You can order my new book 8 RULES OF LOVE at 8rulesoflove.com or at a retail store near you. You can also get the chance to see me live on my first ever world tour. This is a 90 minute interactive show where I will take you on a journey of finding, keeping and even letting go of love. Head to jayshettytour.com and find out if I'll be in a city near you. Thank you so much for all your support - I hope to see you soon.
Do you want to meditate daily with me? Go to go.calm.com/onpurpose to get 40% off a Calm Premium Membership. Experience the Daily Jay. Only on Calm
Jay Shetty sits down with Gabrielle Bernstein to talk about how past trauma affects our daily life. Within us is our protector self, that part of us that takes over when we face fear, danger, sadness, longing, and feel hurt. And our protective self can sometimes stop us from taking chances, from taking risks. It can possibly hinder our growth and healing. Let’s tap into this inner version of us and make peace with our wounded self.
Gabrielle Bernstein is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Universe Has Your Back, Super Attractor, and has written six additional bestsellers including her latest book, Super Attractor. Gabrielle was featured on Oprah’s SuperSoul Sunday as a “next-generation thought leader,” and The Oprah Winfrey Network chose Gabby to be part of the “SuperSoul 100,” a dynamic group of 100 trailblazers whose vision and life’s work are bringing a higher level of consciousness to the world. The New York Times identified her as “a new role model.”
Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/
What We Discuss:
Episode Resources
What we're running from, first and foremost is we're running from trauma. Even the subtle moments in time someone tells you you're stupid, or you were in the best of environments growing up but you were fat shamed by a friend. Those tiny moments that are seemingly insignificant dictate the rest of our lives. Hey, everyone, welcome back to On Purpose, the number one health podcast in the world. Thanks to each and every single one of you who come back every week to listen, learn, and grow. And I am so excited to be talking to you today. I can't believe it. My new book Eight Rules of Love is out and I cannot wait to share it with you. I am so so excited for you to read this book, for you to listen to this book. I read the audiobook. If you haven't got it already, make sure you go to eight Rules of Love dot com. It's dedicated to anyone who's trying to find, keep, or let go of love. So if you've got friends that are dating, broken up, or struggling with love, make sure you grab this book. And I'd love to invite you to come and see me for my global tour. Love Rules go to Jay shelleytour dot com to learn more information about tickets, VIP experiences, and more. I can't wait to see you this year. Now, today we have on a guest who has already been on before, and we don't do that very often, but I have to do it for this special guest, a dear friend, an incredible author, number one New York Times bestseller, multiple international best selling books, the one and only Gabby Bernstein. Gabby, thank you so much for coming back to on Purpose. We've loved each other from the moment we first met, and that was six years ago now, I believe it or not. And we've talked about this multiple times about how we just instantly connected and we found a way to stay connected, with me moving from New York to LA through to not being able to see each other. We just said I hadn't seen you for three years. But you wrote this incredible book called Happy Days, The Guided Path from Trauma to Profound Freedom and Inner Piece, And I want everyone who's listening right now to go and order your copy because you're going to love this conversation and you're going to want the book even more, so go and grab your copy right now. But Gabby you wrote this book at a tough time, you know, at a really tough time in the world, and I wanted to kind of take a step back because when we're doing this work that we do, and you've served millions of people for years now that you've been doing this like this has really been a labor of love for you. You've brought joy to so many people over over a decade. And my question is what is happiness? Like, let's really talk about what is happiness? Because we keep chasing these words. People are chasing mindfulness or happiness or joy or success. But it's like, when you've bought about happiness from all your learnings, all your wisdom, all of your journey, what is happiness? My answer today is quite different than it would have been six years ago when we first did our first interview. The differences is a greater understanding of what happiness is not. I had to really go to that place to come through and be on the other side of what it truly is, and I began to really deepen my awareness and understanding of what takes us out of that presence of joy and as Peter Levine, the founder of Somatic Experiencing, he says, that trauma is the inability to be present, and trauma is often the root cause of most of our unhappiness, whether it's big T trauma or small T trauma big tea like living through a catastrophic event or having kind of violence in the household, or small T trauma being told you're not good enough for being bullied. But we all have it in some way, and when we have it, it's not resolved. We build up all of these defense mechanisms against it, and that creates the inability to be present and to really experience life with all of its moment to moment richness and right here, right now, looking at you and really taking you in and really just feeling into the thrill of what it's like to be back in the same room with a very dear friend and somebody I love. And even when I came in and I hugged you, you know, six years ago, I would have been like hey, Jay, and like very like not in my body and not in the present moment with you, because I was still stuck in that truncated trauma. And so coming through the other side of that, what happiness means to me now is the ability to be fully present and I'm not using that language as like some woo woo, but to be fully present in the moment with whatever is going on right here now, and that is how I'm living today, and it's epic. It's wonderful, like the fact that I could be in the uber on my way here, having a really awesome conversation with the woman driving me and getting to know a new person, and then walking in a room and just being able to hug my friend and feel that. That was a really long answer, but it's important to really recognize that I did not know what true happiness was until nine books later, you know, sixteen years as a spiritual teacher, and I knew what it was for myself along the way. But now I really feel like I've gotten to a place where it truly has transcended sort of these obvious descriptions. I really like that definition, and I really liked that approach because I think that presence is so overtalked about but undervalued and underapplied. We hear about it lot, as you said, but we don't really know how to live it because presence to us often actually means judgment, or presence means I'm present right now, but now I'm gonna critique that or I'm going to see that. Tell us how you think about presence differently, because often people say, well, when I'm present, I just spot everything that's going wrong right now, or when I'm present, I just start highlighting things that I don't like or do like for that matter. So how do you see presence as being beyond judgment and criticism and observation. That's an interesting outlook on it. So the concept of be present, it's just thrown around, and it's this concept of just sort of you know, when you meditate and you quiet your mind, your yeah, yeah, yeah, fine. But really, what I believe is when you go on the journey of undoing the storylines of your past and to at such a point and level that they no longer have a hold on your nervous system, and you begin to reorganize your reactivity and your relationship to yourself and how you respond to the world, then you start to establish what is known in sc somatic experiencing as a felt sense. It's a felt sense of and what that means is I can stand outside my house in the country right now and this season change and smell spring. I can look in my son's eyes and feel the most insane rush of oxytocin moved through my heart when he just looks me in the eye. And that's actually not the human experience. Typically. Typically we are moving so fast, so dissociated from, so checked out from we are, we have disembodied. We're walking around like, you know, without our heads on. And I could only say this because I've lived like that for many, many years and had to work really hard with my meditation and with my spiritual bactors to keep coming back to groundedness. And so there's a lot of that, yo, yo, of like I'm out, I'm in, I'm out, I'm in. But what if you could live life just fully in the presence of where you are in every given moment and truly taking it all in. And that was always sort of like, oh, that would be So you know, that's where we're going. That's what we're talking about in my spiritual books. But I know that now, and I know that you, as my friend who's known me for six years, I'm sure you can feel that in being with me in this room right now versus six years ago. And so I've and I've had that experience even through writing this book, my ninth book. That presence came through the is infused in every imprint, and so I didn't think this was where we were going. But it's actually it truly is what happiness is to me. It's it's being in the experience of things and actually being able to experience life. Yeah, I love what you said to me. It really felt that example of you looking into your son's eyes when you said that, I think what I love about that experience is that it's so immersive. And then you said to take it all in, And I feel like that's really what presence is, is the ability to take it all in through all your senses, right that we don't even use. I often when I'm teaching meditation and we're activating people's senses, we start recognizing how we over rely on our eyes. The only sense we actually observed through is our eyes and maybe then our ears, but our nose. Our sense of touch is fairly unconscious, right, We're not always aware of temperatures, textures, sense and things like that, which I find is we're not taking it all in. One of the things you just reminded me of is I read a study recently that was talking about the awe effect, and it was saying that we're happier and we have more pro social behavior when we experience awe. That's right. And when you spoke about your son's eyes, I was thinking about the idea of or. So always generally nature, beautiful landscapes, views, but someone's eyes could be or. And it was saying that the reason why we love or is because we simultaneously feel tiny but a part of something bigger, beautiful, So you feel a sense of insignificance but connectedness at the same time. And I think that's what presence is to me. I love that. And I think that someone listening right now might be like, what are they talking about? How could I you know? Because the truth is I probably I get that, I understand that. You know, what does that even mean to be present? What does it even mean to be in our Because we live in such a protector mode, we have this huge build up, almost like a wall built up against the presence of that energy, of that are And from a spiritual perspective, it's almost like we have to dismantle of these bricks on this wall to just reconnect to and return to that presence within ourselves. And truly, even in the midst of this experience of not being connected to that awe and that presence for many, many years, I was still able to touch into it. It was I was on a path and a journey towards it. And I think that that actually really benefited my readers, and it benefited the journey that I was on because that's where many people were with me. And so this stage of my life, forty two years young and with much sixteen years of being in this field, I have this experience right now of having kind of up leveled my well being. And that's actually what my hope is for my reader right now. If you open this book right or if you are even listening to us right now, have this conversation, you've unconsciously or consciously raised your head and said, yeah, I'm ready to up level. And the gift of having this globalis that we've all just lived through. Is it so so many of us just started to crack open to the reality that we couldn't just pretend anymore. And this is the journey of kind of unearthing why we have been running and how we've been running and how to stop. Yeah, what are some of the ways you think we're not even away. You have a chapter in the book called you Know, like Why We run Away, and it's like, what are some of those hidden ways of running away that you think stay with us? Because I almost feel like there's the obvious ways we know we run away, then there's the middle, like in between hidden ones where we kind of convince ourselves that we're not running away, and then finally we raised our hands as you said, and say I'm ready to level up. Yeah, what are some of those hidden, confusing places where we're running away or excuses that happen that block us. I'm going to come out straight with it. Jay, What we're running from, first and foremost is we're running from trauma period, end of story. And that word has such a loaded stigma around it, and I'm just wanting to bust through that now because we are all traumatized. You can't be alive in this world right now, at this time, or even decades ago without experiencing trauma in some form. And like I said, some of us may have been brought up with totally secure attachment, so much resilience, so much grace in our life, and we've experienced trauma, but maybe you're able to move through it with more ease because you had that safe, secure experience. But it doesn't mean that it's you're unscathed. It doesn't mean that you have missed, you know, the life's lessons. Because even the subtle moments in time someone tells you you're stupid you're six years old, right, or you were in the best of environments growing up but you were fat shamed by a friend. Those tiny moments that are seemingly insignificant dictate the rest of our lives. And so that's what we're running from. The bigger T the trauma, as you mentioned, you know, well, actually we haven't gotten there yet, but I reveal a really big T trauma that I had remembered in when I was thirty six years old. The bigger the teeth, the trauma, child abuse or living with an alcoholic parent, whatever it might be. But regardless of how big or small the tea is, there is something that needs to be undone because ultimately that's what we're running from. And how are we running. We're running with drugs, we're running with alcohol, we're running with food, we're running with judgment, we're running with work, we're running with rage, we're running with control, and these all the list that I just identified or protector parts of us. So let me just simplify it even more. I am now trained in internal family systems therapy, and the simplification of this is that we have these moments in time where we disembody, we've been experienced some kind of trauma, We check out, and then we say, oh, I never want to feel that shame. I never want to feel that terror again. We just lock it up and those are called exiled parts of us, they're often young parts, and then we build up all these ways of protecting ourselves. And that's the control, that's the drugs, that's the addiction, that's the workaholism, whatever it might be, to protect ourselves from ever experiencing that pain again. We all have exiles and we all have protectors, and this journey that we need to go on is to really relax those protector parts so that they can remember that there is a source of love and an internal parent within us that can take care of us. It's incredible, isn't it that. Well you're saying, are these protector parts are actually causing us more pain? Yeah? So we think we're protecting ourselves by running away. So we have this protector part, but that protection is not protection. It's actually deepening the wound. That's correct. But it looks and fields and sounds like protection. I mean, so we can do a lot of people lately who are saying to me, Jay, I am too sensitive and empathetic towards this world, and I don't feel like I belong here. Yeah, right, Like there's this feeling of like I just want a world full of love and kindness, and I don't feel like I belong here. Yeah, it can feel scary to look at the trauma, right, It's scary, like there's a big fear around, whether it's a small tea trauma or a big tea trauma. As you said, it can be really tough. And you said after doing so much of this work thirty six six years ago, was when you were able to look at it. What do you think blocked you up until that point from looking at it even though you were doing so much work, Or how did your work that you were doing actually open that up as well? Both? Yeah, well, dissociation. So similar to what your friends are saying, it's like it's too scary to live in this world, and so you know what, often one of the great protector parts is to dissociate, to check out, to even meditate above right, to just try to in some way numb that out. And for me, I at thirty six, in a dream, remembered sexual abuse from my childhood, and I had such a huge aha moment when that dream surfaced, because this is why I was a cocaine addict, this is why I was an alcoholic, this is why I was a workaholic, this is why I was controlling the shit out of everything in my life. So there was relief in knowing, Okay, this is what I've been running from, and it was so extreme in my case that my brain literally just you know, it's a beautiful brain response to say, oh, this is so overwhelming to the system that it's going to be totally checked out and dissociated from. But even if you dissociate from a memory, it still shows up in your body. It still shows up in your gas strown testinal issues, It shows up in your sleep, it shows up in your relationships, it shows up in your addiction. It shows up everywhere. Because you may not have the actual claiming of the memory, but the memory is still in your nervous system. I remembered at thirty six because by that stage I'd already written about I'd been eleven years sober, I'd probably written in books. You know, I'd been really on this very big quest to my own spiritual awakening, and all the work that I had done, everything i'd written about got me to the place where I was safe enough to remember, you know, everything's in the perfect order. There's no accident. I'd done a tremendous amount of spiritual work, a tremendous amount of therapeutic work. I got to a place in my life. Also, this is important to recognize where there was a lot of new things happening around me. So control was one of the ways that I kept that exiled story at Bay. But a lot of things in my life at that time were falling out of control. So I was My husband was leaving his job at JP Morgan to come run our business. We were talking about family planning. We had just gotten married. So these big life moments are often when people do remember traumas, or if it's a trauma that you're aware of, it can really get activated and come to the surface. So just something for the listener to consider and it was so horrific, can so scary to remember that. But the journey that I've underwent since that time is what allows me to put my face on this book cover and have it say the Guided Path from Trauma to profound freedom and inner peace and mean every freaking word of that, and to be able to stand behind that with full integrity, authenticity and power, to be able to say you know what to all these people are so traumatized, everyone so traumatized, and I can say, go do this, And it's a gift to be able to live to tell. Yeah. Absolutely, I really appreciate what you said about being safe enough. Yeah, because I think that when you start this work, it's not that all of it happens at the same level, and it's not that the work looks the same every year. And so when you start doing personal growth, self development, spiritual work, whatever it may be, it's going to look different every single year. New things are going to be unlocked and opened and unearthed. And so I think people can feel comfortable that if they're on the journey, there will be a point at which it's safe enough, in your words, to feel that you can be revealed to that, and I wanted to say something here because I love this dedication. And when you said that about getting married and trauma, you actually dedicate this book to your husband. For my husband, Zach, thank you for loving all of my parts and helping me feel safer than I ever thought possible, which I thought was beautiful. Yeah, you're reading that is like really emotional for me because you know it was a trauma for him to be married to me. And you know, Jay, I opened this book by saying that my publishers came to me and I sent them the manuscript. And these are publishers I worked with for so many years and I'd written books and they would just accept the manuscript. The universe has your back ready, ready to print, you know, super attractor, ready to print. And I send them this manuscript and they write back like we need to talk, and they get on the phone with them and they're like, we're really nervous for you, Gabby, because you're revealing so much and it's one negative story after the next, and we don't think that you're showing your true strength. And my response was my ability to be this vulnerable is my true strength. But it wasn't just them. It was Zach Like, when my husband read this book, he edits my books before they go to the publisher. I have an editor, then it goes to Zach, and then it goes to the publisher. And when he read this, it was really triggering for him, super activating, and there was moments when he would say to me, I didn't even know this was going on. And it's so emotional for me because when you're living in that kind of recovery, in that crisis, there's so much shame wrapped up in it, and especially when you're the self help book author, you know that the shame is so extreme that you feel so alone in the journey. And I just have such a deep gratitude for my husband for holding me in that. I have gratitude for the whole team of therapists that helped me in that, but but particularly for my spiritual connection, because without that I would have been really alone. Yeah, And so that's really what I want this book to do for people, is to help them know they're not alone in this journey, and that we all have a lot that we can look at and gently and slowly and safely begin to peel back the layers or take the bricks off the wall. And uh yeah, but just just hearing you read that acknowledgement out loud and that that that dedication out loud is just it just says a lot about what it means to hold another person in their trauma. The reason why it touched me is because again, I think a lot of listeners, a lot of comments that I see, a lot of story tags that I see, and people that I speak to my personal life. Trauma can break partnerships, yeah, oh yeah, massively. Oh yeah, and we see either people struggling in shared trauma, struggling with the individual trauma being passed over to each other, wounds being shared. Explain to us how someone can hold space for someone during their trauma journey and work and as they're on this path. And actually, more importantly, because you do tell us the guided path from trauma to profound freedom, how do you help someone help you? Yeah? I'm really interested in that, Yeah, because because I find that so often we expect someone else to help us, But how do you help your partner help you rather than expecting them to be a therapist, which is really unrealistic, totally unrealistic. Well, there's a lot of answers to that question. So the best way you can help them help you is to just tell the truth to the best of your ability, so even if it's the trauma that you're facing. Actually, on my podcast, I Workshop People and I dear gavied someone yesterday and she was talking about how this book is bringing up a lot for her and she's starting to face into it and her part just doesn't understand. And I said to her, listen, yeah, And I said, listen, you may not feel safe enough yet to let him in on your full journey or even what you're facing into, but it would be extremely valuable for you to go to him and say, Hey, a lot of stuff is coming up for me right now. It's old stuff from my childhood, and it's really scary for me. And I'm reading this book and I want to assure you I'm doing this really beautiful work on this and I'm committed to maybe seeking out therapy and going deeper, and my intention is to really create a safe environment for myself and for a relationship. But that's the truth of where I'm at right now, and that may be the only truth that you can tell, because it's just too much shame wrapped up and telling exactly what's up. That comment, that truth, that extension of vulnerability, even in that slight way, is extremely soothing to the other partner, because if you just leave them completely in the dark and they don't understand why you are so reactive, they don't understand why you might pick up the drink. They can't understand why, and so giving them a little look behind the why is a very valuable thing. Another thing I recommended to her was to have him read the book because any you know, when you've got unresolved trauma, big TI or small T, the patterns are just textbook Jay, you know what I mean, Like, if you were to look at all of my symptoms, you'd be like, check check check check check check check. I now, having done my research and having studied this and having lived it, I can spot it in humans everywhere. I'm like, big T trauma, SMALLT trauma, big T, big big thing. You know, I can see it. Like I kept asking Zach at times to read this one book that was about women who had lived through childhood abuse, and it was a little bit too much for him. But handing him a book like this, or handing a partner a book like Happy Days, allows the partner to be like, oh wow, this whole story sounds just like my partner, or oh yeah, my partner does that too, and it gives you an insight of like one the opportunity for the traumatized person to say, look, I'm not alone, and then for the partner to recognize, oh, this is a real thing. I think those are great answers. I love both of those. I would highly recommend everyone who's listening and watching, if you're reading Happy Days right now, make sure you share even paragraphs of it. You may take a picture and send it to your partner or to a friend. And of course, if you're not reading it, make sure you grab a copy of the book as you're listening right now, because I do believe that what Gabby's saying is so deeply true that if we have not healed our traumas, we're going to carry them with us into every workplace, relationship scenario. And it just gets harder because that trauma gets tied up in more people's trauma, and then you can't even tell the difference between yours, someone else's, and collective. And so I feel like the earlier we can do this work, the healthier it can be for us. And I love what you just said about the idea of informing someone, hey, this is what I'm going through. This is why this week I might be really irritable and why I'm really struggling this week, I'm going to need your support. And I think I do this with rather often, even about small things where I'm like, of course, really big thing on Thursday, I'm really nervous about it. Like just know that this week every gap I get, I'm going to be super silent because I'm going to be preparing my energy for this thing. That's a small thing of just something coming up instantly. But what about when you're doing something internal? So I love those and I would encourage people to even if someone can't read a book, that you send them screenshots and pictures and it's going to get them moving. And this book does a great job at breaking those areas down. I like that idea too, of being like, hey, read this page, or listen to this one section of the audiobook because or just listen to the conversation between Gabby and Jay, because what it does is it just gives a little insight, and then that also helps you as the reader as the as the person on the journey to take away the shame. There's a chapter in the book actually that's called Speaking the Unspeakable, and it's all about shame. And you know, here I was, Jay, I was thirty six. I was just facing into this. I'm at a retreat, leading the freaking retreat with two other women, and it's a retreat on you know, women facing their trauma and transcending their past. And I'm about six months into my own recovery. So I had no business teaching at that time. But I didn't realize that that's actually, you know, part of some of the vulnerable things I shared in this book that my publishers were like, do you really want to say that? Yes, I have to say at all. So here I was, and I'm teaching that I'm leading this retreat, and so in the other teachers session, I'm sitting in the room doing the workshop with them, and the workshops all about shame. I'm okay, I like, you know, all partner up with somebody, and I'm just like called space for them, right, And here I am in this dialogue about shame. And I realized, at thirty six years old, seven self help books, eleven years of sobriety, you know, deck, you know, over a decade of work on stage speaking about spirituality. And I sit there and I'm like, oh my god, shame. I didn't realize I had it. Wow, it's so buried. It's the most impermissible emotion that it's it is the exiled part. It was so so unsafe. I mean, I was like, of course I'm lovable, of course I'm adequate. I don't have shame, you know, we all do. But it was so buried, so deep that facing into that, you know, is a very gentle process, and so one of so another intention here in this conversation, in this just speaking of trauma, just giving voice to trauma, is to just end the stigma and shift the shame, because that shame is why we don't open up to our partners. That shame is why we don't even open a book like this. Yeah, and that's and that's actually what I was going to say that I think one of the biggest things I hear is, oh, no, I have no true Like, no, I don't. I don't have any shame Like no, no, No, I'm you know, and I've I've even led people I've worked with through inner child meditations and you know work, and they don't allow themselves to go there. Oh yeah. And one of the biggest things I also find is people don't want to go there because they're scared they'll get stuck there. Totally, totally right. And so tell us a bit about that path of opening up something but not getting stuck there. What is the difference between someone who opens up a book like this. Obviously you've given the whole path and it's in here, but I mean, like that difference between someone who opens up a part of themselves then just feels like their whole life is collapsing, versus someone who opens it, has the courage to look at it, but then is able to pass through. What have you noticed of the difference you have to titrate in and out. It's not you cannot when you're dealing with big wounds, big tier SMALLTI. I'm going to keep going back to that because some people listen, they're like, oh, you know, nothing's ever happened to me. And if I were sitting with you right now, I can find thirty things that are that you're running from, you know, or one major thing you're running from so wherever you are on the spectrum, the first thing to really identify is that you can't just rip the band aid off right away, and you have to go slow. And there are plenty of people that I have right now that in my world, girlfriend and dressed recovering from postpartum depression. I'm like, do not read the book right now, you know, put it on the shelf and wait. If someone's opening the book and its super activating to them, the answer could be, you know, go back into your therapy and then use the book when you feel safer. Don't put yourself in a position where you're going to blow out your system with too much digging too fast. Now, with that said, inside this book, I hold you by the hand and I walk you so slowly through these steps over and over again. I say, if this is too much for you, please skip ahead, read the next chapter. Go back to chapter three, the body based work. There's a whole chapter on how to settle your nervous system through body base practices, and that in itself can just be so soothing to someone as they start to open up to the possibility that there's something that they need to face and so through breathwork, through physical somatic work, through body talk, and just even getting in touch with what's going on in your body. There's so much relief, and so it's just a very slow process. I don't think people can just rip the band aid off at once. It's it's not possible. Yeah, I'm glad you said that, because I think a lot of people think they have to or they think that that's the only way. And I was actually gonna talk about that. I love this section on hiding behind the Body, and there's a beautiful quote here that you have that says I came to accept that I didn't have a gut problem, I still had a subconscious emotional problem. Yeah. And this whole chapter for everyone who's reading along or or is going to get the book is quote a hiding behind the body. And that to me was huge because I think today we're all trying to be healthier, hopefully everyone who's listening to this podcast at least I know, is people are changing their diet, they're changing their sleep routine, they're changing the vitamins they take and the supplements they take. But then they're still wondering why things aren't getting worked out. And I think a lot of people who are listening can relate to that, and then you start to recognize that the body is just a window into what's actually sitting behind there. What have you found because you've been researching this, studying this, you give a guided path. What were other useful resources? Yeah, on that journey that you kind of recommend to people in the book to say, hey, check this person out, or think about this idea or area of your work. In that chapter, I really referenced the work of doctor John Sarno, who wrote Healing Back Pain. He wrote The Mind Body Prescription, and all of his work was really based on the premise that our physical conditions are psychosomatic. And by no means in book, in my work, or in his work, was there any reference of don't get that medication or don't go on that therapeutic path physically, whatever it might be, but to really look closely at what are the belief systems and the impermissible feelings that are not being met behind the physical sensations. So for me, in the book, I reference how I had decades of gastro intestinal issues, and what I recognized through my healing journey is that I didn't have gastro intestinal issues. I had unresolved trauma, I had impermissible rage, I'd impermissible terror, I'd impermissible shame. And as I began to become safer in my nervous system, safer in my mind, safer, you know, reprocessing memories, I have zero gastro intestinal issues. I didn't have to change, you know, I did for decades, you know, Cebo diets and this thing, and I had, you know, this supplement and all of that is necessary when you're having acute problems. You need medication, you need vitamins, you need diets to just get back to baseline and for sure, but all of it goes away so many of our So people are like, well, how do I know if I have trauma? And I'm like, well, do you have a sleep disorder? Do you have gastro issues? Do you have TMJ? Do you have so go to the body first. Do you have acne? You know? And then it goes even deeper. Do you have panic attacks? Do you have depression? Do you But the bottom line is is that our body is a first responder, and our body is such a beautiful way to reveal to us what is what is needing to be healed? And in fact, we talked about protector parts. The physical body actually is a form of protection. Right, So we send from the Sarno perspective, we have a nervous system response. Because our traumas are triggered, our body gets tense. We go into that fight flight response. So that tension shows up in the stomach, that tension shows up in the migraine. That tension starts to you know, block oxygen from flowing to these areas. From a gas strown testinal perspective, it stops the GI track from actually you know, moving moving our bowel movement. And then what happens. Bacteria builds up and then you actually do have a real diagnosis of CBO or IBS or whatever. Well, if you actually relax your nervous system, your whole system can start to move. You can have that perfect digestion begin to set up because you're relaxed, and in that relaxed state, your body can heal. And so we have to really look at the psychosomatic effect of our physical the physical conditions from a psychosomatic perspective, that already relaxes my nervous system, going like oh wow, like that's where it is like because I think a lot of people right now are just we're tinkering with so many parts of our life, and then we're wondering, why do I still not feel doing oh yeah, right, like I'm doing everything right. And I've I've been in that position myself where I'm like, I'm doing everything right, why am I still not feeling good? And sometimes it is biological if you're psychologically done some of the work, and then it's the other way around as well. What were you surprised by when you started doing this work. What was one of the big surprises that came along as you started to do the work on yourself that you actually thought, Wow, I didn't expect this, Like I didn't think this was going to happen. Well, I was surprised by the shame. I was like, wow, I have shame that right? That was so strange, Right, I'm like this spiritual teacher. I didn't even recognize my shame. I was a shameful I mean, the shame when you experience sexual abuse in any form, whether you're particularly as a child. This shame is it's my fault. The shame is I'm wrong, And you know, underneath all of this is the belief that we're inadequate and unlovable. My therapist taught me that and I remember her saying that, and at the time, I'm like, I'm very adequate and lovable, Like what the hell are you talking about? You know, decade later, Wow, that is absolutely a core belief that I carried for so long. And another big thing I realized was how my spiritual practice actually really saved me and was the through line of all of the guidance of the work that I was led to. And I in the book reference very spiritual therapeutic practices for trauma. So I reference EMDR, which is I movement to sensitization and reprocessing. It's bilateral brain stimulation that allows you to reprocess memories. I reference se Somatic Experiencing, which is a body based trauma therapy IFS, which I went as far as to get trained in. And IFS is all about the caring for your inner child parts. And these specific therapies are all very spiritual in the clinical space. They may not be referenced in that way, but I can say that right and I can be the spiritual voice for them. And I believe it's spirit that my spirit guides that my connection to God very very very clearly laid out this path for me and not just for me to live it, but also for me to share it. And then I would say one of the biggest surprises though, was when I would meet these different therapeutic practices. Each time I was blown away, I was like, Oh my God, what you know? I was carrying that Oh my god, next level that is so present in my body, Oh my God, you know, and just witnessing and witnessing. And I think that the big one of the biggest surprises also, Jay, is that when you live with trauma, you think that's who you are. You just think I am a workaholic, I am a control freak, and you don't know that there's a way out. And I am so proud. The greatest gift I'll give this world is my bravery to go to the places that scared me and come out the other side so that I can live to tell that this works, that you can survive trauma and that you can thrive. I feel it the confidence in this space, and I also just appreciate how you were able to push back your control parameters and protectors, because, like you said, you've been doing this work for a long time. You've been teaching this work, you're helping people, you're changing people's lives, and then going, well, actually there's another layer. What layer of love was work in the trauma? Like when you said, we have that deep held belief if I'm unlovable and I'm inadequate, inadequate, how do you fall in love with yourself again when you realize that's at the root of it, because really you're not trying to fall in love with yourself before. You're trying to protect and fix. And then all of a sudden, now you sing at this stage, yeah, you return to yeah, exactly. Well, I'm going to answer that from an IFS perspective. When I when I use the acronym IFS, it's internal family systems therapy, and it's not actually about your family, your outside family, about your inner family. So you've got your exiled parts of you, and you've got your protector parts of you, and then we all have self, your language. You might call it higher self or God or the universe. And I did that as well for many years inner guidance and self is self with a capital S. And what self is the internal parent, it's the undamaged, resourced part of who we are. It's the man that I'm sitting with here right now. You show up to your podcast in self, and that's actually why it's so resonant with people because they feel that there's no ego attached to it. There's no You're not showing up with like a presence of neediness or anything. You're showing up. This is me, this is what I'm here to do. I'm on my mission. But when your wife triggers you, your protector parts might show up and you might start to get into an extreme pattern. And that's for all of us. So we all have access to this undamaged resource part of who we are self qualities or courage, compassion, calmness, creativity, curiosity, connectedness, And when we are in that presence of self, like you and I are here right now, anything's possible. I could say to you right now, something really difficult for you to hear, but you would hear it with love because I'm grounded in that self energy. And so the main way to fall back in love with yourself is to let self become the leader of your inner system. So it's not like we want to control or push down or manage these protector parts of ourselves. There's no bad parts. We just want to help them be less extreme and how we want to let them know that there's an internal parent. Let me give you a really clear example. Okay, so I let's say something triggered me last week. I was like in a conversation with some friends and I was like, oh my god, they don't like me, like an old exiled part was there. And when the exiled part comes up, you don't want to feel it, right, So then one of my protectors tries to numb it out. And the protector is the judger in that case, like, well they're wrong, right, And I go into like all the reasons they're wrong because I don't want to feel that shame. And then I'm like, well, oh my god, no I'm wrong because you know, so we attack others, we attack ourselves, and so those are protector parts and the judge somebody has to be wrong, right. So the judger was there to protect me from feeling that impermissible feeling. And then because I have this great through line to self, I was able to notice, Okay, I notice there's a protector up. Okay, notice where do I feel that in my body. Notice is it? Does it have a color? Does it have a shape? Is there is there something that it wants to say to me? What do I know about it? Okay, I know it's young. I know it's a young girl who you know, doesn't feel like she is understood in high school right And I know that she's just wanting to blame others because because she's so scared, and what does she need right now? She needs a hug, she needs to breathe, and I can let her actually speak to me and I can listen to that part, and then I can give her what she needs. And so it's literally a practice of becoming your own internal parent, creating the secure attachment that we did not get from our parents ourselves. And there's no greater form of self love than letting self with a capitalis lead your entire system. And you have to see the thing here at Jay's. I didn't shame that part. I wasn't like, oh that judger is there, or that young child parts showing up like you're a loser. I actually really got curious about it. I was compassionate toward it. I brought a calm energy to it. And so the goal here really is to begin to soften and relax the protectors because frankly, Jay, you know the protectors are not bad, right, Like the controller wrote nine books in eleven years. You know she did a job, so, but we just want her to be less extreme, yes, and so she can keep producing and keep creating, but not in that extreme way. It's a lot of density. In chapter seven of the book, I go deep into ifs, but I want to just reiterate for the listener, notice no need. Note in the moment when you can, if you have enough awareness to notice that you're triggered, notice it in your body. Does it feel like is their color? Is there a shape? What do you know about it? And then what does it need? And give yourself a moment to try that out. Even though there's so much depth to it, I felt that was very clear because I think that's what we're ultimately avoiding, is accepting that we have an inner child need. That's right, right, It's like, that's ultimately what we're running away from is that we do have a gap internally and it isn't going to be solved through something in the external world. It's not going to be solved through someone saying something to us in a nice way, or someone changing right, well, right, like it's yeah, like my husband changing his tone is never going to heal my wounds. Right, It may make a create a world where I'm less activated less frequently, but like someone else's behavior cannot change your reactivity, and that doesn't mean the other person shouldn't show up as well. But like you have to be your internal parent, your partner can't be your parent. Frankly, in any ways, your parent can't parent you back to that you know you, especially if a you know, forty two years old or whatever it is, as a little child, the expectation is you'll have that, but most don't. That's so powerful because I think most of us what we're yearning for is to live in a less deactivated state. So ideally what we want is if everyone was just nicer and kinder, then things would just feel better, right, But the reality is that not everyone's just going to be nicer and kinder. And if we can be in the environment, that's beautiful. It's a great environment to grow in. But what you just said was so brilliant. You were like, you know, if my husband changing his tone is not going to solve the wound. And I think that that's why the path that you just laid out is fantastic, because we're constantly checking in with everyone else's needs. We're trying to be pleasing to other people's needs. I don't know the last time most people if we're honest with ourselves, and I want everyone who's listening to truly be honest with yourself. When was the last time you checked in with yourself? And not just yourself? You're in a child self, the youngest self is Gabby was saying and said, what do you need? I just I mean even me, I'm listening, I'm going remember the last time I did that for myself. And the distinction here too is that you're asking the protector part what it is because the exiled parts are really locked up Jay, like they're locked in a basement, and to start to touch into the exiles, I would recommend doing that with IFS therapy. Like with an IFS therapist, you can learn more about it. I do an interview with Dick Schwartz on my podcast, and then obviously in this chapter there's a whole dialogue about IFS and we can get some resources links as well. In the show notes, but more importantly that you would go through that deeper exiled child part journey with a trained therapist, particularly in this system, but that you right now, right here can start to just be a parent to those protector parts. And that's the first step, because the protectors are really the ones that you can see the child activated, but the protector switched right in. The protectors like oh I'm gonna lock that door, like there's a little activation, No thank you. I'm gonna put that fire out by picking up a drink. I'm going to put that fire out by raging, you know. And so you want to work with the alcoholic, you want to work with the rager. And then where you softened your relationship to those protector parts, the closer you can get to the exile, Yeah, because the protectors are their first responders, like, no way, you're not going to get behind that door, and so you have to start to soften those relationships. That's good. That's a good distinction for me because I was Yeah, I think my space was still with the exiled pot. As you said, for a lot of people, those maybe too locked up. Yeah, and for some it's less. So you know, for some for some people that have done a lot of personal growth work. Like if you and I were to do a session in IFS right now, we could get to your child parts and you'd be very safe there. You've done a lot of work, You've got you're safe in your system. We could go to an exile, but I would never like the average person that hasn't done a lot of personal growth work. It's not it's not safe to go. Yeah. Yeah, that's without the therapy. Yeah yes, yeah, absolutely, And that's a great distinction to make again that we don't want people going off and trying to do something that isn't going to serve them. Yeah. You talk a lot about you know in the book that I think one of the last chapters or the last chapters love every part. And I think just as we believe we're unlovable and inadequate, we somehow believe that that's not possible. Right somewhere inside of us, there's a belief that it's actually not possible to be happy or to love ourselves like it just exists there somewhere. Do we develop a belief that it exists before we find it, or do we start looking for it and find it along the way. I was looking for it and found it along the way. And I remember being in the early stages of remembering the trauma and waking up super depressed, waking up so down, so scared, not totally disembodied for months. When you actually remember see to trauma, you kind of go back into it. So you're living in terror, like everything is just danger. And I was just like, there's no way out, but I was so committed. And so I think the most important message is it's not about getting out overnight. In AA, when you get sober, they say I wish you a slow recovery, because that means that you're doing the work that he means that you're going under the surface and peeling back the layers. And so the same goes add addiction really is a root cause is trauma period, So it's really going back low, slowly into the trauma. And so I would say that to the person that's recognizing trauma, is I wish you a slow recovery, meaning that every small layer that you peel back is a miracle. And the more you add up those miracle moments, the closer you get to living a miraculous life. So you can celebrate your successes along the way. So for today, maybe you pick up Happy Days and you just read the first chapter. That's a success story. Maybe you just listen to this podcast episode again, that's another layer. Maybe you practice one of the breath practices in the book. That's another layer. And it's it's a very very gentle process, and you have to be fully celebrating every step of the journey. Am I done, Jay, I'm not done. I still go to therapy every Wednesday. I still have sometimes two additional sessions a month. I still am deep in EMDR. I'm still doing my own ifs on myself. I'm going to be going forever just shining the crystal. Yeah, and so, but there is really freedom on the other side. There really is. Well that's that presence again, right in being present in the process, as you just said. But I think that's what's so hard right now is that because of the way the world's going, everything's become more instant, more fast, fast recovery, quick fix. And I mean that's always been the way, but it's become more and more and more and more and more. And then when you're being asked to do slow recovery and the real work, which is what we know genuinely has the reward during and at the end of the journey. I find that that collision is so hard for people because they wake up with resistance again. So it's like, just when you had that moment when you felt you had a breakthrough, you wake up the next morning and the resistance is fully back. Yeah. That's actually why I think it's valuable to build up your toolbox of self regulating techniques, and they're in here. And the reason that's valuable is that you can still feel relief along the way. You can still have fun along the way. Yeah, it's not postponing the journey yet. You've known me for six years. Six years ago, I was like totally in a very different nervous system than I am now. But I still had fun, you know, I still could be with you and just have a great time. And it was a different kind of fun, and it was a different kind of experience because I wasn't in the presence that I'm in now. But it's not like you can't live your life and have joy along the way these especially if you're on the journey. That's why it's called a spiritual path or a spiritual journey. If you're on the path and the journey, every step of it's an up leveling and so and especially if you have this arsenal of these self regulating tools. Okay, I can be going through some big stuff, I can be slowly getting sober, I can be slowly recovering from trauma. It can be slowly going through therapy. But at the same time, have these amazing meditations, have these amazing breath practices that soothe me, have these great breakthroughs in my therapy or in my relationship, and just celebrate those miracles along the way. Tell me how you think about trauma differently as being a mom. Oh dude, if you've got unhealed trauma and you are about to become a parent, particularly, I would say for both parents, but particularly a mother that's going to carry a baby and deliver a baby in the first early days, be the food for the baby and the whole thing. You want to do this work, because if you don't know, what will have You know, even if you do or you don't, doesn't matter, it'll all come flooding in. In my case, not only did them flooded, but I also was hit with really terrible postpartum depression, suicidal postpartum depression. I write about it in the book because it actually often if you have unresolved trauma can be very activating. Even with the biochemical condition to postpartum, it just can take it to the next level. So for me, my having my son was one of the biggest trauma responses I've experienced in my life was postpartum. That's a beautiful blessing because when you make the commitment to have a child, you are having to ask yourself two questions, am I going to do this the way it was done for me? Or am I going to show up big time? And how do you show up? You show up for yourself, because the more you reparent yourself, the clearer the path to parenting your child. There's a chapter in this book called Reparenting Yourself. It's all here, it's just it's almost a joke, and it's a chapter called reparenting Yourself where in early twenty twenty, I'm like, you know, running my business like everyone's in this storm. My kid's home. He's two years old, he's not napping twice a day, and me and Zac are the only ones with him at that time. Because everybody's home. And I went diving deep into the parenting books, particularly Dan Siegel's work, and he has a lot of methods and one of them I loved the four US is seen, Soothed, Safe, Secure, And I started applying this with my kid, and I was making sure I was really seeing him and soothing him, not just physically, but like really energetically and creating a safe environment, not just that he won't fall over on the you know, but a safe energetically and that creates a secure attachment bond. Now I was looking at this experience with Oliver, and I was like, no one ever did this for me, you know. I was like, why can't I do this for myself? And so I wrote a whole chapter I I did it for myself, and I wrote about it. And so the best parenting advice I have is to do the work on yourself. Yeah. Yeah, this is a parenting book as much as it is because it's reparenting yourself to be a better parent. Yes, yeah, absolutely. And with that, I mean it's again the shame again, right, like from the mothers that I know well who are open and honest with me. If you go through that post giving birth it's like there's shame and guilt in that because yeah, because it impacts. So it's again another opportunity to choose shame and guilt. And then you don't tell anyone because as a mum mum, guilt is even harder to share. What did you do in that period? I mean obviously doing all of this work, but what did you specifically do to move through that? So here I was now at that stage, had published maybe a seven or eight eight books something like this, And you know, I'm just sort of showing the world of where I was a self help book author, very entrenched in the wellness space, brought up homeopathic, really believing in natural medication medicine, never had fulfilled the prescription at a pharmacy, and in many ways probably was a part of the stigma around mental health because I would be in my audiences and people would say to me, like, I'm depressed, and I tried this meditation. I didn't realize if you're having a biochemical condition, it doesn't work if you're having a biochemical condition. And so I was having a biochemical condition but not fully giving it voice. And I got to the point where I was having insomnia. I had insomnia for four months, and when you don't sleep, you get extraordinarily depressed, and for me it became suicidal. I opened the chapter talking about how I'm driving to Mother's day brunch and in the backseat with my son and under my breath they say, I want to kill myself. And so that's where I was at, and I did not get help for four months, maybe longer. I was undiagnosed because of the stigma and the shame of what mental illness is. And you know, we have to really begin to look at the shame and the stigma around it. And so for me in my experience here, I was in this wellness world, and you know, finding that ashwaganda wasn't going to be the answer, and melatonin wasn't going to be the answer. Alfhionine for my stomach wasn't going to be the answer. And even in the therapy, the therapeutic tools were no longer working, the meditation was no longer working, and finally I hit a massive bottom. Just four months of not sleeping, I actually missed a talk live talk. It was the first time in over a decade that I didn't show up because I hadn't slept the night before. And then I finally reached out to a friend who was a psychiatrist and I said I need help, and he put me in touch with a postpartum psychiatrist. I saw her the next day. She diagnosed me within ten minutes. She said, you have postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety. You have to get medicated. And she saw all that resistance in me, and she looked at me and these were the words that helped me. She said, this medication will give you a safer baseline so that you can do the deeper trauma work. And those words just punctured me. I just heard everything she said and I said, okay, all right, I'll do it. And I took that prescription and I went down to the pharmacy and I stood in the pharmacy with my husband. I was like, what do I do. I don't even know what to do. I've never even felled the prescriptions like you hand it to the pharmacist. And I held that medication in my hand and the placebo effect is set right in, and I was like, there is a way out of this. And I was having a biochemical condition. You can't mess with that. You cannot meditate your way out of that. And so here I am now you know a voice for really ending the stigma around mental illness. If you have a proper diagnosis from a psychiatric from a psychiatrist, and you have that psychiatric support, there is no shame in following the medicated path. Yes, of course, we live in a culture when medication is overly prescribed and unnecessarily prescribed, and there are a lot of things you have to know and educate yourself on when you get on psychiatric medication. But when you need it, you need it to survive, and it is and it is exactly what she said that medication created a safer baseline in my system so I could unearth the deepest, deepest wounds and come out the other side. Gave thank you so much for shedding your soul in this book in this episode. And what I love about this book is that it has your story and your journey. It has really practical tips and steps for people to actually follow, and it has these real methodologies and approaches to guide them as well. And I think it's masterful in the way it's kind of like the tapestry of all of that together. And I think what underpins it is just your ability to go all the way and beast of vulnerable as you have been today in today's episode, but it also in the book. And so if anyone who's listening, if you know for a long time you've been shying away, you've been protecting yourself, you've been putting it off, postponing it, you know it's there. Maybe physical response is really triggering right now, maybe something that someone says is pushing you over the edge. Then please go and grab a copy of Happy Days Today. The link is in the comment section and everywhere else, and make sure you follow Gabby. A podcast is called Deer Gabby. Go and listen and subscribe to the podcast. You can also follow Gabby on social media across all platforms. Gabby Bernstein. Make sure you go and do that. Gabby, I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for taking other time to do this, because I think You've made me ask so many questions that I'm going to go back to after this episode. I'm like, what do I need to take a deeper look at? What have I really not work through or what am I avoiding or ignoring or putting off? And I'm just grateful for that. I'm really grateful that you've given me the space to do that, given us all the path to do that through this book. Thank you for your presence and for seeing me even when I couldn't see myself. And it's such a privilege to be your friend. Thank you, Thank you, Gabby. Thank you so much. Everyone who's been listening and watching, make sure you tag me and Gabby on your post so that we know what resonated with you, what connected with you. I just want to point out that a lot of my guests have said this to me recently. It makes me very happy. Our unpurposed community is amazing, and I've been getting messages and speaking to a lot of my friends who've been on the show saying that they just felt the love, like the flood of love from our community. So please show that a Gabby as well. Thank you for doing that for all the other guests before. I wanted you to know that I've been hearing about you personally from so many people and let's start living some happy days. So take care everyone. Thank you so much for listening.