The Mel Robbins Podcast - 13 Things I Wish I Knew in My 20s
Episode Date: March 11, 2024These 13 pieces of life advice will change your future.Buckle up, because today Mel is not holding back. It’s true that your 20s can feel overwhelming, but you’re more powerful than you think. A...nd this advice will unlock that power.If you’re feeling behind in life, these 13 pieces of advice will move you to the front of the line, no matter how old you are. The truth is that no matter what decade of your life you are in, you can make it the best one – and this advice will help you do it.For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s free 29-page workbook to make this your best yearWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s newsletter Disclaimer
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Welcome to another episode of the Mel Robbins podcast.
Now, listen up because today you and I, we are going to do some things differently.
I rolled up here to the microphone hot today because I want to talk to all of you listeners
in your 20s because you've been writing in a lot lately. So I see you, I hear you. Today, I am showing up
for you and I'm also here to talk to the people who love you. There are 13 things that I wish I knew
in my 20s that I am going to share with you today and I should warn you. Mel Robbins in her 20s,
effed up. We're talking unhinged, everybody. This is not an episode, by the way, for little ears, okay?
Because my 20s were the hardest, most confusing, and overwhelming 10 years of my life.
If only I had known these 13 things that I'm going to share with you today, I would not
look back on that decade and want to go delete. And by the way, if
you're in your 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, you're going to love this too because these 13 pieces
of advice I use in my life every single day and I'm 55. And you're also going to love
the stories about how screwed up Mel Robbins used to be. But if you are in your 20s, today,
I'm dedicating this to you because you're probably listening to this because your mom sent you this episode. So if you're currently laying in your bed
looking at social media or you have no money in the bank or you feel shitty about your
job or you've just been ghosted by your last hinge date, do not worry. Mel Robbins is here.
I'm going to put my arms around you and I am not gonna give you that world as your oyster.
You can do anything, pep talk, because I didn't want to hear that back in my 20s and I know
you do not want to hear that today.
I'm gonna tell you the truth.
And the truth is you can make the most of your 20s.
And even though they're hard, they can also be exciting.
And I'm gonna teach you the 13 things that I wish I had known while I was sitting in the corner having a panic attack feeling like a lost loser so that you can
learn how to pull your ship together because you can. Let's do it.
Alrighty it's your friend Mel and today's episode dedicated to all you amazing listeners
in your 20s.
You've been asking for this, and now I'm giving it to you, and it's also dedicated to all
the people in your life right now who love you.
And you know what they're worried about you?
They're giving you really irritating job advice.
They're trying to help you with your budget.
And the fact is, your 20s are a really challenging period in your life.
Full stop.
This decade, not what everybody paints it out to be.
Personally, I was lost in my 20s.
And when I look back on that version of me,
I'm like, ugh, I hate 20 year old Mel Robbins.
In fact, when I think back to that decade, I want to hit the delete button
because my main reaction when I think about
who I was in my 20s and some of the shit that I did
is just cringe.
I also have two daughters in their 20s
who are trying to navigate their life,
and honestly, they're having a really hard time.
Maybe you are too.
For example, every single day, it seems like I get a FaceTime from her daughter Kendall.
She's 23, she lives in Los Angeles.
And when I see her name pop up, I think, oh my God, I hope she's having a good day today.
Because I have no idea what to expect.
She reminds me of me in my 20s.
I mean, one day you're flying on cloud nine, you think you just met the love of your life.
The next day you have negative $25 in your bank account.
You think you're the ugliest person in your friend group.
The person you slept with is no longer texting you back.
You have no idea how to do your job.
You're terrified everyone's going to figure out you don't know what you're doing.
And so whenever she calls, I'm thinking, oh my God, which version of her am I going to
get today on FaceTime?
Please, please, please let it be the happy version.
And honestly, I get it because that used to be me because the 20s, that decade, it is
not all it's cracked up to be.
It doesn't feel like the world is your oyster because the 20s are so freaking hard.
And that's just my 23 year old.
My 25 year old, she's living at home so that she can save money and she
wants to move to New York City in the fall.
And you know, I think she's doing great, but the other day, I heard her referring to herself
as a depressed gerbil.
I mean, just let that sink in.
I don't even know if she knows that I heard her say that.
She was talking to a friend.
She's like, I just feel like a depressed gerbil, like stuck in a cage up here at my parents.
I'm like, oh my God.
Oh.
And so I'm worried about our two daughters and I really want to help them.
And I want to give them advice to help them navigate what is a very confusing and overwhelming
and exciting by the way, exciting moment in your life.
And so I thought, all right, what advice could I give them
to make them feel more powerful,
to help them navigate the ups and downs,
or at the very least to help them stop crying
for five minutes every other hour?
So I've come up with 13 truths
that you need to know in your 20s,
or frankly, at any time in your life.
Whenever you feel lost, overwhelmed, unsure,
life isn't meeting your expectations, come back to these 13 truths. And if you have someone in your life. Whenever you feel lost, overwhelmed, unsure, life isn't meeting your expectations,
come back to these 13 truths. And if you have someone in your life that is in their 20s,
listen to this so that you can understand how difficult this period of life is and how
you can better support them. And by the way, share this episode with every single person
in their 20s that you know they need this advice,
they're gonna love you for it.
And that brings me to the very first thing
I'm gonna tell you.
The idea that your twenties are the best time of your life
is complete and utter bullshit.
It might actually be the hardest decade of your life.
There, I said it.
So if you just went,
oh,
an adult just told me that it's okay to feel like this is hard. Good. You're not the only one who feels that way. In fact, I received an email
from a listener named Eliza who describes some of the things that can go down in your
twenties. Here's what she said.
Hey, Mal, I've been stuck in what feels like a downward spiral tornado for about a year.
I graduated from college last year, and it felt like everything went wrong since then.
Breakup, horrible friendships I moved, took a job, and then quit.
Tons of rumors and backstabbing, financial hardships, major fights with family, not knowing
what I wanted to do.
Basically everything that I thought would never go wrong did.
Now, I just want to pause right there and say,
I feel like Eliza is describing me in my 20s.
And so just know that if you were nodding your head,
you're not the only one.
And when I read this email to our entire team,
you want to know something?
Every single one of our team members in our 20s, you know what they did?
They started nodding their heads like, yep, that sounds about right.
And Eliza wasn't done.
So let's just jump back into her email.
She said, listening to your podcast, Mel, is the first time I haven't received that
standard.
You're young.
Your life is just starting.
Your world is at the fingertips speech, which is quite possibly the worst thing to hear when you feel like your world is imploding one piece at a time.
Well, I'm here to tell you, Eliza, you are not crazy.
You are not alone.
Your 20s, you will go through some of the hardest experiences of your life.
Now, let me explain why this decade is so hard, because I think this is going to be
super helpful.
Your 20s are so hard because it is the first time in your life where no one is telling
you what to do.
Just stop and think about this for a second.
There's no playbook.
And all you've known from zero to 20 is someone else's playbook.
The first 20 years of your life, every detail was planned for you.
And it was planned for all your friends too.
In fact, you and your friends, and this is a big piece of this, from zero to 20,
you and your friends were moving through life at the exact same pace in the exact same place.
You went from first grade to second grade to third grade together to middle school to
high school, maybe to college, then first year, then second year.
You had the same milestones.
You had the same way to measure your success.
You had the same friend groups.
You had the same routine.
You were all on the same vacation schedule for crying out loud.
I mean, when spring bake hit for you,
it hit for everybody else.
You also always had kids in the class ahead of you
to show you what was coming next.
And guess what?
They were following the same playbook.
Then what happens?
Boom!
You enter your 20s and the real world
and into what I call the great scattering.
That playbook that you followed from zero to 20,
it disintegrates and the great scattering begins.
Every single person you know,
scatters in different directions.
Everybody is suddenly on a different timeline.
They're living in different places.
They're working in different jobs. They're hanging out with different people. They're living in different places. They're working in different jobs.
They're hanging out with different people.
They're achieving different milestones at different paces.
And your entire frame of reference
for how you're doing, how you're tracking your progress,
what you're supposed to be doing today,
what you're supposed to be doing next month,
what you're supposed to be doing next year, gone,
zippo, disappear, nada.
That's why your 20s have a tremendous feeling of loss of control.
There's no longer a track.
There's no template.
There's no timeline for what to do next.
It's all up to you.
And that's why all of the stupid adults that say, the word is that you finger tips, you
just want to take those finger fingertips and curl them into a
Fist and punch them into a face and that is exactly why I say it might be the hardest decade of your life
There are too many options. There's no frame of reference
There's no way to track where you are or where you should go
It's all up to you and it's just so overwhelming you my friend are not crazy
and it's just so overwhelming. You, my friend, are not crazy.
You're in the great scattering.
And I'm telling you that because feeling lost
in your 20s amid all this change, it is normal.
How could you not?
How could you not feel lost?
How could you not feel this sense of grief?
How could you not be confused about everybody
and everywhere and where everyone's going
and what you should do.
It is so hard for everyone, no matter how great their Instagram story looks. I'm not kidding
about this. Everybody's sitting there putting out the perfect story like they got it all together
with the perfect brunch and the perfect this and the perfect that and the perfect ski suit.
Everybody is panicking. So you're not a loser. Let's just get that straight, okay? You're in the
great scattering. You will figure it out.
If you look at all the adults that are older than you, most of us are complete idiots and
we've figured it out.
You will figure it out too.
And here's one more thing you need to hear your friend Mel Robbins say.
You have your shit together way more than you realize and you need to start giving yourself
more credit.
I must say that again You have your shit together
Way more than you realize and you need to start giving yourself more credit. I
Get it. Yes, it feels like everyone around you is excelling in every area of their lives and
You feel like you have to pretend like you're doing great. I get it
You're really struggling and it sucks and I want you to know you're doing great. I get it. You're really struggling and it sucks
and I want you to know you're not alone.
Everyone is struggling in some area of their life
and I know both my daughters feel that way
and I definitely felt that way for my 20s and it's okay.
It's okay to feel frustrated.
It's okay to wallow a bit.
It's okay to feel lost
and like you don't have your shit together because
you are figuring it out. But I want to normalize this. That's why this is the first piece of
advice that the twenties are not the best time of your life. In fact, it could be the
worst because there are so many unknowns that you need to navigate right now and it's not
always rainbows and butterflies and sometimes those unknowns, they make you cry. Like a lot.
In fact, I cried more in my 20s than any other decade, and that's even after I got diagnosed
with anxiety and put on Zoloft.
Like I kept on crying.
And if you're a parent listening in, please, please start validating what the 20-somethings in your life are feeling.
Stop trying to fix it and just sit with them and acknowledge how hard and overwhelming it
can be and remind them that they have their shit together more than they think.
I mean, remember how hard your 20s were?
Remember what it was like to apply to college?
Or when you went through your first breakup?
Or you were searching for your first job?
Or your friends all moved to a different city?
Or you were the only one who wasn't going to graduate school or you were the one that
was living at home?
Sucks!
This is the decade that your loved ones need support, not a lecture, because there is so much to figure out about yourself
and your friendships and your career and dating and living on your own and your money and
your health and your habits.
And I'm here to tell you, you will figure it out.
Yes, your 20s may not be your best decade.
So take the pressure off and sit tight because the other 12 things I'm going to tell you
are going to help you create a master template for starting to thrive in your 20s and your
30s and your 40s and your 50s for the rest of your life.
All right, now that we got that out of the way, I'll be right back with the next piece
of advice and you better be here for this, because it's about money,
and it's the only money advice I'm giving,
and it's a doozy.
Stay with me.
["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel.
I'm so glad that you're here.
We are talking about the things
that we wish we knew in our 20s.
We've already covered one, I got 12 more, so let's jump right back into it.
So let's go to the second piece of advice, because we got to talk about money next.
I know it's on your mind and it's not in your pocket. So the second piece of advice is this,
stop spending your money on stupid shit. You get to choose what you spend your money on
Learn how to stop spending money on stupid shit
your generation for example is
Obsessed with skincare, but let me ask you
Do you seriously need another?
Moisturizer when you have three half use tubes at home? No, you don't.
And look, I get it, it's hard, particularly for you guys.
I mean, when I was your age,
I had to at least get in a car and go to the store.
And I still wasted so much money on stupid shit.
But you have a bigger problem.
And this is why you have to take control of this right now.
If you're in your 20s, shopping is in your face 24 seven.
I mean, your phone is basically the new mall.
It takes three seconds for you to see and add click and buy.
Less than a day for it to show up at your doorstep.
You have to take control of your addiction to buying things
in order to make yourself feel better.
Just ask yourself, has that cheap Amazon face
roller really benefited your appearance? I mean, you're not dumb. You know that the influencer
who swears by her $300 red light mask has no wrinkles because she's getting Botox,
not because she's using a red light mask that she, by the way, got for free and is making a
commission off of. I mean, come on, you're smarter than that.
Don't give your power to the influencer machine.
Stay in control of your money in your 20s.
And listen, I get it.
You're spending money consciously or subconsciously
because you feel overwhelmed or sad or insecure or bored
or stressed, which makes you feel out of control.
And in that moment, you're sitting on Instagram,
you see the influencer with her face mask,
boop, click, spending money gives you a rush of dopamine.
And it makes you feel in control, right?
Of the issue that you're trying to solve, which is what?
Wrinkles?
No.
Boredom, sadness, loneliness, overwhelm.
How are you trying to solve that?
With a face roller?
Then after two uses, you wonder why you even bought it
in the first place?
And then what do you do?
You feel more out of control and more sad
and more overwhelmed and even more like a loser.
And you have less money.
Spending money that you do not have on the things
that you do not need doesn't give you power.
It makes you feel powerless.
And while I'm on a roll,
stop spending money on a new workout set.
It is not gonna make you drop 15 pounds,
getting to the gym will.
Do you really need a new wallet, guys?
No, you need a new way to make money.
And trust me, you do not need to purchase a new outfit for every single occasion, especially
when most of you wear it once and then you never touch it again. Stop spending money
on things you do not need. I don't care if you bought it at a thrift store. You still
don't need it. You are channeling your energy, desire, anxiety, and desperation to keep up
with the trends and the gimmicks and the influencers into buying stupid stuff.
And not only is it hurting your already slim bank account, but also trying to keep up with
societies forever changing trends and high expectations is not serving you and your happiness.
It is serving retailers and influencers.
It is impossible to keep up, by the way.
Your 20s are not the time to go broke.
It's the time to learn to take control of your finances.
And finances, they play a major role
in your transition to adulthood.
So pay attention to your money now
and learn how to handle it.
Instead of focusing on how much money you can earn,
how about you get laser focused right now
and where is all your money going?
Here's a trick I want you to steal from our daughter's soire.
Instead of clicking click purchase now.
I want you to open up your notes app
and write down the thing you wanna buy
and then let it sit in your notes app for five days.
If you're still thinking about it five days later,
and you remember to go to your notes app to buy it,
now you can make a decision as to whether or not
this is something you actually need.
And what Sawyer finds is that simply writing it
in her notes app satisfies the feelings of desire in the moment.
Again, helping you to take control instead of spending money on stupid shit.
And if you're going to spend money, here's a recommendation.
Spend it on things that you're actually going to remember.
I personally don't remember a thing I bought in my 20s, but I had a major spending problem.
I wish somebody had come to me like I'm coming to you and grabbed me by the shoulders and
I was like, Mel, you got a stuff spending because here's what I do remember.
I had five freaking credit cards.
That's how much of a spending problem I had because I was overwhelmed and lost and not
making a lot of money in my job, so like complete fucking moron.
I soothed my emotions and made myself feel better
by constantly spending money on shit with a credit card
that I didn't need and couldn't afford.
And so when I got married,
you know what I had to disclose to my new husband
at the age of 28, that I was coming into the marriage
with, oops, $25,000 in credit card debt
that I hadn't told him about.
Ooh!
So if you're gonna bother to spend
your hard-earned money on something,
spend it on an experience.
Spend it on an investment in your well-being
or in building a new skill, like take a class
or use the money to go to therapy
to make yourself happier and learn more about yourself.
That's something you'll remember.
You got it?
Good.
So stop spending money on stupid shit.
You're welcome.
Here's my third piece of advice that I wish I knew in my 20s.
You have so much time.
In your 20s, you're in such a hurry to figure your life out.
Stop!
You have time.
Listen to me.
No. Listen to me. No, really listen to your friend, Mal Robbins.
You have plenty of time to figure out your life and your career and your love life, and your friend group, and your gut health, you have
time.
You want to know why you think you don't have time?
And I just want to validate something.
This time pressure is way worse on today's 20-year-olds than the pressure that I felt about this when I was 20.
And there are two reasons why
you feel so much pressure right now.
Number one, social media is warping your perception
of what it takes to be successful.
I mean, talk about fucking you up.
You spend so much time on social media
looking at influencers or TikTok stars or famous people
your age that seem to have everything that you want.
It's like literally in your face, whether it's the bank account or the wardrobe or the
BMW or the friend group or the dream body or the adorable little kids and matching outfits
or the NBA from Harvard or the fancy wedding in Lake Como.
What is it with everybody getting married
in Lake Como right now?
Get this in your head.
Because of social media, you are programmed to think
that success happens overnight.
I'm sorry to tell you, life doesn't work like that.
Not for normal people like you and me.
Start learning how to be where your feet are,
not where your phone is.
Success takes time and you have plenty of time.
And you're also smart enough to figure out
how to be successful.
You have plenty of time to make the money you deserve,
to grow your career, to find love, to get pregnant, to build solid friendships, to learn how to cook, to go back to graduate school,
to organize your apartment so it looks like a studio McGee shoot.
The second reason why you probably feel this pressure around time is that you're comparing
yourself to your parents' timeline. I have a very different timeline than my daughters. I was married when I was 27.
I was pregnant by 29.
I had Sawyer by the time I was 30.
And I'm sure your parents are the same way.
Maybe they met in high school. They were married by 23.
Try not to be so triggered
by other people's timelines.
And I get it, it's hard.
Why is it hard?
Because you've been programmed for the first 20 years
to go at the same pace and place
as your friends.
You're used to being in lockstep with everybody else, and in the great scattering, the timelines
disappear.
Whether it's your parents or your friends or your cousins or the influencers that you
see on social media do not be triggered by their timeline because it's not your timeline. You have to
learn to trust the timing of your life. I wish somebody had taught me that in my 20s.
I was constantly panic-stricken about whether or not I was keeping up. Trust that things are
happening for you and for a reason. And I'll give you another example of how easy it is
to try to speed up your life
and tell yourself you don't have time getting engaged.
There is so much pressure on you guys
to move in with your partner, get engaged,
film the engagement, put the rose petals around it
like at some fucking reality TV show, get married.
I worry that you're not even giving yourself time to truly evaluate
if this relationship is what you want, if it's going to serve you at this time in your
life, like forget about if it's going to serve you 20 years from now, like slow down and
determine whether or not it's even the right relationship for you now. Your time is precious and you have
plenty of it, so slow down. Slow down so you can figure it out. And here's one thing you
can start doing today. Whenever you feel like you're falling behind, it's so, so easy, right?
Your heart starts thumping like crazy, like you've just chugged 15 things of pre-workout.
Take a deep breath and tell yourself these seven words.
I trust the timing of my life. I wish I had had this. Tell yourself, I'm on my own timeline
and I trust that I'm going to figure everything out. And one more thing that helped me a lot
is every time I've been in a breakdown in my
life, it helps me to say, if the breakdown is really big, so is the amazing thing that's
coming.
There's a direct relationship to how you can start to panic and how amazing things are
going to turn out.
So trust the timing of your life because you do have time.
And that brings me to the fourth piece of advice.
Date the person, not their potential.
When you're in your 20s, it is so easy to obsess
over your relationships and try to make any relationship work
just so you have one.
Like, let's be honest with each other.
You'll want to be in a relationship.
And I have so much to say about dating and relationships in your 20s that we're going
to do a whole other episode about that.
So hit me up at malrobbins.com with your questions, your issues, your problems.
But right now, I just want to give you the golden rule for relationships.
Date the person, not their potential.
Here's what I mean by that.
Stop and think.
Are you truly in a relationship
with a person as they are right now? Or are you in a relationship with who you wish they
were? If you're constantly in your mind, griping about the behaviors you don't like, or what
you wish they would change, you're dating the potential. For example, you can't stand that they don't exercise,
or that they're a drinker, or a drugie,
or they don't surprise you with flowers,
or you don't like their family,
or they refuse to move and explore a new city,
or you know what, the sex, not that great,
definitely not as good as your last partner,
or your friends don't get along with them,
and it drives you freaking crazy.
So what do you do?
You try to control and manipulate them
to become the person who meets your expectations instead of letting them be themselves. That's
what you need to do. You need to let them be themselves because when you give somebody the
freedom to be themselves, guess what happens? You see who they really are. You're so focused in
your 20s on the things that you don't like or what boxes
they check or don't check that you distract yourself from addressing the reality. And
the reality is you're probably not with someone that you actually want to be with. But you've
kept yourself busy griping about the fact that they eat like shit or their friends do
this or all they want to do is watch golf or they did it, did it, did it. And you wish
they would change and you're so busy in your mind trying to control this
that you're deluding yourself
into thinking that they actually might.
Let me cut to the chase.
No matter how long you wait,
they're not gonna change if they don't want to.
All you can do is make very clear
and compassionate requests about what you need
and why you wanna see the change.
That's it.
And then here's the hard part.
Let them show you who they truly are.
Someone's behavior, especially after you tell someone
what you need, their behavior is the truest form
of communication.
And if you ask somebody for what they need,
because you realize I've been dating the potential,
so let me just ask for what I need.
And then the true person shows up.
You got to ask yourself the hard question, if this person never changes.
Is this the relationship I want?
How can I describe this with such detail?
Because I was that person.
And one of the reasons why I regret constantly dating people
that I was trying to change is it meant that I spent my 20s in relationships the entire time.
That's how insecure I was. I was constantly in a relationship and it's a huge regret of mine
because I was so focused on turning it into the thing and dating somebody's potential that I
missed out on all that incredible time in my 20s with my female friends. Don't do that.
You spend way too long in relationships that aren't meant for you when you date the potential
instead of waking up and dating the actual person. And that's why my advice is to date the person
exactly as they are instead of dating the potential of who you wish they really were.
are instead of dating the potential of who you wish they really were. And that brings me to a really important piece of advice.
It's not fair.
And I'm going to tell you exactly what I mean by that when we come back.
Stay with me.
Welcome back.
It's your friend Mel Robbins.
We are going through the 13 pieces of advice that I wish I knew in my 20s.
We've covered four so far.
I'm on number five.
We got eight more to go and number five is really important.
It's not fair.
It's not fair that your friend has a bigger salary than you or that her dad's friend got
her that job.
It's not fair that your friends get to golf and hang out while you are studying for the
series seven again this Saturday. It's not fair that that chick from college goes on European
vacations every summer with her family and she's got the perfect bathing suits and the perfect
manicures. It's not fair. It's not fair that your roommate seemingly has the perfect family life while
yours. It's so bad they wouldn't even put it on a reality show. It's not fair that your sister looks like that and all the men flock to her at the bars
while you're sitting there on your own, buying your own drinks.
Life is not fair.
No matter what life throws your way and how unfair it seems, never, and I mean never,
let yourself play the victim.
That's where you lose your power.
Life is not fair, you're right.
But sitting around wishing it was,
sitting around wishing all the guys flocked to you
instead of your sister, sitting around wishing it was you
on those European vacations, it's not gonna get you anywhere.
You can't change what's happening around you.
And the sooner you accept that, the freer you will feel. It's not going to get you anywhere. You can't change what's happening around you.
And the sooner you accept that, the freer you will feel.
So my advice is move on.
You're spending so much time and energy wishing your life was different and being jealous
of those who you think have it better than you.
Is feeling bad for yourself and questioning why not me?
Is it, is it actually working?
I mean, because it's not going to stop other people from continuing to live their lives, but it's stopping you
from living yours. Stop focusing on what you think is fair and trust where your life is
leading you. And don't ever forget that what happens in a few days, and often even in a single moment,
can change the course of your entire lifetime.
And that brings me to the sixth piece of advice
that I wish somebody had told me in my 20s.
Define your career wins,
not by the quantity of your paycheck,
but by the quality of your circle.
Here's what I mean by that. I think in your 20s, Not by the quantity of your paycheck, but by the quality of your circle.
Here's what I mean by that.
I think in your 20s, you spend so much time looking down at your bank account.
Start looking up at the awesome people that are around you.
You're broke, which is why you're focused on money.
I get it.
But I want you to focus on the skill that makes you money.
And that skill is learning how to talk to people.
Learn how to talk to people. Learn how to talk to
absolutely everyone. And that means you've got to learn how to get out of your comfort zone in
your 20s. I want you to focus your time and energy on creating meaningful connections in your 20s.
God, I wish somebody had taught me this. Because every time you build a relationship with someone
who is working on something really interesting or holds a job you could see yourself in or, heck, someone cool that you meet at the grocery
store or the person next to you at the nail salon or the woman wearing that awesome outfit
on the subway.
There are so many people around you and a single conversation could potentially help you in your job or in your life.
So view each and every human being that you talk to as a win. People will get you further in your
career than any single paying job on your resume ever will because your title, your bonus, your
salary, your yearly raise does
not mean shit in the long run, but your connections do.
They are equivalent to how much your worth is in the business world and your connections
are everything and they are everywhere, everywhere.
Don't tell me you don't have a network because your network is created by all the conversations
you're willing to have.
Plus, let's be real.
Money doesn't come from money.
Money comes from people.
It's people who give you job offers and loans and promotions and connections and hookups.
Every opportunity to make money comes from another human being.
I want you to think about this as a daily practice for the rest of your life and by
God I wish I knew this in my 20s.
I challenge you to talk to one new person every single day and go beyond the hello.
And here's how you do it, because I know in your 20s, you can be a little insecure or
shy about talking to strangers.
So this is a simple way to practice this.
Just compliment someone's nails or their shoes.
People light up when you notice them and you say, hey, I love your nails.
You will love that technique.
Or if you're standing in line, just turn to the person behind you and say, what's good
to order here?
If you're sitting next to someone on the train and they're reading a book, just turn
and ask them, hey, I've been looking for a good book to read.
Would you recommend that one?
Why do you like it?
If you start to do this every single day, you're gonna get better and better and better
at connecting with people.
And guess what happens?
Your circle organically grows.
And this isn't just about you.
Once you start doing this,
you'll realize how helpful you can be for other people.
And in return, you're gonna gain a sense of purpose
and confidence and it's gonna boost your mood.
You don't even realize how much you have to offer.
And the more interested you seem in other people,
both inside work and outside of work,
the more opportunity will flow back to you.
That's it.
Learn to talk to other people
and the quality of the people around you will increase.
The seventh thing I wish I knew in my twenties,
do not be a dick.
You underestimate how much
currency you have if you're a good person. So stop talking shit about your friends behind
their back. Stop eyeing down the girl who hooked up with your ex at the bar. Stop leaving all your
dirty dishes in the sink for your roommates to take care of. Instead, go above and beyond to
make other people feel appreciated and seen. Start sincerely thanking the woman who hands you your coffee every day at Starbucks.
Start holding the door open for people and do it gladly.
Start smiling at everybody who walks by you in the street.
And if you had those periods in your past where you were the bully or you were the toxic
friend, hello, Mel Robbins.
It's never too late to apologize.
In my experience, and I've done a lot of apologizing for the shit I did in my 20s, 95% of the time,
people are so forgiving.
Don't be a dick.
Number eight, now this is a piece of advice that will create more opportunity in your
life than anything else I have said today.
You don't get to want something if you don't have the balls to ask for it.
You have to ask for what you need.
You think your roommates and friends and partners can just read your mind?
They can't, just like you can't read theirs.
And yet, here you are, angry that they're not picking up on what you need.
You're angry that they aren't doing the dishes or cleaning up after themselves or stealing
your food because they forgot to buy groceries or their boyfriend or girlfriend is hanging
out the apartment too much.
How do they not know that they are invading on your...
Newsflash, passive aggressive texts that you're sending
or the inability to say to their face what is annoying you,
doesn't cut it.
And this applies to everything.
If you want your significant other
to stop chewing nicotine,
you don't get to want it unless you ask for it.
If you want your friends to stop screaming
and blasting music when they come home from the bars,
you don't get to want it unless you ask for it.
You're gonna waste your entire 20s
wishing and wanting people would change
that they could read your mind
and wishing people would treat you differently
and wishing people would do certain things for you
and they get all pissed off and resentful when they don't.
Learn in your 20s that you don't get to want it
unless you're willing to ask for it.
Communication is everything.
And no, a drunk conversation doesn't count.
Although that's a good try.
I want you to really hear this.
The moment you open your mouth
and you ask for what you want, like an adult,
you're gonna feel more in control whether you get what you want, like an adult. You're gonna feel more in control
whether you get what you want or not.
Because all that brooding and wishing
that you do internally, it's tearing you apart.
It makes you feel less in control.
And that brings me to the next thing,
the ninth piece of advice that I wish I knew in my 20s.
And it's this.
A rock solid morning routine
is the fastest way to take control of your life. Why? You need structure to your day.
How you set the day up is how it ends up. I mean, think about those mornings that you wake up hung over. Oh, you hit the snooze button 11 times.
You skip the workout class and breakfast and then you have the audacity to wonder why you
have the shakes and a panic attack and the sweats as you're chugging coffee while you're
walking to work.
I mean, I can laugh at it now, but that was me in my twenties.
I would literally walk into the courthouse
as a young lawyer smoking my third Marlboro light,
washing it down with a large Dunkin' Donuts.
My stomach is in knots, I'm ready to puke,
and I'm like, I think I have anxiety.
No woman, you have a shitty morning routine.
And if we can level with each other,
you don't have a consistent morning routine right now,
do you? Don't lie to me you don't have a consistent morning routine right now, do you?
Don't lie to me, don't lie to yourself more importantly.
But if you reclaim that time in the morning for yourself,
before your boss, before your roommates,
before social media, you're gonna feel amazing.
And if you don't know where to start,
your friend Mel Robbins has got you covered.
Here are five things proven by research.
You can do less than 20 minutes.
You can do them hungover to make you feel more energized, more confident, and a little
less anxious today.
Here they are.
You ready?
Number one, just get up on the alarm rings.
That's it.
That's it.
The alarm rings, don't be laying there.
Don't hit the snooze button.
Don't let the anxiety consume you.
Don't spend 20 minutes going over in your mind
what you wish you would have said at the bar last night.
Nope, alarm rings, five, four, three, two, one, get up.
Second, as soon as you can, get outside
and get five minutes of sunlight or just light
in your eyes as soon as you wake up.
The research shows that it jumps starts
your circadian rhythm, it helps you sleep,
it is so good for you.
Next, once your butt's outside, take a walk.
Walk for 10 minutes and here's the catch.
I don't want you to listen to music.
I don't want you to listen to a podcast.
I just want you to walk, think freely,
clear your head based on the research, just a 10
minute walk outside first thing in the morning, boost your mood, wake you up, makes you more
clear headed.
It is so good for your health.
Next number four, drink a glass of water before you chug a cup of coffee, because coffee on
an empty stomach spikes your cortisol levels. I don't care
if it's got oat milk or almond milk or anything else in it, it's making you anxious. Okay?
So stop. Drink the water before you drink the coffee. And the final thing, have some
kind of mindfulness practice. And the fastest thing to do is journaling. Just pick up a
blank notebook and try some sort of journaling practice.
Gratitude journal, morning pages, bullet journals, or just write down one thing that
you truly want to happen in your life.
Allow that possibility to flow through you.
It is time to create a solid morning routine.
Get up on the alarm rings, get
your butt outside into the bright light, take a 10 minute walk, chug your water before
you chug your coffee, and start a journaling practice. You do those five things, 80% of
the mornings in a week. You, my friend, are going to feel back in control and more like
yourself in no time. Number 10, this is what I wish somebody told me in my 20s,
it is relevant for every stage of life, it is gold.
You ready?
Get serious about who you're hanging out with.
I want you to look at the five people
that you spend the most time with.
Really look at them.
Not like creepy look at them, but you know,
like really examine.
What are their habits?
Are the five people that you spend the most time with,
are they healthy?
Are they driven?
Do they have goals?
How do they treat you?
How do they make you feel?
And this is the biggest test.
Can you actually open up and be yourself with them?
Or have they just been your friends forever?
Because in your 20s, it is so important that you surround yourself with people that bring
out the best in you.
I mean, life is hard enough.
You need the people that you spend the time with to lift you up, to help you work on what you want.
And it is okay to lose friends and to grow apart in your 20s. In fact, it's normal and it happens
more in this decade than any other decade of your life. Why? Because you're in the great
scattering. Everybody's going all over the place.
And a friend breakup, it can be good for you
and good for them too.
So this is a really important moment in your life
to stop gripping so tightly onto the people
that you've always known,
because you're such a people pleaser
and your ego can't have one single person dislike you or say a horrible thing about you.
So you like constantly, you're like gripping onto the wrong people and you're trying to
manage what they think about you and you're kind of clingy and annoying and insecure and
you're constantly stalking people and saying, stop.
You're no longer in high school or in capa capa buya sorority.
So just freaking stop.
You get to pick who you spend time with and
it matters. And this goes way beyond friends. Starting in your 20s, you spend more time
with your coworkers than your families and friends combined. And you will start to see
your friends less and less, so think about that.
Don't stick around a job where you don't connect or vibe or feel like you belong.
You're working more than 40 hours a week with these people.
Work with people you admire who treat you well, who treat you like a human being, who
respect your time off, who motivate you to be yourself, who are challenging you
to grow.
Just like with everything in life and every situation you find yourself in, whether it's
your job, the city you live in, the party you're at, the small college town, it's always
all about the people.
So in your 20s, surround yourself with people who lift you up, who make you feel like yourself,
who bring out the best in you because life is always about the people.
It always has been and it always will be.
And you are way more in control of this than you think.
And that brings me to a really important piece of advice that, my God, I wish somebody, you
know, if somebody could have like injected advice into my head and just like kind of
programmed it there, wouldn't that be awesome that you could just wake and be like, oh,
okay, I now know this is a truth and I operate this way.
This is advice number 11.
Be your own person.
And here's a fast way to do it. Be your own person.
Stop pretending you like things that you don't.
And you know what?
I have no business giving you this advice
because in my 20s, I was one of those chicks
that basically morphed into the same person as my boyfriend.
Everything my boyfriend liked, I'm like,
ooh, I like that too, I like that too.
If my new boyfriend liked rap music, boom, so did I.
If he was into the Grateful Dead, I'm like,
pass me the bong, baby.
If he was obsessed with fly fishing, I would lie
and I would say I was obsessed with fly fishing too.
In fact, when I was 26 years old
and I was on my first date with my now husband, Chris,
he said he liked to fly fish.
You know what I did?
Enter Mel Robbins.
Oh, I lied.
I told him not just that I like fly fish,
oh, I had to go deep, everybody.
I told him I'd grown up fly fishing with my dad.
Now I had grown up fishing,
but that's different than fly fishing,
you know what I'm saying?
And three months later, that lie came back to bite me in the ass because we went to
go visit his best friend who get this happens to be a fucking fly fishing instructor.
I mean, kill me now.
Big shout out to Jeff Klausman.
Y'all say that you want to live authentically.
Well, learn to be your own person.
Stop saying you like things that you don't.
Stop saying you've done things that you never have.
Stop doing things just because everybody else's.
Learn to make your own choices.
If you don't want to go see the baseball game, don't go. Don't go because your friend
has tickets. You don't like it, so don't go. If you don't want to go to brunch, then don't.
If you don't like skiing, then sit in the lodge with a book. If you don't want to drink
today, then don't. No one gives a shit what's in your glass but you. And drinking is a huge
part of the culture in your 20s.
It kind of feels like this gigantic continuation
on from college, and it feels like when you're partying,
you're somehow succeeding in your 20s.
There's so much pressure to go out to the bars
on the weekends, let alone the weeknights with your friends,
and here's something you may not realize.
You have a choice to drink or not,
regardless of what everybody else is doing.
You can go to a bar and order a non-alcoholic beer.
You can go to a bar and ask for a club soda and a wine glass.
And if you do want to drink, then do it.
But stop pressuring everyone else to go out with you and to drink with you.
Find the courage to do your own thing in the 20s. And this may sound weird,
but you may not even know who you really are, because you've spent so long just following
the playbook of the pack. The greatest gift that you could give yourself in your 20s is
to take the time to find out who you really are. Now here's the challenging part.
The fastest way to figure out what you like
and who you are as a person is by doing things by yourself because then you don't have the pressure
of managing the person with you
and whether or not they like the thing that you're doing.
Go out to dinner alone, bring your Kindle. Take yourself to
a movie alone. Explore your interests alone. Sign up for that improv class or that painting
class without bringing a friend. Try doing things alone to find out what you really love.
Go to that CrossFit class. Go to that yoga teacher training alone, your relationship with yourself is the foundation
of every relationship that you have.
And learning to be alone with yourself and feeling completely comfortable with that,
it's a huge part of becoming your own person.
And that brings me to the 12th piece of advice.
And boy, oh boy, this took me way too long to learn.
Like this one, I didn't learn until late in my 40s.
If I had learned this 20 years before, oh my God, you ready?
You are not in competition with anyone.
And this is not what social media is telling you, but it is the truth about life. You are not in competition
with anyone. Success, happiness, friendship, it is in limitless supply. There's enough love,
enough friendship, enough support, enough happiness, enough success for every single human being on the planet.
Why do you feel like you're in competition with all your friends?
Or competing with your partner for that matter?
You know your path is separate
from your partner and your friends.
Even if it feels like you guys are like
intertwined right now.
If you're working at a restaurant
and your friend wants to apply there,
they're not taking something from you.
If your high school friends start hanging out with your college friends, that's not a threat
to you.
You're in the great scattering and everybody is going in different paces and different
places and different timelines.
You got to trust where your life is going and stop gripping and competing.
You are only in competition with yourself. It's you against you.
And when I was in my 20s, oh my God, was I a piece of shit. If my roommate got a raise, oh,
then I got to get a raise. Or else I'm a failure. And you want to know something even more fucked up?
If my roommate got a raise or all of a sudden was in a new relationship, I literally looked like they were stealing something from me. As if there was only like one raise or one
person that gets to be in a relationship. And when you look at life that way, you will
always feel like you're failing not only in your twenties, but at life. And that's how
I looked at it, particularly with money. I was so fucking broke. I looked at anyone making more money than me and I was like,
that's it. All the money's gone. Even though they're working at an investment bank and I'm a freaking
public defender, barely able to pay for groceries, their promotion at that investment bank just took
away my chance of making an extra dollar. So fuck you. Now seriously, that is how just puny and disgusting
and shitty of a person I was. And the only person you're in competition with is your own shitty
self. And by shitty self, I mean the part of you that speaks to you in a shitty way. And when
you're sitting there telling yourself, because your friend just got engaged, that somehow means
that you're never going to get engaged.
That's the shitty you talking.
And instead of beating yourself down when somebody else has a win, you got to do the
opposite.
It is so hard, but you got to do the opposite.
Instead of picking up a bat and bashing yourself in the head, grab your fricking pom poms and
celebrate everybody's wins.
Why?
Why?
And you got to learn how to do this
even when inside you're jealous
and you're like, when am I gonna get pregnant?
When am I gonna buy a house?
When am I gonna figure out my fucking life?
You gotta grab those pom-poms.
Let me tell you why.
Because when you pick up those pom-poms
and you cheer for your friends,
you are demonstrating that you know your win is coming to.
You are demonstrating that you know your win is coming to. You are demonstrating that you celebrate other people.
And I promise you, it shifts the energy
and the timeline of your life.
And the more that you pick up those pom-poms
and the more that you celebrate everybody else,
the faster it will come back to you.
And this is a huge takeaway in your 20s. You're not in competition
with anyone else. It is you against you. So stop focusing on why is this happening? And say,
if I'm willing to keep working for it, eventually it's going to happen for me.
And you might even add in, and if things really fucking suck right now, boy, is a massive
win coming my way.
That brings me to the final piece of advice, number 13, and this is number 13, lucky not
unlucky number.
You ready?
This is the most important one.
I saved it for last.
I wish someone had told me in my 20s, Mel, take the biggest fucking risks
of your entire life right now. Remember, you have time. And in your 20s, you can get so scared
and you can be so easily lulled into the idea that good is good enough, that feeling safe
and comfortable is what you should always be looking for, that way of thinking in your 20s in
particular, dead fucking wrong. I want you to start to create this mindset of taking risks and going
big because the only constant in your life for the rest of your life is change.
Remember what are the 20s?
The great scattering.
There's no guardrails.
There's no playbook.
There is no consistency here.
There is nothing but change which is why you're overwhelmed and you're feeling it already,
aren't you?
All of a sudden your roommates, they're going to move on to other cities.
They're going to move in with their boyfriends or their girlfriends or go to graduate
school or get in cage. They're going to take a trip around the world and you, you're going
to be completely spun around when they scatter. If you haven't taken the time to figure out
what big moves you want to make, so do not get yourself in a situation like I did where
the changes that you're making are triggered by what your friends are doing.
Plan your life, get started now. Be the one in your friend group that is the one who makes the big move first.
Do something big. I know that there is something inside of you that you have always wanted to do.
Always. And if you're sitting there saying to yourself, Mel,
I can't think of anything.
Yes, you can.
Just look at who you're jealous of.
Is it a trip that they went on,
or a company they started,
or an idea that they have,
or the fact that they're taking their health super seriously,
or a book that they wrote, start there.
Your 20s is the time to figure out that yes, you can make big things happen because there
is literally no better time than now.
Just like that viral saying, when the girl's trip finally makes it out of the group chat, it is time for your dreams to finally leave the group chat and your brain and come to life.
Why? Because you don't figure out your life by watching it. You figure out your life by living
it. And I wish someone had told me to quit my job and figure out how to backpack around the world.
And what would have my response been?
I don't have the money for that.
You're right, I didn't, but I could have figured out how to do it.
I wouldn't even let myself do that.
And God, not taking a year to backpack and work my way around the world in my 20s, it
is one of the biggest life regrets that I have.
And some of you, you might be sitting here
listening to me right now and you've got this thing,
this big thing, I wanna move, I wanna do this,
I wanna do that, but then what comes up?
All the excuses in your head as to why you can't
make it happen, just like I did.
Do not let that rob you of the life you could be leading.
If you have a big risk in mind,
but you stop yourself from doing it, here's my advice. Just don't be an extremist. Shrink it. How about you do a mini version of it?
And here's what I mean by that. If you want to hike the Appalachian Trail, that is such a cool
thing to do end to end, right? But you're scared about your fitness level, or maybe you don't have
the time and the money to do it, or camping alone for that long scares you. No problem.
have the time and the money to do it or camping alone for that long scares you. No problem.
Instead of going on the girls' trip to Charleston, how about you take that time
to just do a portion of the Appalachian Trail for five nights alone? Or you've always wanted to work on a farm in New Zealand or Switzerland, but it's too scary to quit your job at the moment
it make it happen. No problem. Stop making excuses. Use your paid time off
to volunteer to farm here. Just try it out. You want to build a journal business? Great.
Well, how about you sign up for a free Canvas subscription and you start tooling around with
the designs rather than thinking about it every weekend while you're out at the bars
drinking with your friends. Make little wins come true because they add up to bigger dreams. And if you can't think of something, let your friend Mel give you the biggest, boldest move
you could make right now. Live somewhere in your 20s you've never lived. Move. In your 20s, move.
You can always move back.
Plus, you live in a remote world now.
Anything is possible.
A big move doesn't have to be forever.
But what happens when you move in your 20s
is it changes you forever.
Because moving opens you up to adventure and opportunity.
It proves to yourself that you can create an amazing life
anywhere that you are.
In your 20s, it is time to get out of dodge
because no growth comes from being comfortable.
And you know what else happens when you take big grists?
You grow.
You grow into the person that you're meant to become.
And when you grow, you can't help but create a beautiful life.
And you are creating a beautiful life right now.
You know how I know that?
The fact that you took the time to listen to me today, whether you clicked on it yourself
or somebody that you love sent this to you and was like, I love this lady. You got to listen to this lady. Whether you clicked on it yourself or somebody that you love sent
this to you and was like, I love this lady, you gotta listen to this lady, Mel Robbins.
And you spent the time listening to this. You know what that tells me? It tells me that,
yes, you can take control of your twenties and it proves that you want to. And so just
to recap, here are the 13 things I wish I knew in my 20s. Number one, the idea that the 20s are the time of your life is complete bullshit.
It might actually be one of the hardest decades of your life, so give yourself more grace.
Two, stop spending money on stupid shit.
Three, you have so much time.
Four, date the person, not the potential.
Five, it's not fair.
6. Define what a win looks like by the quality of your circle, not the quantity in your paycheck.
7. Don't be a dick.
8. You don't get to want it if you don't ask for it.
9. Get serious about who you're hanging out with.
10. Create a rock solid morning routine.
11. Be your own person.
Stop pretending you like things that you don't.
12. You're not in competition with anyone.
So start cheering for everyone, including yourself.
And finally, take big risks in your 20s.
And yes, you're gonna have those days
when you see people get engaged or promoted or buy that car
and then the next day you're sobbing
because you feel like it's never gonna be you.
It's okay.
It's okay.
I've been there too.
And I promise you, it's part of life, those ups and downs.
It's just not fair, but you can ride the wave.
And I'm going to
promise you something else. Your day is coming. Your timeline is your own, and you are going to
figure it out. Please give yourself more fucking credit because you deserve it and start trusting
the timing of your life. If you want something, work for it. If you need something, ask for
it. And before I go, I want to tell you something, especially if nobody else tells you this and
especially if you're beating yourself up right now. I want to tell you that I love you and
I believe in you and I believe in your ability to not only pull yourself up by the bootstraps,
dust yourself off and start thriving in your 20s and riding this
wave and doing the things that you need to do like taking the big risks and moving and
surrounding yourself with people that lift you up.
Why?
Because you have the ability to create the best frickin' life ever, even in your 20s.
Alrighty, now go do it. That is Mel Robbins today. And when I look back, okay, let me start all over. I'm sorry, you guys, I am like,
whoo!
Lack of sleep, Mel.
Okay, here we go.
Okay, let's start from the top.
I'm getting there.
I'm getting there, everybody.
And by the way, these are all, okay, hold on a second.
I'm doing the by way.
I'm filling up too much with my words.
I probably would not look back on my third, oh my God.
Ah!
Boy, my armpits stink.
Having one of those days where I'm like, dang.
I don't know what I am detoxing.
Rich up team.
Great job, team. Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyer's right and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend. 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. Got it? Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
Stitcher.