The Jamie Kern Lima Show - Chelsea Handler Reveals All! How to Be a Girls’ Girl, Release Negativity, and Experience More Joy!
Episode Date: February 18, 2025Full Video Available on YouTube @JamieKernLimaOfficial. Are You Ready to believe in YOU?🙌 jamiekernlima.com 👈 Sign up for my FREE Inspirational Newsletter here and you’ll ALSO get special prom...pt questions to help you grow in your self-worth-building that pair with each episode!🩷 Make sure to click the “Follow” button for the show on your favorite podcast app, so you’ll be the first to get each episode! ____ If you’re ready to feel the freedom of being the REAL you, finally…if you’re ready to build better friendshipsor strengthen the ones you have and truly learn how to be a girls’ girl, if you’d like to release negativity and experience more joy in your life today, then this episode with the incredible Chelsea Handler, who shares things she’s never shared before, is for YOU! Get ready to laugh, cry and raise your vibration in more ways than one! Chelsea Handler is a multiple-award-winning writer, comedian, producer, TV host, activist, and the author of six consecutive New York Times bestselling books, and her brand new book, I’ll have what she’s having, is going to be her 7th! Her ultra-popular podcast too, it’s called, Dear Chelsea, and its fifth season, and she also has a Las Vegas Residency at The Cosmopolitan, you can get tickets now to see her! We are SO fortunate that she’s taken a moment, right in the middle of her tour, to be here in person in Southern California, in the Jamie Kern Lime show podcast studios, to share this power conversation together with you and me today! Episode Reflection Questions for YOU: Jamie writes prompt questions each episode to spark revelations in your self-worth journey and help you apply the tools and lessons from each episode into your real life right now. Please make sure you’re signed up for Jamie’s free inspirational newsletter jamiekernlima.com 👈 Get my new book WORTHY plus FREE Bonus gifts including a 95+ page Worthy Workbook and more at WorthyBook.com For more resources related to today’s episode, click here https://jamiekernlima.com/show/ for the podcast episode page. Chapters: 0:00 Welcome to The Jamie Kern Lima Show 9:47 Confidence Is A Power Tool 13:55 How To Choose Yourself 16:11 Work Hard And Play Hard 19:22 How To Part Ways 23:00 Be A Girl's Girl 26:50 Get Success By Giving It It’s such an honor to share this podcast together with you. And please note: I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is NOT intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Click Here to Subscribe to the YouTube Channel Follow me here: Instagram TikTok Facebook Website — Sign up for my inspirational newsletter for YOU at: jamiekernlima.com — Looking for my books on Amazon? Here they are! WORTHY Believe IT
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Today in this episode of the Jamie Kern Lima Show podcast,
if you're ready to feel the freedom of being the real you,
finally.
If you're ready to build better friendships
or strengthen the ones you have
and truly learn how to be a girl's girl.
If you'd like to release negativity
and experience more joy in your life today,
then this episode with the incredible Chelsea Handler,
who shares things she's never shared before, is for you.
Get ready to laugh, cry,
and raise your vibration in more ways than one.
I felt proud, like, that I was able to face that moment.
I felt proud that I was able to be an adult.
I mean, I'm getting emotional just talking about it
because it is so meaningful,
because all you really want in life
is to have an impact on people, you know?
That's what I want.
I want people to feel impacted by me.
I want people to feel better
and to know that, like, I'm your sister, you know?
Chelsea, in a lot of the research I've done for today
and talking to lots of people,
I felt like the through line I heard from people
is that you're a kick-ass girlfriend.
That's the biggest compliment you could ever give me
is telling me that I'm a great sister and a great friend.
That's what I wanted to be, and that's who I want to be.
I want to show up, you know?
And I would do it for a stranger. You don't have to know me.
Like, you know, if you're in need and I know you
and I see you and I come across you, I will help you.
You can fucking bet your bottom dollar I will help you.
You know, pick you up and patch you back together
and do whatever I can because, you know,
we have to stick together as women.
All of the blockades that I experienced
in the beginning of my career were by women, not by men. We have to stick together as women. All of the blockades that I experienced
in the beginning of my career were by women, not by men.
They were trying to block my success.
And tell me I didn't have the value that I believed I had.
Yeah, that success, one more woman succeeding
means more success for all of us.
And it's so much more infectious to be optimistic
and to be hopeful and to be happy about people
rather than tucking shit behind people's back
and gossiping and all of the, like,
small vibrational qualities.
I've done that in my life,
and it has yielded the results
that weren't beneficial to me.
Whoo!
That is so good.
That, like, right there,
no, I feel like that is the greatest life advice
to get the thing you want.
You have to vibrate at the level of the thing to get it.
And what you're just describing is so poignant
and so powerful because you're saying like,
once you want more things for other people,
once you say we all rise higher,
all of a sudden you get more of that in your own life
and you also feel more joyful. Today with you,
Chelsea, because it's our first day meeting in person and Anna's like,
all right, I know Chelsea said her book, she's always on time, so I think she's
gonna for sure show up. Oh, I'm early. I'm early. I can't be on time even. I'm such a loser. My parents never picked me up from
school on time, so I've never been late to anything
as an adult because I just hate the idea of being abandoned and anyone waiting for me.
I hate that.
I find it to be, I'm always early, so yeah, sorry.
I was way early.
Do you feel like you have abandonment issues?
Yes, of course.
At 10 years old, you saved all your money, you bought yourself a first class ticket,
and then the rest of your family wasn't coached.
So you're 10, you're walking on a plane,
and you're like, oh no mom, I'm gonna fly first class.
And you figure it out, where did that knowing come from
that seems to be maybe different
from some of the people that you were raised around?
I always had this feeling like that I was gonna have a big loud life.
I said I'm gonna become famous and I said I don't know how I'm gonna do it but I have a lot to say
and I'm gonna help a lot of people and my aunt looked at me and said well you better lose some
weight. You're declaring it out loud like Like, I'm going to be famous.
I'm going to impact a lot of people.
And then you did something about it, like you went for it.
It was like so meaningful, right?
And my cousin had the video, actual video of her telling me
that I was going to be, that if I wanted to make it in Hollywood,
I was going to have to lose weight,
which she had been denying.
Confidence isn't a gift that everyone receives, right?
Everyone doesn't feel confident all the time.
So I've realized that my confidence is a power tool.
I felt injected.
I felt injected. I felt injected.
You can't buy that. You can't fake that.
When I was younger, I would make rash decisions,
and I would be reactive, and I would be angry,
and I no longer operate that way,
and I'm a happier person because of it.
I like to play hard, and I like to work hard,
and I want all of the experiences.
I'm gonna ask you about your ski instructors
in a few minutes.
And,
uh,
because I also,
I also love living vicariously through you.
I wanna be good.
I wanna be a good girl.
You know what I mean?
And not the way that,
like, I don't wanna be submissive.
I wanna be a good girl
because I wanna be a good person
and I wanna help other people be good women.
Being present is the biggest gift you can give yourself to not be consumed
with worry about the past or something that happened to kind of look at
everything and know it's going to be okay either way.
Jamie Kern Lima is her name.
Everybody needs Jamie Kern Lima in their life.
Jamie Kern Lima.
Jamie, you're so inspiring.
Jamie Kern Lima!
I am so excited for this episode today with the amazing Chelsea Handler.
You guys get ready to laugh, cry, and raise your vibration in more ways than one, if you are ready to
release and free yourself of negativity, stop taking yourself so seriously and feel more
joy.
Chelsea is sharing the raw and honest ways she did that she's never shared before and
how you can too, if you're ready to live life on your own terms
and feel that freedom of finally being who you truly are confidently and unapologetically,
then today's episode is truly going to change your life. Chelsea Handler is a multiple award-winning writer, comedian, producer, TV host, activist,
and the author of six consecutive New York Times bestselling books.
And her brand new book, I'll Have What She's Having, is going to be her seventh.
And as you're listening to this podcast right now, take a moment and follow Chelsea's ultra
popular podcast too. It's called Dear Chelsea
and it's in its fifth season. She's on tour right now. She has a Las Vegas residency at the
Cosmopolitan. You can get tickets right now to see her. And we are so fortunate that she has taken a
moment right in the middle of her tour to be here in person in Southern California and the Jamie Curren Lima
Show podcast studios to share this powerful conversation together with you and me today.
Chelsea Handler, welcome to the Jamie Curren Lima Show.
Oh my gosh.
I'm so grateful to be here.
You're just an absolute delight.
Thank you.
Have you ever arrived with multiple types of ice?
No, but whoever my next lover is
needs to pay close attention to this
because if they have my diet ginger ale that I love
and multiple options for ice,
also another love and passion of mine.
Yeah, that gets you in,
that really hits all the right notes for me.
I do my homework.
Thank you. I do my homework.
Thank you so much.
Your book is amazing. Like your book is amazing. I read it cover to cover and I feel like the sign
of a great book, like a real great book, isn't just when it sort of like entertains you or takes you,
but also like really shifts you. And I felt like your book, I left reading your book feeling shifted. I felt shifted.
I felt more empowered.
I almost felt like I was able to borrow your courage to be more bold, is how I felt.
And I think that's really powerful.
So I just want to say, you know, for every person who wants to learn to use and discover
their own voice, or maybe for every person who is on a healing journey,
every person who is about to leave a relationship
and say, I'm not gonna trade myself
for being in this relationship.
I'm not gonna settle for that.
Or for anyone who really wants to embrace the power
and freedom of being who they truly are and to kind of stop apologizing for it.
I feel like there's so much in this book that I took away.
So I just want to say congratulations and it's going to impact a lot of people.
Thank you so much.
My hope has been, especially with this book, is to inject optimism and female empowerment,
any empowerment really to anyone who feels
disempowered and to highlight that it is always possible to capture light in darkness.
You dedicated the book to flight attendants and said, you've been on so many flights and
if anyone is being an asshole, they can just tap your shoulder, you're going to step up and have their back.
Have you always had the confidence to speak your mind and say how you feel?
Yeah.
I mean, misplaced confidence.
In the beginning, because I was like this as a very young girl, which I also talk a
lot about in the book, I've always been resistant to injustice and authority figures,
quite frankly. But injustice very much as I've grown older and realized that confidence
isn't a gift that everyone receives. Everyone doesn't feel confident all the time. So I've
realized that my confidence is a power tool,
you know, like, and I have to use that judiciously. And I feel when people are being treated badly,
or unfairly, like that is the best use of my voice. And I've never seen anything happen more
consistently, or more terrible treatment happen consistently than I have
on planes.
And the way that our flight attendants who are our sisters in the sky are treated during
COVID, during post COVID, you know, we haven't really ever recovered from COVID socially
and, you know, what people think is appropriate to do on planes or the license they take.
And I find that to be completely disrespectful to flight attendants.
They are stuck with us in a tube of air for however long your flight is and they deserve
to be respected.
And they deserve to be, it's more than respect.
They can really, they're taking care of us and they're like our nannies.
So like we really need to value them and treat them well.
When you look at the studies, it's shocking that the majority of women are people pleasers
and we're scared to speak our mind or to say the truth or, oh, it's been somebody.
Do you, are you able, and you know, you talk about doing it for injustice,
which is such a great, by the way, anyone listening this is such a great hack if you're like I don't know how to speak
my mind when you make it about someone else it's almost easier to do it like oh I'm actually
helping this person then it's easier to stand up for yourself and say how you feel.
Are you able Chelsea to do that as fearlessly when it's for yourself?
That's a great question.
No not always.
Sometimes I suck it up because I know I can.
I can be like, okay, well, that's not about me.
That's not going to impact me in a deleterious way that it might impact another person.
So I would say I'm more protective of others.
You know what I mean?
Because I want to make sure that if people don't feel empowered, I've got your back.
You know, I have that attitude.
But, you know, I'm not shy about standing up for myself.
Sometimes I just feel like it's not worth it.
I don't need that.
I don't need to do that.
But, you know, very recently I did stand up myself
for myself in a big way.
And I had to make a move in my life
that kind of was a bummer,
but also I needed to take care of myself.
And, you know, and I was, I'm proud of the way
that I am able to make decisions at this point in my life.
I'm proud of the woman that I've become.
I'm proud of all the work that I've put in
to become this more self-aware, kinder,
still bold and still brave person.
But, and all I want to do is inject that into other people. kinder, still bold and still brave person.
But, and all I wanna do is inject that into other people.
Like I want everyone to feel this way.
Yeah, yeah.
You know?
Yeah, when you walked in today,
that's what I was saying, that I was very not,
and I never try to have any expectations when I read a book
and I just think, oh, this is someone's offering to the world
what a gift it is for me to read it is how I kind of approach it.
And I felt injected. I felt injected. I felt injected from your book.
And so it does that.
And that's why I think I'm so passionate about it right now
and fired up about it because that is, you can't buy that.
You can't fake that. I really felt that.
When you say you did that recently in your life, are you referring to ending a relationship
and choosing yourself over your relationship? It was a professional relationship. So it wasn't
a personal relationship, but yeah, it was a professional relationship. I left my agency
recently and I had been there for a really long time. And that was a difficult decision to make,
one that I thought about long and hard
because there were a few people at that agency
who really were working so hard for me.
But at the end of the day, I had to step up
and decide what I want my future to look like.
And I know I made the right decision.
So it was, yeah, it was difficult, but I faced it.
I didn't cower away from an uncomfortable conversation.
I didn't do anything, I'm never craven.
You know, when I never like take the easy way out
or let someone else make the call.
Like I'm very intentional about,
I'm gonna tell you that our relationship's over.
I'm not gonna have someone else do it.
I'm not going to take the easy road out
because I'm a conflict avoidant or any of that.
I'm not any of those things.
And while many conversations are uncomfortable,
there's a lot to be said about being face to face
with someone and giving them that kind of news
in a careful, delicate way and an honest way.
And so I'm proud of that also.
How did your agency or old agency handle it?
They were so gracious. They were so gracious to me because we've been in a relationship for many years
and they know me well and they know the type of person that I am and how hard I work.
And some other parts of the agency weren't really working in concert, so they understood.
And that was another example of the way
that my relationships have been built.
You know, like the fact that there wasn't anger
or resentment and there's, you know,
you're always welcome here.
If you ever want to come back, please come back.
And like, that's exactly how I want things to end.
You know, when I was younger, I would make rash decisions
and I would be reactive and I would be angry
and I no longer operate that way.
And I'm a happier person because of it.
Well, they should say you're always welcome back
because before today, I always knew you
as somebody blessed by your talent.
But as someone that watched it, right?
Watched you on television, like was blessed by your talent,
doing their research for the past few weeks for today.
And tell me if I'm, if this is right,
you have to be a crazy hard worker
because the number of shows you have produced,
executive produced, launched out into the world
that are in partnership with
other people, ones that you've done.
I mean, I'm talking about the things that you have done in your career so far.
I mean, and you're on tour right now.
You have a residency.
You're about to film another Netflix special.
And in the middle of it, you're driving up here to see me in Montecito to do this show and I'm looking at all that.
Have you always been and are you now just a really, really, really hard worker?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I want to be a hard worker.
I'm a hustler.
Yeah.
That's what this business is, hustling.
I've been doing this since I was, I mean, when I became very successful, probably 30,
32 was when Chelsea lately began,
but I had a lot of success before that
that wasn't as big, right?
So my career started kind of taking off.
I published my first book when I was 27.
I was on a show called Girls Behaving Badly.
I had a few development deals.
So I had little pockets of success
and I was kind of, the drum beat
was going in the right direction. But since I can remember, like even when I was on Chelsea
lately for seven years, I did that show five days a week or four days a week. And then
I would be on a book tour every single weekend. I would fly to three different cities or two
different cities and do anywhere from three to six shows a weekend, I would fly to three different cities or two different cities and do anywhere
from three to six shows a weekend,
fly back on a Monday morning, do all of that again.
And I've always been able to really hit it hard.
I take long breaks when I have time.
I'll take a month off and go to my house in Spain.
I'm about to leave for Whistler for a month
because I like to play hard and I like to work hard and I want all of the experiences.
Yeah. I'm going to ask you about your ski instructors in a few minutes.
Because I also love living vicariously through you as well. As everyone who reads this book is going to. It's going to be quite an adventure.
With you, I wanted just hit on something you just said,
because it's really powerful.
You said when you left your agency, because here's the thing.
I think about everyone listening and watching us right now who's
in a friendship that they know is not serving them,
but they don't want to hurt that person.
And so they don't tell the truth or they're in a relationship
or they're, you know, whatever it might be.
And, you know, you being at an agency for a long time,
probably working a partnership with a lot of people there,
you're saying, no, I'm actually going to do the best thing for me,
even if it maybe lets other people down.
What's your advice for doing that for someone listening
who's like, I don't want to disappoint everyone else
or I don't want to, or they've been there for me
in the past and they're okay now,
but I know that I deserve so much better.
I think that in life, like, it is a measure of your character
to be able to meet the moments that you are in,
and especially difficult conversations,
and handling difficult emotions is character growth.
And we are tested so many times throughout our life
to be that, to step up to the plate,
to be an honorable person.
I wanna be moral, I wanna be ethical, I don't wanna lie.
Sometimes we have to lie, or it's the best thing to do too.
But when you are coming from a place of integrity,
which is not a word that can ever be underused
or undervalued because really integrity
is just the most important thing.
So many parts of the world are lacking or so many areas are lacking, you know?
So it's so important to, when you're making a decision
or you're breaking up a relationship and you're doing it because of your best interest,
there is a very gentle way to do those things.
And the other person can receive that in a way when you are mindful
and intentional about how you are relaying that information. It's not really your problem
how the other person receives that. All you have to do is honor both of you in that conversation.
You can't take care of someone else's emotional reaction to what you've said when you're coming from a place of self,
not preservation even, but integrity.
Like this no longer works for me.
I'm so sorry, but I respect you
and I appreciate everything we've been through together
thus far.
You have been a huge addition to my life.
And right now, this doesn't make any sense for me.
It doesn't make sense for me to move forward.
And I really have to think about myself
because who else is gonna think about me
if I don't think about myself?
So while the nuances may differ,
depending on what relationship you're ending,
I think there's always a loving, gentle way
to let someone know that this is,
we're gonna put this on pause.
Nothing is final.
I don't think that is good language to use.
Slamming doors and keeping them closed forever isn't loving.
There's always possibility that we could circle back around.
And I think that's also a nice kind of way
to let people know, like maybe we will come back together
at some point,
but this isn't the right time right now for me.
And I need you to respect that.
And while people's reactions may vary
and some people be angry or hurt or feel rejected,
there's nothing bad that can come from acting with integrity.
That is so good.
There's nothing bad that can come from acting with integrity. Mm. That is so good. There's nothing bad that can come
from acting with integrity.
I think just a quick call out also,
what you just said in the past 90 seconds
is gonna be so good for so many people to just rewind
and listen to over and over,
because whether they're looking to like borrow your courage
or borrow your wisdom on how to, you know,
put their foot down in something. A lot of people are. I mean, you're, you know, you've
been in Hollywood for a long time, too. It's amazing how many people I meet that on the
outside are very, very accomplished, but on the inside cannot do what you just did with
your agency. Like they're too scared to stand up for themselves or to put their foot down
or they're too insecure. When you did it, because a lot of people fear, oh, well, what if my other, like in this example,
what if my next agency is not as good?
Or what if I'm giving up on something where they really know me or like any of the other
things?
How did it feel that the, right after you gave them that news, how did that feel?
Well, I mean, one of my conversations with one of my agents was quite emotional actually,
because she and I had had a personal experience a few years back, you know, that was very
meaningful and a difficult time in her life.
And so we were, you know, it became emotional.
But again, I got off the phone and I spoke to my other agent, who I had for many years,
and I felt proud, like like that I was able to face
that moment I felt proud that I was able to be an adult I felt proud that shoot
that we got emotional like that connection you know what I mean I'm
getting emotional just talking about it because it is so meaningful because all
you really want in life is to have an impact on people, you know?
That's what I want. I want people to feel impacted by me.
I want people to feel better and to know that, like, I'm your sister, you know?
And in that conversation with her, that was really...
She reminded me that I was a good sister to her, and I had forgotten that, you know?
So I think with all of this, like, you know, it's hard.
Conflict is hard for so many people,
but it doesn't have to be conflict.
You saying your piece or standing up for yourself
doesn't have to be conflict.
It can be easy, you know?
Yeah.
What I love so much that also happens when we do it
is we're sort of like showing another woman how to do it.
Yes.
You know, which is also beautiful,
even though I'm sure they don't want to hear it at the time.
But it's like they're seeing an example of how to do it.
And you taking us through right now is also,
and talking about how you felt proud that you were able to do it.
And then you're reminded of your connection with that person.
I want to say, Chelsea, in a lot of the research I've done for today
and talking to lots of people,
I felt like the through line I heard from people is that you're a kick-ass girlfriend.
Like you're an amazing girlfriend of people.
Like you're an amazing family member, but also friend.
And so, and I know that, you know,
you're doing that now for, there'll be so many people
that maybe you'll never meet in person,
but through your book and through the things you're sharing,
you're gonna impact them.
Yeah, I hope so.
I hope so because, listen,
that's the biggest compliment you could ever give me,
is telling me that I'm a great sister and a great friend. That's what I wanted to be. And that's
who I want to be. I want to show up, you know, and I would do it for a stranger. You don't have to
know me like, you know, if you're in need, and I know you and I see you and I come across you,
I will help you. You can fucking bet your bottom dollar, I will help you, you know,
pick you up and patch you back together and do whatever I can because, you know, we have to stick together as women.
There's just I remember coming up in this industry and it being there's it was just
like we've been ingrained in women like that we have to compete with each other. And and
all of this the blockades that I experienced in my beginning of my career
were by women, not by men.
And I was like, what's going on?
Like I was threatening to them.
And in turn, they were trying to block my success
and tell me I didn't have the value that I believed I had.
And I found that so confounding.
And so when I started doing my show on Chelsea Lately,
I had my own issues with people I've worked with before,
where I wasn't gracious, maybe,
or we had friction between us or we were competitive.
But once I felt that directed at me,
I made sure that I was never going to move forward professionally in that
way.
Like once I felt it, once I got Chelsea lately, I was like, I'm going to share this spotlight
with as many women, gay men, you know, marginalized communities, like I want people of color.
Everyone was going to be a part of my playground because I didn't want anyone to ever experience what I experienced.
Like, I'm gonna come welcome you here on this show and share this, you know, with everyone.
And that became that show. And that's why that show was successful,
because it was inclusive, not exclusive.
It is, it's shocking when you're a woman and you,
and there's enough things to worry about,
but then, then we see that happening.
And like, I'm 47, I have done plenty of things in my career,
and I just had that happen to me recently.
Oh.
And I was like, shocked, um,
with something I did in Hollywood.
I'll tell you off camera.
I'll tell you another time.
But I just, I'll tell you another time.
But I just, I couldn't even believe it
by another woman who had so much success.
Like, and I like, you know,
I've come to believe in my life that our own, you know,
whether someone believes in God, the universe,
I believe our path is divinely orchestrated.
I don't think anyone else's success has anything to do with ours
or can take ours down or impact ours.
Like, I really think we're on our own.
I think we're the only ones that can lower our vibration,
think we're not worthy of something and mess it up.
You know, so I feel like when people are that way,
it's such a bummer, but especially women.
And so have you had that happen since?
Sure I have.
But I mean, I love what you just said.
There's so much more coming up in this episode.
You are not going to want to miss it.
But first, I wanted to share this with you.
In life, you don't soar to the level of your hopes and dreams.
You stay stuck at the level of your self-worth.
When you build your self-worth, you change your entire life.
And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy, How to Believe You Are Enough and
Transform Your Life for You.
If you have some self-doubt to destroy and a destiny to fulfill, Worthy is for you.
In Worthy, you'll learn proven tools
and simple steps that bring life-changing results,
like how to get unstuck from the things holding you back,
build unshakable self-love,
unlearn the lies that lead to self-doubt
and embrace the truths that wake up worthiness.
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And here's to becoming unstoppable together.
And now more of this incredible conversation together.
When people are that way, it's such a bummer, but especially women.
And so have you had that happen since?
Sure I have.
But like, I mean, I love what you just said.
You know, blowing out someone else's candle
doesn't make yours brighter.
That's not a real thing.
And it's hard in the world we live in.
I am a victim of this too,
where I look at someone else's success,
who's succeeded beyond mine and been like,
oh, I wish I had done that or oh,
and it's a constant reminder to be reminder to remember what you just said.
That is not your path, you're on your path.
Like if anything, use that as a motivator.
Change that like drum beat in your head that,
ooh, I don't like that, they got that or they got that.
Change that drum beat like, yeah, that's success.
One more woman succeeding means more success for all of us.
You have to always change those kind of negative thought
patterns around to be optimistic and to be hopeful.
And it's so much more infectious to be optimistic
and to be hopeful and to be happy about people
rather than tucking shit behind people's back and gossiping
and all of the like small vibrational qualities.
I've done that in my life and it has yielded the results
that weren't beneficial to me.
You know, when you change your attitude
and you change the way you look at things
and that you want success for everyone.
I want success for women and for people
who are not, don't feel seen.
I want everyone to feel successful in life.
And when you spread that around,
first of all, you see more of it
and you realize that it starts to infuse you
with joy and happiness for others in a way
which you were maybe unfamiliar with feeling in the past.
That is so good.
That like right there, no,
I feel like that is the greatest life advice.
That is the, that is, people spend so much time
trying to figure out how to get what they want.
Oh yeah, you say however you want.
People try to like figure out how to get what they want
and then this and then that.
And they think, oh, if I tear someone else down
or oh, if I, this, that, the other thing.
I'll never forget Chelsea,
Oprah once saying that to get the thing you want,
you have to vibrate at the level of the thing to get it.
And what you're just describing is so poignant
and so powerful because you're saying like,
once you want more things for other people,
once you say we all rise higher,
all of a sudden you get more of that in your own life
and you also feel more joyful.
And when I launched this podcast
and every second I was doubting is Oprah gonna show up,
I was like, I have to vibrate at the level of truly,
today with you, Chelsea,
because it's our first day meeting in person.
And I was like, all right, I know Chelsea said in her book,
she's always on time, so I think she's gonna for sure show up. Oh, I'm like, all right, I know Chelsea said in her book she's always on time,
so I think she's gonna for sure show up.
Oh, I'm early. I'm early. I can't be on time even. I'm such a loser. My parents never picked
me up from school on time, so I've never been late to anything as an adult because I just
hate the idea of being abandoned and anyone waiting for me. I hate that. I find it to
be, I'm always early.
So yeah, sorry, I was way early.
Do you feel like you have abandonment issues?
Yes, of course.
I mean, I've worked through a lot of them
and I don't have, I mean, I've had them.
I would say now, no, I don't feel,
I don't have a fear of abandonment.
I don't have the same needs that I used to as a younger,
like say in a relationship, a romantic relationship,
I don't have the constant need for reinforcement
or revalidation or reassuring,
are they coming, are they coming,
are they gonna call when they say they're gonna call,
are they gonna do da-da-da?
I don't longer attract people like that in my life,
so it's not an issue.
And I don't feel worried about whether or not someone
is gonna follow through with something with me
because I don't have people like that in my life anymore.
Yeah, yeah.
And like, and it just like,
if I say I'm gonna do something, I will do it.
Yeah, yeah.
So I wanna ask you about this.
This is, you know, I love that quote,
success leaves clues.
And when I learned, and you guys will all learn about this,
when you get Chelsea's book, I'll have what she's having.
I was, I'm always fascinated by these things
that you can like tap into and be like, huh,
and think back to your own childhood.
But when you were a kid, I want to ask you about
the first time you were on a flight with your you about the first time you're on a flight with
your family, the first time you're on a flight and you guys walk past the first class, went
into coach and you asked your mom, like, why aren't we sitting there?
And she kind of explained like, oh, we have a family, we couldn't ever sit there.
And I want to read something.
Well, first of all, you said, you thought to yourself, speak for yourself, right?
Like speak for yourself.
And you had this kind of knowing.
You said, in my family, or if my family were content,
flying coach the rest of their lives,
we weren't on the same page.
And at some point I'd have to split ties with them.
And at 10 years old, sold lemonade
and sold spiked lemonade.
And then you called all the hotels, I think, one summer
and said you were 15, not 10,
so you could babysit for anyone who needed it.
You saved all your money.
And then I think it was on the trip
to your grandpa's funeral,
you bought yourself a first-class ticket,
and then the rest of your family was in coach.
Yes. How?
Okay, this is what I want to understand because I find this fascinating.
Because you look at how successful you are in your life right now.
You look at all the things that you've done, all the things you continue to do, everything
happening this coming year, right?
At that age, at 10 years old, because Oprah has this in common where she was a little
girl and her grandma was like, you know, you're gonna have to learn how to hang clothes
and the clothespins, you know, work for a nice white family.
And she says at this little young age,
she had that knowing, like, no, grandma, I'm not.
So you're 10, you're walking on a plane,
and you're like, oh no, mom, I'm gonna fly first class.
And you figure it out, but I wanna ask you, like,
where did that knowing come from
that seems to be maybe different
from some of the people that you were raised around?
I always had this feeling
that I was going to have a big, loud life.
And I just felt like, you know,
the instinct and the knowing are two different things.
You have a feeling, but you don't really know what it's going,
how it's going to materialize, right?
Like, I had never heard that about Oprah, which I love.
And which makes total sense
because I feel like she's our mother.
You know, in this earth, on this earth,
she's someone I, you know, obviously look up to immensely.
And I've always, I mean, almost every book, you know,
I owe to her like because of all of her inspiration.
So I love that you're talking about her right now.
She's such a force of nature.
And when I was little,
I just thought this isn't gonna do it.
Like I looked around at my family and our house
and I'm just like, this isn't enough for me.
Like I'm gonna need some, like a more consistent,
a housekeeper, I'm gonna need a housekeeper.
I don't know what my parents were thinking.
They had six children.
I was watching the Brady Bunch, you know,
with the six kids and the mother and the father
and they had Alice.
I was like, where's our fucking Alice?
And I just, you know, there was a materialistic sense
when I was young because my parents,
we lived in this kind of middle-class,
upper middle-class neighborhood,
and we were not on the same level
as our neighbors financially, and that stuck out.
So there was a materialistic aspect,
which is, you know, not the only driving force,
nor should it ever be.
And then there was a feeling of, I so much to say and it was filled,
I had so much angst as a child, especially after my brother died. I was so angry and no
mechanism to understand how to digest that anger until much later in life. So it was a lot of
delayed grief. But in that, in those moments, I was, I was I was motivated by my discontent. You know what I mean?
I was like, this is, I am going, like my childhood was a placeholder. And even though it was filled
with all these vivid, beautiful memories and my family, I have this big, huge family that we're
all so close and we have these great relationships, except
for a couple right now because of the election.
But most of them, I just had a motivating anger.
There's this book that I love called Letting Go by David Hawking.
Have you read that?
Not.
Okay.
It's very powerful and it's metaphysical and it's really about your energy.
But he talks about the levels of like kinesiology
when you're in your most, at your highest vibration,
and this is measurable scientific stuff,
but obviously it's not as talked about all the time
as other things.
So when you're in anger, you are actually accomplishing
a lot because you're motivated by your anger.
It's not the highest vibration to be in,
but the vibration right above anger is courage.
So once you can get rid of your anger
and turn your anger into action, it becomes courage.
And I think that was very true for most of my adolescence.
I was so torn.
I was emotionally stuck at that nine-year-old little girl
level because I didn't really compute my brother's death in a real way.
I didn't have therapy. I didn't talk to anyone.
And that drove me.
That, like, combined with my family life,
and just, I just thought, like,
I'm gonna be a woman who stands out and stands up, you know?
And I'm gonna figure out how I'm gonna do it.
And when I moved to LA, when I was 19 years old,
I didn't, my aunt and uncle lived there.
They had nine children and they lived
on Beverly Glenn Boulevard and I moved in with them.
I had no money.
I drove across country by myself and I hustled.
I didn't have any connections in
this industry. I didn't know anyone except for my aunt and uncle and they were not in
this business. And I remember my aunt sitting down at the kitchen table and I said, I'm
going to become famous. And I said, I don't know how I'm going to do it, but I have a
lot to say and I'm going to help a lot of people. And my aunt looked at me and said, I don't know how I'm going to do it, but I have a lot to say and I'm going to help a lot of people.
And my aunt looked at me and said, well, you better lose some weight.
And I looked at her and I said, OK, I just like, you know, OK, not OK, I have to lose some weight, just like, OK, that's how you're reacting to my desire to say something that's kind of embarrassing to say I want to be famous.
You know, what does that mean?
You're just an idiot.
And I mean, that doesn't mean anything, but I didn't understand then what my
purpose was, something was driving me towards the public eye that could have
been thought of as shallow.
And sometimes when I think back, I go, God, all you want to do is be now I know
why I wanted to do that.
You know what I mean?
Now I know why, now I know why, when I go on, all you want to do is be, now I know why I wanted to do that. You know what I mean?
Now I know why.
Now I know why when I go on stage
and I get to perform in front of three to 5,000 people
and people have paid their money to see me
and I get to watch strangers sit next to each other
in an audience and laugh together next to a stranger,
that I get to provide that,
that I get to go out on that stage
and provide joy and sunshine and healing
and let people forget about this craziness, you know,
that we live in every day.
Like, that is a gift.
That is my purpose, being able to write my stories
and share my, like, my love and my success
with all of these people, people I've never met
get to share in my success, you know?
That is really what it was about,
but I was too young to understand that.
Now I understand that that was the purpose all along.
That was what that drive and that motivation was.
I was going towards something, but I just,
I had kind of, I didn't really understand
the magnitude of why I wanted it to be successful
and why I wanted it to be in the why I wanted to be in the public.
What I love too that I just want to call out, especially for everyone listening, is like,
so you had this knowing, I guess, that this isn't going to cut it from my life.
I want to have a big life.
I wanted this, that.
You are now at your aunt's, your aunt and uncles, and you're telling your aunt, you're
declaring it out loud.
Like, I'm going to be famous., I'm gonna impact a lot of people.
And then you did something about it, like you went for it.
And I think that's so important,
even back to when you were 10,
you didn't just think, oh, one day
I'm gonna have a first class ticket.
You declared it, like you said to your mom,
and then you did something about it, like you took action,
and through a lemonade stand that was lemonade and hard lemonade,
I think your sister, right? Your sister had like 50%.
It was like a 50-50 split, and you thought that was too much.
You fired her, you hired Nelson. He got 10%, right?
So then you got 90%.
All the things, you hustled from that age and you made it happen.
And I wanna call that out because I think like
part of your impact, I think part of what's so beautiful
is that sometimes we can go through experiences
and people can take shortcuts in their own life
because of them.
And I'll never forget, Chelsea,
you just reminded me of something.
I was like eight years old sitting in my living room watching this interview where Barbara
Walters interviewed Oprah and Oprah said on this program, and she was early in her career,
but she said, I always knew I was destined for greatness.
And I remember sitting in my living room as a little kid feeling like me too, like I have
this feeling.
And then she got so much, oh my gosh,
she got just horribly attacked in the press for saying that.
I think people weren't used to a woman speaking
so confidently at the time.
But I remember having that whisper.
And I remember when I launched Beauty Company
in my living room, same thing.
I didn't know anyone in the industry. I didn't know how I was gonna do it. But I just kind of was like, you know, when I launched Beauty Company in my living room, same thing, I didn't know anyone in the industry,
I didn't know how I was gonna do it,
but I just kind of was like, you know what,
I feel like I'm supposed to do it,
and then it was like taking action.
And so I just wanna call that out
because if you think about the circumstances you were in
at 10 that you describe,
and then you're with your aunt and uncle and all their kids
and all the things that you're doing,
your circumstances don't have to define and then you're with your aunt and uncle and all their kids and all the things that you're doing,
your circumstances don't have to define whether or not you can go for the thing. And I think a lot of people right now have a whisper like, oh, maybe I'm supposed to impact
people too, or maybe I'm supposed to, you know, but they're not declaring it. They're not, you know,
and then they're not doing anything about it. And so I just want to call that out that I think that
that's like a recipe you just shared
that's really powerful,
because it happened when you were younger,
it happened before you were famous.
Look at you now, look at all the things that you're doing.
And a great, sorry, I don't mean to interrupt you.
I mean, I guess I do, because I just...
But anyway, I wanted to cap off the story
before I forget with regard to my aunt.
So my aunt, for many years after that,
when I started to become successful, you know,
and she, we would always tell that story.
Like all of the kids, my cousins are very close to me.
My cousin is on the road with me every weekend.
I grew up with those kids, right?
And they're still my, obviously,
they're very close to me today.
So whenever we would tell that story,
remember my aunt's name is Gabby,
we'd be like, remember Gabby,
when you told Chelsea she was fat
and she wasn't gonna be successful?
And she would be like, I never said that,
I never said that, I never said that.
So about 10 years ago, she was in a tough spot
and I was able to buy her a house.
And we surprised her.
I went with my two cousins
and she had just come out of a divorce and we bought a house for her we surprised her. I went with my two cousins and she had just come out of a
divorce and we bought a house for her in the valley. We brought her to the house to look
at it. And as we were looking at it, we were like, this is your house. And had a pool and
she loves her grandchildren. So it was like so meaningful, right? And my cousin had the
video, actual video of her telling me that I was going to be, that if
I wanted to make it into Hollywood, I was going to have to lose weight, which she had
been denying.
And this is so our family.
We're rough on each other.
You know what I mean?
We really give it to each other hard.
And so we go back into the house and my cousin puts the tape in the VCR at the time when
they still had VCRs and said,
by the way, mom, this is what you said never happened.
So on the day that I was able to gift her this house,
we had that footage and they played it for my aunt.
And it was just so funny, you know,
because it was such an emotional day.
And we obviously, our family's not that great at emotion.
You know, we try to make each other laugh more
than we try to make each other cry.
So it was a really funny, full circle, gorgeous,
gorgeous moment in my life.
That must have felt incredible, gifting her a house.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I think is so beautiful in In your book, so many people know your humor
and your power and your advocacy and how tough you are. And you also have so much empathy.
Yeah. Well, I had to pick that up in therapy. Apparently, I didn't have empathy for a long time.
I've heard you say that before.
Yeah.
Watching you cry about gifting your aunt a house, which is such a generous, empathetic
thing to do.
Like, it's just, yeah.
Yeah.
So, can you learn empathy?
Yes, you can.
You can totally learn empathy.
That's the greatest update ever.
Yeah.
The two things I was so scared about when I went into therapy was, A, first of all,
I didn't know I had empathy. I lacked empathy. I did not have it. I just lacked it. I had
sympathy and I had generosity, but they're not the same thing. I wasn't thinking about
what it would be like to be a different person. I would only go, oh, that person's in trouble.
Let me help them. I never thought, what is it like to be them?
What is it like to be that person?
So the good news is you can gain empathy
because it's just like turning a light on that's not on.
Thinking about walking in another person's shoes
is now something that happens to me daily,
you know, regularly, all day long.
I think, oh, that person, what they must be going through
or is that person okay?
And don't take this personally, that person could be going through something. Like, that person, what they must be going through, or is that person okay?
And don't take this personally,
that person could be going through something like,
and thinking about what they might be going through.
And the biggest fear I had about entering into therapy
when I did was that I was a narcissist, you know?
And so I asked my therapist, this guy, Dan Siegel,
who's incredible and just changed my life forever, I said, am I a narcissist?
I need you to really be honest with me.
He was like, typically narcissists aren't looking for feedback.
I was like, hallelujah.
I was so paranoid that I was this bad person.
I was never a bad person.
I have been angry and I've been confused and I've been hurt, but I've not ever been a bad person. And I was never a bad person. I have been angry and I've been confused and
I've been hurt. But I've not ever been a bad person. And I think so many people can get
confused in thinking that we're bad because we have some negative thoughts or we have
human thoughts. Like your humanity is going to create dark thoughts. We all have a shadow self.
We all have a self that's not our best self
that is kind of always trying to get us to lower our vibe.
But we're innately good.
Yeah.
And so that was a relief to find out
all of that information.
Because I wanna be good.
I wanna be a good girl.
You know what I mean?
And not the way that I don't wanna be submissive. I wanna be a good. I want to be a good girl. You know what I mean? And not the way that like, I don't want to be submissive.
I want to be a good girl because I want to be a good person and I want to help other
people be good women.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I think?
One of the things too that people get confused about is most people aren't honest about who
they are.
They hide, you know, their shadow self or they hide, frankly, parts of them
that are perfectly great,
but other people might judge them,
or they hide all these things,
and then they show up on social media
with their highlight reel,
with a thing as their representative,
the person that they think,
and a lot of people get this so wrong, I feel, Chelsea.
I think that people feel all this pressure, like,
oh, I need to show up as my representative
for other people to like me.
When it is impo...
Like you look at all the data,
it's impossible to have a real human connection
unless you're fully who you are.
If you're presenting.
Yeah, if you're presenting.
If you're presentational and you're coming...
Like if I were coming here or,
and thinking, how am I going to impress you?
I hope you like me.
Yeah.
That's much different than me coming in
and being completely present with you
so that there's not even any of that.
Of course, we're going to like each other,
you know, like be real.
Whoever you are is fine.
You don't have to impress people with your humor
or your personality.
That all comes naturally as long as you are present.
Yeah.
You know, and that's something Oprah talks
about all the time.
You know, I remember listening to like 10 episodes
between her and Eckhart Tolle about presence,
about presence.
And I was like, what the fuck are they talking about?
Like, it took me so long to click in.
And they had this series and people would call in
and ask the questions that I was wondering, like, okay,
how does this apply to eating?
How does this apply to friendship?
And it's like, presence, how can you do that?
How can you achieve that in the society that we're living in?
Very easily.
It's a minute by minute thing.
Like being present is the biggest gift
you can give yourself.
To not be consumed with worry about the past
or something that happened.
To kind of look at everything and know
it's going to be okay either way.
Either way, it's going to be okay.
Whatever the outcome is,
whether it works in my favor or doesn't, I will survive.
Coming up, this conversation is so incredible,
so transformative and also so inspiring
that we made it into three parts.
And if you're ready to learn
how to be an incredible girl's girl,
choose yourself over a relationship
that's asking you to abandon yourself,
build the courage to be more bold, confident and free,
get what you want in life and step into your purpose.
You are not gonna wanna miss part two with Chelsea Handler
coming up in the next episode of the Jamie Kern-Lima show.
If you love today's episode, my only ask is that you please click the follow or subscribe
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Share it with another person in your life who could benefit from it, post it and share
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You never know whose life you're meant to change today
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And thank you so much for joining me today.
Before you go, I wanna share some words with you
that couldn't be more true.
You, right now, exactly as you are, are enough and fully worthy.
You're worthy of your greatest hopes, your wildest dreams, and all the unconditional
love in the world.
And it's an honor to welcome you to each and every episode of the Jamie Curren Lima
Show.
Here, I hope you'll come as you are, heal where you need, blossom what you choose,
journey toward your calling, and stay as long as you'd like because you belong here.
You are worthy, you are loved, you are love, and I love you.
And I cannot wait to join you on the next episode of the Jamie Kern Lima Show.
Do you struggle with negative self-talk?
Living with a constant mental narrative that you're not good enough is exhausting.
I know because I spent most of my life in that habit.
The words you say to yourself about yourself are so powerful. And when you learn to take control over your self-talk,
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and learn to trust yourself at jamiekernlema.com slash resources or click the link in the show notes below.
Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious and so is self-belief.
And I'd love to hang out with you even more, especially if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter
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If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration,
some tips, tools, joy, and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. at JamieKernLima.com or in the link in the show notes. I am so excited for this book, you know why?
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Because in life, we don't become what we want.
We become what we believe we're worthy of.
Join the Worthy Movement today
by grabbing your copy of Worthy anywhere books are sold
and head to WorthyBook.com now for free gifts, including my five-part course on becoming
unstoppable and my 95-page Worthy workbook action plan that teaches you how to implement
the tools from the book into your real life right now.
Worthy is groundbreaking.
Yo.
Oh my God!
Worthy, you are worthy.
This book is gonna change lives.
This book literally will teach you
how to actually feel worthy
so that you can have the strength,
you can have the confidence.
The lessons in this book and the strategies
will change your life.
You will never be the same again after you read this book.
Jamie's book Worthy is a must read. It's such an honor to share this podcast together with you.
And please note, I'm not a licensed therapist
and this podcast is not intended as a substitute
for the advice of a physician, professional coach,
psychotherapist or other qualified professional.