Feb 28, 2018
...is from Anais Nin:
16 year old Craig believes his life is so bad he is considering suicide. He ends up on a psychiatric ward, where he is released from the comparison trap he had found himself in in his highly pressured college life. In an invaluable lesson in reversing his unhelpful perspective, Craig sees just how lucky he is and what resources he has at his disposal. There are many lessons for us hidden in this movie. Not to mention unpronounceable names...!
In this episode, discover:
*How to swap upward comparison ("I am less fortunate than person X") for downward comparison ("I have so much more than person Y")
*How specifically to use downward comparison to deal with eating and body image issues
*How airbrushed perfectionism is a corrupting force
*The hidden benefit of the comparison trap that will allow you to escape it if you are crafty enough!
*How the idea of a continuum is far more helpful than the fixed position necessary to get yourself in the comparison trap
RESOURCES
How to review a podcast in iTunes: http://www.theshiftinside.com/how-to-review-a-podcast-in-itunes-explained-super-simply/
The Psychology Today article on racist voters: https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/life-death-and-the-self/201711/the-psychological-roots-trumpism
Episode 18 on Owning Your Food Compulsion: http://www.theshiftinside.com/podcast-own-your-food-compulsion/
Join the private Eating Coach Discussion Group at:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1594950873896541/
Find out more about coaching at http://www.theshiftinside.com/coaching/
Ask a question at:
http://www.theshiftinside.com/podcast/
Get your free audiobook at:
http://www.audibletrial.com/
Sound effects by https://www.zapsplat.com
Get your free Hidden Sugars Checklist to print off at