On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 11 Lessons I've Learned in the Last 12 Months & Ways You Can Apply Them Into Your Life
Episode Date: September 8, 2023Each year is a new year to develop new skills and acquire more knowledge. We also discover more things about ourselves and learn new lessons along the way. In this birthday episode special, I'm sharin...g with you some of the biggest personal and professional reflections in the past 12 months. Our relationships greatly influence our well-being so it's crucial to surround ourselves with individuals who uplift and support us. Our bodies are our most essential assets, and nurturing them is a fundamental responsibility. In reality, even with the purest of intentions, there will always be individuals who seek to undermine or criticize us. It encourages resilience in the face of negativity and a focus on staying true to one's path. In this episode, you'll learn: The importance of self-care How to stay grounded How to love yourself more Being perfect isn't required when helping others How to serve others with gratitude These valuable life lessons provide a roadmap for personal growth, resilience, and a meaningful life. They serve as reminders of the beauty and complexity of human existence, encouraging us to learn and evolve. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:56 Personal and professional reflections for the last 12 months 02:43 Lesson #1: Be really conscious about who you keep and let go in your life 07:33 Lesson #2: Take care of your body like your life depends on it 12:19 Lesson #3: It’s okay to ask for a hug or help from others 16:40 Lesson #4: Don’t buy into your own hype, stay connected to where you started 19:37 Lesson #5: People will always try to tear you down no matter how good your intentions are 22:10 Lesson #6: Different levels come with different problems 26:11 Lesson #7: As you get older, don't forget to do things for your younger self. 29:45 Lesson #8: Give yourself permission to be all of you 30:22 Lesson #9: You don't have to be perfect to help others 32:38 Lesson #10: Make new memories instead of living old ones again and again 34:03 Lesson #11: Use your gifts and skills in the service of others. Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I'm David Eagleman. I have a new podcast called Inner Cosmos on I Heart. I'm going to explore
the relationship between our brains and our experiences by tackling unusual questions. Like,
can we create new senses for humans? So join me weekly to uncover how your brain
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I am Jan Levan Zant and I'll be your host for The R Spot. Each week listeners will call
me live to discuss their relationship issues. Nothing will tear a relationship down faster
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Mommy, daddy, your ex, I'll be talking about those things and so much more. Check out the
R-Spot on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Imagine you have a glass of water
and someone says they're thirsty.
And you give them the whole glass
and then you're trying to give them more from that glass
but there's no more left.
You end up feeling guilty
and the other person is looking at you
like what are you trying to do?
Right, it doesn't make sense,
but we do it emotionally.
Emotionally, we try to over-give over share, over provide, over promise. And actually, we end up
under delivery. Hey everyone, welcome back to on purpose. I am so grateful that you're here right now.
It truly means the world to me
that you tune in every day, some of you multiple times per day or multiple times per week.
And it's been an incredible, incredible journey over the last four and a half years of serving you through this podcast.
I feel like the community we've developed, the relationship we've developed, the depth that we've created has been absolutely phenomenal.
And today's episode is very, very special for me because this is my birthday episode, which means I want to share with you the lessons I've learned, the mistakes I've made, the challenges I've faced,
what has been happening in my life over the last 12 months? Because I feel like
you know me and I know you and we've built this incredible relationship
over the last few years, whether you started listening one episode ago or whether you started listening
300 episodes ago, I feel connected to you and
I know you feel connected too.
So I want to kind of talk through some personal things.
And at the same time, I want to share with you the learnings, the messages, the wisdom
that I've gained through those experiences in my life.
My birthday was on the 6th of September, a couple of days ago, and I woke up in the morning and I wrote this caption
for what I was sharing on Instagram that day,
and it's inspired an entire episode
to share with you some of my top learnings.
And for me, my birthday's always been a day of reflection,
a day of celebration, a day of reconnecting
to my purpose, reconnecting to my essence.
And I'm really excited that I get to share that with you in a deeper, more thoughtful way.
So I want to dive straight in because I've got 12 reminders, 12 lessons I've learned in the
last 12 months. So let's start with number one.
And by the way, these are personal and professional.
So lesson number one is be really conscious
about who you keep and let go from your life.
Just because you have history
doesn't mean you have to force a future.
A lot of people have been asking me,
Jay, it just seems like you've been able
to do so much recently.
I was able to launch my second book,
I was able to go on tour.
The podcast hasn't missed.
It's been incredible to make some really cool content
for our social channels.
I've been able to get involved
in lots of meaningful impact work behind the scenes.
And a lot of people say to me,
Jit, it seems like you've been doing so much.
And the truth is, I can only do that
because of the incredible team I have around me.
I'm surrounded today by an amazing group of people
that work with me because they believe in the purpose,
they believe in what we're trying to do.
They see the impact.
They are so proud of doing good work by themselves.
I have a number of people on my team that are just leaders.
And previously, they never got given the opportunity, they didn't get given the break,
they didn't get given the responsibility for whatever reason.
And so anything I'm able to do today is truly to give credit to them.
Now, notice how I said, be really conscious about who you keep and let go from your life.
And the reason I use the word conscious is because when you're present, when you're aware,
you can energetically in the moment tell whether you connect with someone or whether you don't. How many times have
you met someone and thought to yourself, this is someone I'm going to be friends with for
a long time. Or how many times have you met someone and thought to yourself, yep, me and
this person don't align. No judgment, no criticism, but what we just don't see eye to eye. And
I started to realize that especially in the workplace, I wanted to work with people that
I'd be happy going out to lunch and dinner with.
I wanted to work with people and bring people onto my team that I'd want to invest in and
coach and guide a mentor.
I wanted to have people on my team that I thought could challenge me.
For a long time, I was just looking at people's backgrounds and work experience and things like that.
And I started to realize I was actually neglecting my energy check.
I was denying my ability to use my intuition and see the frequency of someone and see whether we align on that level.
And you see that happen on the podcast all the time.
I'm sure you see me with guests where you can see where we're on the same vibration, same wavelength.
And it's interesting how we all have that ability. We all have that skill, but we often
kind of put it aside or we try to shun it. We go, oh no, no, let me, let me look at the
facts. Let me look at the data. And I almost wanted to give you a reminder
that I want you to trust your intuition.
I want you to trust your gut.
I want you to think energetically about the people
that make you feel good, that lift you up,
that make you feel like they bring out the best in you.
Right?
Does someone bring out the best in you?
Does someone make you feel like the best version of yourself?
How can you connect with them more closely and more deeply?
And I added a part to this lesson as well.
The idea that just because you have history with someone doesn't mean you have to force a future because
it's really interesting how nostalgia and how attachments hold this deep space in our life. We feel we have to stay connected
to people because we were once connected to them. We feel we have to force ourselves to have a
relationship with someone because we had a relationship in the past. And what I've learned is that you
can honor a relationship like I've got lots of friends that we were really, really close back in the day.
And if I'm completely honest, if I see them now, we can slot straight back into that energy
that we had then.
And I love doing that with them.
But I'm not trying to force and create and build a new part to that relationship anymore.
If that's not natural, if that's not organic.
And you know, we've all heard the old phrase that you become the five people you're surrounded
by, you know, you become the average of the five people around you.
And it's lost at the test of time that advice because it's so true.
And I want you to be conscious about where you want to go.
I want you to be conscious about who you want to be. And if you can answer those questions, who do I want to be? Who am I becoming? And
where do I want to go? That's the people you want to surround yourself by. How can
you find those new communities and new people around you?
Now number two, take care of your body and mind like your life depends on it because it does.
In order to serve and give more, I often push myself beyond my limits and therefore I also need
to give them the attention they deserve. Now I've done this time and time again. I love what I do.
I believe in what I do, but I give more than what I have.
How many of you have ever done that before?
Well, you're just trying to give and give and give and you're trying to give way beyond
what you actually have.
How's that possible?
Imagine you have a glass of water and someone says they're thirsty and you give them the
whole glass and then you're trying to give them more from that glass,
but there's no more left. You end up feeling guilty and the other person is looking at you like,
what are you trying to do? Right, it doesn't make sense, but we do it emotionally. Emotionally,
we try to over give, over share, over provide, over promise. And naturally, we end up under delivering.
We end up feeling undervalued.
And what I realized a while ago was
I could only truly extend myself and give myself to others
if I was truly taking care of myself.
Had I slept well, had I eaten well, had I worked out,
had I meditated, because not only would I be able to give more, the quality of what I was able to give was elevated as well.
If I'd meditated, I was more clear.
If I'd worked out, I felt more strength.
If I'd eaten well, then I felt like I had better decision-making capabilities.
How many of us are trying to extend ourselves to others, but we're just giving them our leftovers?
How many of us are trying to be there for our own benefit?
How many of us are trying to extend ourselves to others,
but we're just giving them our leftovers?
How many of us are trying to be there for other people,
but we're not even there for ourselves in the first place?
I really, really want you to remember this.
It sounds so basic and it's so simple,
but I know that there are so many of you
that want to do good in the world,
that you want to do something for others.
And what I've realized time and time again is that it is so, so important and necessary for us to remember
that helping yourself is a part of helping others.
We often see helping ourselves and helping others as complete opposites.
We see them as two things that don't connect,
but actually loving yourself in order to love others
makes it connected, taking care of yourself
in order to care for others makes it connected.
We have to start looking at our life as interconnected
and symbiotic as opposed to disconnected.
Now, how do we do this?
When you look at meditation, exercise, dire and sleep.
Those are the four things I think about.
I call it meds, M-E-D-S, meditation, exercise,
dire and sleep.
You can't solve all four at the same time.
And I often think that doing them in a certain order can help you. So I always
say to people, start with your sleep. If you can start with your sleep pattern, a lot of
other things are going to take care of themself. For example, if you sleep well, you're likely
to eat better because now you're not turning to sugars and carbs or at least the bad ones
for energy because you've slept well. So now you're not filling up that energy gap.
If you are sleeping well,
also your energy increases to one to exercise,
to one to work out.
And you're sleeping better because when you exercise,
you're using up that energy throughout the day.
And of course meditation,
allowing you to have stillness.
And so I want you to think about how you can start
with just one of them.
If you've already nailed sleep, go to diet. If you've done diet, go to exercise, if you've done exercise,
go to meditation, move through your meds very effectively. And this second lesson was most
important for me this year with the tour. I was so enjoying my time on tour and at the same time
it was one of the most exhausting things I've ever done.
I was in each city for like one and a half days
if that, most of that would be coming in, checking in,
sleeping in a hotel, eating something,
going on a walk, getting on stage,
getting back off, flying on a plane again.
It was so exhausting that my meds took care of me.
And I've realized that your capacity in life
increases or decreases based on meditation,
exercise, diet and sleep.
And so in my own life this year,
I learned even more so how important it was
to take care of my body and mind
and what they were capable of.
And what was possible when I did that?
So number three, this one's a big one for me and I want to be open and vulnerable with you.
It's okay to ask for help or a hug.
You're human after all and so am I.
If you're trying to be there for others, it's easy to forget.
You also need to be held and embraced emotionally.
Often I forget this, don't ignore that need.
I can't tell you the amount of times I've tried to be strong for others.
I've held back my own emotions, my tears, my vulnerabilities, my weaknesses,
because I didn't think it was okay to ask for help or a hug.
And recently in the past year, I have been so proud of myself for reaching out to people
and just saying, hey, I'd love to chat, I'd love to talk.
Hey, let's, let me just open up about this for a second.
And I'm so grateful that I have so many incredible friends in my life, men and women who are consistently
there for me, always to help with the hug,
which support whatever it may be.
And I think what's really interesting is,
why do we struggle to ask for help?
One of the first reasons is because we're scared
that no one will care.
We actually have this inbuilt fear inside of us
that no one's coming, that no one's coming
to help us, that no one's coming to care. And because of that fear, we don't ever ask.
And what I've found is that the more I develop and deepen my relationships, the more I'm
able to actually have confidence that when I open my heart to someone, they'll want to help
me. Another reason why we struggle to tell people is we think it will make us look
weak. So now we're worried about how we'll be perceived or how we'll appear to the other
person if we express this vulnerability, if we express this need, does it make us look like weaker? Does it make us look less skilled and less able?
What does it do? And it's really interesting because I realized in my line of work, people
always think, Oh, Jay has to have it all together. He has to have it all going. And I don't,
and I don't think anyone does. And I think that opening up and sharing that with my friends more
openly has allowed me to have them feel like they can reach out because in the past people
don't reach out for advice. But then now you have friends reaching out going, Hey, you
okay, how are you feeling about this? And I love that. I love that. It makes me feel great
when people do that. And so I've had friends reach out to me and say, Hey, I just want to check in and see how you're feeling. You know, I wanted to make
sure you're doing all right. And people check in on you when you allow them to check in
on you. So often we push people away from checking in with us. If we always portray our life
as perfect or if the perception of us is that life is great. And so we have to help
break down that wall for people so that people
can actually reach out to us. Because otherwise we just sit there going, well no one reaches out to
me, no one cares about how I feel, no one really knows. Another reason why we don't give ourselves
permission to ask for a hug or ask for help is because sometimes we're scared of whether we deserve it. I've known people in my life who've had incredible people in their life
be open with them to want to help them and support them
and these people haven't taken it up because they feel like they don't deserve it.
Sometimes maybe we feel we won't fulfill the advice, we won't follow through with it,
so we feel unqualified.
And I think what's important to know in that case
is just tell the other person.
I often say to someone,
hey, I'm not sure I have the energy right now
to follow through with your advice,
but I would love to get your perspective.
I'm not sure I'm emotionally mature enough
to dissect and digest this right now,
but I'd love to give it a shot.
Can you share this with me?
If we were able to tell people what we were really going through
and how we felt, it would be fascinating to see how much more
we'd be able to learn about ourselves
and they'd be able to learn about us.
I don't feel scared anymore to actually open my mind
and say, this is what I'm grappling with.
This is the dichotomy I'm struggling with.
This is the challenge that exists for me. I'm not too long ago, and the heart of the Amazon rainforest, this explorer stumbled upon something that would change his life.
I saw it and I saw, oh well, this is a very unusual situation. It was cacao. The tree that gives us chocolate. But this cacao was unlike anything experts had seen. Or tasted.
I've never wanted us to have a gun bite. I mean, you saw this tax of cash in our office.
Chocolate sort of forms this vortex. It sucks you. This could count as unlike anything experts had seen, or tasted. I've never wanted us to have a gun bite.
I mean, you saw the stacks of cash in our office.
Chocolate sort of forms this vortex.
It sucks you in.
It's like I can be the queen of wild chocolate.
You're all lost.
You're this madness.
It was a game changer.
People quit their jobs.
They left their lives behind so they could search for more
of this stuff.
I wanted to tell their stories, so I followed them
deep into the jungle,
and it wasn't always pretty.
Basically, this like disgruntled guy and his family surrounded the building armed with machetes.
And we've heard all sorts of things that you know somebody got shot over this.
Sometimes I think all these for a damn bar of chocolate.
Listen to obsessions, wild chocolate, on the iHeart radio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
In the 1680s, a feisty opera singer burned down a nunnery and stole away with her secret
lover. In 1810, a pirate queen negotiated her cruise way to total freedom, with all their loot.
During World War II, a flirtatious gambling double agent helped keep D-Day a secret from the Germans.
What are these stories having common?
They're all about real women who were left out of your history books.
If you're tired of missing out, check out the Womanica podcast, a daily women's history podcast highlighting women you may not have heard of but definitely should
know about.
I'm your host Jenny Kaplan, and for me, diving into these stories is the best part of my
day.
I learned something new about women from around the world and leafyling amazed, inspired,
and sometimes shocked.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts. Lesson number four, don't buy into your own
hype. Stay connected to why you started and remain a humble student of life. If you forget
this, life will remind you. I love this one because I genuinely believe that it's so easy to get caught up in your own hype
and forget why you started and forget why you began and forget the feeling you got when you
started doing whatever it is that you do. And for me, I really, on tour this year,
I really, on tour this year, tried to take in the love that I received from all of you, when I met you at a meet and greet, or I met you walking off stage, or when I met you
walking into my car after the show, whatever it was, and so many of you shared so many beautiful
messages of love with me.
I really try to take in the love.
And I think before I used to think that if I took in the love, I'd be buying into my
own hype. And I realized these are two very different things. So buying into your own hype means
you're like getting egoistic and arrogant about what's going on. And receiving love is actually
so beautiful because it doesn't go to the head, it goes to the heart. And so to me, if someone says something, and I can help it go to the heart, it actually
is really nourishing and nurturing. And this is one of the reasons why we struggle to say
nice things about ourselves. This is one of the reasons we struggle to receive compliments
is because we think they're going to go to our ego. And it's really interesting because
what I try and do, and this is how the filtration
process or the extraction process works.
So if someone compliments me, let's say someone says, Jay, you gave such a great presentation,
right?
And I'm doing this and it's uncomfortable for me to even say this about myself, but let's
say someone said that to me.
The first thing I do is I extract gratitude and I pass that gratitude onto my teacher or my teachers or my mentors
who gave me that skill.
So whatever skill someone notices in me, I think of the person who helped me develop that
skill directly or indirectly and I give it to them in my mind.
And then I express gratitude to the person who gave that to me because they've just reminded
me of my teacher, they've reminded me of beautiful memories of learning, they've reminded me of the growth
that I've made, the progress I've made, and some grateful to them as well.
So you've just turned something that could turn into ego into gratitude.
And that's how you don't buy into your own hype.
And what I've understood about life so far is that if you do buy into your own hype, life comes back around, it humbles you, it brings you back down to ground,
and it will keep doing that because it's how it's designed. We're designed to see the
humanity in ourselves and see the humanity in others and value ourselves based on that
humanity, not value ourselves, based on anything else. And I think it's truly special and beautiful when
we can actually do that. Number five, people will always try to tear you down no matter
your intention. Trust that the people that know you love you and invest deeply in those
relationships to protect yourself. I've realized this the hard way that no matter how good your
intention is, no matter how much you care, no matter what you're trying to do in the world,
there will always be people who try and tear you down.
There will always be people who criticize you, who mock you, who ridicule you, who point fingers at you.
And I take as much of it I can as feedback.
I always look at any criticism as how can I learn from that?
How can I learn from that? How can I grow from that? And at the same time,
I have to realize that the people who know me deeply, the people who know me truly, the people who
know me honestly, I have to check in with them. And I do that. When I listen to some feedback about
myself, some criticism, and I'm starting to internalize it and take it personally and trust me, I do that.
I'll often go to a close friend and I'll say, hey, do you feel this way? Do you think this is true?
And I'll have friends who are really honest with me and so they'll say, look, I don't think this
part's true. I think this is something you could work on. I think this may have some validity to
it, but not in that venom that it was given with. And having that conversation is so beautiful,
or a friend of mine just says to me, Jay, you know what? Actually, I'll be honest with you. You're right. And this isn't
the truth. And I think it's so important to continually deepen our closest relationships.
And the challenge is if everyone always knows us in a shallow way, all the criticism we experience
will hit us deep. Right? If all of our relationships are shallow
What anyone will say will cut us deep?
But if we have deep relationships
If we deepen our relationships
We can then make sense of where things really land and so for me I've also realized that as your scale grows
The amount of people that like and dislike your work also grows.
And I think I've tried my best to separate myself from my work, at least theoretically and
intellectually, to recognize that someone cannot like my work, they may not like what I say,
but that doesn't mean they don't like me because they may not know me.
And that's okay.
And I'm not bitter towards them.
I'm not mad at them.
I actually share internally a lot of love with them.
And I practice that if someone has ill will towards me, at least internally, and try
and practice love and compassion towards them.
Number six, I was talking to someone the other day about how I feel that as people grow in scale, the
percentages change.
So when you first start out, 95% of people will like you and 5% of people may not know who
you are or not like you.
And then that keeps changing, right, where you end up to a point where a lot of people in
this world, if they're really well known, 50% of people love them, 50% of people don't care about them.
And it's a really interesting journey to be on where you start to feel like there's more
and more people that understand you deeply, but at the same time, there's more and more
people who completely misunderstand you.
And I think that's the way to explain it.
It's not about like or hate or love or hate.
It's about people who understand you and people who don't and I feel like if you've been here listening to me and
You've been reading what I'm writing and you've read my books and connected with me. You're understanding me really deeply and I really appreciate that space.
And at the same time if someone just sees one clip they may not understand me at all and I have to be okay with that. And that's that's a really hard thing to wrap
your head around. And that leads nicely on the lesson number six. Different levels come with
different problems. Focusing on developing new skills and strengths because they will lead to
peace. So what I've realized is that there is no problem for life. There is no amount of money
that will solve your problems, all your problems or amount There is no amount of money that will solve your problems,
all your problems, or amount of fame, or amount of success that can solve problems.
Now, that doesn't mean that money can't help with happiness, right?
I think we always use the term money-con-buy-happiness.
And I don't believe money can buy happiness, but I also think money can help with happiness.
I think success can help with happiness.
It can be a part of it. It can help with happiness. I think success can help with happiness. It can be a part of it.
It can help with sorting out certain problems. I had different problems in the past. I have
different problems today. And that's why this lesson that I've learned this year is that different
levels come with different problems. And a lot of us are trained to pursue or seek a problem-free
life. We want a life where we don't ever have problems
again. And by the way, I would love to have one of those too, but it's just not realistic.
And so I've realized that rather than focusing on thinking, I hope I never hit a problem again.
I hope that I never have a challenge again. I hope that I never have a difficulty again.
I've realized actually if I focus on developing strengths and skills, if I focus on developing
on developing strengths and skills. If I focus on developing new ideologies, new methods, new approaches, that's actually what shifts my mindset effectively. That's actually what
shifts my energy as well. So people often ask me, Jay, what should I read? Like, what
book do you recommend? And I always say, well, what are you struggling with? And I would
ask yourself that question today, what is it that you're currently struggling with? What do you stuck on? What is difficult? What is uncomfortable? And all I want you
to do is I want you to find a book. I want you to find a TED talk. I want you to find a podcast
episode all on that subject. And if you have more time going find a course. Literally, that's what
you need to do. Go and find a TED talk. Then go and find a book, go and find a podcast, and if you can, go and find a course on that subject matter.
And I promise you that if you immerse yourself in learning, you will overcome that problem.
Now, when you overcome that problem, you will unlock a different problem. It's literally
like a video game. You unlock one level, and guess what? You have another bad person at
the end of it that you got to deal with. You get over that problem, now you're on another level, now there's another challenge, right?
Every level unlocks a challenge.
And when you finish a level of a video game, you get really excited and then you go, oh
gosh, now I've got to beat this bad guy, right?
And it gets harder again, and then you celebrate again, and then it gets harder again.
So life's kind of like that where different levels come with different problems.
And so don't expect a life without problems when you get promoted, when you get that moment
in your career, when you have the perfect family, whatever it may be, there will be another
problem.
But instead of being defeatist about it, what you want to do is be skills oriented about
it, be strength focused about it.
Lesson number seven.
As you get older, don't forget to do things
for your younger self.
There have been times in the past we neglected ourselves
because we weren't emotionally intelligent enough.
We may think our needs have changed,
but some remain the same.
Don't negate them because they feel insignificant
to the older you.
They remain important to the younger you.
Now I'm gonna give you a personal example. This year, I got to take my best friend to Old Trafford, which is the
stadium of Manchester United, which is my football team or soccer team that I've followed since
I was a kid. And I got to take a bunch of my friends. We had the honor of meeting Sir Alex Ferguson,
who's the legendary manager of the club. I got to meet the current manager. I got to meet some former players, legends, icons.
And my today's self that is trying to be more evolved, more spiritual, more about personal
growth may not have appreciated that. But my youngest office, you just got invited to your childhood club
that you love to go and what's the team that you love,
playing the sport that you love, which is my first love.
And my youngest self was so proud of me,
was so excited, was so over the moon.
And what I find is that our oldest self,
our more evolved self often talks down our youngest self.
Maybe there's a thing that you still like from your childhood,
maybe you're a sneakerhead, right?
And you're old-as-self's like, come on, grow up.
You don't need to sneak as anymore,
but your younger self's like, oh no,
but now I actually have the money
to go out and grab that thing that I want, right?
Or maybe there's something else you'd like
to do your younger years, and you didn't have the time,
you didn't have the money,
you didn't have the energy to do it properly.
Today you have a bit more of those things than you can, but you kind of look down on it because you think, oh, that's irresponsible. I should do something better with my life.
And I think it's so important to
honor those younger interests, those younger things, those things that we didn't get to fully enjoy when we were young because
we didn't allow ourselves, our parents didn't allow us, whatever it may have been. And now that we have the opportunity, you can't just deny that.
You can't just negate that.
And I feel that that kind of denial often leads to a sense of bitterness, it leads to a
sense of disconnectedness.
And it leads to that inner child always feeling starved, always feeling like it didn't
get the love, the care, the support, the thing that it needed.
Again, I'm not saying go crazy and live out every one of your childhood dreams,
but I'm saying that some of them need to be pursued.
Maybe you really loved art growing up and you never took that art class
and you're going to invest in that now.
Maybe when you were growing up, you really wanted to play an instrument
and your parents are going to afford to buy you in.
So you're going to go and get your classes right now.
Like, what is that thing that honors your younger self
that you never got to honor at that time?
Because I promise you that you don't wanna make something
feel insignificant just because it feels insignificant now.
If there's still a part of you,
that inner child is still there that wants that experience.
Don't deny your youngest self of an experience just because you're older self thinks it's
insignificant.
That's one of my favorite ones, one of my biggest ones I feel like my life right now is
fully living in both.
I'm living in my evolved self and I'm also living in my childhood self.
There are so many things I do just because I'm like teenage me would think I'm the coolest
if I did this. Even if it's paradoxical to who I am now and I allow
myself to live that way because I don't want to deny my younger self of dreams, aspirations,
and gifts. All right, number eight, give yourself permission to be all of you. The more we try to
extract parts of ourselves and the hopes of becoming perfect, the more we lose a valuable expression of ourselves.
Let opposites coexist be a paradox. I think you've heard me talk about this one enough. I think I live a paradox.
I breathe a paradox every day in the life that I lead, the life I've chosen to lead.
And I've just realized that being all of myself and giving myself permission to be all of myself
Is far more fulfilling than again denying or neglecting parts of myself
Number 10
This one is huge. I really really hope this one resonates with so many of you because I really believe so many of you have so much to offer the world
So listen to this one carefully. You don't have to be perfect to help others. I'm
definitely not perfect. Actually, I'm far from it. I don't have the answer for everything
or know everything about anything. All I know is that you and I have the ability to do things
we haven't even imagined yet, that we can get unstuck, move forward and change our lives.
I think so many of us are holding
ourselves back because we're not perfect. We're not masters. We don't think we
know everything. And the truth is, the more you master something, the more you
become humble about it. You don't master something and then think, oh I know
everything about everything, you master something and then you go, oh wow,
there is so much left to learn. And that's why I just want to remind you that
if you're someone who has something to offer, you can always take people to the level
you're at. And I promise you, there's someone who needs to be at your level, right? When
I've spoken to people who've been a part of AA, they may have a sponsor who's one year
ahead of them, five years ahead of them, ten years ahead of them. All of those people
have valuable experiences. If you've got a new startup, someone who's one year ahead of them, five years ahead of them, 10 years ahead of them. All of those people are valuable experiences.
If you've got a new startup, someone who's one year ahead of you, three years ahead of
you, five years ahead of you, can all be helpful at different times.
Right now my wife and I are working on Juni, our sparkling adaptogenic tea company, and
we're taking so much advice and mentorship from people.
Some people who just started a couple of years ahead of us and some people who've been building for two decades.
And everyone has something to teach us.
And so often we think to ourselves, well, unless I'm done, unless I'm the complete finished
article, then I have nothing to share.
You don't have to be perfect to help others.
I'm definitely not.
And I haven't got it all figured out, but you can still
help people because you have something to share. And I think I've been really embracing
that idea because even I sometimes get into imposter syndrome and think, well, what do
I have to share or what am I going to do about this? And then I realize all I need to do
is go and learn more, read more, connect with people more. It's why I love doing the podcast
I get to learn about so many different topics from so many different people.
All right, two more I want to share with you.
Number 11, make new memories instead of living old ones
again and again.
Don't live in nostalgia.
You have so much more to experience.
Don't try to recreate moments from the past.
Instead, be open to new feelings, new emotions,
new people and new places.
I think so many of us always talk about, oh, the best times were before. But the best
day of my life was 10 years ago. The best moment was this. It's beautiful to have great memories,
but it's even more beautiful to keep making new memories. And I think that's what keeps
us young. It's what keeps us fresh. I think this year, one thing I did with my team,
we went on a team retreat that I loved
and made loads of good memories.
I made so many memories while I was on tour.
I tried to make a memory in every city.
So I tried to do something special, personal,
in every city that would make that city memorable for me.
And a lot of it included going on walks,
going to art galleries, going outdoors, seeing monuments, seeing special historical parts of a city that I
will never ever forget. And I think that was so important to me because I didn't
just want to travel the world and come back not having felt like I was able to
make new memories. And actually I came back with so many new memories of cities
I'd been to. You can go to the same place and shift your mindset about it.
You can go to a place you've been to again and again and again and have a new experience
there.
And lesson number 12, the last one is serve, serve, serve.
Use your gifts and skills in the service of others.
It will create opportunities you never thought of, give your life more meaning than ever, and
help you make memories for a lifetime.
And for me, I can honestly say that till this day, my only goal has been to serve through
everything I do to help make a positive impact in the world.
And I constantly reconnect with that feeling because it's what inspires me more and more
and more.
I keep going because I want to keep serving, I want to keep giving, I want to keep learning,
I want to keep serving, I want to keep giving, I want to keep learning, I want to keep growing.
And I'm just grateful that you give me the opportunity to serve you and you serve me as well by being present here.
So I hope that this episode was useful, I hope that you take something away from it, even if there's one lesson that shifts your mindset and how you think that would be a win for me. And I wish you all the best for the year ahead.
If you're selling,
bring your birthday this month,
or while you're listening to this too,
a happy birthday to you.
Thank you for all the love you gave me
on my 36th birthday.
It means the world to me.
And I can't wait for many, many more birthdays
and many, many more lessons to share with you
all over the years.
So thank you again,
and make sure you share this with a friend
who needs to hear it. And make sure you share this with a friend who needs to hear it and
make sure you tag me on Instagram, on TikTok, on Twitter, or on X and let me know what
you're taking away and what's stuck with you.
Thank you so much, Sennie, you so much love.
Thanks for listening John Pope. The world of chocolate has been turned upside down.
A very unusual situation.
You saw the stacks of cash in our office.
Chocolate comes from the cacountry, and recently, Variety's cacao, thought to have been lost
centuries ago, were re-discovered in the Amazon.
There was no chocolate on Earth like this.
Now some chocolate makers are racing deep into the jungle.
Fun the next game-changing chocolate, and I'm coming along.
Okay, that was a very large crack it up.
Listen to the obsessions while chocolate.
On the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Yvonne Gloria, and I'm Mike DeGolmester Horn.
We're so excited to introduce you to our new podcast, Hungry For History!
On every episode, we're exploring some of our favorite dishes, ingredients, beverages
from our Mexican culture.
We'll share personal memories and family stories, decode culinary customs, and even provide
a recipe or two for you to try at home.
Listen to Hungry For History on the I Heart Radio App,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.