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Chasing Life

Is there a science to being happy? Does our brain chemistry, or even our genetics, determine how we feel about our lives? Can we learn to become even happier? While happiness may look different for everyone, and can at times feel impossible to achieve, we know it’s an emotion that can be crucial to both your physical and mental health. So in this season of Chasing Life, Dr. Sanjay Gupta is setting out to better understand happiness and what the science tells us about the best ways to achieve it.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta

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Want to be Happier? Confidence Can Help
Chasing Life
Jul 9, 2024

Trying new things. Setting Goals. Rebounding from setbacks.  All of these tasks have at least one thing in common – they require confidence. And according to neuropsychologist Ian Robertson, confidence can also make us happier. Robertson is the T Boone Pickens Distinguished Chair at the Center for BrainHealth, UT Dallas, an Emeritus Professor at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, and author of How Confidence Works: The New Science of Self Belief. He and Dr. Sanjay Gupta discuss how confidence might be the most important resource for well-being and why imposter syndrome isn’t such a bad thing. 

Episode Transcript
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:00:02
I want you to think about something. When was the last time you really took a leap? Maybe outside your comfort zone. When you did something that scared you and then you crushed it. You know, you gave that speech, you started that project, you talked to that person. How did that make you feel? My next guest says experiences like these, where we take a risk and then successfully accomplish something, not only take a bit of confidence, but they also help us build even more confidence and importantly, make us happier.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:00:36
Confidence is a bridge over uncertainty. The future is always uncertain, but confidence allows you to price in uncertainty, to to be able to handle uncertainty and the possibility of failure.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:00:50
'That's Ian Robertson. He's a neuropsychologist. He works with Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, as well as the center for Brain Health at the University of Texas at Dallas. He is author of "How Confidence Works: The New Science of Self-Belief." His basic premise is this: even accomplishing small tasks help us to build confidence; help us to feel successful.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:01:15
The greatest source of success is success. And success, like confidence, acts like compound interest. It's exponential. A little bit grows steadily, because of the the the mathematics of confidence, if you like, the mathematics of success.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:01:31
But Ian will acknowledge that getting those wins, building that confidence, it's not always easy. He has been studying psychology in the brain for decades. He's published books and articles. He has a reputation as a renowned neuroscientist, but he still remembers times when even his confidence was low.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:01:50
When I started off, I was a working class guy living in what we call council houses in Glasgow and, very, you know, quite low confidence. I mean, when I was about to speak, I felt very anxious, partly because of a very working class accent. And there was one particular person in the class who'd come from Oxford, and I was always felt rather intimidated in his presence and all that. And then, there was one seminar and he said something, and I realized that I was as smart as him. And, it just changed my belief in what I could contribute intellectually.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:02:29
'Ian says he learned a really important lesson from this -- that you can look confident even when you feel differently. And conversely, you can be really good at something and not feel confident about it.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:02:42
And it turns out this guy was a lovely guy, very nice. There was nothing wrong with him. It's just he had all the external trappings of confidence. Actually, inside, he was as uncertain about himself as I was. And there was, it was actually seeing through that and then realizing, oh, actually, I can do that.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:03:00
Ian does credit a lot of his success to hard work and a chance. But that experience with that classmate, it's so relatable. I mean, who hasn't felt a little intimidated by someone who appeared to be smarter than you, better looking, more skilled or sophisticated, whatever the measure may be. So I wanted to speak to Ian to understand confidence. I wanted to know what its impact on health could be. I wanted to understand what its impact on happiness could be. But I also really wanted to know this. Is confidence innate? Is it fixed? Is it something you are more or less born with? Or how much we could possibly develop it over time? And is there any value in that old saying: fake it til you make it? I'm Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's Chief Medical Correspondent, and this is Chasing Life.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:03:58
I have so many questions for you. I've been really looking forward to this, but I want to make sure we set the table correctly on this conversation. And, you know, I thought I thought a lot about confidence going into this, this discussion with you. And I think, for example, in the operating room, I can tell when one of my residents who I'm training in neurosurgery is confident, and if I had to dissect why they are confident, like what's giving them their confidence, almost always it is their level of preparation. Whereas at the same time, somebody who's not confident, it's almost always I can probe pretty quickly and find out that they did not prepare as well. So I, I guess that's talking about some of how to get confidence. But I'm curious, even before we get there, how do you define confidence?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:04:48
'Well, confidence is a belief with two strands to it. It's the belief you can do something. And it's the belief that if you do that thing, you will get a reward or get an outcome you desire. And that leads to four states of the mind or brain. Can't do, can't happen, which is apathy, where you see lower tonic dopamine activity in people who are apathetic. And, that means in that state, your mood is lower or your anxiety is higher; your your motivation is low and your ability to simply initiate is reduced. And then bottom right of this four squares, if you can visualize them as can do, can happen. And that is confidence. Believing you can do something, for instance, some difficult neurosurgery that you maybe haven't done very much before. The belief you can do that actually, your brain treats as if you had had done it. So anticipating a success generates a response that you would get to an actual success that increases dopamine activity a little bit in your brain, that lifts your mood, lowers your anxiety, and therefore lowers norepinephrine levels, and therefore you get less likelihood of interference with your dexterity or your performance because of high norepinephrine. It also makes you better able to initiate to take action. You're more motivated. And finally, you're a little bit smarter because of the increased dopamine levels in the prefrontal cortex. And therefore it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. And so you actually then do the thing and you're more likely to succeed.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:06:40
'I want to pause here for a second because it's important to spotlight a couple of points. As Ian mentioned, there are four states of the mind connected to confidence. Think of a two-by-two grid. In the top left is apathy, where we feel like we can't do something, and even if we were to do it, it wouldn't result in our desired outcome anyway. In the bottom right hand box is confidence. That's the belief we can do something that would actually result in the desired outcome. The other two states include anger. That's the feeling that we can do something, but even if we did it, we would not get our desired outcome. And the last is anxiety, which is what we experience when we can't do something that would lead to our desired outcome. For Ian, probably for most of us, the ideal state is confidence, which at its core is the belief you can do something and that that something is going to get you a desired reward. Maybe a new job, a new skill, a new relationship. Now, Ian says that the same brain system is activated both when we have confidence we can do something and when we actually accomplish it. So both -- having the belief and doing the thing leave us with the lifted mood, lowered anxiety, sharper thinking all of which makes it more likely we are going to succeed. It is a self-perpetuating upward cycle.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:08:08
Confidence is a bridge over uncertainty. The future is always uncertain, but confidence allows you to price in uncertainty, to to be able to handle uncertainty and the possibility of failure. But the chances are you will be successful, in which case you get the double whammy of all the brain responses to actual success, particularly success in something that was slightly stretching your skills of your abilities. And yes, I can believe you completely, Sanjay, that the more confident of your in terms of the ones who have done the preparation. Now, there's still going to be a little bit anxious. But because they have they've created a goal that's more proximal to their actual abilities, they're more likely to do it successfully.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:08:58
That that is fascinating. The idea of confidence being something that can be calming, something that can help you initiate the activity so you're not just, you know, paralyzed and can actually, as you say, make you a little bit smarter because you have that dopamine surge potentially as well. That's really interesting. Is it is it fair to say that if you're lacking confidence, it's the opposite of those things?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:09:24
'Yes. It is. If you if you lack confidence, if you don't think you can do that thing, then that will generate anxiety because of the prospect of failure. You know, the greatest source of anxiety is the fear of the negative evaluation of other people. And almost all anxiety has to do with other people. And that that increase norepinephrine disrupts the fluid synchronization of different brain regions that are critical for elite performance and so interferes with them. And so you get it becomes a reverse, a self-fulfilling prophecy also, but in reverse. It, you know, you you doubt you can do it, and therefore that makes you less likely to be able to do it. Confidence, it is probably the most important resource in human well-being and human performance, I believe of course.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:10:19
Well, you are in a position to be able to say these things though. Leaving aside the point that we agree on, which is that preparation is probably going to be a criteria for confidence. How much, just overall, would you say confidence is nature versus nurture?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:10:36
'We can never determine an exact percentage because it depends on the base population we're dealing with it. So my rule of thumb is for most things let's say it's 50/50. But the thing is, like most of these genetically determined temperamental differences, they're hugely shaped very early on by the environment, by how people respond to them. So there's an even even these basic tendencies towards being dominant, for example, or being confident they can be shaped out of a person very early on, depending on the family responses to them. And similarly, someone who's timid and withdrawn can have their confidence shaped and strengthened very much by depending on the the family and the environment and the experiences that that child has. So, for instance, if you take two five-year-old girls, equally intelligent, equally capable, but one of them slightly more confident than the other. That slight difference in confidence would mean that that little girl is more likely to try something new. Tiny thing. Ask a question less frightened to make a mistake, and that will result more likely in a small success. That means she's then more likely to to do the next step. And by the time these two girls are 25, there's a yawning gap in their achievement.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:12:03
Fascinating.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:12:03
'And their well-being. Because of the the exponential nature of the mathematics of confidence.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:12:09
That is really interesting. And I think anybody who's listening that has kids in particular can immediately sort of try to envision that the, the, the benefits of confidence, at any age, but certainly at a very young age. To me, confidence seems to be something that you get because of x, y, z. Because you have put in the hours of training. Because you have studied harder; because you have practiced harder. Therefore you can be confidence. But it sounds like what you're saying, professor, is in and of itself, confidence can be a benefit just to be a confident person.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:12:46
Yes, yes. Partly because confidence will make you more likely to do these things that you've just alluded to.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:12:54
Right.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:12:54
'The confidence that you can learn a musical instrument, for instance. Will mean that you will be less likely to give up and say, I'm not musical. When you have that bad practice session where the sounds are awful. The ups and downs of learning - confidence helps you bridge the downs, where you think, oh, I'm just not good at this. These are, these are what I call the "big-I-thoughts" of the fixed mindset, which can sabotage your ability to to persist through setbacks and failure. So yes, preparation practice putting in the 10,000 hours that build skills. But it's also a it's a set of habits. And it can be learned. This belief that you can do this thing and that there will be a benefit from doing this. There's a lot of people who are superficially so confident in you think, how can they possibly, the anxious or feel like an imposter? But actually, if you're not sometimes feeling like an imposter, then you're maybe developing an unhealthy relationship to confidence.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:14:01
So, so very confident people who don't have an unhealthy relationship with confidence may at times suffer from imposter syndrome?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:14:11
Well, put it this way. I don't want to have anyone leading me who doesn't sometimes feel like an imposter. Because that's evidence that you're not taking yourself 100% too seriously. You're not overvaluing your own ego and your own abilities, attributing everything to some special quality of yourself, as opposed to realizing who we are and what we achieve is a result of many factors. Most of many of them we don't have a lot of control over. And successful business people know that failure is a stepping stone to success often, and you have to be able to to to ride these failures and accept them and not take all the credit for the successes you have, because there's a huge amount of luck in that.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:15:01
How would you, how would you describe the connection between confidence and happiness?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:15:08
'Very, very strong. You know, to take a slight sidebar. We know those are very inexorable relationship between socioeconomic status and well-being and happiness. You know, the the wealthier you tend to be, the happier you tend to be. There are limits to that at the upper ends, but it goes quite far up. And so that means if you're, if you're poor and or low down the socioeconomic scale and you can see changes in the brain associated with that. Your your tend to be sicker; you have lower wellbeing. However, there's one fascinating factor that almost gets rid of that relationship and that is having a sense of control. So people, no matter the socioeconomic status, if people have a high sense of personal control over their own immediate lives, a feeling the the opposite of apathy, then you don't get that same linear relationship between socioeconomic status and well-being and happiness. And that's because control gives you agency, and agency is is linked to the confidence that is the most amazing antidote against the corrosion of, of poverty and of of misfortune and of trauma. So that's why control and confidence are really critical in happiness.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:16:42
After the break, Ian's going to explain the science behind "faking it till we make it," and why he thinks most of us are a little overconfident. We'll be right back.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:16:58
'This may surprise you, I'm not sure, but I'm in my mid-fifties now, and I feel that you know, as you learn more in life, I feel you also are become acutely aware of how much you still don't know. The more you know, the more you realize you don't. And that's not directly related to confidence, but I think there is some connective tissue there. Like I'm I think I'm a pretty confident person. I think, you know, you have to be to do what the sort of work probably that you do and that I do. But but I also I think in some ways there's a humility that has grown. And I don't know that humility is the opposite of confidence, but I think I'm more humble and maybe less confident, more willing to to espouse other points of view now, maybe even than I was when I was younger.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:17:47
'Sanjay, I call that mature confidence. It's what, as we get older, we should aspire to. We should become less attached to our egos as we get older, not more attached. It becomes less of a threat to our self-concept if we make a mistake or we don't know something.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:18:09
Right.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:18:09
And, no human being, particularly now with the rise of artificial intelligence, no human being can know a fraction of what is, what is known. We don't have to engage in this struggle to feel as if we are the great, the great person who is the originator of everything, which is the real trap of too much success. Because confidence is so powerful an agent. And that is because confidence makes you persuasive. And if you can persuade other people, then you will, you will achieve great successes because you get people to do things for you. And that can that persuasive, persuasive quality of confidence can often not be backed up by by real abilities. Because in many areas of, of life, for example, neurosurgery, you have to be confident, but you know, your surgery either succeeds or fails. So there's a tangible, objective evidence of that. So it's it's it's much less easy to benefit, if you like, from the swagger of overconfidence in neurosurgery or in mathematics than it is in many domains of life, from politics to to salesmanship to, to to all sorts of domains of, of areas where the fact that you're, you're confident makes people listen to you and you're more likely to do what you ask. And it gives you status. And even if your lack of knowledge is subsequently revealed. It doesn't take away from the status. It sticks. That's what the research shows.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:19:48
So even again, aside from mathematics or certain scientific disciplines where there's clearly, right versus wrong, it sounds like in most places in our society, being a confident person is going to be an attribute regardless.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:20:06
'Absolutely. And if you're not depressed, we're all slightly overconfident. That is, we slightly overestimate our chances of winning -- the lottery, for example. So the whole gambling industry is based on the fact that most people are slightly overconfident, and we're overconfident in our ability to to to be free from the diseases and things like that. And that that's not a bad thing unless it becomes too great. But what it does, it gets us up in the morning. I mean, no person would start a new startup company if they weren't overconfident. Because most startups fail. Financially, it's always better to be employed than to engage in the the absolute terri-, terrible difficulties of starting up a company. Yet people do it and they have great some successes, some of them. So overconfidence is a valuable resource and and it's this two edged sword however, because I would say that all confidence starts off as false.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:21:16
Very interesting.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:21:18
I'm trying to imagine the first time you cut into someone's brain, Sanjay. I mean, I cannot imagine what that's like to do that. And I can't imagine that there wasn't a part of you saying, oh my goodness, am I really doing this? Can I do this? I don't know, you tell me.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:21:38
Well, you know, in that particular scenario, it's interesting, professor, because I think you've trained for a long time. So in some ways the, the, the similarities are maybe more similar to athletics than it is to some sort of huge intellectual pursuit. You know, it's just so much muscle memory and so many things that you've just done over and over again. And I do think the second part of it is that there is this, this humility to it in the sense that you if you start to ponder all the ramifications of what you're doing, it can start to feel very overwhelming. So instead, you you compartmentalize. I'm making a cut in the skin. After that, I will grab a drill. I'll make two burr holes. I will connect those burr holes with an oscillating saw. Then I'll open up the outer layer of the brain known as the dura. I know here the blood vessels lie, so I'm going to cut, you know, three centimeters, to the left of that. And I'm going to open it up and, you know, it just everything is procedural in this, this way. So maybe more similar to athletics, I think, in this regard.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:22:41
But what about the first time you did this and you the very first time.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:22:44
Yeah. You know, it's it's it's a fair question, but, you know, there's so many, facets to our training. So the first time I did it, I also had professor standing right over my left shoulder. So there's this sense of having a safety net there. I think the I think then your question being, what about the first time you did it where there is no safety net? And yeah, you know, that that was I tell you, I felt confident, but I'd be lying if I said there wasn't some anxiety around that as well.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:23:15
And the fact that you did that, and it was a success, was a critical part of building the subsequent confidence in your skills. But there are people who have too much anxiety, or they focus their attention too much on the possible negative outcome. Or they maybe have other things going on in their minds, so there's too much norepinephrine. And so they, they, they fumble a little bit and they make a mistake. We know we know from the research Sanjay, that across the world, people who are chronically anxious do less of everything. They do less in socially, they do less in work, they do less in hobbies and interests. Why? Because their brains are primed into a threat mindset, where they're anticipating and focusing their attention on potential negative outcomes and threat, and that that inhibits those systems of the brain that do the opposite with confidence.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:24:17
'Quick note here - Ian says there is a difference between chronic anxiety and moderate anxiety. The former can lead us to experience higher levels of stress and other health issues. Moderate anxiety, on the other hand, is manageable and could actually be used for our benefit.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:24:34
If you don't feel anxiety, then you're not properly appraising the situation because you're doing something new that stretching you. And that's what confidence does. And that's what it makes us do things in spite of anxiety. And and so therefore the feeling of God, I'm an imposter here. Am I, am I really speaking to all these people who are listening to what I'm saying? They know better things to do. These are these are healthy, healthy thoughts. But but what you have to do is, you have to stand tall, speak clearly, talk as if you were not nervous even though so you're, you're you're a jelly inside. And that that is all faking it. And it's only once you've done it. A simple behavior takes 50, 60, 70 repetitions for it to become a habit. And habits don't require confidence. But to build the habits, you need to fake it. And you need to avoid the confidence sapping habits of maybe speaking too quickly, speaking to quietly, making yourself small, not looking at people. There are so many peripheral habits of confidence that can, that can sap it.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:25:50
Let's say no one gets the exact confidence ratio right, not perfect anyways. Would you rather err the side of being a little bit overly confident or a little under confident?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:26:03
For my children and grandchildren, Sanjay, I wish them slight overconfidence. In the same ways, I wish them nice houses and a good salary.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:26:14
Because you think it helps set them up for greater success. Just confidence as a character trait in and of itself.
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:26:21
Yes, yes yes. I just know that if they lose a job, or if they get sick, you know, if they've learned the habits of confidence, they know that they know things like, as Rumi, the Persian poet said, the road only appears with the first step. They know that you just have to keep doing things, even though you're not getting any rewards from it. You have to just keep on going sometimes because you're, you know, you've learned that if you keep moving, something new will turn up.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:26:53
Does this, some of these concepts you're talking about, does this change throughout an individual's life? I feel like in some ways I was maybe more confident than I am now, even ten years ago. Maybe I'm less likely to speak up. Whereas in the past I had an opinion on everything. Now I'm more of a listener. I want to hear what other people have to say more. Does does it change as we age?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:27:17
Well, yes, it does change, particularly if one internalizes aging stereotypes that will sabotage your confidence. People turn 65 or 70 and they have to retire. And many of them, many people suffer this loss of confidence. Why? Because they're torn away from agency and the domain and the rewards that come from that. But also they internalize the kind of, ageist stereotypes about what older people can and cannot do. You know, people lose their looks. People then lose the finely honed bodies they had when they were younger. And if you're, you know, one's physical appearance was a strong part of one's you know, what was important to a person, then that the loss of these things can really mean that they lose confidence in their ability to interact in the world. So the quiet and mature confidence, where the ego is less important and where you're less inclined to pursue the success, the hamster wheel of success. That's that's a very desirable. That's wisdom.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:28:30
How much, how much confidence is enough? I mean, is more always better? I mean, can you get the benefits of ambition and achievement without being reckless, or is there a limit?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:28:41
Yes. There is a limit. I mean, we've seen many big business people crash and burn. We've seen military leaders. We've seen political leaders crash and burn, overreach. Because confidence is so powerful an agent in the world, it's too easy for it to to mushroom out of control. And, and you get, a narcissistic over evaluation of your ability. But, how much confidence is enough? It's enough to make you. Particularly when things are tough when you have just failed. When you maybe a relationship has failed, a business has failed you, you've lost a job. You've suffered an illness. You're having to pick yourself up again. Enough confidence is gritting your teeth and being able to do that in spite of the doubt, in spite of the uncertainty and the unknown.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:29:40
You know, you spoke about your kids and your grandkids and that you wished for them, confidence. I have kids that are going off to college now. We have an election coming up. People are advocating for change, whatever it may be. If they listen to this podcast and they say, I'd like to strengthen my confidence, how would you tell them to do it?
Prof. Ian Robertson
00:30:02
'First of all, set goals for yourself. It's very important to stretch yourself. Second thing is what you pay attention to. The first lecture I gave after my PhD, there was one person, a senior Oxford professor frowning in the front row, and I couldn't keep my eyes off her. And I gave a terrible lecture because my norepinephrine levels were so high, I couldn't speak clearly. And I thought my career was finished before the end. But turns out there was lots of other people looking moderately interested. But I didn't know then that if I controlled my attention, that could control my emotions and therefore control my performance. I, if I'd known, then I would have deliberately not looked at her and looked and sought out someone who was looking interested, and there was quite a few of them. So controlling your attention, what you pay attention to, what you allow yourself to think about. The the third thing is your attitude to yourself. The human brain is incredibly plastic at all ages. And that plus you can learn new things no matter what your current status, but that that belief is fundamental. If you don't have it, you're not going to engage in the learning, the faking it, the faking it until it feels natural. The fourth thing is anxiety. Anxiety is has the same psycho-physiological pattern as excitement. And they're both just the body's preparation for action. So you can you you must not make anxiety your friend, because it's not a pleasant thing. But you can make it your your ally. You can harness it by saying to yourself, okay, I don't know if I can do this. I have to have this difficult conversation with a friend. I'm dreading it, but I'm going to set myself a goal of seeing if I can perform this without losing my temper or without crying or whatever. And you set a goal for yourself that you then get a success experience if you do it, even though you may not have a good outcome from the conversation. It's all about what the goals you set for yourself. The last thing is affirming of values. And if we affirm our values, take a minute or two to say, what do I stand for? What are my values? Why do I hold them? What do they mean to me? You, your amygdala will respond less strongly to criticism. You will be less likely to engage in ego protecting activities which can, you know, cause chaos in people around you. So that's that's why affirmation of your values are a huge source of confidence. It grounds you. Values are eternal. The human, humans are not.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:32:34
You know, when I grew up, confidence was not always seen as a good thing. Sometimes it seemed too close to arrogance or maybe thinking too highly of yourself. I was taught to just be really good at whatever you were doing and to stay humble. But a lot of what Ian shared really does resonate with me. I like the idea that confidence in and of itself can be a kind of fuel for action. It can help us accomplish goals despite uncertainty or adversity. And no matter what our circumstances are, I think most of us could benefit from that. I do think that building confidence might feel like a never ending journey at times, especially for people who struggle with anxiety or just feel like they can never catch a break. But Ian's prescription for building confidence, it makes sense. You set goals. You be intentional about what you pay attention to. You know that you can learn new things at any age, and that these steps may not always feel easy, but you can understand why they would be effective. It's like Ian says, having confidence doesn't guarantee accomplishing a goal, but it does give you the willingness to initiate, to try, which is something that you can control. On that note, I wanted to share a voicemail from a listener about how she is chasing life. This week, Mohita shared her journey with confidence.
Mohita
00:34:02
I was in IT for almost 25 years and I always loved acting, so I became an actor. Of course, I'm getting very small roles, but you know, I feel so fulfilled. I came out of my comfort zone to be more confident and being on set there is make me feel alive.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
00:34:23
Thank you, Mohita. Chasing life is a production of CNN audio. Our podcast is produced by Eryn Mathewson, Jennifer Lai, Grace Walker and Jesse Remedios. Our senior producer and showrunner is Felicia Patinkin. Andrea Kane is our medical writer, Dan Dzula is our technical director and the executive producer of CNN Audio is Steve Lickteig. With support from Jamus Andrest, Jon Dianora, Haley Thomas, Alex Manasseri, Robert Mathers, Leni Steinhardt, Nichole Pesaru and Lisa Namerow. Special thanks to Ben Tinker, Amanda Sealy and Nadia Kounang of CNN Health and Katie Hinman.