James Altucher interviews the world's leading peak performers in every area of life. But instead of giving you the typical success story, James digs deeper to find the "Choose Yourself" story - these are the moments we relate to... when someone rises up from personal struggle to reinvent themselves. The James Altucher Show brings you into the lives of peak-performers: billionaires, best-selling authors, rappers, astronauts, athletes, comedians, actors, and the world champions in every field, all who forged their own paths, found financial freedom and harnessed the power to create more meaningful and fulfilling lives.
Episode Description:
James talks with psychotherapist and bestselling author Amy Morin about practical mental strength—the kind you need in the moment, not just in theory. Amy’s earlier books focused on what mentally strong people don’t do. Her new book, The Mental Strength Playbook, turns that work into 50 fast, usable tools for anxiety, stress, worry, conflict, focus, and resilience.
The conversation is personal and tactical. Amy explains why “manage your stress” is useless advice when you’re already overwhelmed, and instead offers small moves that can change your physiology, your thinking, or your next action. She and James talk about scheduled worry, reverse worry lists, psychological distance, “smell the pizza” breathing, half-smiling, doing something kind for someone else, and why solving problems can help with depression.
What makes this episode useful is that it treats mental strength like a playbook, not a personality trait. Life deals different hands—money stress, relationship friction, anxiety, public speaking, aging, creative blocks—and the goal is to have a strategy ready for the hand you’re holding.
What You’ll Learn:
- Why Amy wanted to write a “painkiller, not a vitamin” book for mental strength.
- How scheduling worry can reduce rumination and help your brain reset.
- Why a reverse worry list can turn anxiety into excitement before high-pressure moments.
- How simple physical tools—breathing, half-smiling, psychological distance—can calm the body before the mind catches up.
- Why doing something kind for someone else can interrupt rumination and restore a sense of agency.
- How values help you play the long game when current frustrations feel overwhelming.
Timestamped Chapters:
- [02:00] Amy on grief, stress, and why vague advice doesn’t help
- [03:22] Articles as a testing ground for books
- [03:36] Amy’s life on a sailboat and the simplicity it created
- [05:48] From 13 Things Mentally Strong People Don’t Do to The Mental Strength Playbook
- [06:41] Why people need immediate tools, not abstract advice
- [07:53] Financial anxiety and the first question to ask yourself
- [09:00] Scheduling time to worry
- [10:05] Why 3 a.m. worries often shrink by afternoon
- [11:02] Amy’s own worries about family and what she can’t control
- [12:37] The reverse worry list for acute anxiety
- [13:42] James’ public-speaking anxiety technique
- [14:37] Psychological distance and separating yourself from anxiety
- [15:12] The good-vibes boomerang: doing something kind for someone else
- [16:53] Why not all charity or service feels emotionally useful
- [18:00] Neuroplasticity and rewiring the brain
- [20:08] The half-smile technique
- [22:16] Handling heated political or family arguments
- [23:12] “Smell the pizza” breathing
- [24:45] Happiness vs. wellbeing
- [25:48] Brain chemistry, dopamine, serotonin, and purpose
- [27:17] Amy’s origin story after loss and the viral article that changed her career
- [28:42] How Rush Limbaugh unexpectedly revived her first book
- [32:01] Life after becoming an accidental bestselling author
- [34:25] How writing books changed Amy as a therapist
- [35:11] Anxiety disorders, treatment, exposure therapy, and medication
- [37:46] James on writing, anxiety, and the danger of addictive medication
- [40:05] The power of writing 10 ideas a day
- [42:16] Why mental strength requires multiple plays for different situations
- [43:11] Chess, focus, aging, and cognitive load
- [48:29] Why simplicity may protect attention
- [49:08] The secret to long-term relationships
- [52:54] Committing to the long game
- [56:05] Closing thoughts on The Mental Strength Playbook
Additional Resources:
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