How Am I Doing?: 40 Conversations to Have with Yourself
By Dr. Corey Yeager and Cade Cunningham
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About this ebook
Life is hard. But it gets a whole lot easier when you start to talk it out. In How Am I Doing?, you're invited into a series of conversations with yourself to improve your mental health as you discover your purpose, honor your story, and explore who you want to be.
Dr. Corey Yeager, psychotherapist for the NBA’s Detroit Pistons and most recently featured on Oprah and Prince Harry's The Me You Can't See on Apple TV+, offers you 40 questions to help you raise awareness of your thoughts and emotions and reconnect with who you want to be.
Over the course of these 40 conversations with yourself, you're invited to:
- Build trust with yourself
- Consider how past traumas affect your life today
- Grow a practice of positive self-talk
- Let go of guilt and regret from your past
- Develop mental health strategies for what to for moments when you're depressed or anxious
- Increase your confidence and embrace your emotions
Each of the 40 questions is paired with a short, thoughtful reflection from Dr. Yeager, along with prompts and self-care strategies to help you look at yourself in the mirror and come into alignment with who you want to be.
So join the conversation; nothing is off-limits here. Come check in with yourself and take these small, simple steps to journey toward a more honest and harmonious way of living.
Dr. Corey Yeager
Best known for his appearance on Harry and Oprah's The Me You Can't See on Apple TV+, Dr. Corey Yeager is a licensed marriage and family therapist at the doctoral level, focusing his therapeutic practice primarily on serving the African American community. Dr. Yeager holds a bachelor of arts degree in psychology from Metropolitan State University, a master of arts degree in psychotherapy from Argosy University, and a PhD in family social science from the University of Minnesota. His research centers on better understanding the plight of African American relationships and educating service organizations to encourage meaningful change in those relationships. Yeager served as the psychotherapist for the Detroit Pistons for five seasons. He is working within the merging of his two cornerstone passions: athletics and therapy. In his current role as a consultant for the United Football League (UFL), he supports the overall mission of the league while also working with players and coaches to build cohesiveness. As Dr. Yeager has facilitated meaningful dialogue on the subject of race and racism, he has had "courageous conversations" about that across the country. Outside of the NBA and UFL, some of his clients include The Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN), The Smithsonian Institute, the University of Southern California, WonderMind, The Gersh Agency, and Lola Red. He is also a part of the Engage Speakers Bureau based in Los Angeles.
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How Am I Doing? - Dr. Corey Yeager
Introduction
To me, therapy is conversation. And conversation—when there’s humor, openness, and curiosity—is like playing on a playground. We take turns. We tell stories. And neither of us knows what we’ll discover.
I came to psychotherapy after nearly two decades living my dream of playing pro football. I made it pretty far but didn’t get all the way to the NFL—which meant I was free to find a new field of play in therapy. It took a lot of work to get here, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t feel like work.
At therapy’s core, we’re talking. And I love talking. Just like with football, I don’t always have to have the right answer. It’s okay for me to stumble. It’s okay for you to stumble. Because sometimes we stumble into magic.
Four years ago, I transitioned from working as a therapist in the Minneapolis public schools—a role I still treasure—to providing sports-based therapy to professional athletes. My clients and office spaces have changed, but ultimately, I’m still just having conversations. These days my office is at the Pistons Performance Center (PPC), where the Detroit Pistons practice. I don’t wear a suit, and I don’t approach anyone from on high. I just show up and show them I’m present. The players know they can call me anytime day or night. And sometimes they do.
You’ll often hear me chatting with the players. How you livin’? You good?
I say as a player approaches me on the bench. Come holla at me over here.
Or I’ll give them a simple, How you doin’?
This book puts that one simple question in your court. I break down the larger question, How am I doing?
into forty smaller questions to help you answer that big one. Your number one goal as you read should be to cultivate a better sense of awareness—becoming curious of who you are and how you got where you are. Only then you can start intentionally making better choices for who you want to be.
Everyone has thoughts and feelings going on under the surface, underneath their awareness. In therapy we call this the subconscious. I like to describe consciousness as the front stage—this is where you see the actors performing. The subconscious is the backstage—all the costumes and scenery changes that you don’t see. I want you to tap into what’s going on backstage, in your subconscious.
You’ll also hear me talk about roots a lot. We are not going to stay on the surface here. We’re going to ask a lot of deep questions—questions inside of other questions—and we’ll keep going until we find answers.
We’re not seeking behavior modification in these pages. I practice narrative-solution focused therapy. That means I dig into a space and get content-laden stories. I think of narrative-solution focused therapy like this. Imagine you’re going to have a backyard party, but the yard is covered with dandelions. It looks like you don’t spend any time taking care of it. So, you mow. The lawn looks great, and you appear to have it all together. But four days later the dandelions are back. Why? Because you didn’t do anything to impact the root system.
In narrative therapy, we’re not going to mow. We’re going way underneath the surface. Our hands will be covered in dirt. We’re going to spend the whole afternoon out there pulling up the entire root system. If we can get to the root, we can better fix the issue for the long term. It’s a longer, messier, and more frustrating process.
Throughout this book you’ll be pulling up those dandelions. I’ll be asking you to recall specific moments, because your content-laden stories are the cornerstone to entering your world. So go ahead and get your notes app open or grab a journal, or maybe you want to walk and talk into your phone. Whatever feels most comfortable for you.
The therapeutic playground sounds like a fun place, but it has its raised voices, hurt feelings, and tears, just like a real playground. It’s not always a serene place. Sometimes you will have to fight for resolution. You’ll have to be open to the change and growth these battles usher in. My task as a therapist is to be present. That’s your task as a reader here too. Be present for yourself. Show up for these questions. Reflect on them. Bring your own thoughts and your own questions.
While I can’t be there to hold your story the way I would in person, I’m going to do my best to walk this journey with you. I’ll tell you about my struggles and my experience. I’ll ask you to stay engaged and work hard. I’ll give you prompts and activities to engage with on the page and in the mirror. This deep heart-work and the pages you write will be a vessel for your story. Who knows? Together we might stumble into magic.
QUESTION 1
Who is the most important person in your life?
When you think of the most important person in your life, you might think of one of the people you’ve committed your life to. Maybe your spouse or a child or a longtime friend. You may think of a parent or grandparent who sacrificed so much to help you grow into who you are today. Or maybe you think of one of the loyal, hardworking people who depend on you at work.
But if a family member, friend, or colleague is the most important person in your life, and everything you do is for them, then where do you come in? Are you the second most important person? Third, fourth, fifth in line?
You may not realize it, but you are the most important person in your life. While you might think prioritizing yourself is selfish or arrogant, I hope to convince you it’s not. In fact, it’s essential to your well-being and foundational to every other question in this book. Facing up to challenges, becoming intentional with your day, making better decisions, improving relationships—you can’t tackle any of those goals until you recognize the position you’re here to play.
Even though I’m a generous guy and I’m happy to share what I have, I still recognize myself as the top dog in my world. And that means sometimes I have to be generous to myself, give myself the same time and attention and grace I give others. Before I can be a good brother, father, husband, friend, therapist, or coach to anyone, I have to be a good Corey for Corey. When it’s my turn to take the shot, I take it. When it’s my turn to step up to bat, I step up. When opportunities come to put myself first for my own well-being, I take responsibility for my own needs.
Here’s an example. When I’m starting to feel overwhelmed, I tell my wife, Carrie, that I’m taking a Corey day. That means I won’t be fielding any calls, even from her. I’ve learned to make this preemptive move before I become submerged and start making poor decisions. I won’t be able to take care of someone else who is overwhelmed when I’m in the same space myself.
This is what I mean by putting myself first. It doesn’t mean I don’t want to help others. Being of service to others is vital to me. As you’ll see in the pages ahead, it’s central to my identity. But I am aware of where I need to be mentally to be able to serve others. On days when the gas tank is on empty, I need to fill it up before I go anywhere or do anything. There are afternoons I literally sit in a chair in my living room and refuse to answer the door when people ring the doorbell. If they peer inside the house, they can even see me sitting there. That’s how comfortable I have become with putting myself first in this context.
I want to help you put yourself first too.
To be clear, this is not carte blanche to do whatever the heck you want. There will be situations when you’re not the priority, and it isn’t really about you. Putting someone else’s needs first can be the appropriate action in many situations. Staying up late to help your child with her homework, or giving up your seat on the subway to someone who needs it, doesn’t mean you’re not the most important person. Your role in these situations is to be the adult or to be the good citizen. The difference is you’re moving consciously, not reflexively. You’re moving with awareness.
As you move through this book, I will be gently prompting you to put yourself first. Along the way I want you to notice when and where you hesitate. Keep asking questions. I don’t expect things to change overnight here or anywhere else, but gaining more awareness of where you fall on your list of priorities is the very first step.
TELL YOUR STORY
So let me ask you again: Who is the most important person in your life? (I hope you answered I am.
) How does embracing your role as the star in your own life make you feel?
When you’re getting overwhelmed, take a moment to pause and make a plan to protect yourself. Can you say no to an upcoming plan? Can you let the phone go to voicemail? What are some other ways you can put yourself and your needs first?
Keep a log in your calendar or notes app for the next few days. Make two columns. On one side, list the occasions when you put yourself first. On the other, list the moments when you hesitate. Notice examples of each throughout your day. At the end of the week, circle back. Consider imbalances and ask yourself, Where do I need to make a change?
Consider the last time you felt completely out of balance. Maybe you hit a wall and burned out over a busy schedule. Maybe you just woke up one day and thought, What’s the point of it all? Go back into that moment and write it down in your journal, as if you were telling a story. Who were you seeking to please? Was it you or someone else?
QUESTION 2
What are your wildest dreams?
When I began studying psychology, I started dreaming about a career that would connect my experience in pro sports with my newfound passion for therapy. Sports and therapy? Nah, those two don’t belong together. Bring the dream down, Corey. It doesn’t have to be so big. Now I’m in the NBA, which was a wild dream of mine. I didn’t even play basketball to get here! But I pursued a passion to become a therapist, got my doctorate, and it ultimately led to my dream job. It’s still wild, but my career is a testament to the fact that wild dreams are not out of your reach.
It’s important that we keep a wild dream outstretched in front of us. When we have the shape of our dreams, we’re able to intentionally organize and prioritize small, daily tasks. I set macro