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The Double Win

KELLY MCGONIGAL: Harnessing the Hidden Gift of Stress

The Double Win

Michael Hyatt

Management, Intentionality, Selfdevelopment, Education, Teamleadership, Personaldevelopment, Productivity, Self-improvement, Business, Achievement, Influence, Selfleadership, Leadership

4.81.5K Ratings

🗓️ 15 April 2026

⏱️ 67 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We've spent decades trying to reduce, manage, and protect ourselves from stress. But what if that entire strategy is backwards? In this episode, Michael and Megan sit down with Stanford health psychologist and bestselling author Kelly McGonigal to challenge the most common assumptions about what stress is and how we should respond. If you’re ready to stop chasing the fantasy of a stress-free life and start living with greater resilience and joy, this conversation will show you where to begin.


Memorable Quotes

  1. “Stress, from a scientific point of view, is the biological capacity to adapt and to learn from experience. So every time you have a stress response, it's your brain and your body recognizing this is a moment that matters.”
  2. “It's a fantasy to believe that there's a version of your life that's not stressful, and that if you were doing life ‘right,’ you wouldn't experience stress. Research is pretty clear that people who have meaningful lives have very stressful lives.”
  3. “We know that when stress or distress is met with action or connection with other people, it doesn't have the same toxic effects.”
  4. “The number one cause of stress generation is people trying to avoid stress. So they procrastinate. They put off a difficult conversation…They make choices in the moment that allow them to avoid some discomfort or avoid some pressure, but then things start spiraling.”
  5. “I think we should try to be human beings who contribute to less suffering in the world. And that is different from trying to construct a life where you yourself experience less stress, or you try to parent in a way that your kids experience less stress, or you try to manage a team in a way where your team is never stressed.”
  6. “As soon as you stop fearing what your body does in moments of stress, when you understand it as an attempt to help you, your nervous system response starts to change… All of a sudden your stress response is healthier.”
  7. “In moments when you're starting to feel overwhelmed by stress, that is not a sign that you can't handle this, and it's not a sign that there's no hope. It's your brain and body's wisdom or intuition telling you that you should look for support in your life, whether it's looking for information, emotional support.”
  8. “Joy really asks us to be brave. It asks us to value the things that bring us joy. It asks us to be vulnerable and admit that the things that bring us joy will also cause us pain if we lose them… You are dissolving some of the protective boundaries that you have to other people.”


Key Takeaways

  1. A Meaningful Life Is a Stressful One. Research consistently shows that people with more roles, goals, and responsibilities experience more stress because they have more at stake. Trying to engineer a stress-free life often means cutting out the very things that give life meaning.
  2. Avoidance Leads to More Stress. "Stress generation" most often starts with procrastination, postponed conversations, or choosing short-term comfort over long-term growth. Trying to avoid stress creates more (and worse) stress.
  3. Movement Builds Resilience and Joy. Exercise causes muscles to release chemicals that act like antidepressants—building stress resilience and increasing your sensitivity to connection, meaning, and pleasure at the same time. No other intervention does both.
  4. Life Teaches Your Nervous System to Flex. In-the-moment tactics matter less than the cumulative effect of human connection, nature, play, movement, animals, and creative experience over time. These are what actually shape a flexible, healthy nervous system.
  5. Joy Is Risky. Joy asks us to value things we could lose, to be vulnerable with others, and to let ourselves be moved. Meeting other people's joy with genuine enthusiasm is one of the most powerful ways to increase the joy in your own life.


Resources


Watch on YouTube at:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJdN5QpP54Y


This episode was produced by Sarah Vorhees Wendel of VW Sound

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You can, again, contrast that to some of the things we do that we think are stress relievers

0:04.3

because they don't ask anything of us, like scrolling.

0:08.1

Actually, by not asking anything of us and also not really giving us anything, it becomes

0:14.9

its own kind of stress state that is like a shutdown.

0:22.2

Hi, I'm Michael Hyatt.

0:23.5

And I'm Megan Hyatt Miller.

0:24.7

And you're listening to The Double Wind Show.

0:26.9

We are so excited to share with you our recent conversation with Kelly McGonagall.

0:32.0

It was so good.

0:32.9

It was so good.

0:33.7

Okay, so Kelly's a health psychologist and lecturer at Stanford University. She's the author of bestselling books, including the upside of stress, the willpower instinct, and the joy of movement. Her TED talk on stress is one of the most viewed of all time. Get this, Meg, more than 30 million views. And I kind of thought that was a typo, but it's not.

0:54.8

It's insane.

0:55.6

So she specializes in translating neuroscience and psychology into practical tools for everyday

1:01.4

life, as you'll soon hear.

1:03.3

But Kelly's work has influenced leaders, organizations, individuals who are seeking

1:07.6

resilience and sustainable performance.

1:10.8

She's also known for reframing common struggles as she did twice in our interview with her,

1:16.5

and it was so good, things like stress and temptation as opportunities for growth.

1:21.4

And her most recent work, which I can't wait for,

1:25.0

explores how joy is a risk worth taking.

1:28.2

It's really great.

1:28.9

And I think the big idea of this is that stress is not an obstacle to a flourishing life.

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