Guy Winch: Why we all need to practice emotional first aid
Guy Winch asks us to take our emotional health as seriously as we take our physical health -- and explores how to heal from common heartaches. Full bio
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is that it makes you an expert
than my cookie, I had questions.
notice favoritism of a different kind,
value the body than we do the mind.
my doctorate in psychology,
look at my business card and say,
So not a real doctor,"
over the mind, I see it everywhere.
was getting ready for bed.
by the sink brushing his teeth,
on the stool when he fell.
but then he got back up,
a box of Band-Aids to put one on his cut.
tie his shoelaces,
so it doesn't become infected,
your teeth by brushing twice a day.
our physical health
we were five years old.
our psychological health?
about emotional hygiene?
taking care of our teeth
so much more important to us
even more often than we do physical ones,
or rejection or loneliness.
worse if we ignore them,
in dramatic ways.
scientifically proven techniques
kinds of psychological injuries,
that we should.
Just shake it off; it's all in your head."
to somebody with a broken leg:
it's all in your leg."
our physical and our psychological health.
my brother is also a psychologist.
I've ever done in my life
to New York City
for the first time in our lives,
brutal for both of us.
family and friends,
really expensive then
for five minutes a week.
be spending together.
we would talk for 10 minutes.
waiting for him to call --
but the phone didn't ring.
he will call later."
being away for over 10 months,
the way I missed him.
saddest and longest nights of my life.
I realized I had kicked it off the hook
and it rang a second later,
and, boy, was he pissed.
night of his life as well.
happened, but he said,
If you saw I wasn't calling you,
the phone and call me?"
but I do today,
deep psychological wound,
and scrambles our thinking.
care much less than they actually do.
for rejection and heartache
more than you can stand?
loneliness back then,
so it never occurred to me.
purely subjectively.
from those around you.
and all of it is horrifying.
miserable, it will kill you.
likelihood of an early death
high cholesterol.
of your immune system,
of illnesses and diseases.
that taken together,
significant a risk
longevity as cigarette smoking.
saying, "This could kill you."
we prioritize our psychological health,
a psychological wound
psychological wound
and misleads us.
play with identical plastic toys.
and a cute doggie would pop out.
purple button, then pushing it,
at the box, with her lower lip trembling.
watched this happen,
into tears without even touching it.
everything she could think of
and she squealed with delight.
identical plastic toys,
reactions to failure.
capable of sliding a red button.
them from succeeding
into believing they could not.
as well, all the time.
feelings and beliefs that gets triggered
frustrations and setbacks.
your mind reacts to failure?
you're incapable of something
you'll begin to feel helpless
or you won't even try at all.
convinced you can't succeed.
function below their actual potential.
sometimes a single failure
succeed, and they believed it.
it's very difficult to change our mind.
when I was a teenager with my brother.
down a dark road at night,
and they were looking for suspects.
shined his flashlight on the driver,
and then on me.
to him whatsoever.
he searches me,
I didn't have a police record,
I had a twin in the front seat.
you could see by the look on his face
getting away with something.
once we become convinced.
demoralized and defeated after you fail.
convinced you can't succeed.
feelings of helplessness.
over the situation.
negative cycle before it begins.
we thought they were.
and really unpleasant the next.
and an extremely ugly divorce,
seemed nice and he seemed successful,
he seemed really into her.
she bought a new dress,
New York City bar for a drink.
the man stands up and says,
All she could do was call a friend.
"Well, what do you expect?
you have nothing interesting to say,
successful man like that
could be so cruel?
the friend who said that.
especially after a rejection.
and all our shortcomings,
what we wish we weren't,
our self-esteem is already hurting.
and damage it even further?
worse on purpose.
and decide, "Oh, I know!
how much deeper I can make it."
injuries all the time.
our psychological health.
that when your self-esteem is lower,
stress and to anxiety,
and it takes longer to recover from them.
the first thing you should be doing
join Fight Club and beat it into a pulp.
you would expect from a truly good friend.
psychological habits and change them.
is called rumination.
professor makes you feel stupid in class,
the scene in your head for days,
in this way can easily become a habit,
on upsetting and negative thoughts,
at significant risk
alcoholism, eating disorders,
feel really strong and really important,
because a little over a year ago,
with stage III non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
a harsh course of chemotherapy.
what he was going through.
how much he was suffering,
but psychologically I was a mess.
distraction is sufficient
in that moment.
upsetting, negative thought,
something else until the urge passed.
my whole outlook changed
and more hopeful.
my brother had a CAT scan,
he got the results.
of chemotherapy to go,
psychological wounds,
you will thrive.
people began practicing personal hygiene,
by over 50 percent
could rise just as dramatically
emotional hygiene.
the world would be like
and less depression?
and more empowered?
I want to live in,
wants to live in as well.
and change a few simple habits,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Guy Winch - Psychologist, authorGuy Winch asks us to take our emotional health as seriously as we take our physical health -- and explores how to heal from common heartaches.
Why you should listen
Guy Winch is a licensed psychologist who works with individuals, couples and families. As an advocate for psychological health, he has spent the last two decades adapting the findings of scientific studies into tools his patients, readers and audience members can use to enhance and maintain their mental health. As an identical twin with a keen eye for any signs of favoritism, he believes we need to practice emotional hygiene with the same diligence with which we practice personal and dental hygiene.
His recent book, Emotional First Aid: Healing Rejection, Guilt, Failure, and Other Everyday Hurts, has been translated in 24 languages. He writes the popular "Squeaky Wheel Blog" on PsychologyToday.com, and he is the author of The Squeaky Wheel: Complaining the Right Way to Get Results, Improve Your Relationships and Enhance Self-Esteem. His new book, How to Fix a Broken Heart, was published by TED Books/Simon & Schuster in 2017. He has also dabbled in stand-up comedy.
Guy Winch | Speaker | TED.com