The Let Them Theory - Why You Feel More Stress Than You Should...


The Inner Wiring That Keeps You Stressed

Hi Reader,

💡 Today's Niblit: In The Let Them Theory, author Mel Robbins explains why your brain naturally resists letting go of control over others. Understanding this biological drive is the first step to breaking free from unnecessary stress and anxiety.

🔑 Key Insight: Your brain craves security and predictability, which is why losing control over people or situations triggers stress responses. When others don't behave as you expect, your ingrained survival systems activate, flooding your body with stress hormones even though no real danger exists.

Imagine your brain as a security guard who's been trained to watch for threats. When your teenage daughter chooses friends you don't approve of, or your spouse loads the dishwasher "wrong," that guard starts frantically pressing alarm buttons. The problem is, this security system was designed for life-or-death situations, not for managing disappointment about someone's different approach to life.

Why does this matter? Studies show that people who practice acceptance have measurably lower cortisol levels and experience less anxiety. When you understand that your stress often comes from resisting reality rather than actual problems, you can begin to retrain your brain's response patterns and find genuine peace.

🦉 Nibble of Wisdom: "Stress often arises from the resistance to accept what is rather than trying to change it." (Chapter 3)

🛠️ Practical Tip: Before reacting to someone's behavior, pause and ask yourself: "Is this mine to control?" This simple question helps distinguish between real problems requiring action and preferences that trigger unnecessary stress.

🚀 Quick Action: Set a phone reminder for three random times today. When it goes off, notice what you're thinking about. If you're mentally trying to change someone else's behavior, take three deep breaths and say, "Let Them." Track how this affects your stress levels.

🔍 Further Exploration:

  • Notice the physical sensations that arise when you feel the urge to control someone else — tight chest, clenched jaw, racing thoughts.
  • Consider how much mental energy you'd have for your own goals if you stopped monitoring and managing others' choices.
  • Explore the concept of psychological reactance — why people often resist even harder when they feel controlled, making your efforts counterproductive.

🎬 Wrapup: Remember, your stress isn't always about what's happening, oftentimes it's about your resistance to what's happening. By understanding your brain's control-seeking patterns, you can choose peace over pressure and focus on what truly deserves your attention.

🔗 Links:

Rewiring with you,

Tom "still debugging my stress-trigger control circuits" Bernthal


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