the Henny Flynn podcast

Tap to send me your reflections ♡ My good friend Susan McCulley is back on the show. And this time we're talking about the tough stuff. Author, somatic movement coach and artist, Susan brings a breadth and depth of wisdom, knowledge and personal experience to every conversation and this episode is no exception. We look at the topic of Tough Stuff from many perspectives. Exploring the importance of going gently with ourselves when things FEEL hard - and the importance of facing into ...

Show Notes

Tap to send me your reflections ♡

My good friend Susan McCulley is back on the show. And this time we're talking about the tough stuff.

Author, somatic movement coach and artist, Susan brings a breadth and depth of wisdom, knowledge and personal experience to every conversation and this episode is no exception.

We look at the topic of Tough Stuff from many perspectives. 

Exploring the importance of going gently with ourselves when things FEEL hard - and the importance of facing into and taking action to navigate the things that are hard to DO. Some of the areas we cover include:

  • Not just about the DOINGNESS but also the BEINGWITHNESS
  • Understanding our capacity is vital to how we care for ourselves in the face of tough things
  • Being persistent, learning, and feeling good about yourself are all affected by a crucial neurological mechanism responsible for cultivating qualities of tenacity and willpower
  • Doing effortful things is GOOD for you - but we also need BALANCE
  • How making small changes can lead to big results

We finish with Susan's beautiful enquiry: 'How can I make more space for what's needed right now?'

CONNECT WITH SUSAN
For movement, books & art https://www.susanmcculley.com/
For women over 50 https://www.susanmcculley.com/women-over-50

REFERENCES
Dr Andrew Huberman - the 'source' of the will to live
Stephen Covey -  7 Habits of Highly Successful People 
James Clear - Atomic Habits

Support the show

***

A piece of quiet
Your weekly pause - a calming relaxation practice, every Wednesday. A few minutes to settle, a few minutes to write. First aid for the soul.
Join here - use the code PEACE for 20% off your first year

Let’s stay connected
Sign up to hear more - and only receive what speaks to you.
Join the list here

everyday ♡ compassion
Tiny reminders of self-love and presence, delivered three times a week.
Subscribe here

Free Events & Small Group Courses
Explore the power of Flow Journaling, self-compassion and gentle change in a supportive space.
See what’s on

Solo Retreats at Bach Brook
Rest, reflect and reconnect – fully supported in a place of deep natural beauty.
Retreat with me

Books, Journaling Resources & Self-paced Courses
Explore tools for inner connection and compassionate growth.
Visit the library

Free 20-minute Call
Explore whether coaching could support what’s calling for change.
...

★ Support this podcast ★

What is the Henny Flynn podcast?

A space to settle in and listen, and see where the episode takes you. This inspiring, reflective podcast is an invitation to travel deeper, with compassionate self-enquiry.

Henny shares insights from her own life, alongside practices that help us connect with our inner wisdom, explore our relationship with change and find a greater sense of flow. Henny believes we all hold our own answers, so there are no one-size-fits-all solutions here. This is a space to be with what’s true for you, and to grow from there.

If you’re drawn to slowing down, listening in, and exploring what it means to live with greater authenticity, this podcast is for you. Guided by psychology, mindfulness, therapeutic coaching, flow journaling, and everyday compassion, we explore ideas that help us step further into our inner worlds, in order to shape the changes we seek in our outer worlds.

Henny Flynn: It's been quite a
while since my good friend,

Susan McCauley has joined me
here. And every time we talk, we

have a wide and far reaching
conversation. And today is no

different. Today we're talking
about the tough stuff. We're

talking about the being witness.

And we're talking about the
doing this of the tough stuff.

We touch on neuroscience. We
touch on compassion, no surprise

there. And we look at what it is
that can really support us when

we are facing into things that
feel hard.

Welcome to the Henny Flynn
podcast, the space for deepening

self awareness with profound
self compassion. I'm Henny, I

write coach and speak about how
exploring our inner world can

transform how we experience our
outer world. All founded on a

bedrock of self love. Settle in,
and listen and see where the

episode takes you. So hello, my
darling.

Susan McCulley: Hello, honey.

Oh, so great to see you.

Henny Flynn: Yeah, it really is
really is. And as ever, I think

our conversation feels like it's
coming at a good time for the

both of us. Yeah. And I, I often
find with the podcasts that I

might have a plan about, you
know, to sort of to record an

episode about something. But if,
if I'm not feeling it, then I

can't do it. It just doesn't
mean just doesn't work. It

doesn't flow. Whereas today, I
think as we opened up the call,

both of us acknowledge that
we've got some tough stuff going

on. And this conversation
hopefully will be useful for us

as much as it is for everybody
listening.

Susan McCulley: Yeah. Yeah, the
tough stuff. It comes. It comes.

Sometimes it feels like it comes
in waves. But um, yeah, it's not

avoidable. And, and finding ways
of, as we were saying, both

being with those difficult
things, and acting both both the

action and the presence with
whatever it is that we're

facing, or trying to change or,
or wanting to do differently. Is

there they're equally important,
and, and they, and I think

they're a little bit they're
different skills. They're two

different skills. Yeah,

Henny Flynn: yeah, definitely.

And I think we'll make sure that
we, I mean, I My sense is

they'll probably weave in as
we're talking anyway. But it

feels really important to make
sure we're talking about both of

them because sometimes sometimes
I think we can get so caught in

the skill set of the doing Enos
of the tough stuff that we can

try and use those same skills in
the being witness of the tough

stuff. But actually, those two
skill sets like you say there,

Yeah, different.

Susan McCulley: I mean, I don't
know about you, I, I can use the

doing to avoid the being with
you. I mean, Brene Brown talks

about this, that there are
people who are there they're

over, over over performers or
over compensators or something.

They're the one who's like, the
wheels come off, and they're the

one it's like, okay, you do
this, you do that I'm gonna do

this and we're gonna give each
DGG and it's totally me. Okay,

what's your strategy and what
who's responsible for what and

and I think that there is
something to that, but I often

like skip over that how do you
feel about this thing that is

happening and and given that I
maybe we start there is that

when we are faced with something
that is difficult, whether it is

some kind of difficult news a
loss, or is something difficult,

like this is something you
either want to or need to do.

That is not something you
exactly want? Do you want to do,

right? There's something that
you feel some, like, I know I

have to do this. I was saying
that my example is my strength

training work. I have a
osteopenia diagnosis. So due to

strengthen my bones, I'm doing
strength training, I love to

move, strength training. I feel
a little mad about it. In every

morning, I'm like, I've got to
do this thing. And again, how

can I be present with how I feel
about it? What is in the

emotional landscape. But before
I do the whole strategy,

Henny Flynn: you know, this is
so interesting, because that is

such a beautiful example, I
think of where the being witness

overlays the doing this, because
it would be very easy to get

into a kind of very fixed,
shutdown kind of mindset, and

just just get on with it, you
know, the stiff upper lip, the,

the, you know, what we sometimes
might consider resilience. But

let's we'll talk about
resilience. Let's do that.

Because I think, yeah, there's
like a whole load in there. But

you know, that sort of stiff
upper lip thing. Whereas if we

actually acknowledge what might
be what might be sitting

underneath any resistance, yeah,
could be about really

understanding Well, what, what
is it that this is making me

think of? So a really lovely
example, could be many moons

ago, I used to work in financial
services, and one of the things

that is notoriously difficult to
do is to get people to save

money. Now, the challenge is
that when you talk about

pensions, most of us
unconsciously think of death.

And so, when you talk to someone
in their 30s, or in their 20s,

or 40s, about saving for their
pension, what you're actually

talking to them about is death.

And most of us don't want to
think about death. And so we

don't want to think about
pensions. And so we don't want

to save money because if we're
saving money, we're saving money

for when we're old. And when
we're old, we're going to die.

And so you have these like on
heard, or unseen messages

sitting underneath, so for you
any kind of lighten their

resistance might be like it's
because I really don't like the

fact that I've got osteopenia,
and I don't like the doctor for

telling me that that's what I've
got. And I don't like the fact

that my body is like doing this
to me and like Ella

Susan McCulley: lewdly
Absolutely. That's so

fascinating about the money
saving thing I've never thought

about that way. But that's
that's so make sense to me. And

and isn't there both in my
resistance and in the clients

that you're talking about?

There's there's some ageism
there, right? There's some

assumptions, there's stories
that we have about what is going

to be happening when I'm in on
my pension or what does it what

does it a woman who has
osteopenia look like oh, yeah,

you know, like are like what
kind of life so many things as

you say they the these under
undercurrents, unseen or

unspoken, beliefs, stories,
images that were like, No, thank

you. Yeah.

Henny Flynn: Yeah. And actually,
I mean, I mean, hadn't, hadn't

even thought about as kind of
coming into this conversation

from this direction. But it
feels like we've really tapped

into something there because so
often, the thing that will be

preventing us from looking at or
facing into the tough stuff will

be the stories that we're
holding about it. You know, we

we scenario build around things
we hypothesise we make

assumptions we catastrophize and

Susan McCulley: I'm a we're off
to a world class at that. Oh,

Henny Flynn: well, you know,
it's that there are lots of lots

of people competing with you. So

Susan McCulley: I don't know, I
don't know.

Henny Flynn: So what we're, what
we're also kind of talking about

here is how to how to be really
clear about what is what is

going on for us underneath the
surface, raising that self

awareness or deepening that self
aware Tennis, so that we're

aware of what might be stopping
us from facing into the stuff

that we find hard. Because often
it's not the actual thing. It's

not saving money. You know,
unless unless money is very,

very tight. Saving money, per se
isn't the thing that's hard. But

thinking about who am I going to
be? When I'm older? That could

be hard? Yeah.

Susan McCulley: Yeah. Yeah, I
love that. And, and while the

action of a dressing, the hard
thing can have, for me anyway, a

sort of a certain satisfaction
to it, and, and there's science

about it, and all of that kind
of thing. The presence is at

least part of what can help us
really see all of the aspects of

what this issue is for us. And,
and I think that that the

resistance is a great like
little signal. And Seth Godin,

who's written lots of books
about changing things, says that

to rush the resistance, when you
feel the resistance, it's like,

oh, there's something here, as
opposed to what I usually do.

I'm like, I'm out. I got the
resistance in my mouth. But I

always love this. I remember
this feeling of like, you know,

there's something to be done.

Like, there's something
important here, if you're

feeling resistance. And, and so
I think it is a place to start

for sure.

Henny Flynn: I love that. I love
that idea of rushing the

resistance, like so really like
coming towards it. So Oh, yeah.

For me, it would be it would be
the language of like, well

welcome it in, you know, what is
it that you want me to know?

Like, what's going on here?

Yeah. Because, yeah, it's in
there that the you know, the

gold is in terms of like, what
we really need to understand

about what's going on. Right.

Susan McCulley: And I know that
you, I mean, you do marvellous

work with journaling, which can
be a way into these kinds of

things. I've been playing
recently with Liz Gilbert's

practice of letters from love.

Have you have you experimented
with that at all?

Henny Flynn: I I think I
naturally do version of it.

Yeah.

Susan McCulley: Yeah, I would
say so. Yeah, I you, you don't

need lists. I do. But but it's a
very simple practice. But really

what it is, is tapping into
what's underneath both the fear

or the story or the
catastrophizing, but also the

wisdom and the perspective. And
the, the broader vision because

so often, when we're faced with
difficult things, is that our,

our viewpoint just contracts to
the most narrow thing. Yeah,

like just the we can just barely
see through the crack in the

door. And, and what, what you're
proposing here, this, this, this

willingness to be present, and
however, we support ourselves in

that presence, I mean, maybe
it's talking with a friend, but

sometimes I just find myself
battling or you know, identity.

But yes, for me, often writing
is very helpful to uncover these

things.

Henny Flynn: I think sometimes
when we talk with a with a

friend, unless unless they're
really skilled at helping us

navigate our own ability to
convince ourselves and other

others of what we think we want
to hear, we can we can end up in

a little bit of an echo chamber.

Whereas what I find with
journaling is that my journal

rarely lets me off the hook.

Channel is, you know, she's
like, Hmm, I really think you

could look at this from a
different perspective, even

though you don't want to

Susan McCulley: and then she can
also and she can also bring some

real love to and

Henny Flynn: she's doing so much
love. I mean, it's just done

with so much love. Yeah, so my
my technique that I tend to use

when I'm in that tough stuff
place, and I don't know, I don't

know what to do with the
resistance that I'm feeling is

and I think this is quite
similar to the Liz Gilbert

approach, but I will say IE, are
you there? And my diary always

replies. I am always here.

That's right. And then I say,
What am I here to learn? And

then she says, What would you
love to know? And then I'm and

then that conversation and it's,
it's funny, because I kind of

like I keep sort of wondering
like, is this going to change

one day like these words that I
write? But so it's not like a

script. It's just well, that's
just what happens. And it it

hones my attention on Okay,
well, what is the thing? What is

the thing rather than? You know,
the kind of blanket I feel a bit

lost or I feel bad or right.

Susan McCulley: Yeah, I think
there's a there's a big

difference. i There were many
years where I had a very

unsatisfying journaling
practice, when it was just sort

of my monkey mind on the page,
and like, this is going in this

is happening and this is bad and
and how can they How could this

person do this? And it never got
me anywhere. But what you're

proposing and which you're
absolutely right, very in

alignment with Blizz Gilbert's
standard prompt is writing to

love and and using the prompt
love. What would you have me

know today? Yeah,

Henny Flynn: it's very similar.

Yeah. And,

Susan McCulley: and there is she
also offers that if there is

something in particular with
which we are grappling, you can

say love, what would you have me
know about saving money today?

And, and it can allow, but and I
totally resonate with this

feelings? Like, what is going on
here? Like, how is it that I am

getting this, these insights and
this wisdom? What is happening?

I don't know. And am I making it
up? Where is it coming from? You

know, but there it is. And it's
like, I my, whatever my left

side of my brain, I guess goes,
What's going on? And my right

side is this Hush now. It
doesn't matter. It is a moot

point.

Henny Flynn: I love it. I love
that that part of the brain that

goes like, am I just making this
up? And it's like, well, yes.

Susan McCulley: Or no. And but

Henny Flynn: it's like, I mean,
like on one level? Yes. On one

level. You're You're channelling
from, you know, from a spirit

beyond. Who knows, really
doesn't matter. Just start

writing. Yes, please. Yeah. It's
that. Yeah. You could call it

wherever you like. But yes, I
love that. I love that point

where we start questioning, but
actually then bringing the

questioning into the journaling
is exactly

Susan McCulley: and yeah, my
journal always has a little

chuckle over that.

Henny Flynn: So it's, and I
think it's really interesting

that this your example of like,
journaling from the monkey mind,

because actually, when we're
thinking about the tough stuff,

often what will happen when
we're in that, that sort of that

part of our mind, which is
ruminating on stuff in the past

or or catastrophizing about
stuff in the future, when we get

stuck in, as you say, this kind
of very narrow focus, and we're

actually with narrowing down our
ability to think creatively

about how we're actually able to
resource ourselves to deal with

more difficult things. So the
more we can do, to kind of

soften I think physically to
soften, mentally to suffer and

emotionally to soften enables us
to be with what is going on

without. So I'm just going to
call off hang on a sec. Without

without condoning something that
someone else has done that was

very problematic or without
saying rose tinted spectacles on

every blue rose happening, you
know, it's not about that. So I

think a big part of this. This
being witness is also

acknowledgement and that
obviously is what journaling can

help us with to is helping us
acknowledge Well, this is hard.

I shared with you at the
beginning we've got some some

stuff going on. And you know, we
A needing to say we're sort of

within my kind of family unit,
we're needing to accommodate

what that means. And the hard
thing is when you're not in

control of what of everything
that's going on, and not being

in control, his really difficult
for many of us. And the because

the the flip of the other side
of the either we're desperate to

be in control, or we're
desperate to have no control, in

which case either side of
control is really hot. Yeah. But

there's a I think there's a
lovely exercise from Stephen

Covey, which is the circles of
control.

Susan McCulley: Circles are of
influence maybe no. Well,

Henny Flynn: so he might talk.

Yeah, he might call it circles
of influence. Yes. And I think

over the years, I've adapted it
to such a degree that I now call

it circles of control.

Susan McCulley: Let's go with
that. There we go. Yeah.

Henny Flynn: And so the idea is
that you you draw a big circle,

that is all the things that you
can control, and a smaller

circle, which are all the things
that you can't control about a

certain situation. And you write
down everything that you can

control and everything that you
can't control, you can't control

the weather, but you can control
what you're wearing, you know, I

mean, you even get it down to
like, those kinds of details.

And, and then you see, will,
this big circle, that's where

I'll spend my energy. Because
all the stuff in that little

circle doesn't matter how much
energy I invest in it, it's not

going

Susan McCulley: to be right.

That's exactly right. It's the
Serenity Prayer, right. It's

like, it's that that wisdom of
just differentiating? And, um,

and, you know, I think the bear
is our brain so long to be able

to contain and control. And yet,
we know that we have control

over. So little, really, I mean,
when we talked to hear talking

about the circles, I was like,
maybe the I can't control

circles would be the bigger
circle. Since there is so much

that I can't control and at but
that is such a great reminder

about how much of myself do I
want to sink into all of these

things.

Henny Flynn: It's interesting,
though, Susan, because actually,

when you start breaking down
what I can control, and you say,

we might not be able to control
the macro conditions around us,

like the systems that were put
in, you know, so the health

system or the financial, you
know, the banking system, or the

world, you know, crises that are
around us. While they, yes, our

macro conditions that are big.

There are also so many aspects
of our internal landscape, our

internal weather that we have
more control over than we might

initially ordinarily recognise.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I think
this sort of comes into that the

stuff we were talking about
earlier, which is, you know,

about the kind of doing this as
well. So part of part of being

able to support ourselves with
tough things is about

understanding, well, where can I
make changes where can I

exercise agency? Yeah. Yeah,
and, and another thought, which

has just completely flown out of
my head, so I'm handing back

over to you.

Susan McCulley: Well, I think, I
hope it I hope it returns but,

um, but um, I think that that
really is a great segue into

once we have given ourselves the
time and the space to be with

the question that I often ask
myself is, what is my capacity

right now? To both both to be
with but also to effectively act

in regards to this issue. And
and Do what I often play with

is, is sort of just check, is it
sort of just checking in? To see

how am I really? Do I really
have? What I need in order to

deal with this? Or do I need to
give myself a little space? Do I

need to build my capacity in
some way, whether it is taking

care of myself in some way,
getting good night's sleep, I'm

getting some support, times 1000
For however, that whatever that

looks like for each of us, in
order to then start to make some

choices about action, and how do
we proceed with the actual doing

around the things that we can
control? And, and so I think

that one of the things that we
can tune into, is what we, we

sometimes call it, I think the
feeling of being overwhelmed, or

feeling like I sometimes feel
like like my circuits just get

jammed, like, and that can look
lots of ways it can look sort of

frantic, it can also look

Henny Flynn: numb. Yeah.

Susan McCulley: And when I'm
feeling like, this thing is too

big of a bite for me to take
right now. One of the things

that works well, for me is to
say what's a small thing I could

do? What is a tiny thing that I
could do, that I could have some

agency over, that I could move
the needle as it were, toward

whatever needs being done. And
so whatever it is, if it is

managing some difficult health
news, does that mean? What I

need to do is I need to find one
article to read. So I can

understand something that I
didn't understand before. Maybe?

Or maybe it's if it's a habit
that needs changing, you know,

like, what is this just making
it really small. From the brains

perspective, if we contrast this
sort of overwhelmed, the

circuits getting jammed, we
break it down into this little

thing, it's kind of like you
sneak in around the back door,

around your amygdala, amygdala,
it's all ready to just like fire

off sirens. And, you know, shut
the whole system down, kind of

do a little thing and you kind
of get around the sweet. She

just wants to protect us back a
little amygdala. And so um, so

this is some of the genius of
James clear writes about it in

atomic habits. BJ Fogg did
research called Tiny habits,

it's, you know, it's the same
neurological mechanism that

we're, we are using, when we do
something really small.

Sometimes they call it just
embarrassingly small, like

absurdly small, you are able to
begin to stretch your capacity.

Henny Flynn: And then you also
get a reward from them, of

course, so then you get a little
bit of a dopamine or maybe a

serotonin hit coming into your
system, which then helps to

rebalance the cortisol or the
adrenaline, or maybe the

testosterone that might have
been firing up before. And it

just makes your body feel a
little bit happier, you know,

we're in when we're dealing with
someone who's got sort of high

anxiety, often, you know,
particularly if they're, they're

feeling very anxious about maybe
going to a shop, you know, going

into shops is a really tough
thing for them. What we're

looking to do then, is to find
the evidence to show well,

you've been you went to a shop,
when did you go to a shop and it

was okay. And you're reminding
the system, you're reminding the

amygdala that actually, it's not
going to every shop, that makes

that means that they need the
amygdala needs to fire up. So in

the same, it's using the same
kind of strategy. It's saying,

well, here's a small thing.

Here's a small win. Here's
something that just can start to

reset some of that pattern. that
might be wanting to get

established. And those, I think
making those small changes, as

well as one of the series of
retreats around, which turned

into the book, the heart of
change, one of the retreats and

one of the chapters in the book
is called Beautiful disruption.

Because I realised that I was
becoming, so I had become so

kind of fixed about certain
things having to be a certain

way. And if they weren't a
certain way, it really threw me.

So sitting in the right seat on
the train on the way to work,

very important. And what I
started to do was disrupt with

these like small steps. And it
was only after then learning

what I now know that I realised
what I was actually doing was

exactly what you've just
described, which is putting

those little changes into place.

And through that, teaching, my
limbic system, that it was safe,

to be doing things a little bit
differently, it was safe to be

making these changes, and and
that then, obviously, enables us

to start making bigger and
bigger.

Susan McCulley: That's right,
that's right. Yeah, I mean, it

is just like, a muscle is just
like, you know, expanding your

range of motion, physically,
you're expanding your range of

capacity. mentally, emotionally,

Henny Flynn: I love that. I love
that use of the word capacity.

Because it's also there's
compassion in there as well,

about recognising, you know, my
capacity is pretty low right

now. And that's okay. That's
right. And, and actually, today,

I, I because of some of the, you
know, ongoing stuff that you

know, every every person has
stuff in their life. That's

tough. And, you know, I am no
exception, you are no exception.

Everyone listening is no
exception. And it's kind of I

noticed that it was, I was
feeling it today. And rather

than do what I might ordinarily
have done in the past, which

would have been plough on
through it, and just get grumpy

and irritated and irritating,
probably, I took myself to my

seat in my office and worked in
a different way worked on

something else, there's still
work, so was, you know, use my

time usefully, but did it
differently. And that was

because I recognise that my
capacity for doing what I had

planned to do just was not
available to me, I needed to

refill in some way. And that
was, what worked for me. Yeah.

And so also kind of recognising
what works for us individually,

I think is really important
here. Yeah.

Susan McCulley: Yeah. And I like
what you're saying too, in the

sense that, that beautiful
disruption does not have to be

an earthquake, it can be just
moving across the room. Exactly,

Henny Flynn: exactly. And so
yeah, so for me, like when I was

because this was when I was
first, like playing with this

whole idea of beautiful
disruption was when I was still

commuting into London. And so
one of the things I would do was

I try and take a different route
to work each day, rather than

the head down, charging along
whatever street it was in the

City of London, and ignoring
everybody, or I'd try and see

something new that became I then
sort of play with that for a

bit. Like each time I walked
along the same street, like

what's the new thing? And that
was a tiny piece of beautiful

disruption that I now recognise
was probably having enormous

benefit in my very tired brain.

Yeah. So it just shifted,
shifted the dial. Yeah. It's

interesting, actually, this
stuff, talking about brain. I

know, I mentioned to you before
we came on those. I'd heard

Andrew Huberman, Dr. Andrew
Huberman, who if everybody

listening if you haven't heard
him talk, I think he is amazing.

He's a neuroscientist
specialises in eyes. I think. I

think like that's his, like,
deep deep specialism is the

neuroscience of sight or
something like that anyway, but

he is a incredibly well informed
guy who, who is on a mission to

bring neuroscience into
mainstream knowledge. And he

shares things so eloquently, I
think. And I, I came across him

talking about the source of
willpower. And he actually ended

up saying that some
neuroscientists are now seeing

this part of the brain as the
source of the will to live.

This, and it's the had to write
this down, which I'm going to

say wrong, anterior mid
cingulate cortex. And it's the

part of the brain that's
activated according to whether

something is hard as in
effortful, or not. So back to

your point around lifting
weights in the morning, do your

strength training in the
morning. If that is something

that is effortful for you, you
will be activating the anterior

mid cingulate cortex. And the
more that that grows, the more

it benefits you. So being
persistent, learning something

new, feeling good about
yourself, this is interesting,

are all affected by this part of
the brain? Yeah, it controls

self control, decision making.

And resource distribution, which
I think taps into your point

around capacity. It's
strengthened through hard

physical activity. So there's
sort of correlations here

between, you know, physical
exercise impacting our emotional

and mental well being. Because
it, it makes us more determined

to keep going. That's part of
what this part of the brain

does. And amazingly, it is
associated with preventing age

related decrements or
decrements. I don't have to say

that word in cognitive
performance. So basically, it

keeps our brain functioning
healthily for longer into old

age.

Susan McCulley: So is it kind of
it's a kind of learning. It is a

it is neuroplasticity is what?

Yeah, is

Henny Flynn: happening? Yeah,
it's neuroplasticity, like

happening like, in, in such kind
of real time.

Susan McCulley: Yeah. Yeah.

That's fascinating. And did I
hear you also, I just wanted to

circle back to this. That
feeling good, like celebrating

what we have done. Acknowledging
that, I think that is just worth

highlighting. Because, for me, I
am such a to do list person and

I and I, like Okay, done it. But
instead just taking a minute and

saying, way to go. You did your
squats today, darling. You

wrong? And how important that is
for for expanding our capacity,

and giving ourselves that feel
good bump. Yeah, that's what the

Dr. BJ Fogg talks about, too, is
that people change when they

feel good, not when they feel
like

Henny Flynn: brilliant. Yes.

Yes. Because oh, gosh, I mean,
when I think I know, we're sort

of we're kind of weaving in and
out of this, this sort of topic.

But when I think about when I
was growing up in as a, all the

way through my adult years, had
a you know, at times, I will be

heavier at times lighter. rarely
ever looked on myself, whatever

weight I was, and felt good
about the weight that I was, but

what never, ever helped me with
people saying you will be so

pretty if you just lost some
weight. Because, you know, I

think I kinda had worked that
one out. Right? And actually, is

that really the message that we
want to be? I

Susan McCulley: mean, we can
even I've, we've got a whole

conversation about fat phobia
and misogyny and how they

intersect. darlin, we're gonna
have to just put up pin and not

wear because there's a whole
thing. And so I just want to

acknowledge how painful that is.

And yet how, at least many of us
internally will be so hard and

so mean. And so be reading to
ourselves, I think, with this

idea if I don't, I'm not going
to change if I don't like, crack

any. And, and, and what the
science shows us just exactly,

Henny Flynn: exactly, exactly.

And the because we we grow up in
a maybe in an educational

environment or a home
environment where where we're

told off. And that is meant to
be the precursor to being doing

better at something, whether
it's behaviour or maths, you

know, whereas actually sports
think about before. Oh, yeah,

exactly. Whereas, I mean, it's
the reason why all of the work

that I do, and it's so I find it
so fascinating, Susan, because

it's like, as I move through the
years of me doing this work, and

I gather more and more knowledge
to myself, the fundamental

principles that have underpinned
everything that I've done right

from the beginning, that
compassion is the foundation

says self compassion is the
foundation stone to all

successful and long lasting
change. I have never come across

anything that tells me any
different. And all I see is more

and more and more evidence that
tells me that fundamental

knowingness was right. And
continues to be right. Yeah, you

know, if and so this kind of
comes back to this thing about

the tough stuff, you know, when
we're thinking about, you know,

either facing into something,
which is really hard to

acknowledge, if we do that with
self compassion and kindness to

ourselves, that is going to,
it's going to feel easier, it

doesn't change the thing, but we
will feel easier. And in the

same way, when there's something
tough that we want to do, like,

make a big change, or change a
habit, or change your job, or

you know, whatever the thing is,
that might feel hard, or might

feel effortful, or scary. If we
do it with compassion, it

doesn't change the actions that
we take, it doesn't change the

fact that you're gonna get up in
the morning and lift your

weights and do your squats. But
the attitude that you bring into

it could be utterly transformed.

If it's with self compassion.

Yeah,

Susan McCulley: yeah. Yeah. And,
and, and that, I part of that,

is this, this examination of
capacity? Like, you know, how

are you doing, my friend, as we
get up this morning? How did you

sleep? How do you feel, you
know, and, and allowing for the

softness, rather than the
rigidity around? Well, I'm happy

to do it exactly this way, as
you were saying, you know, in

order for it to be to count or
to be good enough. And, and so I

think that, you know, part of
what we're talking about, is

this kind of softness, this,
this broadening of how we look

at all of these things. That is,
you know, is instead of the

razor focus on this one thing,
how can I open this up and, and

create more space for whatever's
needed right now?

Henny Flynn: That feels like a
lovely, lovely line to close our

conversation on actually, Susan,
how can I make more space for

whatever is needed right now.

And loved that conversation so
much. I think Susan and I both

said, just before she, she
headed off that it was a

conversation that she and I both
needed today. And I hope that

there were aspects of it may be
even the whole of it, that felt

useful for you to and I'll share
in the notes, some of the

references, the ones we can
remember that we touched on

during the recording. And I
really look forward to hearing

how this idea of facing into the
tough stuff resonates with you,

but also the learning that doing
the tough stuff can be really

good For us, how does that
balance for you? How does that

make sense in your own life?

Where do you see that you can
use those that awareness of that

neuroscience that from Andrew
Huberman way you can use that

awareness that doing things that
are effortful is ultimately

really good for us. But balance
that out with the compassion, of

softening into ourselves when
we're facing into things that

feel tough for us. So, you know,
I'm very mindful as well as

ever, that this stuff can
activate feelings, thoughts

within us, maybe old stories,
old memories. And, you know, if

there's anything there that you
feel you would benefit from

exploring more deeply, then do
reach out to me, or to someone

else that you trust. And perhaps
consider what would benefit you

in working that through and also
do reach out to Susan as well.

I'll share the link to her age
of becoming group if you're if

you identify as female and
you're over the age of 50. I

think that's where her group
begins, then you might be

interested in the age of
becoming group on Facebook. It's

a really lovely space where
Susan shares some of her wisdom,

her philosophy and also shares
the the movement practice that

she offers as well. And I know
there are a number of people

listening here who have
participated in Susan's

practices so under including
myself, so definitely go and

check that out if that makes you
curious. All right, my darlings.

Take care. I send you a hug and
a wave