Mental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Jeremy West.
info_outline MAA #101: With Alex WardMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Alex Ward.
info_outline MAA #100: With Gillian CosgriffMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Gillian Cosgriff.
info_outline MAA #099: With Sam PetersenMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Sam Petersen.
info_outline MAA #098: With Lauren BokMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Lauren Bok.
info_outline MAA #097: With Dilruk JayasinhaMental As Anyone
Interview with Dilruk Jayasinha.
info_outline MAA #096: With Greg FidelerMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Greg Fideler
info_outline MAA #095: With Ben SteelMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Ben Steel
info_outline MAA #094: With Katrina FlemingMental As Anyone
Mental As Anyone Interview with Katrina Fleming.
info_outline MAA #093: With Jess PearmanMental As Anyone
Interview with Jess Pearman.
info_outlineInterview with Sri Lankan-born Melbourne-based Comedian Dilruk Jayasinha, who has performed anecdotal and self-reflective comedy all around Australia and the world since 2010. Dil has been on the tv shows such as Utopia and Have Yoi Been Paying Attention?, he won a Logie in 2018 for Most Popular New Talent, he has an awesome podcast with fellow Comedian Ben Lomas called Fit Bet, and currently you can catch Dil’s comedy special on Amazon Prime called Bundle of Joy. Dil's 2020 show Victorious Lion will hopefully resume later in the year (check www.comedy.com.au for updates). Dil very kindly spent some time on this interview a couple of weeks prior to the lockdown.
We discuss: the benefits of seeing a mental health professional, the importance of giving therapy a fair crack and having a good fit with your therapist, Shae’s own techniques for managing work as a Psychologist, setting boundaries between work and personal life, the benefits of cutting down on multi-tasking, the book Atomic Habits by James Clear, unconditional love for his niece, the Trello app for organising your life, Dil’s thoughts on quitting alcohol and the pain-avoidance technique of staying sober, picking somewhere to start and gradually increasing his pace to help him (literally) run a marathon, being in touch with your values to assist with achieving goals, gratitude and bigger picture thinking, using jealousy constructively, the Elton John analogy of responding rather than reacting, Dil’s super power, the problem when the “default is fault”, the book Useful Beliefs by Chris Helder, and Dil’s message to realise that you may have things better than you have told yourself.