Inside Mental Health

Why Negative Self-Talk Feels True (And How to Stop Believing It)

Jan 22, 2026
Lynn Smith, a media expert and former NBC anchor, shares insights on negative self-talk and its impact on mental health. She explains how our brains are wired for fear and why this leads to self-sabotage. Lynn challenges the myth of toxic positivity, emphasizing resilience over perfectionism as a vital skill. The conversation reveals practical steps to reframe harmful thoughts and encourages teaching resilience to children. Ultimately, Lynn advocates for taking small, purposeful actions to combat the inner critic and move forward.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Brain Wiring Explains Negative Self-Talk

  • Negative self-talk is rooted in brain wiring that treats perceived social threats as danger.
  • Reframing changes the data fed to decision centers and alters bodily fear responses.
ADVICE

Interrupt And Reframe Negative Thoughts

  • Stop when the brain bully speaks and deliberately reframe the thought into something actionable.
  • Watch how your body calms and your performance improves when you feed new data to your brain.
INSIGHT

Reframe Without Toxic Positivity

  • Reframing is not about toxic positivity or denying real problems.
  • Distinguish between unhelpful catastrophizing and realistic problem-solving action.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app