Get all the inside secrets and tools you need to help you develop your intuitive and leadership skills so you are on the path to the highest level of success with ease. Anxiety is a real emotion. It can cripple you if you don’t get it under control.
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Listen in as Jennifer Takagi, founder of Takagi Consulting, 5X time Amazon.Com Best Selling-Author, Certified Soul Care Coach, Certified Jack Canfield Success Principle Trainer, Certified Professional Behavioral Analyst and Facilitator of the DISC Behavioral Profiles, Certified Change Style Indicator Facilitator, Law of Attraction Practitioner, and Certified Coaching Specialist - leadership entrepreneur, speaker and trainer, shares the lessons she’s learned along the way. Each episode is designed to give you the tools, ideas, and inspiration to lead with integrity. Humor is a big part of Jennifer’s life, so expect a few puns and possibly some sarcasm. Tune in for a motivational guest, a story or tips to take you even closer to that success you’ve been coveting. Please share the episodes that inspired you the most and be sure to leave a comment.
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Wishing you the best,
Jennifer Takagi
Speaker, Trainer, Author, Catalyst for Healing
PS: We would love to hear from you! For questions, coaching, or to book interviews, please email my team at Jennifer@takagiconsulting.com
Music. Welcome to Destin for success. I'm your
host, Jennifer Takagi, and today I want to talk about anxiety.
Do you have crippling anxiety? Is it keeping you from doing the
things you want to do, living the life that you want to live?
I'm very fortunate, because I don't struggle with anxiety very
much. There are times when it hits me really hard. I remember
one time at work, my boss came to me and said, Hey, our his
boss, like two up bosses is coming to town tomorrow and
wants to meet with you at 10am Well, I had already scheduled to
be off that morning and was going to be late. I wasn't even
planning on being there till 1030 and he said, Well, that'll
work. You can, you can come in at 1030 and I said, What are we
meeting about? And he said, I don't really know. I said, so
your boss's boss is coming to town to meet with me, but nobody
knows why? Yes, I'm gonna tell you I was feeling an immense
amount of anxiety, like I was up and down all night. I was
stressed out. It was so scary, I didn't know what they wanted.
What they wanted me to do was be a temporary boss in a in a
position, and it all worked out just fine, but that created a
lot of anxiety for me, because there was a history of those
meetings not being in the employee's best interest, and so
it was really scary. And that was like, Whoa, I don't know if
I can do this. And you you've probably heard if you've been
following me for a while. I had a boss for a number of years
that created anxiety just when I could hear her footsteps walking
down the corridor. So I knew what I was in for every day
based on the the cadence of the steps. So I have, I have dealt
with that. I have suffered with that, and it was not fun at all.
But mine works situational. I actually went to the doctor and
I was like, oh, I want Xanax. I hear people just eat Xanax like
candy, and it solves all the problems, and my doctor wouldn't
give me Xanax. So there you go. I guess I didn't do a good
enough job selling it, but he did give me a mild anti anxiety
medicine that truly made all the difference in the world, because
I was calmer and I could think through the situation. When
you're in those situations, when people are just coming at you,
it can be hard to think through what to do next if you don't
have the right skills. And I will be perfectly transparent,
clear right here, I I'm sure I didn't have the skills, I'm sure
I didn't have the skills to be able to handle it. But anxiety,
when you look up a psychiatric definition of anxiety, it's
excessive apprehensiveness about real or perceived threats,
typically leading to avoidance behavior, often to physical
symptoms such as increased heart rate and muscle tension. Again,
mine was situational. If I was not at work, I was pretty good.
I don't think I dwelled on work all the time I might have, but
thank God that's in the rear view mirror that career path.
But I'm talking about this real or perceived threat. I have
friends who can literally list every single possible thing that
could go wrong, and the list is long and it's in depth and it's
specific, and then you wonder, is that stuff gonna happen?
Let's just talk about the news for half a minute. I quit
watching the news years ago, because after the Oklahoma City
bombing, for the first solid year, at least, there was not
one local news report that didn't have something to do with
the bombing. And then when that finally laid up a little bit and
it wasn't so much, then it became all about the trials. And
so that, just like created even more more stress and anxiety,
because what's gonna happen? And so at some point in there, I
don't remember exactly when it was, I quit watching the news.
And my husband and I had had a habit for years. We would watch
the local news the world or nightly news, and then the local
news again, and then 630 whatever. Our show came on then,
but we watched it pretty religiously, and one night, I
was like, Yeah, let's not do that. And we quit. And it's kind
of funny, because sometimes he watches the news without me, and
I'm like, oh, yeah, oh, it's on. Let me go in the other room. And
some people have criticized me about it and said, You need to
know what's going on in the world. And I said, Well, so do
you know what's going on in the world, and what are you doing to
change it? What are you doing to change it? And I heard, I
believe her name is Leslie Osborne. She was a state senator
here in the state of Oklahoma, or maybe she was a state
Congresswoman, I can't remember, but she held public office in
that way, and then she was our labor commissioner. And she
might still be, I don't know, but at a at the Oklahoma State
Safety Council, I was honored to do breakout sessions out two
years in a row. She was the keynote speaker, and she said,
Don't worry about what's going on in Washington. You can't
necessarily affect a change there. You need to worry about
what's going on locally in your community, because if you change
what's going on in your city and your county and your state, that
affects your life much more greatly than what's going on
elsewhere. And I think we are creating a whole group of people
who are anxiety ridden because they watch the news, and I don't
care what channel it is, it doesn't really matter. But when
you have the news on 24 hours a day, because you need to know
what's going on, you're creating more anxiety for yourself. And
the question becomes, is, is that a legitimate anxiety? Is
that going to happen? I had a friend after the Oklahoma City
bombing, said, I'm scared of strangers. I'm scared of moving
vans. And there was a third thing, I can't remember the
third thing she was scared of. And I said, Wait a minute.
Strangers came and helped our friends and colleagues, and
we've both moved multiple times, and we took moving trucks every
time. Like you can't take one event and then project it to all
future things, because that's kind of what anxiety does you're
looking at, what problems can be happening in the future. And
that begs the question, Where is your focus? There's a lot of
research out there. Whether you're airy fairy Wu like me, or
you're very structured and and sound. If you're a Christian,
the Bible talks about where you put your focus. Keep your eyes
on him, and if you're focusing on all the bad things that could
possibly be happening, you're gonna feel more of that anxiety.
Mother Teresa said, Don't ever invite me to an anti war rally
that's negative in every single connotation, our words matter.
She said, Now you invite me to a peace rally, and I'm in so
where's your focus? Are you focusing on all the possible
good things that could happen? Or are you focusing on all the
bad things that could happen. Funny little silly story, one
morning, I woke up and our cat was at our island that has
wheels on it, and he was, like, completely focused. And I ran
and got my husband, and I was like, Oh my gosh, we have a
scorpion in the house, which I'm in Oklahoma. We live near a
pond. We get scorpions occasionally, but it's pretty
rare. So he comes out, and that stupid Scorpion just took off
and went underneath the cabinet. How did it get under there? I
don't know. I They can just squish into little bitty, tiny
spaces. So my husband left and I finished getting ready for work,
and I've got the dog and the cat now staring at this wheel, and
that stupid Scorpion had come back. So I ran Newsflash,
newsflash, if you don't know this, hairspray will kill pretty
much any bug that you don't want to deal with, because it like
freezes them. It freezes your hair, freezes the critters. So I
squeezed I sprayed that Scorpion, and then I can't hear
the sound of killing something, so I have to cover my ears and
scream, la, la, la, la, really loudly.
I put a paper towel over it, and then squish it and threw it
away. And then I. To leave, and there is a little frog in the
garage. And so I got a broom and I brushed it. I was like, You
need to go away little frog, because it was hot, and that
frog was going to die in the heat in the garage. I brushed it
outside, and the stupid thing went under my car. So now I've
got the broom and I'm trying to move it out from under the car,
and it won't go and I thought, well, there's nothing I can do
about you, buddy. I've done everything in my power. I put
the broom up, Shut the garage door, I back up, and I hear a
squish. I ran over the damn frog. So at the time, I don't
think I had a cell phone, or if I did, I didn't have Bluetooth
in my car. And I got to work, and I called my husband, and I
said, Well, it was death day at the Takagi house this morning.
And he goes, What are you talking about? And so I told him
about what had happened, and I said, but thank goodness I got
to work and it's all over. Like, whoosh, whoosh. Wipe it off. I
love to run my hands down my arms and just like wipe off all
that bad mojo, weird feelings, whatever, it's gone. And I did
have a tiny bit of dread about coming home that night, because
there's gonna be a dead frog in the driveway and what. So I am
pulling up to the house, and my driveway is clear. There's
nothing there. And my husband comes in a little bit later, and
I was like, Oh my gosh, did you see this? I guess the birds came
and and took care of that frog, and it's gone. And he goes, No,
I came home and hosed off the driveway because I knew it was
going to upset you to come home, so yeah, bonus points for Bill
Takagi, because he got the dead frog off the driveway. I could
have spiraled that day about all the bad things that could
happen, but I made a choice. I made a conscious decision, that
that was over and done. Jack Canfield talks about it a lot in
his book, The Success Principles and in that training that I went
through, which was amazing. And he talks about, when you wake up
in the morning and stub your toe, you can have the thought
process of, Oh, thank goodness that's over. I don't have to
worry about that again today. My one bad thing's over. Or you can
start in and create your own Sunday night melodrama. You
could be your own lifetime movie. Oh, I stubbed my toe and
then I cut myself shaving, whether it's a leg or a face. I
kept myself shaving, and then I was out of hairspray because I
used it yesterday to kill the scorpion, and then, and then I
didn't have anything to take for lunch, and then I spilled my
coffee, thank god on her and coffee, because I've never had
to do that. And you can just create your own day of horror,
and it creates anxiety, because you're creating everything
that's happening as it happens, where you focus your time and
attention matters, and it matters a lot. So where's your
focus? If you're struggling with anxiety, what are you focusing
on? Is it something so far in the future that you have no
control over, or are you focusing on doing what you can
do really well right now? I believe it's Mary Barr is the
CEO of GM, and she was asked when you started GM, did you
know that you wanted to work your way up and be the CEO? And
she said, Oh, absolutely not. My focus was doing the job that I
had to the best of my ability. And people took notice. You
don't have to jump up and down and show everybody you're there.
They see you're there by consistency, by doing a good
job, and by focusing on the here and now, what you're doing right
now. So my question for you to ponder as I close this out is,
what would your life look like without the anxiety? What would
your life look like if you assumed the best, the best out
of yourself, the best out of your employees, the best out of
your spouse, the best out of your kids, the best out of the
person at the grocery store that checked you out. What if you
just expected the best? My friend told me a story recently
that Esther Hicks, who's a total woo person, if you don't know
her, and Abraham Hicks is how she channels and shares magical,
mystical, wonderful. Uh, stories and information and guidance.
And she had a very expensive car. I don't know if it was a
royal Rolls Royce. That's easy for me to say Rolls Royce or
another kind, but it was a very expensive car. And they drove up
to park or and they were going to valet the car. And as they
got out the friend with her said, Oh my gosh. Are you really
going to trust this, you know, $200,000 car, whatever it was to
the valet. Don't you think they're going to, you know,
scratch it up or bump a another door or something? And she said,
Oh, I just assume that anybody who sees this car is going to
appreciate it enough to treat it as well as I do. What I'm going
to assume they're going to treat it as well as I do, versus
somebody's going to scratch my car. This is going to be a
problem. Are you assuming the best, assuming the worst? Where
is your focus? What if you assume the best out of people?
Yes, there are times when it's not going to work out. Yeah, I
get it blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. You could make up your own
story about that. My story is things work out for me. I go to
Toby Keith's before almost every single Oklahoma City NBA home
basketball game. And in all the years I've been going since
like, 2009 2010 I can't remember. Maybe it was 2011 but
a long time now, because 2024 is when I'm recording this, I bet
there aren't five times and there are 40 games a year, I bet
there aren't five times that I didn't get to park right in
front of Toby Keith's and then walk to the game at work, we'd
all go to lunch. And if we ever went out to lunch, everybody
wanted to ride in my car. Why? Because I just assume I'm going
to get a great parking spot, and I typically do, there are rare
occasions I just chalk that up to somebody else needed it more
than I did that day, or I needed to get a few steps in so you
have the choice on how much anxiety you experience and if
you want to hang on to it, or if you want to let it go, I have a
free gift for you. I keep telling you about it that you
need to get it and you need to implement it. 12 minute
gift.com. I'm Jennifer Takagi. I look forward to connecting with
you soon. You.