Good Life Project - Why MEL ROBBINS Says Letting Go is Key to Success
Episode Date: March 28, 2025Unlock your power to thrive amidst chaos with Mel Robbins, voice behind the global phenomenon "The Let Them Theory: A Life-Changing Tool That Millions of People Can't Stop Talking About." In this prof...ound conversation, Mel shares the counterintuitive wisdom of radical acceptance to help you reclaim your energy, cultivate inner peace, and create real positive change - no matter how turbulent your world becomes.You can find Mel at: The Let Them Theory | Instagram | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode, you’ll also love the earlier conversations we had with Mel about taking care of yourself and your health.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Spend your time and energy on things that actually matter to you and not waste it on the stupid shit that currently drains it.
Mel Robbins is a true phenomenon.
Going from hitting rock bottom, being nearly a million dollars in debt and suffering debilitating anxiety,
to becoming a leading voice on change and motivation.
Millions of people, along with the world's leading brands, come to her for advice. Her videos and top-ranked podcasts have billions of views and she sold millions of books,
including her number one near times bestseller, The Let Them Theory,
which invites people to let go of the need to control others
and reclaim the power and agency that you have in your own life.
This is the single biggest moment of my career. I'm very
clear that it's a moment. Take me a little bit deeper into this. People have
a lot of stress right now and they're looking for places to aim it. What's your
take on what that's actually about? You can't take control of your life until
you stop trying to control or gaslight yourself
into thinking you can control anything out there.
Where is the line between letting people do what they want to do and allowing harm to
happen?
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I can answer what the disruption and what it's been like in so many different aspects.
Because this is the single biggest moment of my career.
I'm very clear that it's a moment.
And I keep saying to the folks at work with me,
my team members, everybody, this is not normal.
This happens once a decade in terms of an idea catching fire
and being the right idea at the right moment in time,
exactly when a large number of people are ready to hear the idea
and want the idea and then share the idea.
And so even though you and I know how to launch a successful book,
we know how to market something,
it is absolutely impossible to have engineered what has actually happened.
And so one of the ways that this has been very disruptive
is to recognize that I am in a deeply spiritual experience
where I feel that this book is not a book.
It is part of something so much bigger than me,
so much bigger than a book,
so much bigger than any individual person
that I feel like I am in the slipstream of spreading
a message that has been true since the history of time and reminding humanity of what each
one of us knows to be true.
That even in the darkest moments in your life,
there are still places where you can find light.
Even when it seems that all hope is lost
or you have nothing, everything is out of your control.
There are things that you can control.
And this is not a new message.
I mean, if you're a fan of Stoicism or the Serenity Prayer or Buddhism or radical acceptance
or detachment theory or, you know, Victor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning, or you
read any of the writing of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., these are all teachings, philosophies,
spiritual truths about the fundamental aspect of being a human being, which is any time you try to control something
that is outside of you, it creates stress inside of you.
And true power lies in focusing on your response
to what's happening outside of you.
I just happened to come along with a modern version of this
inspired by my daughter yelling at me at, you know,
my son's high school prom as I was micromanaging something.
And these two words, let them, and the two words, let me,
have come into existence, packaged the way that I packaged it
at a moment in time where I think,
people aren't just going through a transition.
I think the average person would say to you,
I am stressed out. I feel like things that would say to you, I am stressed out.
I feel like things that I used to rely on are spiraling out of control.
I'm full of concern about where the world is headed.
There's somebody in my family that I'm worried about.
I'm worried about finances.
I'm worried about AI.
That there just seems to be so much out there that the message that actually you do have some control, you do
have power, and being reminded of the simple little things that you can do to
stop giving power to things you can't control and take your power back and
focus on your attitude and the things that you do or don't do in response to
the world around you. I think this is exactly when we all are desperate
for something we can hold onto or to remind us that, yes,
we are more powerful than what it feels like right now.
And so on a spiritual level, Jonathan,
I feel like I am having a spiritual experience.
I feel like I am surrounded by ancestors.
I am surrounded by history.
I'm accompanied by ancestors. I am surrounded by history.
I'm accompanied by spiritual teachers and philosophy
that this is so much bigger than me.
I just, for whatever reason, in the person that was tapped
to put this thing into the slipstream
of consciousness right now.
And so on one level, I've been thinking a lot about
how to actually be present for this moment,
because I am very well aware that this is a moment.
In fact, I've gotten to the point where I'm like,
kind of nervous to get on a plane,
because the only way this gets bigger
is if I go down on a plane
and then people are talking about it, like, you know,
after my death, and I'm kind of not kidding about that.
And I guess the reason why I say that is because
it has been like a rocket to launch a book
on Christmas Eve and to have it become
the single most successful self-help book,
leadership success relationship book ever launched.
It is on track to be the most successful non-fiction book, leadership success, relationship book ever launched. It is on track to be the most successful
non-fiction book ever launched.
To have that happened at a moment in time
where people aren't reading as much,
they're not as interested in this stuff,
to have people actually picking up a book and reading
or listening to it, sharing it with family members,
and turning toward a message that can help them
feel a little bit better about themselves
or feel a little bit more empowered,
that's freaking unbelievably cool.
And that's not just me, that's something bigger than me.
So I keep thinking of this image, Jonathan,
that I'm sitting on an airplane,
it's going 500 miles an hour,
and the velocity of this thing is something
I don't understand, but I'm experiencing it.
But my job is to sit in the seat on the plane,
keep my feet on the ground as I'm sitting in the seat,
have my cup of coffee, talk to my friend Jonathan,
and occasionally look out the window and take in the view.
Because I know that there will be an arc to this.
I know that the let them theory is the legacy
I'm gonna leave on this earth.
And kind of knowing you're in that moment, it's a very weird experience.
And so that's one thing that has been very disruptive.
I think the second thing that has been wild is that in additions of the book launching, the podcast, which I've
been doing for two years, has just like five X'd in growth.
And we hit number one on Apple and on Spotify, Unseated Joe Rogan.
I stayed there for an entire month.
And what I found to be fascinating is that I've been in the top 20 podcasts in the world
since we've started, basically.
Nobody cared.
Nobody would write an article. If you Google the Mel Robbins podcast, the first article that you'll find about the podcast was by Time Magazine in October, four months ago. But other than that,
the only other article written about my podcast was by a blogger
that worked for a radio station on Cape Cod.
And it turns out the only reason why I know this is because we Googled it once, we found this article,
and it turns out I hired that guy without even realizing, and he's now on my team.
And so when you hit number one in a world that is full of uncertainty and stress and conspiracies theory and negativity,
and there's something about people needing to be against something, it was shocking how almost overnight, the negativity, the takedown, the amount of just garbage flying around social media
that my husband, that I just caught Chris cheating on me
and his lipstick on his collar
and they had taken photographs
from a appearance I had done on Jay Shetty's podcast
and then put AI over it.
Like just the amount of complete garbage, the lies being spread,
the rumors, because now all of a sudden,
when you are in that much positive light,
there is this counteracting force
that has negative come and rise to the surface.
And so it's been a very interesting experience
to really have to use the let them theory.
And to not just use it in the context of my day-to-day life,
but to use it in the context of lies that get spread about you,
rumors, negativity, like all that kind of stuff
at a scale that I've never experienced. And so that's been something that's been very disruptive,
not just to me, but to my team.
Because, you know, it's not just,
I'm not the only one that kind of is doing the podcast
and we have a team of people.
And so when people start, I don't like that woman
and she's a this and, you know, I heard this about,
like all this, you're just like, whoa,
people have a lot of stress right now
and they're looking for places to aim it.
And so it's been amazing to see both the positive
but what comes with that level of responsibility
and that size of a megaphone, if you will,
is when you spread that much light,
there is a counteracting force that tries to take it out.
And so it's been very interesting to notice
that's been not disruptive,
but just I've been using let them and let me
and not giving time and energy to it
and still protecting myself from it.
And I'm not saying that like I'm whining,
I'm just kind of explaining that I think for anybody
that tries to make a change in their life or is trying to do something good,
even if you're simply wanting to move or you simply want to change your career or you want to
leave a relationship, you started by talking about transition,
that is a positive force in your life to want to change something about your life. And what you will notice
is that there will be a corresponding negative response to it by the people around you.
And there is just this truth about the balance of that in life because your positive change
makes people question where they're at.
It makes them question what they thought was going to happen.
It's easier to question you than to just sit with the uncertainty of what your changes are going to mean for them.
And so it's been interesting to experience that on scale.
But I think that the main thing for me is that I've just had this real clarity,
because I've spent my entire life like a lot of people, Jonathan,
and we've talked a lot about this,
and you have been a North Star for me in this regard.
I've not been effective recently at following your example,
but I have certainly suffered from the disease of more.
I need to do more.
You know, like, I need to do this. I need to do that. Okay, now that this is working, we gotta add more on I need to do more. You know, like I need to do this.
I need to do that.
Okay, now that this is working, we gotta add more on.
We gotta do more. We gotta get bigger.
We gotta grow more.
And I have gotten to the point where I feel so satisfied
by exactly what I'm doing right now,
the podcast and the let them theory.
And I don't wanna do more. exactly what I'm doing right now, the podcast and the let them theory.
And I don't wanna do more.
And it's a very different thing to look at your life. And when you think about the transition
that you may be wanting to go through,
understanding when you're building something
because you wanna create something new
versus adding more because
you feel you need to and that's what's driving the transition this like need to
do more that need to be bigger that need to do this for me it's been a very
profound experience to realize that I've just done the best work of my entire
life I feel like an up you like an athlete that's retiring.
I want to enjoy the impact that the let them theory is having in people's lives and really
just focus on doing it well.
Because I've been the kind of person that just jumps to the next thing and jumps to
the next thing and jumps to the next thing.
What would it look like if my transition wasn't doing more?
It wasn't reinvention in the way that I think about it.
What if my transition is actually reinventing myself
to become masterful at just doing the podcast
and really seeing the LetThem Theory book
and what this becomes through for the next decade.
Like what if I do that and I allow myself
and give myself the permission to really master
something I've never been good at,
which is creating systems and rhythm and a predictable life
and not just chase the next thing.
And so those are kind of three ways that at least, you know, a predictable life and not just chase the next thing.
And so those are kind of three ways that at least, from a spiritual level, being very present
that this is a very spiritual experience for me
and feeling very humbled to be a part of something bigger.
And the second thing being this kind of awakening
that no matter what you do in your life,
whether it's a small personal change
or more positivity in your life,
there will always be some sort of negative thing
that rises in response because of the balance of stuff.
And I'm just experiencing it at a scale
that I've never experienced it before.
And very happy to report that the Latin theory is helping me to just let people say what
they're gonna say, believe what they're gonna believe, do what they're gonna do
and let me just focus on what I know to be true and who I am. And the third thing
being just this epiphany that reinvention and transition for me is
choosing not to jump on all the opportunity.
Because when you're all of a sudden everywhere,
guess what?
Everybody wants to jump in.
Everybody wants you to do a supplement
and do this thing or do the other thing.
And I'm very clear that I actually want to do something
that you've been very good at,
which is stay true to your values and resist the urge to do something that you've been very good at, which is stay true to your values
and resist the urge to do more
because that's what you think you should do.
Do the things that align with what you actually value.
And for me, that's my family and actually seeing my friends
and spending time in, you know, beautiful part of the world
that I live in here in Vermont and enjoying the mountains,
just like you enjoy the mountains.
And really keeping in mind that the podcast
and the LetThem Theory, it's not my identity,
this is a job and it's an important job.
But the success of it isn't a reflection
on my worth as a person because it's the work that I do.
My worth as a person is based on how I show up every day
and who I am in my life and with my relationships.
And so I think those are the kind of the three big things
that I'm thinking about.
And of course, I'm just like, absolutely,
I'm pinching myself.
I wrote this book with our oldest daughter. The fact that people are loving it, the fact that it's helping so many people, the fact that it's making relationships better. I just think that's so cool.
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There are so many things I'd love to kind of deepen
into there, but the last point that I don't want to brush by
because, you know, as we've talked about,
I've been in this, what I call my two by 20,
I will turn 60 this year.
So I'm a couple years ahead of you.
And when I turned 58, I said, you know,
I'm two years away from like an interesting age.
And why don't I spend two years really just reflecting
and running a series of experiments and thinking like,
how do I want to step into the next season
of contribution and life? What do I want to bring with me? What do I want to leave
behind? What do I want to bring with me but differently? So the way you describe
that I think is really fascinating like when you think about that you know major
transitions or where you're at right now is you know in the past it was always
like more and more different and now you're in this moment where it's like
what if it's this but deeper?
I think that's such an interesting option that we don't often visit. Okay so what am I closing the
door on? What's the next thing? Rather than what if I actually strip away some of the things that
I'm doing now? Just leave the essence of the work that somehow I'm connected to and
Just really pour myself into that like does that count as
Like me evolving into the next best version of myself whatever hell or if you want to phrase it
We so often don't look I think we're conditioned
for the more and the different Rather than what about the less and the deeper and it sounds like that's a lot of what you're exploring now
rather than what about the less and the deeper? And it sounds like that's a lot of what you're exploring now.
Yeah, it's a great insight.
And the thing that came to mind immediately
is that's also what's happened in my marriage.
Like, I heard somebody say, I don't remember who said this,
so I don't know who to give credit to,
but somebody else said this thing.
They kind of casually said, you know,
second marriages are amazing,
especially when they're with the first person you're married.
And I think that there is this obsession where
when we get tired or bored or frustrated
or a little stuck in the patterns of where we're at
or used to something, we think that the answer
is something new.
And I, for one, have absolutely always just gone
to the next thing, always just gone to the next thing.
Like the shiny penny, it's like exhilarating, it's fun.
And there's lots of science around this.
I mean, breaking your routine and doing new things.
Like it just-
Yeah, we love the novelty of it.
We love the novelty.
We love the like wash of chemicals in the body,
and it feels like you're doing something new,
because you are.
But what you just said is doing less
but doing it in a deeper way, stripping away
the bells and whistles and really focusing on,
well, what really matters to me
and what do I want my life to feel like right now?
And for me, I think that's been a theme
without me realizing it for the past kind of
almost four years.
And you know, you've been on a very similar trajectory
because you guys left and went to Colorado
and completely changed the way your day-to-day life looks.
We did the same thing, leaving a area outside of Boston
and going up to a rural area in Vermont.
And just that change of having a almost less,
like I remember when we first moved,
the change was so startling
because I started to realize,
my God, talk about more and more.
I spent, I would literally popcorn through my days
running to a Walmart or wanting to this place or that place
just because I could.
And then you get to a place like where you live now
in the mountains and there's nowhere to go to.
And so you start to realize, wait a minute,
as I strip away less, I'm stuck with myself.
And I think that's also why I haven't done the deeper focus
because it's easier for me to jump to the next thing
and kind of stay on the surface and get masterful there
and then jump to the next thing.
I think it's easier for both of us.
And it also, for both of us.
And it also, it distracts us from going deeper
into the core, which often means that we need
to address things we're really uncomfortable with.
And so we just keep doing the next thing
because it stops us from having to do that work.
Yeah, totally.
So no, that's kind of it for me.
Like I, it's been, it's been an exhilarating ride.
It's taken me 15 years of just army-curling my way through the muck to get to a point
where something this extraordinary could happen in this concentrated moment.
And that I personally, as a human being being have done enough work on myself that I can stay steady
and present as I am navigating something of this global scale, because I've never navigated
anything like this before.
So one of the things you shared earlier in our conversation is this notion that, you
know, while you gave a specific type of languaging, like, to this idea in your book.
The idea itself is of, you know, the Lethal Theory.
It's not new.
It's been around for thousands of years.
Buddhism and non-attachment.
Stoicism and releasing control.
Existentialism and freedom.
Sufism and surrender.
You've got CBT.
So now you're even mentioning things, and I'm like, yeah,
you're right, I guess.
We should move that.
Like, you're right.
Like, the more it's out there, the more
people see the connections.
So you're absolutely, you're even broadening it right now. Yeah. So like, here, you're right, I guess we should move that. You're right, the more it's out there, the more people see the connections.
So you're even broadening it right now.
Yeah, so here's my curiosity.
These are concepts we've known for a time immemorial, right?
And there's a reason that this basic idea of control
what you can control and let go of the things
that you can control, because the opposite of that
is suffering defined.
This is not new knowledge for any of us and yet thousands of years of having it repeated
to us and probably hundreds of traditions and different voices and people, we still
walk through the day deeply driven to control everything and everyone that we can possibly
control.
What's your take on what that's actually about?
Well, based on the extremely smart people that I interviewed as I was writing this
and researching it and looking at my experience using it and people's experience
at Follow Me who had been using it, it just comes down to hardwiring.
You know, we have a fundamental need to be in control
of our decisions, of what we're gonna eat,
of what we think our future is,
of what's happening at work.
And the reason we have this need
is because it makes us feel safe.
If we kind of feel like we can scout around
and we don't spot danger,
then we can take a deep breath and we can rest.
The problem, as I see it, is twofold.
Number one, the problem that the let them theory primarily addresses
is the fact that there is one thing on the planet
you're never going to be able to control, and that's other human beings.
You can't control what they think, say, do, feel.
You're just never going to. But the problem is that their behavior pisses you off,
it worries you, it frustrates you, it stresses you out,
you want them to change.
And so another person's behavior actually triggers
your feeling of being out of control.
And the mistake that I've always made is I just instinctually
then step across the line and think the way that I'm going
to feel safe again is by trying to control what that other
person is doing, feeling, or saying.
And then the problem is that I'm now bumping up against that
other person's need to be in control of themselves.
And so I didn't, like, I think we all kind of know this, but we get
into this very frustrating battle for autonomy, control, and agency. And we've been in it since
we were little kids with our parents. Now, this is primarily a book about adult relationships,
but the way that we learned that you love people by controlling them
is because we were parented when we were little kids.
And parents do need to be in control
of what a child is doing and eating
and their personal safety and lots of other things.
But there comes a time where a child becomes a young
and adult and now they want their autonomy.
And none of us have ever learned truly how to go through life,
or at least I haven't, how to go through life and focus on what I can control
and not allow the things that I can't control to stress me out
or make me angry or waste my time.
Like I knew this instinctually,
but I never knew how to apply it.
And I think the second thing that's going on
and why this message is exploding right now
is because of a couple factors.
Number one, I know that you interview a lot of the same,
especially medical experts and incredible thought leaders
that I talk to on my podcast, but it is apparent
from the medical experts that coming out of the pandemic,
over 83% of people are in a chronic state of fight
or flight, chronic.
And I think everybody underestimates the fact
that if 80% of people are in fight or flight all the time,
that has an impact on how people vote.
It has an impact on how they show up at work.
It has an impact on how they talk to you
when they come home from work.
It has an impact on how they talk to you when they come home from work. It has an impact on how they deal
with customer service reps.
And we've all noticed this uptick in hostility
and a lack of kindness and not being civil to one another
and the inability to have mature conversations.
And I personally believe that one of the reasons
why this is true is because 80% of people
are just locked in the state of fight or flight.
And when that's the case, you actually cannot bring your prefrontal cortex online because
the amygdala has hijacked how you're operating.
And so we are in a moment where, whether it's because of the headlines or it's because people
are mainlining social media or it's because you're in a state of fight or flight or it's because of the headlines or it's because people are mainlining social media or it's because you're in a state of fight or flight
or it's because of the state of the world,
that people are gripped and are on edge,
the amygdala is firing.
And so people feel unsafe,
which means they're gonna start to try to control everything
and they're gonna feel out of control in their lives
and then you don't know how to actually
get back into your body and feel peaceful
and back in control.
And so along comes my simple theory, the let them theory.
The more you let other people live their life,
the better your life gets.
But most importantly, what it does is this.
When you say let them, anytime somebody frustrates you
or you're in traffic or long lines or you see that,
you can go let them.
What's interesting about that, Jonathan,
is that what you're doing is when you say those two words,
you are actually recognizing this is out of my control,
therefore it is not worth my time and energy.
You are also putting up a force field,
and you're preventing all of those little micro-moments where somebody
pisses you off or frustrates you or traffic backs up and it floods you with stress, which
then brings the amygdala online, which then drains your energy and your time.
It prevents that from happening.
And so what's starting to happen for people as they learn about, you know, saying
let them and saying let me is they're starting to feel peaceful. They're starting to feel a layer
of protection that what's happening out there doesn't actually have to interfere with how I
feel in here. And, you know, one of the interesting things that one of the experts said to me as I was,
you know, researching all this was, you know, Mel, nobody stops to think that you actually
can't get sober
until you stop drinking.
The same thing is true about taking control of your life.
You can't take control of your life
until you stop trying to control or gaslight yourself
into thinking you can control anything out there.
And you also can't get your power back
until you first recognize that you've been giving power
to people's opinions and to their inconsiderate behavior,
and you give power to the headlines,
and you give power to social media.
That's why you don't feel powerful,
because you didn't realize you gave it all away
by allowing it to impact you and stress you out.
And so when you say let them, it's not being passive.
You're not allowing people to trample all over you. let them, it's not being passive. You're not allowing
people to trample all over you. That's already happening, by the way. You're not letting
the government do whatever the government's doing. No, you're actually recognizing and
seeing things exactly as they are. Maybe even for the first time. Like I'm going to say
let them in response to the government, because this stuff's already happened.
And by the way, if I burn through all my energy
screaming at the news every night
or just mainlining the news
and then gossiping with friends about how bad it is,
do I have energy for the second part?
Let me remind myself that I still have power.
There are things I can do here.
I absolutely can do things.
I can get involved in my community.
I can get involved with the ACLU.
I can call my congressperson.
I can organize.
But if you are burning through all your energy by allowing the outside world to stress you
out, you will not have the energy and time to tap into your power to actually make meaningful
change happen.
I think that makes a lot of sense. I remember talking to beautiful travel writer Pico Iyer
a little while back. And Pico has spent the better part of his life traveling with the
Dalai Lama as his companion. He met her when he was a young child through his dad. He was
an actual professional philosopher. And he studied deeply and learned from him, studied
deeply Tibetan Buddhism and all sorts of different traditions. And he really says, learned from him, studied deeply Tibetan Buddhism
and all sorts of different traditions.
And he really says, you know,
we're having this conversation about change
and change internally, but also change in society and culture.
And he's like, you know, like the biggest myth
is that we're actually, any one person is capable
of doing more than creating change within themselves.
Now, maybe once we start there,
we can affect a ripple
that starts to expand beyond that.
But it's this notion of we all, so many of us look
to the external things that we can do
without actually starting with,
how can I change my own internal experience first and foremost?
Because oftentimes the external things are more obvious,
they're more checkbox, they're more like, oh, I can do that, I can spend that money,
I can show up at this thing, and the internal stuff is a lot murkier
and a lot harder. So we kind of avoid it.
You know, Jonathan, it reminds me of something that just happened, I'll be quick about this, but
I, since discovering this and saying let them,
I've been astonished by how much more peaceful I am.
And I'm also astonished and I feel kind of sad
about how for the first 54 years of my life,
I just allowed myself to be completely rattled
by the world around me and other people's moods and just so
much stupid stuff. And I had this experience this weekend where I was
visiting some family and it was fascinating because for the few days I
was there, every time we're in the car, angry at the driver in front of us, the news is on in the morning, the news is on at night, there's griping about the
news and the headlines, there's like just constant negative agitation in response
to every thing and every one and all the stuff, the lines are long and this person's this. And it was this really just profound experience
because I realized that's a lot of what my energy
probably was like.
And it is completely accessible to all of us
to have a very different existence
by simply protecting yourself from allowing all of that
to agitate you.
And so when you shared that story
about how the change starts from within
and that ripple effect that it can have,
like from a pure energetic level,
that piece that you can access for yourself
and how powerful it feels to know that you're steady,
no matter what happens around you,
and then what happens when you bring that into your job,
you bring that into your family,
you bring that into your day-to-day life,
everything starts to change.
And you recognize something really profound,
which I know you know,
because of your spiritual practices
and because of everything that you talk about
and that you teach.
We give so much power to all the big stuff out here.
And yes, they do have power.
But we miss the extraordinary power that you have
through your energy.
And through the way that positive and peaceful and grounded energy actually settles people around
you. And that's one of the things that I've been the most moved by in terms of
the impact that saying let them and saying let me has really reminded me of.
Because once you start to feel peaceful, now you want to protect it.
Once you start to feel, you know, like your time back and your energy, now you want to
protect it.
Right.
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
I want to revisit something that you said though, and it relates to this as well, which
is this notion of, and I imagine you've been asked this question before, I know you have
actually, let's say you adopt this state of mind, this orientation.
Where is the line between letting people do what they want to do, surrendering a sense
of control and just focusing on what you're capable of and allowing harm to happen,
either harm to you because somebody's actually treating you
in a way that is causing harm or has caused harm
or harm to those around you or the world around you
or your community around you.
Take me a little bit deeper into this.
Great question.
So let's start with somebody outside of you.
You know, I personally am one of these people
that always gets involved.
Like I have the first responder gene.
So it is very difficult for me to just let anyone do anything.
And part of the problem with people that harm themselves
or do harmful things is they don't do it in front of you.
Like it's pretty easy if somebody't do it in front of you. Like it's pretty easy
if somebody's doing something in front of you.
In terms of the thing that they're doing,
they're probably already doing it.
So the let them part is not I'm allowing it,
it's recognizing that this is a very serious thing
that's happening.
I'm letting them reveal that they are in danger and pain.
We've all been in a situation
where a friend has drank too much, right?
And then we argue about the keys
for what ultimately happens.
A lot of people actually back down
and just let them drive.
I'm not recommending that, but here's what I am saying.
I can't actually make the call for somebody
because what the let them theory does
is it actually forces you, first you say let them, right?
I'm gonna let them get really drunk here
and I'm gonna let them like go on and on about how they are
I'm fine with it because they're already saying it.
But then I'm gonna go to step two, let me decide
based on my values, based on my character, based on my morals, what I'm gonna do.
And if you value someone's safety or you value someone else's safety on that road,
then let me take the damn keys and let me put up with your bullshit when you start acting out,
mouthing off to me and let me put you on the couch at my house or drive you home.
And let me do the thing that a at my house or drive you home, and let me do the thing
that a lot of us actually don't do,
because we don't want to deal with it
once the person starts mouthing off.
And so to me, what it sets up
is a moral dilemma for every person,
because the power isn't in stopping the other person.
The power is in the let me part.
Let me decide how I'm gonna handle this.
That might mean calling the police.
It might mean taking the keys.
It might be calling somebody's parents
or calling somebody's spouse.
It might mean not making excuses for somebody.
That you're not gonna call your adult kid in
and blame the fact that they don't wanna go to work
because they're hung over for the fifth morning in a row
on the fact that you've got family plans.
You're going to let them learn from life.
And so I think every situation is different.
It's much clearer if somebody's harming themselves
or someone else in front of you,
but the problem with a lot of the people in our lives
and the damage that they're doing to themselves as others
is they hide it from you.
And so you can use let them in a very important way,
which is people's behavior reveals the truth.
And too often we listen to the words
coming out of somebody's mouth, the apologies,
the promises that they're not gonna do it again,
the description that it's not that serious,
I didn't really mean it, no, I don't need to help,
you know, I threatened to take my life,
but I didn't really mean it, no, I don't need help, I'm fine.
And so you have to look at the behavior,
that's the let them part.
Let them reveal where they're at,
how much they're struggling,
whether or not they're thinking clearly,
and then let me understand and remind myself
there's only three things I can control.
I can control what I think about this,
I can control what I do and don't do,
and I can control how I process my feelings
about what's happening.
That's all you got.
And so you use this as a tool to remind yourself
that if somebody's going to do something,
they're going to do it.
But the power is in the let me part.
I get to choose what I'm going to do about it.
I get to choose when I step in and when I don't.
I get to choose when I am supporting or I'm not.
I get to choose what I pay for and what I don't.
I get to choose if I'm getting involved or not.
I mean, this is why if we're
at a party, Jonathan, and I'm not serving you the alcohol, and you go and drink and
drive that I can't be arrested for not stopping you. We don't hold people accountable to that.
I actually think the let them theory forces you to start questioning whether or not you're
going to hold yourself accountable to it. Does that make sense?
It makes sense. And I guess the other scenario that I think is in my head and I would imagine
a lot of young art communities has is, what about that scenario where you feel like somebody's
doing harm to you? I'm not necessarily talking about physical harm, although that could be
an unfortunate case. But what about a scenario, you're at work, you have a colleague who's
constantly quote taking credit, constantly quote backstabbing and the you're both work, you have a colleague who's constantly, quote, taking credit, constantly, quote, backstabbing, and the, you're both, you know, and it's affecting not just the
way that you feel when you're at work with them, but you can see them actually building
social currency, social capital, political currency within the organization, and in your
mind taking opportunities that really were yours.
So these are just like two different scenarios.
So when you perceive somebody else,
and I guess this is really where the corollary,
the let me side becomes super important.
It's everything.
Everybody loves let them because you feel,
because you're smug.
Let them, let them go out without me.
Let them do what they're gonna do.
Like there's a superiority thing,
which honestly is super effective
in detaching from your emotions.
Because if your emotions are one that you're hurt
or you're the victim or something is happening
where you're wronged, you are beaten down by your emotions.
And so part of the power of saying let them
is you actually feel superior
to the people you're saying it about.
You feel better than the people that are walking slow. You feel better than the people that are walking slow.
You feel better than the people that didn't invite you.
But let's take the scenario that you're talking about
because it's an excellent one.
Because this is never about what's right or wrong.
It's about where's the power
and where should you focus so that you have power.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
So in this situation, not fair, not okay.
And when you say, let them, you're not just going,
let them, and shrugging your shoe.
Oh, I guess I'm screwed, let them.
No, you're saying it with a little bit of a, let them.
Let them, like I see what you're doing.
It's almost like you allow it without allowing it
because you're forcing yourself to see somebody
as they are and oftentimes to truly see it
as it is black and white for the first time.
And for real, like let them try to take credit.
Let them try to build the social currency.
Let them try to do this to me.
And then let me remind myself, I actually have power here.
There's a lot I can do.
And so there, and when you recognize that you do have power,
you stop wasting it by being upset
and wounded and victimized by the other person,
and you pull the power back and you start to focus on,
well, what can I do?
And when you start to say to yourself, well, I do,
I have what I think about this,
and I think this is bullshit.
I have the things I can do.
And what I can do is I can recognize
that what this person is masterful at
is they actually are masterful
at making their contribution knowns and taking credit.
And I'm shitty at it.
So I let me start to speak up.
Let me start to write my boss an email
at the end of every week
claiming the contributions I'm making.
Let me speak up in meetings when this asshole
is taking credit for my work and say,
well, actually, Mike,
that's not how it went. Sally was the lead on that and I spent 60 hours working on it
and now you're taking credit for it. That's not how that went. Call him out. And so there
are things you can do. You can also get a different job. You're not stuck. But the more
that you focused on what the other person is doing,
and the more you allow their behavior to beat you down,
the less energy, time, and power
you're gonna feel internally,
and you're not gonna see all the things
that you could or can do if you choose
to try to change the situation for the better.
And I also wanna say one other thing,
because, you know, that's an example that's frustrating,
but there's also examples where you might have somebody
that you're in a relationship with
and you're starting to realize
they have a narcissistic personality style.
You might have somebody in your family
that has an extraordinarily challenging behavior.
You might have somebody in your life
that is battling addiction.
When you say let them, you're not allowing somebody to succumb to addiction.
You're not letting some narcissist walk all over you.
That's already happening.
When you say let them, let them be exactly who they are right now.
Let their behavior reveal who they are and where I stand.
Because I think part of the problem
that we get into with other people
is that we live in a fantasy in our head
making excuses for behavior that's disrespectful
because we don't wanna deal with it
or we hope they're gonna change
or we're just used to this pattern
and we have trauma in our background
and so there's more complicated reasons why we do this.
But my hope is that when you say,
let them make it all about themselves,
let them be passive aggressive,
let them be a challenging personality,
let them have their addiction,
what you're doing, Jonathan,
is you're forcing yourself to practice radical
acceptance. This is what I'm dealing with. And I am going to stop gaslighting myself
into believing this person's going to change. I'm going to stop bracing because I'm wishing
that they would be different. And I'm going to walk into this experience with this person
and this relationship with my eyes wide open.
This is who this person is.
And now I do the let me part,
which is if I know I'm dealing with somebody
that has got an active addiction
and they are lying to me,
their behavior tells me that.
Let me decide what time and energy I'm gonna give to this.
If I am dealing with somebody
who's got a narcissistic personality style and they always make it about them What time and energy I'm gonna give to this? If I am dealing with somebody
who's got a narcissistic personality style
and they always make it about them
and they always erupt and they always gossip
and they always are draining, let them be that way.
Now let me decide how much time and energy
do I give this person.
Let me remind myself, I'm not gonna change this person.
The only thing that can change is my energy
and my behavior around it.
And if I'm gonna choose to be around this person,
then if I want it to feel different,
I have to be different.
And it starts with recognizing
that this is exactly who this person is.
It's who they've always been.
It's who they are right now.
And they're showing you who they are
through their behavior.
So let them, because when you let them show you who they are,
you now are dealing with the facts,
which changes how you show up.
That is that, and this is easier said than done,
particularly when you're in a cycle of abuse,
when you have past trauma.
Yeah, or if you really care about the other person.
Of course.
That's like, you're trying to, like, yeah, in that case,
you're really trying to protect them
because it's like you feel like you can see three steps ahead, you can see the harm that's
coming their way, and you don't want it to happen.
But at the end of the day, you also don't want to suffer the anxiety of seeing them
experience that harm.
So part of it is your own discomfort with the feeling that you don't want to have.
What jumps out at me, what you just described also, is this notion that it's almost like
the let them part is a prerequisite to the let me part.
There's a Buddhist tenet that translates roughly to abandon hope.
I always hated it.
I completely, I was like, how feudalist, how awful is that?
That's a teaching that you should follow.
And then as you know, like I've had tinnitus, I have a sound that has been in my head for
years now. And in the very beginning it was destroying me,
it was taking, really taking me out.
And all day, every day, all I could try and figure out
was how to stop this from happening.
And it couldn't function, and I was looking for every cure,
every possible thing.
And you know, like for many people, it does never go away.
Sometimes your brain habituates, and you're pretty fine,
sometimes not, it causes just great distress and harm. For me, I got to a point and I
remember thinking about this Buddhist slogan back then and I was like enough I
can't abandon hope that this will someday change. And then I finally got to
a point where I tried so many different things, right? And I was like okay so for
some reason my brain is and them in this scenario is literally my own brain.
My brain is generating a sound inside of my head
that only I can hear, right?
I can't do any, I've literally tried everything.
All the doctors are like,
there's nothing big time wrong with you
and there's nothing we can do to help you.
So I get to a point where I'm like, okay,
this is me for life, then what?
Which is the functional equivalent of saying,
let them or let it, let my own brain,
brain is my them at this point.
And until I hit that point,
I was spending zero energy trying to figure out like,
if I do have some power in this scenario to be okay,
if this doesn't change, if it's just going
to go on this way, what is that power look like? What is this? And that's when everything
changed for me, when I started to actually understand, like, okay, so are there practices
or are there things that I can do or are there skills I can develop that will allow me to
make peace with this thing if it never goes away? And in fact, there were.
I think that is a beautiful-
And it took years to do that.
Yeah, but I couldn't get to that place
of me stepping into the place of power
until I let go of literally
the them that was a part of my own brain.
Jonathan, that is so beautiful.
I apologize for talking over you.
I sometimes challenging, you know,
on the remote, it looks like you're done. What I wanted to say about that,
because it ties back to the relationship thing.
There is one thing that you will never be able to change
and that's another person.
And I once heard Dr. Romany,
who's regarded as the world's leading expert
on narcissistic personality styles,
say that the single biggest thing that causes a lot of damage
and keeps people in a lot of dynamics
with people that have narcissistic personality
or borderline personality,
like all those challenging dynamics,
is the hope
that they're going to change.
And there's obviously a lot of research underneath
that is more trauma-informed,
but this, it's exactly what you're saying.
And I feel like there is a way to hold out the belief
that somebody is capable
of getting sober, the belief that somebody is capable
of taking better care of themselves,
the belief that somebody is capable
of being more responsible with money,
or the belief that somebody is capable
of working through their issues
and getting into a very healthy long-term relationship.
But that is different than hoping somebody does.
Because to me, what you're describing is
the hope that this is gonna change
often can keep you doing in relationships
exactly what you did with your own brain,
which is looking for ways that it can change instead of going, you know what?
This is exactly how it is right now.
And I need to adjust my life and how I show up
with the reality of what is,
instead of resisting what is in the hope that it changes.
And so I think what you just explained
summarizes this exactly,
because let them force you to let people be who they are,
because when you let people be who they are,
your relationships get better,
because you now see who you're dealing with
instead of imposing an expectation or hope
that they'd be different.
It is fascinating to me that there's this sense
of abandoning hope can actually be one
of the most empowering things that you can do.
It's a little counterintuitive.
I mean, it's like you said, it's not like you're just giving up on the possibility that
something outside of your control can change.
That would be awesome if it could.
But you have to, that is the unlock key for you.
Say, let me now reallocate my energy to what I actually am in control of myself.
And that is where, certainly all the way back to earlier in the conversation,
fundamentally, this is really a conversation about power and agency.
And that's where you start to reclaim it.
And I think especially in this day and age, so many of us feel so devoid of power and agency
that it's a really powerful message to explore.
I agree with you.
I'm sitting here kind of just noodling the part about hope
because, you know, I often say
that I think one of the single biggest things
that stand in a person's way
when it comes to changing anything about your life
is this sense of discouragement that it's not gonna work.
And I think what the nuance that I would put in this
is that hope to me is kind of one of these things
that's sort of like a wish
that I just really hope that somehow this turns around.
And to me, this idea that belief, and I'm thinking about it in the context of when you
have a family member that's really struggling, like all the experts that we talked to when
we were looking at let them and let me, especially in the area of addiction, there's this famous
saying in addiction that people only get sober when being drunk is harder
than doing the very hard work of facing the things
that you don't wanna face.
And that's why you can't make anybody get sober.
You can't make people heal, that people only heal
and people only change when they're ready
to do the hard work to change.
And people are typically only ready to do that hard work when they're ready to do the hard work to change. And people are typically only ready to do that hard work
when they're ready for themselves.
And if you look at all the brain science around this
that we quoted in the book
and talked to all these neuroscientists,
if you look at the basic wiring of the human brain,
we default towards what's easy right now.
And we also like push away from what's hard,
which if you put it in the context of any kind of change,
this is why changing is so hard,
because we reflexively move towards what we know
and what's easy,
and we reflexively push away from the thing that's hard.
So there is almost nothing that you could do
that would have something happen
in another human being's brain over the long term to make changing suddenly easier.
They have to have that happen within themselves.
And it's a hard thing to grasp, to understand that there is a necessary amount of struggle that every one of us has to go through in order to organize
the necessary internal friction that has your brain shift and go, okay, sitting on
the couch and literally making the world's worst choices and letting myself
go is now harder than getting up and just going to the damn gym
because I've gotten so frustrated with myself
that I'm not gonna do that anymore.
But it has to come from within.
And that's a extremely difficult thing to grasp.
And the let them theory doesn't make it easy.
It gives you the tools, as you said, so beautifully to understand where
is power, where is agency, and particularly when you're dealing with two
people, power and agency are in different places for both of you, and you want to
work with the laws of human nature, not against it like I was for 54 years.
Absolutely. It feels like a good place for us to come pull circle
in our conversation as well.
So I've asked you this question before.
It was a bunch of years ago at this point
in this container of Good Life Project.
If I offer up the phrase to live a good life,
what comes up?
To spend your time and energy
on things that actually matter to you.
And not waste it on the stupid shit that currently drains it.
Thank you.
Hey, before you leave, if you loved this episode, say that you will also love the earlier conversation
we had with Mel about taking care of yourself and your health.
You'll find a link to that episode in the show notes.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers Lindsay Fox and me,
Jonathan Fields. Editing help by Troy Young, Christopher Carter crafted our theme music,
and special thanks to Shelly Del Bliss for her research on this episode.
And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project
in your favorite listening app or on YouTube too. If you found this conversation
interesting or valuable and inspiring, chances are you did because you're still listening here.
Do me a personal favor, a second favor, share it with just one person. I mean if you want to share
it with more that's awesome too, but just one person even, then invite them to talk with you
about what you've both discovered, to reconnect and explore ideas
that really matter, because that's how we all come alive together. Until next time,
I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.
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