Stress resets, the ultimate mental health hack | Jenny Taitz
13m 8s
Clinical psychologist Jenny Tates reframes stress as a co-created phenomenon that can be spread, but also actively reset. She argues that instead of eliminating stress, the goal is to cultivate the belief that one can handle it. She introduces quick "stress resets"—simple mental, physical, and behavioral shifts—that require no long meditation or medication. Three key tools are presented: first, playfully distancing oneself from repetitive negative thoughts; second, adopting a subtle "half-smile" to physiologically influence mood and acceptance; and third, consciously acting opposite to unhelpful emotion-driven urges (e.g., engaging in a task when procrastinating). Practicing these resets in daily life builds resilience, allowing individuals to access them during major crises. Tates emphasizes that stress management is less about the challenge itself and more about trusting one's ability to cope, a skill that can foster hope and prevent stress from becoming a chronic, damaging force in one's life and relationships.
(light music) You're listening to Ted Talk's Daily where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hugh. Everyone, and I know fellow parents out there will relate, picture this. It's a totally normal morning, but total chaos around you. The house is a mess and you're thinking, how did we get here before 9 a.m.? That stress, it's a little hilarious. But mostly heartbreaking. When what we're facing feels like too much, spilled milk becomes a flood. That's clinical psychologist Jenny Tates. In her talk, she offers a slightly different take on this. That stress isn't only something that happens to us, it's also something that we co-create and can accidentally spread. But here's the good news. If you can create stress, you can also learn to reset it. In minutes, no long meditations, medications, or prattinias required. Just shifts in your mind, body, and behavior. Jenny guides us through how to implement simple actions and mindset shifts to change negative thought patterns, shift our moods, and do the exact opposite of what stress is telling us to do. Because for Jenny, it's not about eliminating it, but knowing you can handle it. Stick around after her talk for a brief Q&A with Ted's Joey Katona. That's coming up right after a short break. And now our Ted Talk of the Day. - Let me invite you into my house. It probably looks a little like yours. So one morning, rushing to feed our crying toddler, my husband Adam drops a gallon of milk. He is so mad, he starts aggressively cleaning and cuts his hand under the fridge. He's bleeding, hates blood, and we're out of bandages. So he drives to the pharmacy. On his way home, he rears ends in Uber. All before breakfast. That stress, it's a little hilarious, but mostly heartbreaking. A headache at work spills into heartache at home. Stress doesn't just happen. It's something we easily co-create, then spread like the flu. In minutes, no long meditations, medications, or martinis required. I call these pivots, stress, resets, and I love them so much. I wrote a book highlighting 75 of my favorites. We will cover them all, I wish. As a clinical psychologist, I've taught thousands of people how to use intense emotions and crises, helping clients transform from wanting to die, to building lives they cherish. And I rely on these tools myself, whether I'm trying to get my three young kids to bed, a live-action version of walk-am-all, or when I'm struggling to find the words to write a eulogy hours after losing one of my closest friends. Of course, stressing over spilled milk isn't worrying that AI will hijack your career or facing a cancer diagnosis. A reset won't turn awful into awesome, but it will let you ditch hopelessness and bring the best of you forward, sparking that priceless feeling of knowing you can count on yourself. The secret, practicing stress resets in ordinary moments allows you to reach for them when life feels unbearable. You might be wondering, can you even feel better if your challenges aren't disappearing? Absolutely, stress is less about what you're facing, and more about believing you can cope. This isn't positivity, this is regulating your nervous system. Framing stress is an opportunity for growth and accepting sensations, even not in your stomach, lowers cortisol and allows you to persevere. What moves me most is, research finds even refugees in asylum seekers grappling with being forcibly displaced can improve their mental health by learning strategies similar to ones we'll cover. If peace of mind is possible in political limbo, it's definitely possible in your daily hustle. Yet we create fender benders. Short on money, we shop online. Big deadline, we bounce between procrastination and perfectionism. Tired and lonely, we scroll at midnight. Why? Because when emotions spike, clarity vanishes, we want relief now, so we turn to habits that hurt or reach for substances like alcohol, cannabis, or Xanax that shrink our ability to think when we deserve to be our sharpest. To buy past suffering, normalize your feelings. No matter how hard things seem, emotions and urges are waves, they'll pass without you escaping in ways that undermine you. You know if you scroll tick-tock, you can tear up, then smile within seconds. The problem isn't feeling, it's ruminating, taking a two minute interaction and replaying it for days, turning stress into a chronic problem. Ruminating was my specialty before I learned to reset. And you can too, with three stress resets to reclaim your resilience. One, learn to play with your thoughts. Let's say you just experienced rejection. That's disappointing enough. Then your mind has the nerve to send the emotional equivalent of spam. You're gonna die alone. Almost everyone has repetitive negative thoughts. And life is too precious to take all the 6000 thoughts we have a day, literally. So rather than letting your spam sap your brain power, try seeing it like you'd see blimps in the sky or singing it to your favorite upbeat tune. It sounds silly, but when you play with your unhelpful thoughts, you lose in their grip. If you wanna be more all-encompassing, do you remember that song, "What is love?" "Baby, don't hurt me." Can we all please join together at the counter-threasinging, "What are thoughts? "Thoughts can't hurt me." Okay. "What are thoughts? "Thoughts can't hurt me." Thank you, that was amazing. Even if you don't actually sing, changing your relationship with your insulting inner soundtrack and replacing dead ends with next steps will let you live more harmoniously. Good luck ruminating while you're singing, right? Two, try a half-smile. Dialectical behavior therapist prescribe subtly smiling even when you don't actually feel happy. See, your face doesn't just reflect how you feel, it shapes your emotional experience. Research shows that Botox that prevents scowling improves mood. (audience laughs) No need to freeze your forehead. Half-smiling is your free and natural version. Try being miserable or battling road rage with a resting Buddha face. (audience laughs) Seriously, it primes you to accept whatever is, preventing you from adding attention headache to everything else you're carrying. To be clear, this is not about faking happiness when you're legitimately upset. It's about letting your physiology boost your bandwidth. Plus, it can help foster connections with others, especially if your face otherwise looks like a big do not disturb sign. (audience laughs) Let's give half-smiling a try. Anybody feeling more serene? Now turn to the person next to you and give them a little smile. You guys have such nice half-smiles. How does that feel? (audience laughs) If your body is a walking pharmacy if you know how to use it. Three, act opposite to how you feel. Notice how when you're anxious, you avoid, when you're depressed, you lay low, when you're angry, you yell, acting exactly the way you feel, when you're totally overwhelmed, amplifies negativity and piles on guilt and shame. If you wanna upgrade your mood and how you live your life, the third tool is to notice your emotion driven urge. Ask yourself if acting on it is ultimately helpful, if not do the opposite. So if you're grumpy and wanna send a hostile text, how about either sending a nice one to someone who needs it or sewing your phone? Anybody procrastinate? You've got pressing to do's yet suddenly it's time to empty your inbox. That pseudo productivity or procrastivity, the opposite action, lovingly bringing your full attention to the tasks that matters most again and again. Opposite action isn't superficial. It changes the way you see yourself. What's the ultimate mental health hack? Regularly practicing opposite action. It improves your mental health.
and anxiety in weeks. If stress tries to convince you opposite action is impossible action or insists that you're just not the karaoke type, keep a hope kit, a collection of items that elevates your mood within reach. It can have anything in it that propels you forward. These are shown to generate real hope. This is my. It has pictures of my grandparents holding me as a little girl, cards from clients, a playlist with some dance worthy Drake music, and a note to myself to always be a light. What belongs in yours? After savoring these reminders consider hope isn't just a feeling, it's a behavior you spread, touching the lives of the people you love and anyone you encounter. Stress doesn't have to scar you and you don't have to spill it on to others. Spilled milk or something stickier, stress isn't what happens. It's what you do next. Creating perspective, finding calm within you, and doing what matters will reset your stress, your life, and maybe the world. Thank you. [Applause] How's my half smile? So beautiful. Jenny, if stress is something we co-create as you say, what's just one behavior that you would urge us all to stop doing tomorrow so that we stop passing it on? I love this and I love acronyms. One of my favorite acronyms is stop. STOP, slow down, take a step back, observe, and proceed mindfully. We can create so much damage if we're going a hundred miles an hour, but so much less if we're going five miles an hour. When our emotional mind is on fire, it's so hard to think clearly, but we're so good at getting better with the right tools and stop is like a quick one. Like, nothing happens if you slow things down. Less happens. Thank you. Another round of applause for Dr. Jenny Tates. [Applause] Thank you so much for coming. [Music] That was Jenny Tates at Tednext 2025. If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at Ted.com/curationguidelines. And that's it for today. Ted Talks Daily is part of the Ted Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the Ted Research Team and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonsaka Sungmar Nivong. This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisy-Bogan. Additional support from Emma Tobner and Danielle Bollarezzo. I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening. [Music]
Podcast Summary
Key Points:
Stress is not just an external event but something individuals co-create and can inadvertently spread to others.
Simple, quick "stress resets" involving mindset, body, and behavior shifts can effectively manage stress without lengthy practices.
Three practical reset tools are
Building resilience through these techniques in ordinary moments prepares one to handle significant challenges, fostering self-reliance and hope.
Summary:
Clinical psychologist Jenny Tates reframes stress as a co-created phenomenon that can be spread, but also actively reset. She argues that instead of eliminating stress, the goal is to cultivate the belief that one can handle it. She introduces quick "stress resets"—simple mental, physical, and behavioral shifts—that require no long meditation or medication.
, engaging in a task when procrastinating). Practicing these resets in daily life builds resilience, allowing individuals to access them during major crises. Tates emphasizes that stress management is less about the challenge itself and more about trusting one's ability to cope, a skill that can foster hope and prevent stress from becoming a chronic, damaging force in one's life and relationships.
FAQs
A stress reset is a quick mental or behavioral shift that helps you manage stress without lengthy practices. It allows you to change negative thought patterns and moods, fostering resilience by showing you can handle stress rather than eliminate it.
Try playing with unhelpful thoughts by viewing them like passing blimps or singing them to a tune. This reduces their grip and helps you replace them with constructive next steps, making it harder to ruminate.
The half-smile involves subtly smiling even when you don't feel happy, as your facial expressions can shape your emotions. It helps accept current situations, boosts emotional bandwidth, and can improve connections with others.
Acting opposite to emotion-driven urges, like doing a task when procrastinating, disrupts negative cycles. This practice enhances mood, reduces anxiety over weeks, and changes how you see yourself by promoting helpful behaviors.
A hope kit is a collection of personal items that elevate your mood, such as photos or music. It generates real hope by reminding you of positive connections and strengths, encouraging resilience in tough moments.
STOP stands for Slow down, Take a step back, Observe, and Proceed mindfully. It helps prevent passing stress to others by encouraging thoughtful responses instead of reactive ones when emotions are high.
Chat with AI
Loading...
Pro features
Go deeper with this episode
Unlock creator-grade tools that turn any transcript into show notes and subtitle files.