needed to remove them from my life. And then once I did,
00:03:36 Speaker_00
I could then see in hindsight, like, oh shit, those were total emotional crutches. And it just happens to be that at this point right now, in the last month, or maybe two at this point, I'm at a point now where I don't have any left.
00:03:53 Speaker_00
For whatever reason, it all kind of happened at once. So today we're going to be talking about emotional crutches. This episode of Anything Goes is presented by Amazon. I'm obsessed with finding gifts that'll just blow people's minds.
00:04:08 Speaker_00
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00:04:18 Speaker_00
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00:04:32 Speaker_00
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00:05:09 Speaker_00
This episode of Anything Goes is brought to you by Amazon. I will admit gift giving is not my love language. However, there are many people in my life who do care about gifts. Gifts is their love language.
00:05:25 Speaker_00
And so when it comes to gift-giving, I love a one-stop shop. And that's why Amazon is so phenomenal, because it truly is a one-stop shop. I mean, you can really find everything all in one place.
00:05:38 Speaker_00
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00:05:57 Speaker_00
Okay. According to Google, an emotional crutch is a coping mechanism that can cause people to ignore reality and prevent them from thinking logically. Crutches can be things, activities, people, or relationships that people rely on too much Okay.
00:06:13 Speaker_00
Key, keyword too much to release stress. Okay. I think that's a key term because it's okay to lean on friends and family and therapy and hobbies and exercise and whatever to help relieve stress. Like that's normal, right?
00:06:35 Speaker_00
It's when we rely on things too much that there's a problem. These things can remove us from reality to a point where we don't even need to address our stress anymore. I think that's when it gets to an unhealthy point.
00:06:49 Speaker_00
While these things may not be harmful on their own, they can become problematic when used exclusively and excessively.
00:06:56 Speaker_00
Some examples include alcohol, weed, nicotine, religious faith that is not based on sound evidence, television, video games, internet, shopping, junk food, the list goes on.
00:07:10 Speaker_00
Weirdly enough, I never really thought about my own personal emotional crutches up until recently. I actually thought of myself as being somebody who didn't really have any, to be honest.
00:07:21 Speaker_00
And I think that's what's so sneaky about emotional crutches is that oftentimes we don't even realize that we have them.
00:07:30 Speaker_00
Or we're in denial of them because to address the fact that we have an unhealthy relationship with these things is to then, you know, force oneself to like make a choice about how we move forward.
00:07:44 Speaker_00
Whereas if you don't address it, then you never have to make a choice about like if you continue using this thing as an emotional crutch or not. Right.
00:07:51 Speaker_00
to just continue in autopilot and use these things as crutches is to just, you know, it's more comfortable that way.
00:07:57 Speaker_00
So a lot of times we don't even realize what our emotional crutches are until, you know, it either reaches a point that using the emotional crutch makes us actually more miserable or we subconsciously come to the conclusion like, ooh, I probably shouldn't be doing this anymore.
00:08:16 Speaker_00
Let me play around with, you know, letting this thing go. And then in hindsight, you're like, wait a minute, that was an emotional crutch. It's very hard to address in the moment.
00:08:26 Speaker_00
But when I look at my own life, it's very clear to me now what my emotional crutches were slash are, because I think some of them are still unresolved maybe, or they're, you know, 80% resolved or 50% resolved, like whatever.
00:08:47 Speaker_00
My personal emotional crutches are number one, nicotine slash oral fixation in general, shopping, social media, scrolling, YouTube videos, podcast, constant noise in my ears, constant things to watch, entertainment, but specifically on the internet, internet entertainment, definitely having internet addiction,
00:09:11 Speaker_00
avoidant boys, okay? Boys who do not like me back, okay? And then one that I'm sort of hesitant to put on the list, but I feel like I should, is alcohol slash parties.
00:09:27 Speaker_00
I'm hesitant to put it on the list because I think that compared to my other emotional crutches, this one is not that big of a deal. I can kind of go without drinking or go without partying, whereas I'm addicted to these other things.
00:09:41 Speaker_00
However, there's been phases of my life where I have used drinking or partying to avoid reality. I'm 50-50 on if that should be on the list, so it's the last one on the list. The other ones are more significant.
00:09:56 Speaker_00
Now, some of these were obvious emotional crutches, right? Like, my oral fixation slash nicotine addiction is pretty obvious. Like, I was definitely aware of that. And I've had issues with oral fixation my entire life. Okay.
00:10:16 Speaker_00
Since I was born, like I was a kid sucking my thumb up until I was like 10 years old to help relieve anxiety. And then I had a few years off where I didn't have any oral fixation.
00:10:28 Speaker_00
And then, you know, I started vaping or whatever, and that became my new oral fixation.
00:10:33 Speaker_00
And then I got addicted to nicotine and then nicotine became its own sort of, uh, emotional crutch, but they're all sort of one in the same, but they're actually kind of different. And anyway,
00:10:42 Speaker_00
That's always been obvious to me, but shopping, avoidant boys, boys that don't like me back, I actually didn't really notice that until more recently. Social media, scrolling, internet addiction, I've been pretty aware of that.
00:10:59 Speaker_00
So again, it's like some of these were sneaky and some of these were more obvious. But something I was sort of curious about upon realizing that I'm kind of getting rid of all of these emotional crutches was how did they form in the first place?
00:11:13 Speaker_00
You know, we develop these habits of relieving stress in ways that are maybe easier. Like they involve instant gratification or they're, they're just simply in the unhealthy category.
00:11:24 Speaker_00
It's like every time we're in a, in a period of stress, we need to do something. As humans, we rarely just sit in it. We respond in some way. And the likelihood that you're going to choose something unhealthy is 50-50.
00:11:37 Speaker_00
You're either going to choose a healthy coping mechanism or an unhealthy coping mechanism. Emotional crutches form when people use unhealthy coping strategies to avoid facing challenges or making changes.
00:11:49 Speaker_00
It's basically just choosing something that feels good but isn't great for you. This episode is brought to you by Bumble. Dating can be exhausting. Even just getting to the dating stage is a little bit overwhelming.
00:12:03 Speaker_00
You know, I'm not somebody who loves casually dating. I like to be in a relationship. Finding somebody you're attracted to is challenging enough, but then making sure that you're compatible is a whole other challenge.
00:12:16 Speaker_00
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00:12:29 Speaker_00
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00:12:42 Speaker_00
running errands, grabbing coffee, online shopping at like 2 a.m. for like who knows what, getting some work done, but then getting distracted, but then going back to work and now, oh my God, it's 4 a.m., what's happening?
00:12:51 Speaker_00
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00:13:03 Speaker_00
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00:13:17 Speaker_00
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00:13:32 Speaker_00
Terms and cashback limits apply. See PayPal app. This card is issued by the Bancorp Bank, N.A., pursuant to a license by MasterCard International, Inc., and may be used everywhere MasterCard is accepted. So, how did my emotional crutches form?
00:13:50 Speaker_00
Oral fixation, as I mentioned earlier, started for me at a young age. I was a very, very, very, very, very anxious child. Not really sure why. Honestly, it's probably genetic. Both of my parents have anxiety, specifically my mom. Very anxious woman.
00:14:08 Speaker_00
Bless her soul, but she is so anxious. She might be the most anxious person I've ever met. My dad, Less anxious, but has struggled with anxiety, particularly later in his life, like in his adulthood.
00:14:20 Speaker_00
Nowadays, he struggles with anxiety, but anyway, very anxious kid. Horrible separation anxiety from my parents, going to preschool, going to school, going to sleepovers. All of these things caused a lot of anxiety for me.
00:14:34 Speaker_00
I just wanted to be comfortable in my parents' arms all the time. And to soothe my childhood anxiety, I began sucking my thumb from a very, very young age. I don't even remember starting. It just happened.
00:14:48 Speaker_00
And then it became more and more of an emotional crutch as I got older because things became more challenging for me, right? Like when you're a kid, you're not in preschool yet, you don't even have a brain really yet.
00:15:02 Speaker_00
And I was just kind of sucking my thumb, I don't know, for God knows what reason. And then the older I got, the more I relied on it to relieve my anxiety because the social challenges became greater, right? Now I have to go to preschool.
00:15:16 Speaker_00
Now I have to go to school. Now I'm going to sleepovers with friends. And you know, those things triggered my anxiety so bad that I relied heavily on sucking my thumb. And it was really hard for me to quit. I didn't quit till I was like 11 or 12.
00:15:32 Speaker_00
And that's definitely on the older end when it comes to quitting, sucking your thumb, right? Like most people quit when they're like five or whatever. I could not drop the habit. It was so hard for me.
00:15:45 Speaker_00
And I ended up having to quit at age 12 because it was fucking up my teeth. like having my thumb in my mouth for 12 years straight pushed my front teeth out.
00:15:55 Speaker_00
I had like an overbite from sucking my thumb and I had to go get that fixed because that was like an actual issue. And so then I had to like get this cage put in my mouth that would prevent me from putting my thumb in my mouth. It was this whole thing.
00:16:11 Speaker_00
It was horrible. But eventually I did quit. And then five years later, I started vaping. And the vape started as sort of like an oral fixation, right? Like it just sort of brought me back, I think, to my thumb sucking as a kid subconsciously.
00:16:27 Speaker_00
It just like was sort of soothing for me. And it started pretty surface level and innocent. It wasn't that deep. I mainly used the vape to combat boredom or help me focus on grueling tasks. In particular, it used to take me
00:16:47 Speaker_00
30 hours to edit a YouTube video, which is great in all, but you know, it's hard to, to focus for like 10 hours at a time and edit a video, like just sitting, you know, on your computer or at least for me, like I definitely have a bit of energy.
00:17:02 Speaker_00
I like to move around and stuff and editing is sort of a, a grueling task, right? You're sitting at your computer and, and that's it. Like I'm somebody who thrives on like running errands. right?
00:17:12 Speaker_00
Me sitting on the computer for 10 hours straight, it's a little tough for me. So having an oral fixation helped me focus, helped relieve the uncomfortable feelings that came from that grueling task and it made it more enjoyable.
00:17:25 Speaker_00
And then I sort of became addicted to nicotine and I noticed that nicotine sort of helped me focus and it also helped me release more happy chemicals in my brain. So I actually had a higher
00:17:38 Speaker_00
tolerance for doing activities that I didn't like, which was interesting. Like nicotine allowed me to just kind of do anything. Like I was almost like superhuman in a way because the nicotine was constantly releasing happy chemicals in my brain.
00:17:54 Speaker_00
I always had a vape on me 24 hours a day. The second I ran out of pods, I went and got more. I was constantly consuming nicotine. I had nicotine in my system 24 seven.
00:18:05 Speaker_00
Anytime I needed like a hit of happy chemicals in my brain, I would just hit the vape. So like if I would be working on something that, you know, I really didn't want to work on for whatever reason, or I, you know, I had a really long day, right?
00:18:21 Speaker_00
Like a really long travel day where like, I don't know, like I'm traveling across the country. Like I'm, and I have like three layovers and whatever, for some reason that was more doable because of nicotine, like as a substance, right?
00:18:37 Speaker_00
The chemical itself just made me happier in a way. Like I could get a hit of happiness. Like I remember in my darkest of days, right?
00:18:48 Speaker_00
Like being like, Oh my God, like my vape is the only thing bringing me joy or giving me even like the something similar to joy. Now in retrospect, that's really dark, but that's how it really was for me. Okay.
00:19:01 Speaker_00
Like it really, it was, it became that deep. My vape was like the thread that was whole helping me hold on to my stability. Now, shopping addiction, I think formed because when I was a kid, all I wanted was to have a closet full of clothes.
00:19:21 Speaker_00
You know, all I wanted to do was buy stuff. And for majority of people and kids, that's not realistic. We don't have a job. Most of our parents aren't fucking millionaires.
00:19:32 Speaker_00
So obviously we don't just get to go shopping and buy whatever we want all the time. But for me, psychologically, I always wanted that freedom. I was like, oh my God, I want to just buy whatever I want.
00:19:43 Speaker_00
Like I love clothes and I love technology and I love things. I want more things. When I make my own money one day, I'm going to have a lot of things. and then I did make my own money, and then I immediately developed a shopping addiction in retrospect.
00:19:59 Speaker_00
I didn't realize it, but I definitely did. Now, I will say, I know people who have far worse shopping addictions than me. I actually don't even think my shopping addiction was that bad. It never sent me into debt.
00:20:11 Speaker_00
It never, it was actually never even beyond my means, right? Like it wasn't like I was even addicted to buying expensive things. That's a misconception about a shopping addiction.
00:20:22 Speaker_00
You can completely have a shopping addiction and not, you know, spend beyond your means.
00:20:28 Speaker_00
You can have a shopping addiction and that shopping addiction can be shopping on Amazon where things are, you know, lower prices or like, you know, those websites like Timu or Shein or whatever, all those inexpensive sort of wholesale model sort of, you know, you can get a fuck ton of stuff on those websites for cheap.
00:20:48 Speaker_00
You could be addicted to going to the dollar store and buying random shit. That is the most dangerous misconception about shopping addiction is that you have to be spending money on expensive things. Okay.
00:21:00 Speaker_00
And that's why I didn't catch my own shopping addiction because I actually didn't often splurge on like I don't know, like a designer bag. Like that actually didn't happen a lot. I was addicted to buying vintage. I was addicted to going thrift shopping.
00:21:16 Speaker_00
I was addicted to buying weird little contraptions on Amazon that would help my daily life. Like a weird little strawberry peeler. You know what I mean? It's like, why do you need that? I just loved the feeling of buying things.
00:21:29 Speaker_00
I would be like, oh, I want to buy new, like I should probably buy more socks. Cause I probably don't have enough socks or like whenever I was bored, I would figure out something to buy like, Oh, I should probably buy new underwear.
00:21:41 Speaker_00
Now I know what you're thinking. Like that's not that bad. No, it is. Because if anytime I'm feeling stressed or overwhelmed and you know, the nicotine is not helping or you know, I'm bored of doom scrolling on Instagram, I'm buying stuff.
00:21:56 Speaker_00
It's a slippery slope though because
00:21:59 Speaker_00
even if you're buying things that are technically, you know, useful, uh, and you're not like buying super expensive stuff, you still end up in an uncomfortable position because instead of maybe, you know, the more obvious shopping addiction timeline where it's like, okay, you want really nice things, you make money, you spend all of your money on nice things.
00:22:22 Speaker_00
Now you go into debt. But mine was more like, I want a lot of things, some nice things, some, you know, normal things, kind of just things in general. I make my own money and now I can buy these things.
00:22:36 Speaker_00
And because honestly, not a lot of the things were super expensive. A lot of them were thrifted or vintage or whatever, or underwear or socks or like a weird contraption for my kitchen or whatever.
00:22:47 Speaker_00
Instead of going into debt or something from this shopping addiction, I ended up with so much stuff. that psychologically I became miserable and it took years and years and years of sort of realizing, Oh my God, I have too much stuff.
00:23:03 Speaker_00
I have too much stuff. I have to stop. I have to stop. And routinely going through and getting rid of stuff, donating stuff until recently I finally gotten my belongings down to a reasonable level, right?
00:23:18 Speaker_00
I think what shopping was for me was instant gratification. There's multiple moments of gratification when shopping. There's enjoyment in shopping itself, right?
00:23:28 Speaker_00
Looking around a store or scrolling online that releases happy chemicals in my brain, but then also actually buying it, like making the decision.
00:23:36 Speaker_00
There's a little bit of excitement in that, like even when I'm typing in my credit card or, or, you know, handing my card over to the, person working at the store, I don't know, I'm excited, there's an excitement.
00:23:47 Speaker_00
And then there's satisfaction, and especially the first few times I get to use the thing I bought, that's really satisfying.
00:23:56 Speaker_00
But then, you know, the satisfaction from that fades, and it's sort of short-lived, and then it's time to move on to the next thing.
00:24:03 Speaker_00
Whenever I was having a tough time or didn't know what to do with myself or whatever, and I didn't want to do anything that was like any heavy lifting, I would shop.
00:24:13 Speaker_00
And it's one thing to like go shop around and like go pop into stores and see what's going on. I always would be buying stuff, you know? And that's what made it, I think, bad is that it wasn't just like, oh, today's a day off.
00:24:26 Speaker_00
I want to go look around in some stores. It's like, yeah, but also I would always buy something. It was a lot to do that just to combat boredom or to escape through it. That's not the way, you know, next we have avoidant boys. Okay.
00:24:43 Speaker_00
Ooh, this one's tough. I think that this started because when I was younger, you know, in middle school, high school, I never felt like I was desirable. for a few reasons. Number one, I was really outgoing and loud and whatever.
00:25:00 Speaker_00
And I think that wasn't as maybe appealing to the boys that I liked for whatever reason. So there was that. Also, I was a late bloomer physically. I went through puberty really late. So like I looked a bit younger and obviously boys at that age,
00:25:18 Speaker_00
You know, they want, they're like, everybody's bodies are changing and I think these boys are growing up. They're now realizing what they're attracted to and it's more developed, you know, and I was not.
00:25:33 Speaker_00
So they were not physically attracted to me and they made that very clear by calling me flat and stuff like that, saying I had no boobs, no butt, whatever.
00:25:43 Speaker_00
And I was kind of awkward and nervous around boys, so anytime they would show interest in me, I'd always fuck it up. I've always felt sort of uncomfortable and insecure about my abilities with boys. I got a bit older, and it was time to start dating.
00:26:01 Speaker_00
And the boys that I liked were always the boys that were hard to get.
00:26:07 Speaker_00
guys that didn't like me at first, guys that only give me the time of day sometimes, guys that I'm nervous around, that like their approval means everything to me because I feel like I've won if they end up liking me back, right?
00:26:23 Speaker_00
Whereas a guy who's really sweet and just organically likes me out the gate and I don't have to win him over or fight a bunch of other girls to get him, that's not as exciting. That's not as satisfying.
00:26:35 Speaker_00
That doesn't boost my self-esteem as much, right? And I need that self-esteem boost. Or I did need that self-esteem boost because in middle school and high school, my self-esteem was completely shot.
00:26:47 Speaker_00
And then going into adulthood and actual real dating, I was not looking for a happy relationship. I was looking for a boost of self-esteem ultimately. I think that's why, you know, all of my first few relationships were such a catastrophe.
00:27:05 Speaker_00
Number one, I was choosing guys that were emotionally unavailable for me. I was also choosing guys that like a lot of other people like. So it was like I was trying to win in a way, which is weird.
00:27:19 Speaker_00
And then I was choosing guys that I was so intimidated by that I could never fully be myself around them.
00:27:25 Speaker_00
And I was choosing this type of guy just because by being with them, I feel like it's erasing the feelings of inadequacy that I had as a young teenager.
00:27:37 Speaker_00
Now, the problem was it started as sort of this thing like, you know, I just like these guys that are challenges for me, right? Like I like the challenge. It helps boost my self esteem, blah, blah, blah. But then it became more than that. It became,
00:27:54 Speaker_00
an emotional crutch where I liked dating guys that made me anxious, made me feel like shit, confused me, intimidated me because it was a distraction from my other anxieties. If I could be anxious about the boy I like or the boy I'm dating,
00:28:14 Speaker_00
I'm so distracted. I'm not worried about anything else. And there was something sort of soothing about that in a very weird twisted way that I barely even understand myself. And I'm the one who was doing it. Okay.
00:28:25 Speaker_00
So it did eventually become an emotional crutch where like, I became used to dating guys that were avoidant. It was a distraction for me and the push and the pull of it was so riveting and exciting. And it was so emotionally turbulent for me.
00:28:42 Speaker_00
And like, they didn't even know half the time what I was going through. Like they thought everything was fine. Everybody around me thought everything was fine. But deep down, I'm like, I'm constantly trying to win this guy over.
00:28:52 Speaker_00
I don't know if he loves me. I don't believe that he loves me. I don't think he's going to want to marry me. I don't want to ask him. I don't know if this guy even wants to have Kids, is this somebody I'm gonna be with forever? He's so hard to hold down.
00:29:05 Speaker_00
He's so all over the place. Oh my God, I love him so much. He's amazing. I'm putting him on a pedestal because he's so hard to get, and hard to get means better, right? I don't know, it was just this whole fucking mess, right?
00:29:22 Speaker_00
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00:29:34 Speaker_00
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00:31:01 Speaker_00
Next we have social media, doom scrolling, constant noise, constant entertainment, the internet. I mean, obviously I think this started because the internet is ingrained in our society at this point. I don't need to explain this, right?
00:31:16 Speaker_00
Like why we're all addicted to our phones, why we're all addicted to the internet. We all started going on it to be a functioning member of society, to stay connected with people, not miss out on stuff.
00:31:27 Speaker_00
And then it ended up becoming an addiction because all of these tech companies are like, we need to keep these people addicted. I think simply put, the internet is an emotional crutch for many of us because it's a distracting addiction.
00:31:41 Speaker_00
It's something that you can disappear into. It's created to be a complete distraction and there's nothing better in a time of stress than a complete distraction and the internet can very easily do that for you. So, you know, I'm not unique in this one.
00:31:59 Speaker_00
And then last but not least, alcohol and partying. Again, I'm like hesitant to include this, but there have been times where I've used it as an emotional crutch. So I'm, I'm including it.
00:32:08 Speaker_00
I think I tend to use alcohol and partying, uh, as a crutch when I don't like my day to day life, you know, and I need something to look forward to like on the weekends, you know, like I, I need to have a fun weekend.
00:32:25 Speaker_00
I go through these phases where I'm like, I just need to have a good weekend. For fuck's sake. It's like when I don't like my work life for the most part. That's when I tend to be like, I want to just party. Like I need to do something satisfying.
00:32:38 Speaker_00
Whereas when I'm like satisfied with my work life and comfortable with it and I'm enjoying it, which is absolutely a privilege, though it does happen to me, you know, often. I mean, I have my fair share of challenges, and I know what you're thinking.
00:32:51 Speaker_00
Emma, you have a job on the fucking internet. Like, shut up. That's, like, fun and awesome, and yes. But also, you know, I can't lie and say that it's always sunshine and rainbows for me. There are times when it's challenging for whatever. Whatever.
00:33:03 Speaker_00
I won't get into it. But you get what I'm saying. When I'm going through that, where I'm having a really hard time, that's when I want to party. That's when I want to drink. I want to have something to look forward to at the end of the week.
00:33:15 Speaker_00
Also, when I'm going through a breakup,
00:33:18 Speaker_00
whenever I'm going through a breakup, I will tend to be like, let me just get drunk every weekend and party every weekend and get validation from boys because I've just been rejected in one way or another by the boy I was just with.
00:33:32 Speaker_00
So now I need to set myself free and be crazy and have fun. Um, now the next question is what's so bad about emotional crutches anyway? We're not all perfect, okay?
00:33:47 Speaker_00
Is it really fair to expect ourselves to go through life without a few emotional crutches? I mean, for fuck's sake, we're human, and being human is not easy for anyone. Okay? Is it on a spectrum? Absolutely. It's fucking horrible for some people.
00:34:07 Speaker_00
It's far better for others. But even then, even for the person on the planet who has the easiest life, there's still bullshit. You know what I mean? Should we allow ourselves to have some emotional crutches? Is it so wrong?
00:34:20 Speaker_00
With the two emotional crutches that I was consciously aware of, oral fixation and nicotine, and then social media, internet in general, I used to constantly make excuses for myself. I was like, hello, like, okay, I could be doing far worse, right?
00:34:38 Speaker_00
Like I can fully function on nicotine. If anything, I can function better. I enjoy it. I'll quit eventually. Like I'll quit when I have to get pregnant one day. Cause you can't be on nicotine and be pregnant, obviously. Like I'll wait till then.
00:34:52 Speaker_00
Like, and then, you know, with the internet, I was like, well, everybody's looking on the internet all the time. It keeps me in the loop. Like, you know, it's so easy to make excuses for your emotional crutch.
00:35:04 Speaker_00
And it's easy to be like, the fuck, like you think I'm Jesus Christ or like Mother Teresa? Like, what do you think? Like, you think I'm not going to have any, any flaws, right? It's easy to justify your emotional crutches by saying stuff like that.
00:35:18 Speaker_00
However, emotional crutches are absolutely detrimental to one's growth. and they ultimately do more harm than good.
00:35:26 Speaker_00
In the moment, it might feel like they are bringing us happiness or satisfaction or distraction or whatever, but long-term, more harm than good. Emotional crutches don't actually get to the root of the problem and solve it. It's a Band-Aid, basically.
00:35:43 Speaker_00
If you have a big cut and you put a Band-Aid on it, you need stitches, you know what I mean? That thing's not gonna heal unless you get stitches. which is a bit more painful and you have to go to the hospital and it's a whole thing.
00:35:54 Speaker_00
It's not convenient and it's not fun, but that's the only way that you can truly treat a big cut, right? It's the same thing with challenges in life.
00:36:04 Speaker_00
If you're putting band-aids on it, you're not getting to the root of the problem and temporarily it might feel better, but longterm it gets worse. It infects, it's a larger problem.
00:36:15 Speaker_00
Also you end up developing oftentimes an addiction to these emotional crutches. And addiction is incredibly hard to break. Now you have a festering issue that is untreated, but then now you also have an addiction on top of it, right?
00:36:28 Speaker_00
That's why emotional crutches are so fucked up. And in addition to that, in order to live the most authentic, genuine, fulfilling version of your life, You need to be living in reality, right? You need to be rooted and grounded in reality.
00:36:48 Speaker_00
And emotional crutches prevent logical reasoning. Emotional crutches can be a form of self-deception that prevents all logical reasoning and allows us to ignore reality. And that's also not healthy.
00:37:00 Speaker_00
Like, listen, it can give you a false sense of being on top of the world, but only ever for a short period of time. So I think most people would agree that we should all strive to remove emotional crutches from our lives. Is it going to be easy? No.
00:37:17 Speaker_00
Is it going to be an ongoing journey for the rest of our lives? Absolutely. But it is something valid to strive for. And for a long time, I didn't necessarily believe that I, I made excuses.
00:37:29 Speaker_00
I allowed myself to use these things, um, with the excuse being like, I'm human. It's fine. It is fine. And like, it is a process, but I think ultimately our goal should be to remove these things from our lives.
00:37:43 Speaker_00
Because what you'll also realize is that they actually were making your quality of life far worse. So it's like a double whammy, you know, it's preventing your growth and it's actually a net negative making your life worse.
00:37:58 Speaker_00
As I mentioned earlier, you know, I'm coming out the other end, having removed pretty much all of these emotional crutches from my life.
00:38:08 Speaker_00
Obviously some are still a work in progress, but even though it's challenging, it's so clear to me how these things were preventing my growth and how these things were making my overall quality of life worse.
00:38:21 Speaker_00
Like with my oral fixation and with nicotine, nicotine allowed me to do stuff I hated. with ease. It didn't force me to create a life that I love, which is so interesting.
00:38:35 Speaker_00
And listen, I know I haven't given you any nicotine updates in a while about my quitting journey. I don't want to speak too soon, but I'm, I'm doing pretty well. Okay. Let me just say that.
00:38:49 Speaker_00
I want to wait until I like don't hit a vape every once in a while or like, you know what I mean? And until I fully like come to you and say, hi, I'm, I fully have quit, but I am not consuming nicotine on a daily basis anymore.
00:39:03 Speaker_00
And listen, that's a topic in itself, right? I don't want to fully dig into that yet. Cause I'm not ready. There's a lot, a lot of epiphanies have happened as a result of being on my nicotine quitting journey. It's been far more deep than I expected.
00:39:20 Speaker_00
But what I can say right now is that nicotine allowed me to do anything I wanted with ease because I always had this little hit of happy chemicals in my pocket, you know? Now that it's not in my system constantly, I don't have that ability.
00:39:38 Speaker_00
And I'm noticing that I'm saying no to stuff that I don't want to do. And there's a lot more stuff that I don't want to do than there used to be. There's certain people that I'm like, wait, why have I been giving you the time of day?
00:39:50 Speaker_00
Like you're not somebody that I want in my life. Like I'm having all these epiphanies about things that I've just been putting up with because nicotine gave me this ability to just deal with anything.
00:40:02 Speaker_00
So I wasn't ever really critically thinking about what actually brings value to my life. It's so weird. It's one of those things that it's hard to explain. And if somebody were to have explained it to me prior, I would have been like, what?
00:40:17 Speaker_00
That doesn't even make sense. But it was completely clouding my judgment. And I don't know, now I'm just, it's so clear to me what I like to do, what I don't like to do, what's worth my time and effort, what's not worth my time and effort.
00:40:33 Speaker_00
My priorities are shifting completely, you know? Nicotine allowed me to disconnect from life 24-7. I was floating through life. I don't know, I wasn't fully connected.
00:40:45 Speaker_00
And that was something that was comforting for me, especially, you know, growing up in the public eye or whatever, which for me has been sort of challenging in a lot of ways, like very uncomfortable for me emotionally, and obviously exciting and incredibly rewarding in a lot of ways, but also really overwhelming and terrifying for me.
00:41:03 Speaker_00
And so nicotine weirdly allowed me to disconnect. It's just something that the chemical does. I don't know how to even explain it, but it did it. And now I'm not able to hide behind it anymore, you know, and I'm, I'm fucking stuck.
00:41:18 Speaker_00
I'm stuck in reality now and it's uncomfortable, but at least it's real. In addition to that, my quality of life was made so much worse by nicotine. Number one, it absolutely made my anxiety worse. I'm already an anxious person.
00:41:35 Speaker_00
The last thing I need is my anxiety to be worse. Nicotine undeniably made my anxiety worse.
00:41:40 Speaker_00
And I know that now because for the first time ever, not ever, for the first time since I started consuming nicotine on a daily basis, I know, you know, what my equilibrium is. I'm actually not as anxious as I thought. I'm very anxious for sure.
00:41:54 Speaker_00
But like I used to be in a constant state of panic. And I'm realizing now that that was because nicotine was fucking with my brain. And now I am 75% less anxious now that I don't consume nicotine.
00:42:06 Speaker_00
It was definitely making my quality of life worse that way. And also, I was constantly stressed about my health. I had constant health anxiety because I was like, listen, I'm consuming nicotine and
00:42:17 Speaker_00
some of these things are carcinogenic, like, it's not healthy, right? No doctor's gonna tell you that vaping is good. And even when I was using the Zyn, there was all these things about like, is it really healthy or is it not?
00:42:29 Speaker_00
And there's so much health anxiety. By the way, deserved. I should have health anxiety. I'm doing something actively that's bad for my body.
00:42:38 Speaker_00
And so now, you know, a month into not having nicotine in my system, I'm realizing the ways that it was holding me back and the ways that it was making me miserable. Same thing with shopping.
00:42:51 Speaker_00
I think it fully sunk in how severe my shopping addiction was when I most recently did my huge closet clean out where I basically got rid of all of the clothes that I don't wear on a consistent basis.
00:43:04 Speaker_00
And I was getting rid of some stuff that I bought pretty recently within the last two months, three months. And I was like, why do I even own this stuff? And then I realized it's like, because you just like buying stuff, Emma.
00:43:16 Speaker_00
You just like buying stuff. It made me sick in a way, you know, watching me, you know, tear all these things out of my closet and put it in this big pile. I felt gluttonous. I felt wasteful.
00:43:29 Speaker_00
And I mean, I feel better because I'm donating, you know, this stuff. And like, that does help, I guess. But like, There's enough clothes to go around without me fucking buying shit just to donate it.
00:43:40 Speaker_00
Like, no, that's like, yeah, I can maybe feel a little better about that, but I think that my feelings of guilt and a bit of remorse are valid. I actually don't think I need to baby myself and be like, well, I'm donating it.
00:43:51 Speaker_00
It's like, yeah, you're donating it and that's good. But also if I wasn't donating it, somebody else would donate it. There's a fuck ton of clothes going around in this world, you know?
00:44:00 Speaker_00
Clothes and like weird little gadgets and stuff like that's ultimately just trash. You know what I mean? I don't feel good about that.
00:44:08 Speaker_00
Once I got rid of all of the clutter, right, all the stuff that I don't use consistently, and there was barely, and there's barely any stuff left, right? Like I have the amount of clothes that I had when I was a kid.
00:44:20 Speaker_00
Walking into my closet, there's tranquility. I don't have decision fatigue. It all became immediately clear to me when I felt the joy of the simplicity of the items in my home.
00:44:34 Speaker_00
Like I only have items in my home that I genuinely use that are genuinely of value to me. and that feeling is honestly more satisfying than any feeling I get from buying a new thing. Only then was I able to be like, okay, you know what?
00:44:50 Speaker_00
I can't shop like this anymore. I just can't, you know? Like the clutter, it makes me anxious. Having too many things in my house gives me decision fatigue, like trying to decide like, oh, what pair of scissors am I gonna use?
00:45:04 Speaker_00
Oh, what pair of socks am I gonna wear? Oh, what outfit am I gonna wear today? People do say that, you know, objects hold energy. And like when you have too many objects, you'll feel stressed and anxious because there's overwhelming amounts of energy.
00:45:18 Speaker_00
Through having less stuff, I'm realizing how I overvalued having choices. I thought having choices was the dream, but I realize now the dream is to have a really good of one thing. It's better to have one amazing candle than six mediocre candles.
00:45:44 Speaker_00
you know, when it comes to like shopping and enjoying shopping, I'm not going to stop going shopping, right? Like if it's the weekend and I want to go shopping, I'll let myself go, but I'm not going to buy anything.
00:45:53 Speaker_00
And if I do buy something, it has to be better than the equivalent of what I currently own. And I have to then donate what I currently own. That's my new rule, at least for now, but I'm going to try to shop less and find other hobbies.
00:46:04 Speaker_00
And you know, it's worth it because now I know what it feels like to not have too much stuff. And it's too good. Next we have my avoidant boy addiction. Being attracted to these boys absolutely prevented my growth.
00:46:19 Speaker_00
not only was I incredibly unhappy dating these boys, for the most part, like, there would be happy moments, fun moments, but like, at baseline, I was not doing well. And it wouldn't even necessarily be because of the boy, right?
00:46:37 Speaker_00
Like, it wouldn't even be like, because they're being mean to me. And like, maybe sometimes it was that too, but like, for the most part, it was actually because I chose them for the wrong reason.
00:46:45 Speaker_00
It was my fault just as much as it was theirs, and obviously the reason why it became an emotional crutch was also the reason why it was making me miserable. It was so stressful that I didn't have time to think about anything else.
00:46:59 Speaker_00
It was so anxiety-inducing, I didn't have time to be anxious about anything else. Do you see what I mean? But ultimately that makes your quality of life worse.
00:47:06 Speaker_00
I had a hard time focusing my energy on anything actually productive for my life because I was constantly a wreck trying to manage these challenging relationships. And a distraction so engulfing like this really prevents growth for obvious reasons.
00:47:21 Speaker_00
How am I supposed to figure out what areas of my life I need to grow in when I'm so engulfed in this relationship that's ultimately not going to go anywhere or succeed because it was founded on cracked foundation, you know?
00:47:35 Speaker_00
How am I going to have the time to like actually grow as a person if this is all I'm focused on? But also too, part of my growth maturing journey is also working towards my ultimate goals, right? And one of my goals in life is to have a family.
00:47:55 Speaker_00
And I was not leading myself in that direction by dating this type of boy, right? How am I supposed to grow and find that partner?
00:48:07 Speaker_00
if I'm searching for somebody who is kind of toxic for me, so it's a distraction, and they're not really fully reciprocating their love for me, so it's like a boost in my self-esteem when they do reassure me or whatever.
00:48:23 Speaker_00
being in a relationship for those reasons is all wrong. Okay. If that, if that's what you're looking for, you're not going to find true companionship there. And that's ultimately what I want. It's crazy too.
00:48:34 Speaker_00
Cause in retrospect, like none of these boys knew who I was, you know, I never felt safe to be myself around them. And again, not only is that uncomfortable emotionally, right. To feel like, Oh God, I'm dating this person.
00:48:49 Speaker_00
But they don't fully know me to my core. They don't know my soul. It prevents growth because my partner can't help me grow if my partner doesn't know who I am. But I was so intimidated by these boys that I never could be myself around them.
00:49:02 Speaker_00
And then we have social media, scrolling, internet in general. Similar to the nicotine, only now am I able to realize how anxious constantly being on the internet made me. I kind of had a feeling in the moment, like, that's weird.
00:49:21 Speaker_00
Every time I doom scroll, I come out of it incredibly anxious. But now that I've fully broken that habit, and it's not even in my pocket, right? It's not even on my phone anymore. I have a separate phone for social media and stuff.
00:49:37 Speaker_00
I don't have it in my pocket at all times. It's literally put away in a drawer only to be used when I'm going to post something because that's what I have to do for my own mental wellbeing.
00:49:48 Speaker_00
Only now can I realize how much anxiety the internet and social media brought me. Now listen, like do I still watch a YouTube video every once in a while? Totally. Do I still listen to a podcast every once in a while? Sure.
00:50:01 Speaker_00
But like I'm not doom scrolling and it's definitely not an emotional crutch anymore. And now, you know, I'm, again, I'm able to realize how it was holding me back.
00:50:10 Speaker_00
Like when you're constantly online, you start to see everything through the lens of the internet. It's almost like you're living in the matrix in a way because the world that is online is very different than the real world.
00:50:23 Speaker_00
The real world that's physical and tangible that we live in, our own personal world, is far more simple. The world online is so much more complex. We're interacting with thousands of people.
00:50:35 Speaker_00
We're aware of what's going on in every single corner of the world at all times. It's just a very different world. So when you're online all the time, you start living in that world. And that world is very overwhelming.
00:50:46 Speaker_00
Not only is it overwhelming and anxiety-inducing, it's also riddled with bad morals and bad values. Like what's rewarded on the internet is often not good. Extremes, shock value, physical attractiveness, evil, catastrophe.
00:51:06 Speaker_00
Like for the most part, what catches our attention online is stuff that's not good. And so when you're living in that world, when you're on the internet all the time, you start to sort of adopt the mindset of the internet.
00:51:17 Speaker_00
You believe that that's what life is. All of these extremes, the worst of the worst and the best of the best and the greatest of the great and the worst of the worst. When in reality, in the real world, it's far more simple than that.
00:51:31 Speaker_00
A really good weekend for you might just be sitting in your backyard drinking a LaCroix. Whereas on the internet, a good weekend is being on a yacht in Capri, Italy. It warps your sense of reality and it's, it's not healthy.
00:51:46 Speaker_00
It prevents growth because it fucks with your morals and your priorities and your values. And it makes you miserable, too. Going back to quality of life, being on the internet all the time and living in the matrix in that way makes you feel like shit.
00:52:03 Speaker_00
You're constantly seeing, again, as I mentioned earlier, the greatest of the great and the best of the best. And that's what you have to compare yourself to, and obviously that makes you feel like shit.
00:52:15 Speaker_00
And then last but not least, we have alcohol and partying. I really do think that like, again, this was never really my biggest crutch, but alcohol and partying always brought me anxiety and rarely was fulfilling.
00:52:31 Speaker_00
And it often just got in the way of the stuff that makes me feel good, waking up early, exercise, stuff like that. I think it prevented growth for me because I wasn't trying to socialize in ways that are actually fulfilling for me.
00:52:47 Speaker_00
But maybe a bit more challenging or uncomfortable at first, like making a new friend and then going out to dinner with them or like going and painting pottery with a friend. You know what I mean? Like that is harder socially.
00:53:01 Speaker_00
It's not as like shiny and appealing, but it is ultimately more fulfilling. Now, the only thing is, when it comes to being single, I will say, like, it's pretty hard to date around without going out. I've met a guy that I've dated on a night out.
00:53:21 Speaker_00
And so it's like, how can I sit here and say that that's an emotional crutch and it's bad when it's worked for me in the past? I think it just depends on your intentions.
00:53:29 Speaker_00
Like, I think if you're single and you want to socialize and mingle, I think there's nothing wrong with that. I think it's an emotional crutch in dating if you're going out and partying to like numb the pain of your breakup.
00:53:42 Speaker_00
That's again, that's sort of a band-aid that's not really fixing the root of the problem.
00:53:45 Speaker_00
But if you're going out because you want to find your next partner and you're excited and it's like just kind of a fun thing and there's kind of nowhere else to find people, like where else are you going to go, you know?
00:53:56 Speaker_00
It's a fun, easy, obvious way where a lot of people are single. Then I think it's not an emotional crutch. At least that's what I noticed in me, right? Now this leads me, okay, to today.
00:54:08 Speaker_00
I've pretty much gotten rid of all of my emotional crutches and it's all sort of happened all at once, right? Like with nicotine, I've been trying to quit for a while now.
00:54:20 Speaker_00
And it's been an ongoing journey, but I am the closest I've ever been to quitting. I mean, I don't consume nicotine on a daily basis. In fact, I go weeks and weeks and weeks without consuming nicotine now.
00:54:31 Speaker_00
You know, within the last month or two, I'm quit pretty much. I've quit. I don't want to say that, though, because I want to wait until it's definitely set in stone, because you can always relapse. So it's like very scary to say, like, I quit.
00:54:44 Speaker_00
But I'm doing really well with it. Okay. And then, you know, this month I got rid of all of my clothes. And so my shopping addiction has been put in check. And so that's not really an emotional crutch for me anymore.
00:54:58 Speaker_00
I recently, within the last six months, got two phones so that I couldn't feed into my social media internet addiction. And I couldn't use that as an emotional crutch anymore.
00:55:09 Speaker_00
I'm just not really interacting with boys who don't like me anymore, avoidant boys. If I'm talking that like we have mutual feelings for each other, like I'm not playing fucking games anymore.
00:55:20 Speaker_00
And I'm just not really in a phase where I feel the need to escape using alcohol or parties. And you would think, you know, it would be a relief to get rid of all these emotional crutches, right?
00:55:31 Speaker_00
Because as I explained, they do ultimately cause pain, but no, even though these emotional crutches cause me pain, they cause me a type of pain that I'm more comfortable with. The pain that is reality is so unique, you know?
00:55:51 Speaker_00
It's so much harder to deal with than like a manufactured sort of pain that you're in control of. The pain of reality is out of your control, whereas the pain of dating a toxic boy, it's in your control in a way.
00:56:10 Speaker_00
Now, it's not a coincidence that I've ditched all of my emotional crutches at once. I think I'm in a major growth phase in my life. I think I'm in a larger growth phase in general.
00:56:20 Speaker_00
I think there's like this growth phase that happens when you're going from a teenager to an adult that spans from like age, I don't know, 16 to probably 30, honestly. where a lot of rapid growth happens. And I'm in that phase anyway, right?
00:56:36 Speaker_00
But I'm in a micro growth phase as well. That's happening for God knows what reason, you know, it's just like part of my maturing journey.
00:56:46 Speaker_00
I'm consciously realizing and apparently subconsciously realizing that these things are not working for me anymore. These emotional crutches are ultimately making my life worse. And I know in my heart of hearts that I need to eliminate these things.
00:56:59 Speaker_00
And that's why I've done it. but that does not mean it's easy. Having no emotional crutches as I feel I do right now is one of the hardest things I've ever dealt with in my entire life. Okay.
00:57:13 Speaker_00
I feel naked because all of these things I used to hide behind and used to soothe me, they're gone. And my fuse is, is short, right? Like let's say I'm a bomb. Now it's almost like somebody came up to me and snipped my fuse off completely.
00:57:28 Speaker_00
I just keep exploding. And there are many moments when I'm tempted to go back to the dark side with all of these things. You know, there are moments when I'm like, I just want a fucking vape. You know, I just want nicotine again.
00:57:42 Speaker_00
Like I want to go shopping and I want to buy stuff and I want to feel the dopamine of that. I want to just sit and scroll on social media for hours and hours and hours.
00:57:52 Speaker_00
I want to get drunk at a party and I want to be with boys that are toxic because it's like a distraction for me. Like those things helped me with my stability, weirdly enough. And now they're all gone all at once. It's fucked with my patience.
00:58:07 Speaker_00
However, I feel my fuse growing again, but this time in a healthy, sustainable way. I'm having to find emotional stability and happy chemicals in more productive ways.
00:58:21 Speaker_00
You know, like I've noticed that I really am relying on things like exercise or hobbies that are intriguing to me to give me happy chemicals. Like for example,
00:58:35 Speaker_00
I've been doing, um, occasional hot Pilates, hot yoga classes for a while, but recently I got like really into it.
00:58:42 Speaker_00
And honestly, it's just because it's not about looking a certain way or like how the workout is supposed to impact my appearance or my health, or I don't even fucking care.
00:58:51 Speaker_00
I just like how it makes me feel and it makes me release happy chemicals for whatever reason. Like when I'm done with it, I have so many endorphins that it makes me feel so good. So I'm like relying on that.
00:59:02 Speaker_00
I also am really focusing on like getting more work done because I noticed that when I get a lot of work done in the day, at the end of the day, I feel really satisfied.
00:59:12 Speaker_00
So I'm like trying to focus on productivity because I noticed that that also makes me feel good and releases happy chemicals in my brain.
00:59:20 Speaker_00
And so, you know, I'm having defined happy chemicals from stuff that doesn't release as many happy chemicals, right? Getting my work done and being productive does not release nearly as many happy chemicals as nicotine.
00:59:34 Speaker_00
However, by stripping myself of all of these things, you know, it's forcing me to find ways to supplement that are actually healthy, but fuck it's hard. And I've been really grumpy, uh, and I feel really bad for my loved ones, but,
00:59:50 Speaker_00
I'm starting to see the light and it's getting easier every day.
00:59:54 Speaker_00
And my overall quality of life, despite the fact that I'm grumpy and my fuse is short and I want to go back to the dark side sometime, despite all of that, my quality of life is still better. And that's something that cannot be understated.
01:00:10 Speaker_00
My anxiety is so much lower. I'm seeing things so much clearer. It's overall good. I know it's good. But it's fucking hard. And it's so hard that you almost have to like, you can't rush yourself into it. You have to kind of plant the seed in your mind.
01:00:27 Speaker_00
Like, okay, you know what? I know that this is an emotional crutch. I'm going to work towards figuring out how to eradicate it from my life. It's a process. You can't rush yourself. You're going to fail. You're going to be fucking grumpy as I've been.
01:00:40 Speaker_00
But I think on the other side of it is a much better life. So I invite you to take a look at your own emotional crutches and plant the seed in your brain of how maybe at some point you might move on from them. It's very hard though. It is so hard.
01:00:57 Speaker_00
Trust me. If I could fucking hit a vape right now, I'd love to. Okay. If I could just go spend the whole day shopping, I'd fucking love to. But with all things like that, there's a cost anyway. That's all I got for today.
01:01:14 Speaker_00
Thank you all for listening and hanging out. I hope you enjoyed it. If you are currently trying to get rid of your emotional crutches, I'm sending you my love because I know it's fucking tough.
01:01:24 Speaker_00
And if you like this episode, new episodes of Anything Goes every Thursday and Sunday stream, anywhere you get podcasts, social media is at Anything Goes.
01:01:33 Speaker_00
My social media is at Emma Chamberlain and my coffee company can be found at chamberlaincoffee.com or at Chamberlain Coffee on social media. I love you all. I appreciate you all. And I'll talk to you soon. Bye. This episode is brought to you by Adidas.
01:01:48 Speaker_00
Whether you're a professional athlete or lacing up a pair of sneakers for the first time, everyone feels pressure. Okay. For me, it started when I was a young tween.
01:01:58 Speaker_00
There were a lot of pressures that I experienced as a cheerleader, not only from coaches, but also from within. You want to be good because you're like, if I'm not, then what am I doing with all this time that I'm dedicating to this thing?
01:02:11 Speaker_00
The only problem was, even though I did well under the pressure, the pressure still made me miserable, and it made me anxious. But it wasn't until I got older that I realized that sports should be where you escape pressure, not feel it.
01:02:24 Speaker_00
For me now, it's less about perfection and being the best, and it's more about doing what feels good and what makes me happy. With the right mindset, you can beat anything, including pressure. You got this.
01:02:35 Speaker_00
Visit adidas.com slash you got this to learn more.