Curiosity: The Bridge to Connection - podcast episode cover

Curiosity: The Bridge to Connection

Feb 23, 202536 minEp. 131
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Episode description

In this enlightening conversation, Mette Reebirk, an author and executive coach, shares her journey from corporate leadership to entrepreneurship. Mette emphasizes the importance of questioning our thoughts and narratives, understanding the connection between thoughts and emotions, and the power of self-reflection.

She discusses the impact of leadership on personal well-being, the necessity of empathy in relationships, and the challenges of embracing diversity. Mette advocates for mindfulness and living in the moment, encouraging listeners to capture their thoughts and emotions while fostering curiosity and connection with others.

Mette's Linked In page

Transcript

Dana Skaggs (00:01.57) Welcome friends, whether you're out on a walk, running errands, or relaxing at home, it's wonderful to connect with you. Joining us today is Med Reburke. She is an inspiring author and executive coach. She's dedicated over two decades to helping experienced leaders realize their true potential and free themselves from anxiety. She has a new book.

called The Tipping Point. Life force comes from questioning your thoughts and it reveals how we can set ourselves free by questioning what we believe to be true. Med, welcome to Phoenix in Flame. Mette Reebirk (00:47.84) Thank you. Thank you so much.

Dana Skaggs (00:51.992) This is amazing. can't wait to get talking with you. There's so many questions. Now, go ahead and you have done so much. with my background in psychotherapy, I love what you're doing. And I love the way you're encouraging people to question the narratives, where they came from, what they're doing to us right now. So I would like to learn a little bit more about you first, because I understand you started. with a bachelor's degree in economics.

Mette Reebirk (01:23.818) Actually, have a bachelor degree, I have a couple of masters, so I have a lot of paper on a lot of stuff. Yeah, yeah, I'm from Denmark and I live in Copenhagen. I have a family, I have three kids, they grow up. I have two grandchildren. I'm married to a very lovely husband who is an organist. Dana Skaggs (01:33.026) Well, tell us about yourself. Tell us where you come from and yeah, let's get to know you.

Mette Reebirk (01:53.388) played the organ in a church. have been working, I'm 60 years, I've been working for many, years and seven years ago I got fired. It was not the first time I got fired.

Dana Skaggs (02:10.04) Well, tell us if that sounds interesting. I usually when I talk, there's interesting stories behind our little our journey in life is there are the experiences that all of the experiences, even at the time, it feels like a negative thing. But when we look back, sometimes not so much. And I'm very interested in what we learn and all those twists and turns. Mette Reebirk (02:18.014) Yes. Mette Reebirk (02:25.056) Yeah.

Mette Reebirk (02:31.754) Okay, when I got fired, I was so fed up with corporate. So I decided to start on my own, not really knowing what to offer. But I got a little money because I was fired in a not very polite way. So I used the money to get someone to make me a website.

And you know communication, it's so easy. You can write so many lovely words and it looks great, but you know, what is it actually? So, but anyway, was, my first customer was huge, very, very big Chinese company that had me to come and inspire them how to create a research park that could attract startups from Scandinavia.

So I traveled to China a little worried actually because normally I had always been hired in huge companies and suddenly it was just me, Mehdi Rehberg, incorporated all by herself. And I started to think, what is it actually that I have to offer? But actually they were very thrilled. And then I, you know, when I...

When you start up a company, need to kind of find out what is it actually that will be your... What is it that people want to buy? And especially when it's a startup, you need to also be a little pragmatic. So I was approached also by a headhunter who asked me if I wanted to become a headhunter. And I said, okay, three days a week, I can do that. So I did that on the side also.

And then I got to see that, first of all, it was a very boring job, but I met a lot of leaders on all levels that had been laid off. And I got to see that regardless of how much they had achieved, they were not very sure that they were not very happy and they were not very

Mette Reebirk (04:56.704) They were insecure about whether their dad would be proud of them. And I start to wonder, how come? Because on the paper, they had everything. And then I also started to think about, what is it me, Mede, I'm going, what's my thinking? And then I became very curious about thoughts. and emotions, feelings and what comes first.

Dana Skaggs (05:31.57) Let me pause you for just a moment and because I'm really tracking what you're saying and I I already have questions and comments and I'm going to try to kind of weave those in. The first thing I'm wondering is kind of when you're you mentioned being in corporate and getting kind of tired of that and kind of wanting to move on. I'm interested in kind of what your position was what you did with with the corporate world first of all that you were kind of launching from and then also

What your experience was when you mentioned how kind of frightening or scary or anxiety ridden it was when you're not part of a company, when you're just by yourself. And that speaks to a lot of people that like myself and you that are entrepreneurs and we kind of launch out on our own and we don't have a big company that's backing us. And that is a very different experience. So what are those two things? Like what was your corporate experience? I've talked to people, for example, that were in HR and different

departments and corporate before they kind of launched out and became an entrepreneur. So what was your experience there and then what was it like for you going by on your own?

Mette Reebirk (06:37.514) Yeah, but I've done a lot of different things, but always in a leader position. I've been president, I've been director of a huge organization set up to attract investments to Copenhagen. I have been international director at a university. I've been in another university, I've been director for corporate relations.

Yeah, different leadership positions. But always, you know, having a huge organization kind of backing me kind of, I maybe I also had grown into this belief that my, my personality was a little, you know, lined with the company I worked for. And suddenly without, you know, this Dana Skaggs (07:09.44) a lot. you.

Mette Reebirk (07:36.032) brand behind me, it was just me, Medde. But then I learned that actually they didn't buy into the company. They bought into what I had to bring to the table. That means what I have in between my ears and in my heart, right? So... Dana Skaggs (07:57.248) Yes.

Mette Reebirk (08:02.538) And that had been kind of a false belief that had kind of guided me until that point when I got to see that maybe it was just a story I told myself and believed to be true until I discovered that it was just a story. So, you know, it's... And that is what we do all the time. If I ask you to close your eyes and maybe also your listeners, just for a short moment, try to close your eyes. Dana Skaggs (08:36.963) Mm -hmm.

Mette Reebirk (08:52.544) or can you open them again? And then I'm pretty sure that there was a voice in your head saying, this is weird. I don't hope that this will last too long because my listeners, they don't like it. And then there's another voice maybe telling you, come on, be positive. She has a plan, And then to recognize that those two have something going on, there must be a third one watching those two.

and what's going on in your head. thoughts, it's just, you know, we have around 60 ,000 thoughts a day. Coming or going, it's like clouds on the sky, you know, they come and go. But sometimes we kind of hang on to some of the thoughts. Dana Skaggs (09:37.71) Mm -hmm. Mm -hmm.

Mette Reebirk (09:48.446) And you do not have a feeling or an emotion that has not been created by a thought. So whenever you feel anxious, afraid, angry, shameful, it's created by a thought, you in a very short moment innocently believed to be true. And the moment you find out that this is just a thought, I don't need to believe it.

The feeling you have, the stressful feeling you have, will leave your body. But you know, it's amazing. The body is amazing. It's the most incredible app ever, ever, ever invented. Because it tells you all the time about the quality of your thinking. Dana Skaggs (10:46.016) Mm

Mette Reebirk (10:47.958) But then, before you get to know this, you actually believe the opposite of what is the truth. Because it feels, you have this problem in your stomach, all your heart beats, and you start to sweat. And then you think, okay, this is so tangible. Dana Skaggs (11:16.663) Mm -hmm. Mette Reebirk (11:16.734) It must be true what I'm thinking.

Dana Skaggs (11:19.348) Absolutely. Well, and what you're describing is right to down to a T of cognitive behavioral therapy is that everything starts with a thought and that produces a feeling which then produces our action. And you're just right down the line talking about that. And I, you know, were you talking about how we hold our thoughts, which are feelings in our bodies and something that that I tend to do is I'll hold my stress in my shoulders. Mette Reebirk (11:25.962) Okay.

Dana Skaggs (11:49.514) and it will feel like concrete. Or you know that temperature when something is so cold it feels hot or something is so hot it feels cold, right at that line? Sometimes that's what my shoulders feel like, right at that line between freezing and super hot and you can't figure out which it is. And I think it's really interesting the work that you're doing with businesses and with people helping them to kind of look behind the curtain. Mette Reebirk (11:59.67) Yeah. Yes.

Dana Skaggs (12:19.318) and figure out what is it that you believe, what's causing your anxiety that's in turn causing the feelings and in turn causing these bodily sensations. I mean, it's the real deal.

Mette Reebirk (12:31.852) It's definitely the real deal. But you know, sometimes it's, you know, even though that you may get it or intellectually, you know, understand it, it can be difficult to let go of it because it has kind of grown into how you believe you to be, you personality, your, you know, it's my story. It's my story. It's my trauma, traumas. Dana Skaggs (12:58.786) Mm -hmm. Mm -hmm.

Mette Reebirk (13:01.676) So when we let go of that, some people can feel even more naked. So that they can, you know, they get used to have this stone in the shoe. And without that stone, it can feel maybe even more, you know, And there's also another thing here is that, you know, the only one who can hurt me is actually myself. So when we see that, we also need to let go of blaming others. Our boss, our spouse, our kids, our friends, our whatever, the politicians. Because...

Dana Skaggs (13:57.492) Do you find that to be common, you know, when people are just shifting blame and they don't, they have a hard time understanding what you're saying that they are the ones that are harming themselves? Mette Reebirk (14:03.862) Thanks.

Mette Reebirk (14:09.628) Yeah, you you need to look behind. Also, there's a lot of, I don't know, I think you may have the same problem in the US, that a lot of people become stressed in their workplaces because of bad leadership, and there's a lot of bad leadership. But actually, even very, very... awful leader.

You know, it depends on how you react upon what's on your plate. And if you let go of this blaming thing and you still have this very, very bad leader, you only have one thing to deal with, and that's a bad leader. And maybe you can even teach him, maybe you can even help him, or you can use your energy finding another job. But if you also have to entertain a story about he shouldn't or I don't know a lot, try to change him or try to control him or her, it's not going to work.

Dana Skaggs (15:29.326) Well, let me ask you this because I absolutely, 100 % on board with what you're saying and I've seen it with so many people and stories that I've heard people say things like, you know, he say, assuming the boss was male, well, he hates me. He thinks I'm stupid. He doesn't think I'm doing a good job. So they create this whole narrative that is impacting their, but that's in their own mind that really.

That's the narrative. That's what they're choosing to believe about the boss and that's impacting how they interact with him. You say to let go. What have you found to be most helpful with your clients in, in if they want to let go and they understand, like you said, intellectually that they need to let go, but they're having a hard time actually letting go of that narrative that, like you said, the stone in the shoe that they've had for a long time, maybe they

have never lived a life without that particular narrative and they don't know how to let it go, what would you suggest to those people? Mette Reebirk (16:31.562) You know, when we meet the other person, we don't really meet the other person. We meet the story, our own story about the other person. means that actually we meet ourself. So when we blame the other one for this and that, and we reach a point where we get it, then we can actually learn a lot of things about ourself.

When I blame my boss about this and that, he doesn't like me. Do I like myself? He finds me not smart enough. Do I find myself smart enough? And then when we get that and we can start to listen differently to the other person. then maybe we also get to that point where we can listen and hear that actually the bus.

he's actually not very secure. He's very, very insecure. And actually, he also looks very tired. So instead of, you know, taking it on to define something in me in that specific moment, then maybe I can approach him and say, okay, I really get it. There's so much on your plate and... You know, today in the afternoon I have an hour where you can, know, if I can help you, let me know. And now I'm going to make two cup of coffee because I think maybe you need a good cup of coffee.

Dana Skaggs (18:27.342) That's what a wonderful thing how empathetic and compassionate you know that we can be in those places that would change the whole dynamic between two people. Mette Reebirk (18:35.946) Yeah, and it's about one thought. So when we, but when we don't know it, we take everything in and we make it ours. And that is actually a huge problem. And that is also why so many wars starts and so many misunderstandings. We are so busy blaming.

And actually when we don't need to blame anyone any longer, then we start to listen in a different way and we start to look in a different way.

Dana Skaggs (19:21.258) I that. I love that. I want to ask you something. You said something a few moments ago that I thought was really interesting and profound. You said when we meet someone else, we're actually meeting ourselves. And I, and then when you went on to describe it, it was basically how we project our own beliefs about ourselves and about the other person on to that other person. So we're actually, and I'm thinking when you were saying that, I was thinking about how we're struggling.

Mette Reebirk (19:44.223) always. Dana Skaggs (19:49.58) with trying to be more diverse. We're trying to be more open to diversity, to have a platform to create more diversity. And sometimes that means meeting someone that is not like us. And so when we're meeting someone, it's almost, I would like to hear your thoughts on how that.

that narrative and how we're meeting someone else, we're kind of meeting ourself, which is basically our assumptions we're making about the other person, because we really don't know them yet. We're just meeting them. So all that's happening on our mind, all those thoughts that you're mentioning are actually our own beliefs. We don't really know this person yet. And so how do you see how that impacts businesses, attempts to be more diverse and include more diversity, which means us meeting and working with people that we are not like?

Mette Reebirk (20:30.366) And not at all. Mette Reebirk (20:42.7) It's going to take a long time. Because actually, each of us, need to get a feeling about what it's all about. When we believe that we are actually meeting the other one as an individual, and then we don't know, we haven't yet realized that we are meeting ourselves.

Dana Skaggs (20:45.699) You Mette Reebirk (21:13.022) the reaction that we would think that now he or she will do like this and that and then nothing happens or something else happens and then maybe some people they will take it very personally and say this is not very respectful or they must be stupid or I don't know what a lot of things that we you know get Dana Skaggs (21:40.152) Right. Right. Mette Reebirk (21:43.19) put together. So it's...

Mette Reebirk (21:54.954) when we kind of can empty our head and meet the other one. Dana Skaggs (22:02.136) that. Mette Reebirk (22:02.76) Then we can, you know, be curious. And we don't need to have, you know, we don't need to be afraid that now they are going to validate us because we don't validate them any longer. We are just there. Show me. Yeah, because when you are afraid, it's very difficult to be curious. And... Dana Skaggs (22:21.068) I like that. Empty our minds and be curious.

Dana Skaggs (22:30.529) Mmm. Mette Reebirk (22:31.432) A lot of people, they are afraid all the time. Dana Skaggs (22:35.978) And when we're afraid we get defensive and so we're definitely not. Right. Mette Reebirk (22:38.634) Yeah, and we don't, we are not aware of it. Actually, we are mentally on cruise control almost all the time. But we don't know it. And it's very difficult to change anything if you don't know that it could be done differently.

Dana Skaggs (22:59.55) That and that seems to be what you're doing is trying to help people really be aware to get off cruise control and to be more aware of those thoughts that they're having. Mette Reebirk (23:06.846) Yeah. But to do that, you know, I cannot... I can write a book and you can read the book and it sounds... Sounds good and right and everything. But you need also to be curious about where things lead you. It's not enough to understand a sentence.

We can all understand a sentence. But you also need to have this little thing extra. Dana Skaggs (23:38.434) Mm -hmm. Mette Reebirk (23:45.322) That way you can look at, where does it lead me? I read this, okay, I'm not my thoughts, I'm not my emotions, feelings. I have thoughts, I have feelings. Okay, and then be silent for a little moment and say, how does that come up in my life?

Mette Reebirk (24:10.09) Now I get it. For instance, know, kids, teenagers, they don't clean up after themselves. They just throw their clothes here and there and everywhere, And then you and I, can tell them, now you have to do, I'm not going to do it for you. You have to take up your clothes and put it nicely together and in the closet. Dana Skaggs (24:24.605) Yes.

Mette Reebirk (24:41.613) But nothing changed. It goes on. And then I can maybe say, okay, that is not very respectful. And I can be very upset, angry and... Until I get the idea that, okay, without this story, it's not very respectful. What's in the problem? Who wants it to be, you know, removed? It's me. And maybe do they actually see it? Because if it's on the floor and they just, you know, go over it, they don't see it.

Mette Reebirk (25:23.348) When you don't see anything, it's very, very difficult to find it. So when you start to become aware of what's going on, and then, okay, I stopped being so, always yelling up and spending a lot of energy doing that, and that didn't really become me either. What happened? Dana Skaggs (25:28.942) Right.

Mette Reebirk (25:52.012) They started to pick up their own clothes. Yeah, yeah, actually. So, you know, a better world starts with each of us questioning, becoming aware of what is it that we are telling ourselves about reality. Dana Skaggs (25:55.458) Really? Mette Reebirk (26:18.762) And you know, the only thing that we can lose is a story. The only thing we can lose is the story.

Dana Skaggs (26:28.97) Mm -hmm. That I just I really resonate and appreciate everything that you're saying. You had something in your bio, a kind of a quote of yours. said, you're not afraid. You believe you are. And that reminded me of a quote from Epictetus that says, people are not disturbed by things, but by the view they take of them. And that seems to be exactly what you're saying.

Mette Reebirk (26:59.018) Yeah, and it's so simple. It's so simple that you may even think that if it's so simple, there's something missing, but it isn't. It is so simple.

Dana Skaggs (27:15.758) So how do you, what do you find is the best way to encourage people to slow down enough to capture their thoughts? Because like you said, we're kind of on cruise control and we've been in these patterns sometimes our whole lives. We're unaware of what all is going on. It's like white noise now. What has worked best for you in terms of helping people to slow down enough to capture these thoughts? that are impacting their beliefs that are impacting their lives so much.

Mette Reebirk (27:50.496) become aware of their body. If they have a heart that is beating too fast or stomach problem. the moment they can feel okay. Okay, what was it I was thinking in that specific moment? I felt this and that.

Mette Reebirk (28:15.724) He didn't say good morning, my boss this morning. have I done something wrong? Can I be 100 % sure that that is correct? 100 %? Maybe not. Okay. So in that moment where you start to question a small belief that you became aware of because of something in your body, then you are on the right track.

Dana Skaggs (28:45.698) I love that. And that absolutely resonates with my platform, which is boundaries. And it's, you know, understanding the difference between our own thoughts and feelings and assumptions, things that are going on within our own mind and heart versus someone else on the other side of the fence and their yard, what they're thinking and feeling and doing.

in understanding that difference and you know we make assumptions about he's thinking this he's feeling this well we don't know that though do we because we can't read their mind Mette Reebirk (29:15.24) No, no, and actually, actually, people, are not very concerned about you. They are so busy in their own little bubble, thinking and making up stories. So whatever you do, if you have forgot to button something or your hair is not totally perfect, they couldn't care less.

Dana Skaggs (29:25.761) Yep. Dana Skaggs (29:39.49) They could, I agree with you. I have had so many patients in my office that are so tangled up with what other people are thinking about them, but what they don't realize is exactly what you said. Other people are so wrapped up in their own stuff. They don't notice anybody else. And so everyone's so wrapped up. We just realized that it's like, no one's looking because they're too concerned about their own self.

Mette Reebirk (29:41.9) you Mette Reebirk (29:56.074) at all. Yeah. Mette Reebirk (30:04.618) Yeah, you're safe, home safe. Yeah, yeah. And you know, actually it is funny and it is crazy because we spend so much energy in something that is totally crazy. Dana Skaggs (30:08.312) That's it! my gosh.

Dana Skaggs (30:21.28) And what's the point in it? Because if you follow it through, you look at it like a book that you're turning the pages of the book, it's like, okay, worst case scenario, this other person looks at you and thinks your hair looks funny. Okay, and? It's like, yeah.

Mette Reebirk (30:36.522) And then maybe it's because her hair looks funny. Because again, we do not meet the other one where the other one is. We meet the other one through the story about the other one. That means that we meet ourselves. Yeah.

Dana Skaggs (30:49.144) That's it. my gosh. And our, our agency, our power is in owning our own story and being able to step back and find that freedom of curiosity. And when you were describing that, it made me think of little children when they're out on the playground, because we were talking about diversity earlier and how what you're describing helps us to be able to be open to differences in people, people that are not like us.

And when you look at little children that are on the playground playing, they don't really say they'll walk up to someone who doesn't look like them and they say, Hey, I'm Henry. What's your name? And they'll say, my name's Fred. Okay. You want to play? Sure. You know, and they run off and they just have, they, have this curiosity and they'll look at something from a point of curiosity and they don't have all those, those Mette Reebirk (31:32.384) Don't complicate life!

Dana Skaggs (31:41.614) preconceived beliefs and narratives that we end up creating later in life because of our stories. What I'm hearing you say is that we have the platform and the right and I could argue the responsibility to question our stories. Mette Reebirk (31:56.424) Especially if it hurts us. Dana Skaggs (32:00.546) Yes.

Mette Reebirk (32:08.288) that all people, we are here to have a happy life. We are not here to have a painful life. We are here to find happiness. And happiness is actually where we are in the moment. And life is created by a lot of different small moments. But actually we are not very often there.

Either we are in yesterday or in tomorrow and none of that exists. So what exists is you and me here. And the next small moment will be created upon this small moment we had, you and I. Dana Skaggs (32:44.342) Right.

Dana Skaggs (32:56.672) I love that. That's mindfulness and just being in the moment. Something I've said to people before that I said some might perceive my next comment as somewhat morbid, but I find it refreshing is that, you know, none of us knows if we're even going to be alive five minutes from now. Now, we hope we are. But if we don't know if we're going to be alive five minutes from now, why not just sink into the moment? Exactly what you were just describing. Be

Mette Reebirk (33:24.352) Now we are alive. Dana Skaggs (33:26.316) We are alive right now and with one another right now, what's gonna happen five minutes from now is irrelevant. That's what I heard you say and just give ourselves permission to just sink into the moment and absorb it and appreciate it, because therein lies peace and happiness. Mette Reebirk (33:28.108) Mm Mette Reebirk (33:42.152) And another funny little thing is that we are so busy also trying to...

think about problems in the future, regardless of whether it will turn out to become a problem. But all problems. They tend to be solved in the present moment. I cannot fix a problem that maybe or maybe not will emerge tomorrow. Now, I need to wait until it is actually a problem. And then in that moment, I will take care of it. Dana Skaggs (34:12.802) Yes.

Dana Skaggs (34:33.154) Yeah, that's excellent. That's excellent. I appreciate you so much and your energy and your wisdom and your time and your experience that you are so wonderfully sharing with myself and my listeners. Now, what I have for how my listeners can get

you know, more of you, if they want to know more about what you have. Of course, I'm going to put your book in the show notes, but I have your LinkedIn profile. Is there another website or you want them to go to the LinkedIn profile? Okay, then I will put that in the show notes so they can make sure they can go there to be able to connect with you more and find out more. Absolutely. Thank you so, so much for coming and spending your wonderful time with me and my listeners. Thank you.

Mette Reebirk (34:59.66) you. Yeah. LinkedIn. Yeah. Mette Reebirk (35:12.288) Wonderful. Mette Reebirk (35:20.01) Always. Thank you too.

Dana Skaggs (35:22.985) Guys, I know you have heard so many things today that you're thinking not only is it such a blessing to you, but you have a friend or a coworker or a family member that you're thinking, I know just the person that needs to know exactly what met just said on this podcast episode. Take the link of this podcast episode and copy and paste it in text and email. Put it on your favorite social media platform so that we can grow our Phoenix and flame community and spread.

Met's word on what to do with your thoughts and to take them to captive and change those narratives. I hope that you are having a wonderful day and that the rest of your day goes fantastically. I'm Dana on Phoenix and Flame.

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