The Mel Robbins Podcast - 9 Habits That Will Change Your Life: The Best Expert Advice I’m Using This Year
Episode Date: December 25, 2025In this episode, you’re getting the best of the best of The Mel Robbins Podcast. These are the 9 moments people couldn’t stop talking about this year. In 2025, Mel released 106 episodes of the p...odcast and featured 75 experts who shared their transformative insights on health, relationships, mindset, and more. Together, this adds up to thousands of takeaways. Because your time is valuable, Mel is giving you a gift today: She and her team crunched the data, reviewed hundreds of hours of content, analyzed listener feedback, and pinpointed the moments you saved, replayed, and wrote about – the moments that made people sit up straighter, breathe deeper, and whisper, “Oh… that explains everything.” Whether you’re new to the podcast, are figuring out which episodes to listen to next, or want to hear the most impactful advice summarized, today’s episode is for you. These 9 ideas changed something in how you see yourself, how you heal, how you eat, how you love, how you relate to your family, and what you believe is still possible for your life. If you’re ready for the kind of insight that rearranges how you think and how you live, start with these 9 moments people couldn’t stop talking about – including the #1 most-shared episode of the entire year on both Spotify and Apple Podcasts. This episode is the cheat sheet for the level-up in life you have been looking for. Want more from these experts? Check out the full episodes here: Jay Shetty: A Process for Finding Purpose: Do THIS to Build the Life You Want | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeDanielle Bayard Jackson: It’s Not You: The Real Reason Adult Friendship Is So Hard & 3 Ways to Make It Easier | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeDr. Dawn Mussallem: Mayo Clinic Cancer Doctor: 5 Foods That Heal the Body, Starve Cancer, & Prevent Disease | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeVanessa Marin: Your Guide to Better Sex, Intimacy, & Love From a World-Leading Sex Therapist | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeJason Wilson: The Real Reason Boys and Men Are Quietly Giving Up & What They Need to Hear | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeDr. Stacy Sims: The Body Reset: How Women Should Eat & Exercise for Health, Fat Loss, & Energy | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeDr. Vonda Wright: Look, Feel, & Stay Young Forever: #1 Orthopedic Surgeon’s Proven Protocol | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeDr. Gabor Mate: Why You Feel Lost in Life: Dr. Gabor Maté on Trauma & How to Heal | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeBryan Stevenson: This Conversation Will Change Your Life: Do This to Find Purpose & Meaning | Apple | Spotify | YouTubeFor more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page. As a gift to listeners of The Mel Robbins Podcast, Mel has created a free 20-page workbook to help you make 2026 a great year. This workbook is designed using the latest research to help you get clear about what you want and empower you to take the next step forward in your life. And the cool part? It takes less than a minute for you to get your hands on it. Just sign up at melrobbins.com/bestyear. Connect with Mel: Get on the waitlist for Pure GeniusGet Mel’s newsletter, packed with tools, coaching, and inspiration.Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Okay, you want to hear something awesome?
So my team and I went back through every single episode of the Mel Robbins podcast that we have released this year.
I'm talking all 106 of them.
And we got our shovels out and we dug into the data.
We looked at the shares, the saves, the replays, the comments, the clips and the moments that went insanely viral.
There are nine moments this year that mattered most to you.
These are the nine moments that stood out above everything else.
Nine moments that weren't just popular.
They were powerful on a global scale.
These nine moments helped you feel less alone.
They helped you make real change.
They helped you heal.
helped you breathe again, and they made you feel empowered. These nine moments are the moments
you shared with the people that you care about. And these are the top nine moments from the number one
most followed podcast in the world. That's right. The Mel Rob's podcast is the number one most followed
podcast in the world this year. We are the third largest podcast in the world in terms of downloads,
in terms of the listener base globally. And so today, this is,
the cool thing that we're doing. I'm going to share with you the nine most impactful moments
of the entire year. These are the moments that you need to hear right now. And I think a few of them
are going to surprise you because they definitely surprised me.
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and I just want to say thank you. Thank you for making the Mel Robbins
podcast, the most followed podcast in the entire world.
And as a thank you, I have a gift for you.
I want to guide you step by step through the process of creating your best year yet in
2006.
How?
Simple.
With a free 20-page science back workbook that I've created just for you.
This workbook is designed using the latest research to help you get clear about what you want
and empower you to create a plan so that you can take the next step forward in your life.
Just sign up at Melrobbins.com slash best year.
It's quick to download, and it's ready for you right now.
As your friend, I'll tell you, you deserve to have the best year of your life,
especially after everything you've been through this year.
Here it is.
I'm offering to help you.
Why wouldn't you take it?
Just sign up at melrobins.com slash best year.
Hey, it's your friend Mel Robbins.
and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited for today. I'm glad you're here. It's such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you. If you're a new listener or you're here because someone shared this with you, I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. I cannot tell you how excited I am for today's conversation. And before you and I get started, though, on these most unforgettable moments of the Mel Robbins podcast in 2025, I just want to say something to you. Thank you.
You made this year extraordinary.
I mean, this was a year for the record books,
and whether you've been with me listening to this podcast from day one
or you've just started listening recently,
the fact that you chose to spend your time here with me
is something I don't take lightly.
And if you're new, I want to welcome you.
I'm glad you're here.
The Mel Robbins podcast community has grown like crazy this year.
See, after Apple named us the number one most followed show
in the world. And the number three, I'm talking the third largest podcast in the world, the third
largest downloads, largest listener base. I was just so happy. And I was happy not because of the
ranking, but because the ranking demonstrates something that gives me hope. It makes me feel
encouraged. See, every single time, you find the time and you make the time to listen to this
podcast that has a simple mission of inspiring you to create a better life and giving you the tools
and the resources and access to these world-round experts that are going to help you do it.
Every time you make the time to listen to this or to watch this, you're making an investment
in you, in your happiness, in your family, in your financial future.
I really do believe in my heart that the conversations that you and I are happening,
they make you feel clearer. They connect you with what truly matters. They're making you stronger
in your body and more hopeful about your life and more confident in how you're showing up
every day. I know I feel that way after every single episode that we record, and that's why I'm so
excited to share the top nine moments from this year with you. See, we released 106 episodes,
and more than 75 globally renowned experts showed up with their absolutely.
best insights, their most inspiring story, the most relatable and impactful advice. We looked at
everything. We analyzed the episodes you shared the most, the clips you replayed, the ideas that you
debated in the comments. Ooh, you got a lot of big opinions. I love that about you. The things that
hit you so deeply, you couldn't stop thinking about them. And today, we've assembled the top nine.
I'm talking the best of the best. And this is not just a highlight reel. This is going to be a
masterclass in how to live your best life. Because these moments that resonated so deeply with you
and your fellow listeners around the world, they resonated because they shifted how you think
about friendship, health, relationships, habits, how to find meaning and purpose in your life,
how to get unstuck. And before we jump into these nine moments, I want to tell you about something
that I created for you. It's something very special. It is a thank you from my team and
for me, a thank you to you, because you listened to the podcast this year, because you watched
the podcast on YouTube, and because you made the time, an invested time in learning how to create a
better life.
I love that, and so I really wanted to give you something.
So what are we giving you?
We're giving you a 20-page workbook that is going to help you create the best year of your life.
It walks you through the six questions that my husband and I have asked ourselves every year
at the end of the year, six questions that have guided us for the last 22 years on getting
very clear about what we want, where we are right now, and the things that matter and how to
create a plan. It is designed to help you get clear. It's designed to help you get in touch
with what matters to you. It's designed to help you make next year amazing. And you can find that
at melrobins.com slash best year. That's where you download it. Feel free to share it with all the
people that you care about in your life. All righty. So thank you. And now let's jump into it.
Let's jump into the top nine moments of this year. One moment in particular that shot straight
to the top in terms of the top nine moments that made the biggest impact on you. It came from
someone that you and I both adore. I'm talking about none other than Jay Shetty. Now, you may know
Jay is the host of On Purpose, one of the biggest, most impactful podcasts on the planet. He's also a number
one New York Times bestselling author and the chief purpose officer at com.
Jay is a former monk, and he is someone who has helped millions of people find clarity and
meaning. In fact, 50 million people follow him online. But here's why this particular moment
on the Mel Robbins podcast this year rose above just about everything else. Jay said something
that was so simple, so true, that you could almost hear every single person listening
say, that's me. That's me. Because so many of you had moments this year where you just felt
off track, or you felt unsure, or you felt like life was moving, but you were stuck. Or maybe you're the person
in your family right now who's holding everything together. That's what you've been doing this year,
but you are starting to come undone right now. And so if you've thought it all this year,
God, I feel stuck. How do I get unstuck? You're not alone. And this first moment that resonated so
deeply, that's what this is all about. Jay's talking about what it means to be stuck.
see being stuck feeling like you're still in your life as things are moving but you're not feeling
scared that you'll always be stuck here this is one of the most universal experiences that you're
going to have as a human being and so many of you felt so much comfort from the way that my friend
jay shetty described and reframed this experience of being stuck that i want you to come back to
this over and over and over again whenever you or somebody you
that you love is feeling stuck in life. So take a listen to Jay Shetty's brilliant insight.
What I'd like people to remember is that you're not stuck. You're actually grieving a past
version of yourself. So there's a part of you that's died that actually you left behind a long time
ago, but there's a part of you that still misses it. You still want things to be the same.
You still want things to be that way. And that keeps pulling you back. And that's actually
blocking you from making the next move. It's stopping you because life used to be this way or
life used to feel this way. And so we're stuck not because we don't know what to do next. We're stuck
because there's a part of us that wants to hold on to what we have here. There's a beautiful Zen
teaching that says what's holding you back is what you're holding on to. There's an identity, an
idea, a mindset, a behavior, an attitude that is keeping you held back. And once you let go of
that. Once you open and release your hands, all of a sudden you feel free. So what identity,
what habit, what mindset, what expectation are you letting yourself be held back by that if you
were to let go of, you could easily move forward. If you've raised your kids and they've left the
house, there's a part of you that misses what the home felt like with their energy. And now you
spend all your day thinking about all the memories in the corners. You look in this corner and you
remember your child growing up, you look in this corner and you remember Christmas dinner,
you look at this place, so you're constantly surrounding yourself with an identity that no longer
exists. So you don't have the time or the energy or the presence to be able to even think about
what comes next because there's a part of you that still feels affected. If you go to a relationship
breakup, you keep looking at pictures of when you went on vacation, you keep looking at the pictures
of when you had your first date, you keep looking at the memories of, you know, the memories of,
Maybe it's a piece of clothing, maybe it's an item at home, whatever you're surrounded by.
So you're still living as if you're still dating that person.
And so that's all holding on to something that is an identity that's already moved on in life.
Your kids have already moved on.
They're at college or they're getting engaged.
Your ex has already moved on.
They're in a new relationship or they're alone.
So reality has moved on, but you've held on to the piece of clothing, the memory, the photo,
the whatever it may be. And that's what's keeping you stuck. So my question to everyone is,
what is that thing for you? And how do you learn to release it? That's the focus. I think we think
we're stuck because we don't know what to do next. No, we're stuck because we're still holding
on to what's behind us. And as soon as you release it, you propel yourself forward. Have you
ever felt that before? And you're holding on to something really tight. If you let go of it,
all of a sudden you feel momentum. Momentum doesn't come from knowing where you're going.
It comes from knowing that I don't want to be here anymore. And I think if people think,
Think about that for a second.
What are you holding onto that's holding you back?
What are you clinging onto that's keeping you locked in, that's keeping you stuck?
Just let that sit for a minute.
What are you clinging onto that's keeping you locked in?
That's keeping you stuck.
I want to repeat something else that he said because it really struck me.
Jay asked you a question.
He said, my question to you is, what is that?
thing for you. And how do you learn to release it? You know, we think we're stuck because we don't
know what to do next. Oh my God, that one hit me. It's so true. I've always felt stuck because I'm
like, I don't know what to do. I don't know what to do. Jay wants you to really consider,
no, you're stuck because you're holding on to what's behind you. And as soon as you release it,
you propel yourself forward. Wow. I mean, no wonder that was one of the,
the most re-watched, re-shared, sent to your sister at midnight moments of the entire year.
So many of you wrote in saying the same thing, I thought I didn't know what to do next.
But really, I was just scared to let go of what wasn't working, or I was scared to admit that
a chapter of my life was over and I was still holding on to it and expecting my life to feel
the same.
No wonder this moment rose to the top.
it helped you see your life with more clarity.
I know it helped me too.
I mean, the truth is, we've all done this.
You've done this, I've done this, you hold on a little too tightly to something that you've
outgrown, the relationship that used to fit, the job that doesn't light you up anymore,
the friend group that you used to have so much fun with, but now it just kind of feels stale.
Or maybe you're holding on to the version of yourself.
And you're afraid to admit that, my gosh, I've just moved past myself.
Jay helps so many of you name that.
And once you name it, you can start moving forward again.
I mean, that clip, that was a truth bomb.
But the entire episode was full of moments just like this.
And if you haven't listened to it yet, you have to cue this one up next.
It is in the show notes.
It'll be linked with all the episodes that we are featuring today
that had the top nine moments of the entire year.
And that one you want to re-listen to
because people kept coming back to this conversation with Jay and all the wisdom that he dropped
over and over on so many topics like relationships, purpose.
I mean, you just have to carve out the time to hear it to experience the truth bombs.
I mean, it was just mic drop after mic drop after mic drop.
Now, that was just the first of nine.
And after that Jay Shetty moment took off, my team and I noticed something really interesting.
The next topic that you couldn't stop talking about this year was friendship.
Every single time we released anything about the topic of friendship, losing them, making them, outgrowing them, navigating conflict with friends, making friends as an adult, the loss of friends when you're in your 20s and your 30s going through different stages of life.
I mean, you went wild for it.
And you want to know what?
I get it.
because nothing will make you feel more confused or more alone than wondering,
why does everyone else seem to have this friendship thing figured out except me?
Why does everybody else have a group and I don't?
You know, you maybe have this experience where you're like,
I know that I'm like a person who needs a tribe, but I can't find a tribe.
Where did all my friends go?
And how do I make new friends?
And how do I find the time?
And so when we looked at the data, whether that was the clips that you were saving, the ones that you shared, the comments that you left, there was one voice that kept rising to the top when it came to the experts that appeared on the show.
And that voice was Danielle Byard Jackson.
Daniel Byard Jackson is the best-selling author of Fighting for Friendship, and she is the director of the Women's Relational Health Institute, where she leads groundbreaking research on the science of female connection.
Now, Danielle has this unbelievable gift of taking something that feels personal.
It feels painful.
Sometimes the lack of friendship and connection in your life or the fact that friends have fallen off, it can feel kind of shameful.
You know, you have this feeling like, is it just me that feels like this friendship thing is so hard, especially the older I get?
and she's going to explain this in a way that will make you think, oh, wait, wait a minute.
This is happening to all of us.
And this next clip, it's one of the top nine clips of the entire year, was one of the most
validating things that you heard all year long.
You told us it was a relief, that it even made you cry.
So many people, including me, said, oh my gosh, learning this, it finally made sense.
sense of the friendships that I've lost. It made me feel like I'm not some idiot or I'm incapable
of keeping and making and nurturing friendships. And if you haven't listened to the full episode
yet that we've done with Danielle, you have to. It is packed with the kind of clarity and
research more importantly. Like she's got the statistics that lay the foundation and the groundwork
that really help you understand the nature of adult friendship. And one of the statistics that really
blew my mind, and this goes for men and women, is that you will replace half of your friends
every seven years. This is normal. This is what everybody experiences. And that was just the
beginning of the research and the frameworks that Daniel taught us this year about adult
friendship that made it one of the most powerful moments of the entire year. So let's take
a listen to Danielle Byard Jackson on the Mel Robbins podcast.
So men and women, yeah, there's research that finds that we replace half of our friends
every seven years.
I hope that that makes people feel a little less ashamed if they have friendships that don't
work out because what that says to me is that there's this natural pruning that happens
throughout your life.
I also hope that that has people release any shame around needing to make new friends.
because I hear people say, I'm out here making friends at 42.
I should have had all my friends from high school, really?
Because I know some of the friends I had in high school, it would not be appropriate for us to still be friends.
It wouldn't make sense to where I am right now or the values I have right now.
And so if we are dropping or shedding new friends every seven years, that means we need to be picking up new ones.
Because what does that turn rate look like?
How am I positioning myself to invite new friendships into my life?
So I hope it shows us that we will always be having to make new friends.
But we even kind of promote the idea to young girls.
We'll even ask them from a young age, is that your best friend?
Is that your bestie?
Do you want something for your best friend?
And we've got the chains with like the hearts, you know, from Claire's like best friend.
So from the very beginning, being trained to identify who that one person is.
And I've also heard it said that, you know, relationships are a woman's primary resource.
And I wonder if it's kind of like this social currency, especially at that age.
is how many friends do you have?
And we see the girl with lots of friends
and what do I, you know,
what determinations do I begin to make about her?
She must be likable and cool.
You know, so the girl who's got a lot of friends,
but especially if you have a bestie
because that means you matter.
This is your alliance.
You have somebody who sees you as important.
And so that best friend phenomenon,
I definitely see emerge at that stage.
What would you say to the person
who's listening to you right now,
who either experienced not having a best friend,
or not feeling like they were part of a good friend group
or they're seeing somebody that they care about experiencing it right now.
You are not alone.
There's some research that finds that 40% of adults don't have a best friend.
So there's a lot of people out here who don't have that
maybe in this particular season of their life.
It doesn't make you any less important or worthy or lovable to not have that one person.
And if you don't, ask yourself if you can get all the things you need
from the collective rather than the singular.
I think it's a romantic notion,
this idea of the one person
who offers you multiple things.
She's your mom, friend, your happy hour buddy.
It's very cool and that one person satisfies all those things.
But until maybe you find that person,
can you find that from the collective,
from multiple people,
you're getting laughter,
you're getting growth opportunities,
you're sharing resources,
are you getting that from the village?
Because maybe right now,
that's more important than having the one person who satisfies all the things. And so I just
need that woman to know you are not alone. There are so many people who are in the same boat
and to resist the urge to internalize that and to wonder what's wrong with you because you don't
have that right now. Every time I listen to Danielle, I just feel myself exhale. Don't you?
That's why this was one of the top nine moments of the entire year.
Because if you've ever looked around, I thought, is it just me?
Am I the only adult who's a loser who doesn't have a tight friend group?
Danielle proved through research that you're not alone, not even close.
This is what the majority of people are feeling.
In fact, I want to reflect back a few things that really struck me and changed me,
and I know it changed you too because you kept writing in about it and commenting about it.
And it's also why re-listening to these moments is so powerful, even for me.
In listening to that with you, I just got a whole new insight that I'm about to share with you.
And so let me reflect back a couple things that really I think are important to take away from
that, that number one, for men and women, that every seven years you're going to go through
this, she called it a natural pruning or shedding, and you're going to lose up to half your
friends.
And that's normal.
It's a sign that you're growing and changing, and so are the people in your life.
And that's a beautiful thing.
But you have to be honest with yourself and wake up.
to the fact that if half are going to naturally come in and out of your life, you've got to be
proactive about finding new friends, making new friends, and adding new friends to your life.
It's such a beautiful insight because it doesn't make it personal. It just makes it a priority
for you to take this serious. The other thing that really struck me is that 40% of people
say they don't have a best friend. Now, in re-listening to that, I want to share something that
I just got out of that moment for the very first time. It was a moment where she was talking about
how, if you don't have that singular person, it doesn't make you less important. And that we have
been led to believe this romantic notion that you should be able to get everything from just one
person. And that there's this ability to be very satisfied in the collective. And here's what I just
realized that at this stage of my life, I'm 57, I get more from the collective nature of
friendship. Having a besty, besty, besty, it can put a lot of pressure on you to always respond. It can
put a lot of pressure on that person to be everything. And I find it really powerful to relax
into this notion of friendship as a collective versus a singular. And I'm just sharing that because it really
dawned on me as I listened to her share this moment again as I've been listening just alongside
with you. And that's why I love doing this best of episode because I get something new out of
these moments just like you are, even if you heard it when we released the episode for the first
time. So I'm so glad that you're here because what Danielle just gave you and me is permission
to stop taking friendship changes personally, to stop making it a referendum on your worth, to stop
assuming everyone else has got some secret friendship manual that you never received.
The truth is, your life changes, and that means your friendships will change with it.
That's growth.
And if you're feeling this strain on your relationship with your bestie, maybe lean into the
collective.
Maybe your bestie's going through something.
Maybe you're going through a really busy part of your life, and just take the pressure
off, because that's going to give space for the friendship to both continue to grow and
for you to grow into relationships with other people.
I just love this.
And here's the part that resonated with so many of you.
That if friendships naturally shift, that means you're not behind.
You're not starting over.
You're simply living your life.
And as you shift and change, now you're making room for the people who fit into the chapter
that you're in right now.
What a beautiful way to think about it.
Now, I know why this resonated.
It resonated because it's the truth.
of what we're all experiencing. And it also resonated, I know, because it was one of the most
shared episodes of the entire year and one of the most popular episodes on Apple of this entire
year. And if you haven't listened to the entire conversation yet, please do. If you haven't
shared this with people in your life, your friends, people that are struggling with friendship,
please take a moment and share it because it will take the pressure off your shoulders. It'll
take the pressure off the shoulders of the people in your life that are feeling lonely because
they haven't found their people or they're going through that season where they're shedding a lot of
people or they're in a new transition and they're having to make new friends. And this conversation
will replace that uncertainty with the kind of clarity that every one of us needs. All right.
Now let's switch gears and let's turn in a direction that the data was like, ding, ding, ding,
everybody cares a lot about this. What are we talking about? We're talking about health. Your long-term health.
You cared about your health this year.
I'm so proud of you.
I love it when the data shows that you are interested in topics that extend the quality of your life.
And when we pulled the numbers, we were stunned on a particular episode.
It was an episode that we did with Dr. Dawn Musilum, and it didn't just do well.
It took off like a rocket ship.
Almost all of you who listened listened to the entire.
higher episode until the very last minute because it was just that good. You hung on Dr.
Mu-Salem's every word, all the research she was dropping, and the takeaway, takeaway, takeaway,
of what she was telling you, she tells her patience. Let me tell you about the popularity of this
episode and the advice that you're about to hear and the moment I'm about to play for you.
This episode was only released a month ago. It's already one of the fastest growing episodes I've ever
released. You've written in saying things like Mel, I've sent this to everyone I love. And the clip
that you are about to hear hit millions of downloads, millions of listens almost immediately.
And look, I get it. I was not surprised when this episode hit the top. I was surprised by the numbers
and the data that accumulated in just one month. Because when Dr. Musalem talks, she makes something as
terrifying is cancer and disease, feel clearer, calmer, and more in your control than you realize.
Let me tell you about Dr. Don Musilom. She is a double board certified Mayo Clinic cancer doctor
and a pioneering lifestyle medicine expert. She is also a stage four cancer survivor who
specializes in helping people prevent and fight disease through both traditional medicine
and lifestyle. The advice she is about to give you went viral.
instantly. Because in this moment, she's breaking down the specific foods that you and your loved ones
need to eat. Why? Because they fight cancer. These are the five specific foods that she tells her
patients to eat when they have a cancer diagnosis. These are the five specific foods that Dr. Mus Salem ate
and focused on when she got her cancer diagnosis. This was so compelling. It's so tactical. The research is so
unbelievable, there were four and a half million of you who watched it on Instagram alone.
So here is Dr. Dawn Musilum describing the five foods that fight cancer and the research that
explains how they do it. So there's research with berries that's so exciting, both for breast
cancer prevention as well as breast cancer survivorship. You won't believe this. For every two
servings a week, it can reduce the risk of breast cancer. And for breast cancer,
It can reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer by 25%.
This is in the nurse's health study.
Such cool data, right?
So, berries, but guess what?
These purple sweet potatoes, can we talk about those?
Yes, so let's talk about the purple sweet potatoes.
Dr. Musalum, why do purple sweet potatoes prevent cancer?
There's 150% more anthocyanes in these purple sweet potatoes than there aren't those berries.
Tell me about the word anthocyan.
What does it do in your body that helps prevent cancer and cure disease and have you live a longer life?
So anthocyanins, like many of these other phytonutrients we see in these vegetables and fruits that we have here,
they have the opportunity to come into our body.
And what we have is we have tumors, genes that will be turned on, and we have tumor genes that can be turned off.
That's how they function with the cancer.
And these different molecules can help to either make cancer turn off so that it's not likely
to have this proliferation, or they can even turn on things called tumor suppressor genes.
These tumor suppressor genes help to be the brakes on any cancer.
Why do vegetables like cauliflower, brussels, broccoli, why do these prevent or cure cancer?
These are some of the most powerful vegetables when it comes to breast cancer.
And there's so many fun facts with it.
So if we look at this cauliflower and broccoli, these are beautiful cruciferous vegetables.
And maybe when I'm ready to cook these, I'll chop on a few of these before I cook it.
And you know why?
Why?
Because when they're raw, there's an enzyme in them called myrosanase.
Okay.
Murosanase?
Neurosanase.
Okay.
And that enzyme is really magical for trying to absorb the phytonutrients that are in the broccoli,
the cauliflower, the brussels, the arugula, better and more effectively.
So when it comes to breast cancer, it helps.
helps to make estrogen into a less proliferative form.
What's proliferative mean?
You know, when we think of the breast tissue, we think of the fact that the breast
tissue itself can be in a proliferative state where cells can grow more.
And what the broccoli can do is it can transition the estrogen actually in our body
to a form of estrogen that doesn't cause that proliferation.
Proliferation is growth.
So you can imagine if something's upregulating growth, that's not a good thing, right?
We want things that try to turn off that growth.
it keeps that in check. It's like a master of detoxification. Let's talk about beans and why do they
prevent cancer? This is an amazing plant protein. But when you think about plant protein, you're not just
getting protein, you're getting fiber. And fiber is obviously in all of these plant foods. You only get
fiber from plants. There was just something we call an umbrella review. 17 million person years in the
study. And what it showed us is that there's class one evidence. This is like the highest,
quality evidence we have in medicine, that fiber can help to reduce dying from any cause,
dying from heart disease, it can also reduce the risk of dying from pancreas cancer in this
class one evidence. What? It's really exciting. There was another study, another review of the data
that was just published that showed that fiber can help to reduce the risk of cancer rate 22%.
Why does etamamee prevent cancer? There are very few things we can consume that, God forbid,
you ever got breast cancer would reduce your risk of dying. And etymone are one of those.
And one of the most influential times you have that edamom is your young girl.
And if you're a young boy, it's going to be very protective for his prostate too.
So we know that soy is also good to reduce the risk of prostate cancer.
There's even some research that says it reduces the risk of lung cancer.
And it's amazing for the gut microbiome.
But let me talk about breast cancer because a lot of women with breast cancer avoid soy.
Even though that we know this data that it looks protective, they avoid soy.
Well, the American Cancer Society's 2022 data on nutrition and exercise,
update dedicated three paragraphs to the safety of soy and breast cancer survivors. And it didn't just show
safety. In this beautiful meta-analysis, it showed that there was a 25% reduction in breast cancer
coming back. Let's talk about Kiwi. It's super cool. So this really gets like on the cellular level.
So at the level of DNA, it can reduce oxidative stress. So oxidative stress is what comes from us from
everything as simple as breathing oxygen from the environment to having any stressors in life.
life. It's just really living. We get this oxidative damage that builds up. Certain foods can even
kind of cause this trigger as well. But what these little magical fruits do is they go in and they
help to turn off that oxidative stress. They come to the rescue. I mean, don't you just love her?
If this is the first time you're experiencing the magic of Dr. Dawn Musaylam, you have got to listen
to the entire episode. Because she just, you know, you know what I almost imagine when I'm, when I'm
when I'm listening to her. I'm imagining being a patient in a hospital and in she walks and you
could see her wearing a cape. I love the word she's talking about science, super cool, beautiful
meta-analysis, fun facts, tumor genes, turning. I mean, it's just like she has this ability
to bring something to the conversation about a topic that's terrifying cancer. And as you listen to her,
you feel hopeful. You have clarity. You believe the science. She's so enthusiastic about
how your body can heal and these things that you can eat that, I mean, these are her words,
tumor genes, turn off. I mean, I just, photonutrients. I'm so excited by the fact that you have
this episode as a resource. I'm excited that you have a world-renowned Mayo Clinic cancer doctor
who's a stage four breast cancer survivor who is sharing this with you.
Because cancer is one of those topics that we tiptoe around.
And I know, it feels big.
It's heavy.
It's scary.
It's out of your control.
You doubt whether or not your body can manage it.
But Dr. Musaylam, she doesn't speak to you from fear.
She speaks to you from power, from lived experience, and from science, science that she is so excited about.
And that's what made this moment explode.
Dr. M. Salem is living proof that your body wants to heal and it knows how to heal.
And she gave you the very specific takeaways backed by extraordinary research to prove to you that there are things that you can do.
She's reminding you that your future, it's not passive.
It's your responsibility.
She's telling you, your choices matter.
Your habits matter.
The food you eat, it matters.
You matter.
That's why this episode took off the way that it did.
It didn't scare you.
It empowered you.
It made you smarter.
Now, the success of the episode with Dr. Don Musaylum didn't surprise me because you deeply
care about your health.
It's one of the reasons why you listen.
But the next top moment of the entire year of the Mel Robbins podcast was shocking.
I did not expect this.
The team didn't expect this.
I am startled by this next moment.
And so here's what we're going to do.
We're going to hit the pause button because I want to give our amazing sponsors a chance to shine
and to share a few words because they're the reasons that we can bring you the Mel Robbins
podcast for free.
I also want to give you a chance to share some of these top moments that you've heard so far
with your friends, with your family, with the people that you care about, because we all deserve
this extraordinary advice and research and insights and inspiration. So take a minute and share,
but don't you dare go anywhere, because the next moment is all about sex, and it's going to shock
you. So stay with me.
Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins today.
You and I are going through the nine biggest moments from the Mel Robbins podcast this year.
These are moments that will change your life.
It's the expert advice that you need this year.
And all of these moments come from the top shows and the most shared moments of the year on the podcast.
Now, we've covered three so far. The remaining six are incredible. And that brings me to the next
top moment of the year. This one was a shocker. When we crunched the data and discovered one of the
top moments of the entire year was an episode about sex? Wow. And it came from the episode entitled
Your Guide to Better Sex, Intimacy and Love from a world-leading sex therapist. This was one of the most
talked about, most re-watched, most shared conversations of the entire year. And I get why.
Because Vanessa Marin makes this topic feel normal. Vanessa has been in clinical practice as a
licensed sex therapist for over 20 years, and she's been married for 16 years. She knows what
it's like. And she turns the lights on a topic that so many of us have kept in the dark,
literally. She has this way of giving you permission to understand yourself better and communicate
better without the shame, without the pressure, without the shoulds or the hinting or the withholds,
you know, where you're thinking about it, but you don't really talk about it. And that's why this next
moment struck such a nerve. It was kind of like a collective sigh of relief. And, you know,
I'm kind of happy that this was one of the biggest moments because I think we all want to have a
great sex life and we don't really know how to talk about it. And that's why this was
also one of the most refreshing conversations of the entire year, because one of the things Vanessa
talked about is the timing of sex. Literally, what's the best time of day to have sex? And when
you should have sex and what to do and not do once you're in bed. Now, isn't it interesting
that the third largest podcast in the world in terms of downloads and global listeners,
that the advice about sex and improving your sex life was something that was one of the most
powerful clips globally? I guess we're all kind of struggling with this. We all want to feel more
satisfied and more connected. We want to feel more empowered. And this particular piece of advice
that I'm about to play for you, it changed my life. It's a piece of advice that I put to use
immediately the second I was done talking to Vanessa, I shared this with my husband, Chris.
It is so brilliant. It is so obvious. It is kind of one of those things that once you hear it, you're like,
Oh, my God, I have been so overcomplicating this.
Why did I not think about this sooner?
Wait until you hear what sex therapist Vanessa Marin said.
When I asked her, Vanessa, when is the best time of day for sex?
Another classic mistake that I see most couples making, which is that we leave sex to the very end of the night.
We just have that idea in our heads like, oh, we're all teeth brushed, all cleaned up, crawling into bed.
That's the time for sex.
that is the worst time for sex. By the time you're crawling into bed, you are exhausted. You're thinking
about the next day. You're thinking about the crazy day you just had. You're doing that mental
math in your head of, okay, if I fall asleep in the next five minutes, then I can get this many
hours of sleep. That is the worst time to get excited about sex. So I always encourage couples
try to have sex as early in the evening as you can. Obviously, everybody has different
schedules, we have different things going on, but try to prioritize it as early as you possibly
can. So if it's, we're not going to watch TV until we've had sex first. Maybe it's even we're
going to have sex and then we're going to have dinner or we're going to have dinner, have sex,
then we'll come back and clean everything up. But do it earlier so you actually have the energy
to have that intimacy with each other. What I'm hearing from you, which is interesting,
because I feel myself also having a little bit of a visceral like, oh God, is this idea of you
got to plan it. You're like, yeah, no kidding, Mel. You have to plan it. Like, because I think
I believe in the myth that it's just supposed to happen, which is clearly not working. And that's
what happens in the beginning of a relationship. When you first, it's brand new, you will literally
going to the grocery stores, the hottest date on the planet, and then you're having sex in the
backseat of the car, in the parking lot. Like, those days are over. So you're saying,
I want to challenge you on that, though. Okay. If you really think back on it,
in the early days of a relationship.
So I'll talk about me and Zander.
When we started having sex and then we're planning dates with each other,
we're scheduling sex.
Because you're planning dates.
We're planning dates.
I would know.
He'd ask me out on Friday.
Hey, you want to go hang out on Friday?
We'll go to dinner, come back to my place.
We're having sex.
That's scheduling sex.
It's not that we've never had to schedule sex before.
Now we're old and boring and we have to do it.
We've been scheduling sex our entire relationship.
What are some little things that make a big difference in your sex life?
Ooh, I'll give you three.
First one, gratitude, which you might not expect.
But research has shown that gratitude is actually the number one predictor of marital satisfaction.
And we talked earlier about how emotional and physical intimacy are really deeply intertwined.
So if we want to feel closer to our partner and get like the maximum bang for our buck, gratitude is the fastest thing that you can do.
It's literally a few seconds to say, I appreciate this about you. I saw that you did that. Thank you so much for this.
Second thing is some form of physical contact with each other. We talked a lot about non-sexual touch. It's so important to have that non-sexual touch.
And in particular, I like a six-second kiss and a 20 to 30-second hug. We actually have research showing that those are the specific timeframes it takes for our body to release oxytocin, the bonding hormone, the trust hormone,
makes us feel close to each other. And then the third thing, eye contact. It is wild how few
couples make eye contact with each other. And I think that there is no greater tragedy than being
in a long-term relationship with somebody, but feeling literally and emotionally unseen by them.
So those three things, you can do those three things in under a minute every single day,
and those will make such a big impact. I just have to say, hearing this,
again, alongside you, I truly understand why this was one of the most powerful moments of the
entire year for all of us. I mean, I'm just going to reflect back to you what changed my life
about this. When she said that thing about the fact that you've always been scheduling sex and
that basically a date is scheduling sex, I just was like, duh, Mel, you just look at it differently
when you're in a long-term relationship.
Why did I not think about this before?
It's so true, isn't it?
I mean, because by the time I crawl into bed,
I'm wrapped up like a human burrito,
I'm horizontal, I'm done.
If Chris even breeze in my direction,
I'm like, okay, how about the morning?
How about the morning?
I'm too tired.
And that's what I love so much about Vanessa's work,
that she takes something that so many of us feel embarrassed about
or you feel shameful
because you think that you're doing something wrong
or you can't believe that it's gotten to this point
where you're no longer having sex as much as you want to
or your anger, like it just,
and removes every ounce of shame from it.
And there's one other thing I wanted to reflect back to you
that has made a big difference.
You know those three things she said at the end
that really impact your sex life,
all based on research, the first being gratitude,
and that's kind of like remembering who you married
and being appreciative of all the things they are doing, right?
Of how hard they are trying,
of the good things that are easy to forget about the person.
but the two things that have made a big deal for me is the hugs. The physical contact and that
research about a hug needing to last between 20 and 30 seconds. You know, Chris and I were always
touchy, feely, but the hug thing, whenever I pass him in the kitchen, we now have this habit
where we stop, like one of us will grab the other one by the shoulders and we just hug. And 20
seconds is longer than you think. And practicing doing an extra long hug like that,
it just makes you feel more connected to your person.
It's really remarkable how these two simple changes,
making it a point to hug a little longer than normal and do it once a day.
My rule is if I pass Chris in the kitchen, I stop and I hug them.
That's the rule.
It happens every day now.
And then just scheduling sex, having it before we go out,
having it before dinner, having it earlier in the day.
Holy cow.
small changes, extraordinarily profound impact. So, you know, I think it really was such an important
moment globally because, you know, if you've been silently wondering, why don't I want sex as much
as I used to? Is something wrong with me? Is something wrong with us? Why can't it just happen
naturally like it used to happen? Well, what we learned from Vanessa is it didn't happen naturally
because we were scheduling it through something we used to call dating.
And Vanessa just brings this huge collective, oh, you're not broken.
Your relationship isn't broken.
You're just human.
And your body and your brain are tired at night.
It's not that you're not interested.
That's why this moment became one of the most replayed, rewatched, and shared of the entire year.
It didn't make you feel guilty.
It made you feel understood.
It took the pressures off your shoulders and gave you permission to approach intimacy with more humor, more grace, and way less self-judgment.
And if you haven't heard the full conversation, you should because it's everything you need more of in your relationships.
Simple, doable shifts that make sense, that are grounded in research, and that help you make connection easier instead of heavier.
So let's now go somewhere that I really wasn't expecting the data to take us,
and that's into the emotional world of men.
Now, this moment genuinely surprised me.
Because when we crunched the numbers from the entire year,
one of the moments that absolutely took off was about something that most people never really
consider, they don't talk about, they don't know what to do about it,
and that's what's really going on beneath the surface with the men that you love.
And I have to be honest, with an audience that's mostly women.
Now, we have a lot of men that listen, but women are the gateway to the Mel Robbins universe.
But here's what I was not expecting.
I was not expecting the conversation about the emotional life of men to explode in the way that it did.
But you devoured it.
You shared it with your partners, your sons, your dads, your brothers, your friends.
and messages poured in like Mel.
This episode finally helped me understand him.
I wish I had heard this and knew this years ago.
Please, Mel, please have Jason Wilson back.
Jason Wilson is the founder and director of the Cave of Adulham, Transformational Training Academy,
which is a pioneering school in Detroit, where young boys learn emotional resilience, discipline, character, and integrity.
Jason received the President's Volunteer Service Award from President Barack Obama, and his work with young men was the subject of an award-winning ESPN film documentary, the executive producer, none other than Lawrence Fishburn.
Jason Wilson is also the author of the best-selling book, The Man, The Moment Demands, a guide that reframes what it means to be a whole man in today's world.
And I'm encouraged to see that there are so many people right now talking about the state of men
and explaining how men are in trouble in terms of their emotional and their mental health.
But there's not a lot of people who are telling you and me what to do about it.
Like once you know that somebody in your life may be struggling, they may not have a lot of friends,
they may be kind of shut down and not expressing themselves, what do you do about it?
it. How do you support them in opening up? How do you support them in creating friendships with
guys and really living a more healthy life in terms of being happy and connected and more resilient?
And how do you do that in a way that really opens the door for not only you to change
how you're relating to the men in your life, but for the men in your life to really receive this
message and feel inspired and encouraged to change themselves? And that's exactly what
Jason Wilson did for you and me. He opened the door to what's underneath the silence
and underneath the anger. And he does it with so much love and honesty. This is why this
moment became one of the most unexpected and impactful moments of the entire year. And you've got
to listen to the whole episode. It's just so profound and helpful. And Jason spent a lot of time
talking about how the men that he works with, the boys that he works with, are either angry
or they seem silent and shut down. And I was really interested in this topic because I
am married to a man who, for a lot of our marriage, was very shut down. He was very quiet. He seemed
very stoic. And even when you're dealing with somebody like that, there's anger underneath there.
And so I was asking, Jason, why are these the two things that we see?
Why do we tend to see the men and the young men in our life either expressing and holding a lot of anger or just seeming very stoic and silent?
And just wait to you hear what Jason Wilson said about the reason why men are either angry or silent.
You can't be weak
You can't be soft
You can't be as simple as they say
If you're just angry
If you're silent you look stoic now
Oh he must be strong because nothing ever phases him
And so men
Anger is a very safe emotion to express
When our feelings are hurt we're angry
When we're sad we're angry
When we lose we're angry
When our wives express that they want to spend
more time with us because they miss us. We're angry. It's a surface emotion. That's why I tell men
to dig deep. What are you really feeling? And I compare it to masculinity to the crayon analogy in this
book. As men, we stay within the eight box of crayons, okay? And we may pull out four. Women have
64. That's why we confuse you so much, Jason. But this is interesting. We were created
For all of those emotions, they're not exclusive to you.
That's true.
It's there, but we've been hoodwinked by allowing society to define what a man is.
And so when women are communicating with us, they may pull out, I'll use an analogy of the color violet, and all we have is purple.
We can't meet the moment.
Or even more complex issues, they ask for lime, and we're trying to put green and yellow together.
And because men, we're not used to expressing the gamut of emotion.
that we have as human beings, we can't meet the moment.
And so I need to learn how to express more than my anger.
If you don't trust me with the finances,
it's not the anger I need to express.
It's the hurt you make me feel
because my father never trusted me with anything
that required responsibility.
And so when a man can express his heart
to his wife or the woman in his life,
a mature woman, she drops her guard.
And now we can communicate.
You know, I've said this before, and I'm going to say it again, I absolutely love Jason Wilson.
I love his work.
I love his best-selling books.
I love his voice.
I love how he can just get in there with a level of conviction.
He has this way of saying out loud what so many men are living in silence and frankly,
so many women like me need to hear. And once you understand that anger is often the only emotion
that men were ever taught to access, everything shifts. The shutdowns make more sense. The short fuse
makes more sense. The silence makes more sense. It doesn't excuse hurtful behavior, but it explains
the wiring and the experiences underneath it that created it. And that explanation is what so many
of you said, felt like a lifeline. Because when you love a man, whether you're talking about your
partner or your dad or your brother or your son, you want to understand him. You want to be
connected. You want a relationship that's not built on guessing. That cran box metaphor was so
helpful. So many of you wrote in and commented about that in particular. I've never even thought about it.
Like the men in my life I've judged because they're only doing life with four or five crayons,
but there's so many more complex emotions underneath
and just knowing that, it makes me feel excited
because I can lean in and be curious
and be softer and communicate in a different way
to help them express it.
I'm just so grateful for that conversation
and I'm grateful it really resonated with you,
which is why it was one of the top nine moments this year.
Are you ready to shift gears again?
Because coming up, the next moment
was the top moment for all podcasts everywhere.
What you're about to hear comes from an episode that we did on women's health with
none other than Stanford University's Dr. Stacey Sims.
Dr. Stacey Sims has a PhD in exercise, physiology, and nutrition science.
She's on the faculty at Stanford University, teaching about lifestyle medicine, and at
Auckland University of Technology where she teaches sports medicine. She is a renowned researcher
and has directed research programs at Stanford, Auckland University of Technology, and the
University of Wicado. And she has published, check this out. A hundred and seven peer-reviewed
research papers, which in normal person speak, is a ton. This episode was the number one most
shared episode of all episodes, of all podcasts of the entire year. And you do not want to miss this
moment because it's where Dr. Stacey Sims unpacks a fundamental medical truth. So let's take a
moment to listen to our incredible sponsors. And I want to give you a chance to share all of the
remarkable moments that we've covered so far with the people that you care about. But don't
you go anywhere because the number one most shared moment of any podcast on the planet this year is
coming up when we return from this very short break.
Stay with me.
Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins.
Today, you and I are covering the top nine moments
on the Mel Robbins podcast of this year.
The most shared, the most watched, the most downloaded.
You love these moments.
The moments that moved you, that inspired you,
and we are now going to go into a moment that pushed you into action.
Because we're talking about women's health.
And this is the number one moment by number one.
I don't mean it was just number one on this podcast.
This advice that you're about to hear,
it comes from the single most popular episode
that the Mel Robbins podcast has ever released
in the last three years that we have been doing this show.
And it's also from the number one most shared episode
of every single episode on the planet on Apple in 2025.
That's how inspiring and how empowering this advice is.
It started from when I was teaching at Stanford
and wanted to wake some of the undergrads up after lunch
and the afternoon's sleepies come in
and I was teaching about sex differences in training or high performance.
So I would start with women or not small men.
And people are like, well, of course not.
like that's you know women aren't small men but what i mean by that is everything from what happens
in utero until we die is different for women than men so when we talk about women are not small men
and we see all the guidelines that are out there for exercise all the guidelines out there for
mental health for the connections the sociocultural pressures we experience things differently
as women than men do but that's not ever really explained so when we say women are not small men
it makes people take that pause and ask, well, what do you mean by that? What topic? So today,
what I mean by women are not small men is we're going to dive into exercise, especially how
what we do should change as we move through our lives. What does that motto, women are not small men,
mean in practice? I think when we look right now at what's being portrayed in social media,
fitness trends, the medical trends, all of that data is really,
drawn from men and just generalized to women, which is a huge disservice. So I want women,
especially you as a listener on this podcast, to take a pause whenever you see a new trend come up
or someone pushing something to just go, well, where do this originate? How does it appropriate
for me as a woman in my phase of life? And when you take that pause, you begin to have an
objection to some of the things that are being pushed on you and an objective view of how you
should approach things to make it beneficial for you. I mean, if you look at most women who make
a point to get up, do some training, go exercise, and it happens so often after four weeks of
following the same kind of training program as their male partner, their male partner has gotten
leaner, fitter, better cognition, focus, all of the things that you want at a fitness. And the
woman's like, how come I'm fatter and tired? And I don't have any like increase in my fitness like
my partner does. And I see it all the time and I'm always explaining, well, one, your partner might
get up and go fasted training. Women's bodies don't respond well to fasted training. What's
facet training? I don't even know what the heck this is. Like what was fasted training? Fasted training means
you're not having any food before you go do exercise. If I don't have food to counter the fuel
that the muscles are needing from a contraction, I need to find a way to supply that fuel. So it goes into
a little bit of a tizzy. And one of the first things that starts to get broken down is,
your muscle mass because muscle is a pretty active tissue and the hypothalamus is like, well,
I don't know if I'm going to be able to supply the food that this muscle needs if I don't have
any food coming in. So it's a very small amount of food that a woman needs first thing in the
morning to then go be successful in her training. And it doesn't mean a full meal. It could be
the protein coffee. It could be a couple of tablespoons of yogurt, a half a banana. It's not a lot,
but it's enough to bring your blood sugar up and tell your brain.
Yeah, I've got this.
I cannot thank Dr. Stacey Sims enough.
This episode changed my life in fundamental ways.
There are so many changes that I made.
And what we were just talking about,
the fact that women forever were basically taught
to exercise on an empty stomach to maximize calorie burn,
and that works against you.
I didn't know that.
And so a fundamental change that I've made
is that when I get up, I eat breakfast.
I fuel myself.
And that's with everything from, you know, making eggs in the morning to making a smoothie to
having one of these pure genius shots.
Pure Genius is something that's also changed my life.
It's why I became the co-founder of this new protein company, Pure Genius.
I was inspired to do it because of how much I've been learning from all of these medical experts.
Now, after learning from Dr. Stacey Sims, I never, ever, ever exercise on an empty stomach.
I don't even go for a walk on an empty stomach.
You have to listen to this episode.
It is so packed with eye-opening, research-back,
validating tactical, effective changes
that you and me as women and all the women in your life,
we need to make.
So there's no question in my mind
why this was the number one most shared episode
of the entire world across the globe
of every single podcast.
That's how good it is.
So please make the time
and spend the time with Dr. Stacey Sims,
learn about the ways that women are not small men
and what you and I have been led to believe
that's untrue that works against your body,
I know you're going to love it.
And since we're in the lane of taking back your health,
let's zoom in and switch directions
and really focus on something
that every single one of us needs
to be serious about as we get old.
and that is how to protect your strength, your mobility, and your future.
See, Dr. Stacey Sims came in and gave us a complete body reset, but then Dr. Vanda Wright
came in with a reckoning.
Now, let me tell you about Dr. Vanda Wright.
Dr. Vanda Wright is one of the leading experts on aging, mobility, law, and, and
longevity, and long-term health.
Dr. Wright is a double-board-certified orthopedic surgeon and internationally recognized
researcher whose groundbreaking work on mobility, musculoskeletal aging, and longevity is transforming
how we understand the aging body.
Dr. Wright has more than 100,000 patients treated and multiple number one best-selling books.
She is redefining what's possible for strength, movement, and vitality at every stage of life.
Dr. Wright is treated more than 100,000 patients and has multiple number one best-selling books at the University of Pittsburgh.
Dr. Wright was the medical director of the UPMC Sports Complex and the director of many of their biggest research groups, including the performance and research initiative for master's athletes.
She is redefining what's possible for strength, movement, and vitality at every stage of life.
When my team and I crunch the numbers for this episode, my jaw hit the floor.
This conversation wasn't just one of our top health episodes of the year.
It was one of the top episodes of the entire show, period.
And the reason is simple.
Dr. Vanda Wright doesn't speak about aging.
like it's a slow decline.
She talks about it like it's something you can train for.
She doesn't come rolling in with fear.
She comes in with fire.
Every single person I know who heard that episode said the same thing.
Okay.
This changes everything.
Because she kept saying over and over,
getting old is inevitable, getting weak is not.
This is the moment that I'm about to play for.
you that made millions of women stand up a little straighter and take ownership of their future
because you're about to hear this world-renowned medical researcher and orthopedic surgeon
get very choked up and start crying. She's going to describe to you what it's like to see women
come into her office. Women who have been so busy taking care of everybody else
that they never took the time to take care of themselves.
What you're about to hear is the real truth
of what you and your loved ones are going to be facing
if you don't take your mobility and strength training
and truly, truly choosing how you age seriously.
You know what, Mel, I don't mean to cry in public,
but I am still a practicing surgeon.
I have looked into the eyes of more than 100,000 people in my lifetime as a doctor.
And I started as a cancer nurse, right?
But I see the future of people today every day when I take call, and this is what it is.
And I've got to solve for this.
You and I have got to solve for this.
When your Aunt Mary breaks her hip, and I'm called to the hospital bed to see her,
she is laying there in excruciating pain,
balled up at the bottom of the bed with that horrible blue gown on that we put people in,
and she doesn't want to be moved up because it hurts too much, right?
From bones that she never even paid attention to,
never knew she had because we ignored it and now they're screaming.
That's number one.
Number two, what's happened to her is she's laying there in a pile of her own urine
because she was not treated for the gynealco-urinary syndrome of menopause.
Her pelvic floor got weak.
So many women do not talk about the fact that they become incontinent in late in life
and have urinary tract infection.
So she's painful.
She is incontinent, which if she even realizes it, she feels ashamed about that.
I need to do a 45-minute surgery on her where because she's broken her hip,
I need to put a rod down that, the size of my thumb, actually.
I cannot do that if her heart is not healthy enough to withstand anesthesia.
And many times her heart is so unhealthy because she's taking care of everybody else in the world except herself that the hospitalists have a hard time clearing her heart.
And do you know what else?
She either has a touch of dementia or she has full-blown Alzheimer's.
That is the state of women that I see every time I go to fix a hip on call.
and do you know in her lucid moments what she is saying to me she is standing there with her daughter
it's usually the eldest daughter at the bedside she's looking at me she's looking at her daughter
and time after time again she'll say something like i've not always been like this i don't know
how i got here don't ever let this happen to you don't get old well i am not blaming her at all
I see the future of women, Mel, I can't not not cry.
If we know we have within our hands to change the trajectory of our future.
And if we choose to not be the victims of the passage of time,
we don't have to end up like all those women I take care of,
30% of whom after they break a hip will die.
We can choose another path, but it takes conscious effort
and a belief that we are worth it.
One of the things I love most about Dr. Vonda Wright is that I really feel her passion and her belief that you and I are worth it.
I believe her, don't you?
When she says we have within our hands the ability to change the trajectory of our future,
if we choose not to be the victims of the passage of time.
And I also love that in this episode,
she gives you the very specific and simple things you can start doing every day
with things that are already in your home,
to take better care of yourself, to build your strength, to build your mobility.
Every time I hear this section of the episode, something inside me goes still.
I think of my grandmothers.
I think of women in my life who are aging, who have taken care of everybody else but haven't really taken care of themselves.
Because that's what she's talking about.
The women in your life that she's caring for, every single day.
day. She sees them. In pain, women who didn't know what was happening inside their bodies,
who spent decades taking care of everyone but themselves, and now as they age, their health is
unraveling. And here's why this moment rose above almost everything else we published this
year, Dr. Wright wakes you up without shaming you. She's showing you the cost of ignoring your
own needs, of ignoring your body, and then she hands you back your power in the exact same breath.
Because Dr. Wright's whole message is this. You're not too old. You're not too late. You're not
past the point of changing. Your body will always respond to the positive stress that you give it,
the strength training, the nutritional changes, the mobility exercises. And when she says you do not
have to be the victim of the passage of time, you can feel that in your bones. And you may not even
be thinking about yourself. I hope you are. I hope you are. But you may be thinking and have this renewed
sense of hope for one of your aunts, or maybe for your mom or for your grandma, or for your older
sister, who has been so busy taking care of her aging in-laws that she's let herself go,
and she's kind of saying, I don't know how I got here. That's why this episode was one of the
biggest across every platform. And Dr. Wright started something that also went viral. She started
something called the viral push-up challenge. You loved it. She told you and me that we had to be able
to do 11 push-ups. I was like, on our knees. She's like, nope, on your toes. And she shared how to do
this challenge with a level of humor and passion. You can start against the wall. You can start
against your kitchen counter. When you're ready to get down on the knees, you can do it on the
knees. And over time, she wants you and me to be able to do 11 push-ups. And you, you,
You loved the challenge, and so did I.
In fact, I did my push-ups this morning.
I've been working on them all year, thanks to Dr. Wright.
I'm still doing a couple on my knees.
I'm not to the toes yet.
It takes time, but I feel the strength.
Now, if you have not listened to the entire conversation
or you listened and you're like, oh, my God,
I remember how amazing that was.
I got to listen again.
What are you waiting for?
Your best years are not behind you.
You are building your best years right now,
and Dr. Wright is here with one.
of the most popular episodes of all time to give you the playbook on how to do that.
Now, after hearing Dr. Wright and feeling that jolt of urgency and the hope about your
intelligence and your body and the strength that you can build, now I want to pivot
and take you somewhere deeper. Because one of the biggest patterns that we saw when we looked
back at the entire year was you weren't just working on your health.
You weren't just focused on building better habits.
You were also working on healing.
And when it comes to healing, there's one voice globally that rose above almost every other guest
because he has this ability to help you understand yourself on the deepest level.
And that is Dr. Gabor Mate.
Dr. Gabor Mate is a world-renowned physician and number one best-selling.
author, whose groundbreaking work reveals how childhood experiences and trauma shape your
emotional patterns, your relationships, and even your physical health across a lifetime.
His insights have transformed the global conversation on healing, and his clarity and compassion
how people like you and me finally understand themselves in a way that opens the door
to real change, real connection, and real freedom.
This episode was nothing short of a global phenomenon
because Dr. Gabor gave you the single most viral moment of the entire year.
The moment you're about to hear had 25 million people watch it,
because it clicked for so many of you.
If you've ever wondered, why does my childhood impact me,
but it doesn't seem to impact my brother?
Why do I have a terrible relationship with my dad,
but my sister has a great relationship?
Why is it that I'm more sensitive
and I don't feel very connected to my family?
I feel like an outsider.
And one of the things that Dr. Gabor Mante talks about in his work is that understanding how your childhood shapes you gives you more compassion for yourself as an adult and it opens the door for healing and for you to consciously become the kind of person you want to become.
And one of the biggest insights that he shared is the fact that your childhood was very different.
than your siblings. And so let's drop into the moment where Dr. Gabor Matte tells you the truth about your
childhood that you need to hear. No siblings grow up in the same house. No siblings have the same
parents. No siblings have the same family. No siblings have the same childhood. Why not? The whole lot of
reasons. Number one is the birth order. Parents don't relate to the first child the way
they relate to the second child. Then there's gender differences. Parents don't relate to, I'm not
on whether parents love the kids or not. I'm talking about what actually happens. The child doesn't
experience the parents love. The child experiences the way the parents shows up. Number one, number
two, the parents' relationship might be in a different phase, one child than another. The parents
might be in a different economic situation.
Their parents' lives might be different.
Then, each child will evoke a different response from the parent.
Like with my three kids or your three kids.
Yeah, you have three children.
Yeah, you have two daughters and a son.
I have two sons and a daughter.
It's not that I loved or we loved any one of them more than the other,
but we responded to them differently.
And there's one more factor,
which is children born with different temperaments,
which is they experienced the world differently.
So even if I could be the same parent to all my kids, which I couldn't be,
they still have three different parents because they would experience me differently.
That moment hit you so deeply, and I know it hit me deeply too, both as a child and also as a parent.
No siblings grow up in the same childhood.
And when you hear him explain it so plainly, without judgment,
like I really, in listening to it again with you, I'm thinking about the line that this is not about
how you experience love from your parents. It's how you're experiencing the way your parents
showed up with you. And when you really take that on, whether you take it on as a parent or
you take it on as your experience as a child, that every child experiences a completely different
parent. They have a completely different childhood. Suddenly, so many things about your life
makes sense. The roles you took on, the ways you coped and adapted, the guilt you may have
carried, the reactions you wish you didn't have, the patterns that you're trying to break.
That moment, the one you just heard, was the single, most viral moment of the entire year.
because perhaps for the first time you realized nothing's wrong with you.
You were doing the best you could with the version of the world you grew up inside of.
And what I love about this episode is that so many of you sent it to your siblings.
You sent it to your partner, your therapist, you forwarded it to your group chat.
It didn't just explain your past.
it gave you permission to stop fighting against it to heal, to forgive, to understand,
to accept the reality of what it's like for absolutely everybody in their childhood.
This conversation with Dr. Gabor Mante helped millions of people this year
soften toward themselves. It helped you drop the shame you may have been dragging around.
It helped you understand your family with a little more commitment.
compassion. It helped you understand the tension or the frustration or the friction that you may
feel with your siblings or with your parents. It helped you feel a little less alone in the
ways that you struggle. And if you haven't listened to this episode yet, I'm telling you,
do it. It will change the way you see yourself. It will change the way you see the people that
you love. It will change what you believe is possible for your own healing.
it will help you see your childhood as something that is in the past, and your future as an adult
as something that you can take control of and change for the better. How amazing is that?
Just hearing it, it's so powerful what he says that, obviously, it's one of the top nine moments
of the entire year. And that brings me to the final conversation.
that we had this year on the Mel Robbins podcast. It didn't just stay with me. It changed me for the
better. It changed the way I see the world, the way I show up in my own life, the way I think about
what is possible at this very overwhelming moment in history. Who am I talking about? I'm talking
about the conversation we had with the remarkable Brian Stevenson. Now, if you've been with me
this year, you already know. Brian isn't just one of the greatest civil rights attorneys of our
time. He is one of the single greatest human beings I have ever had the privilege of sitting down
with. Brian Stevenson is the founder of the Equal Justice Initiative. He has argued and won
landmark cases before the United States Supreme Court. He wrote the number one New York Times
mega bestselling book, Just Mercy, which became a major motion picture.
and none other than Michael B. Jordan played Brian Stevenson in the movie.
Brian Stevenson has also received dozens of words, like the MacArthur Genius Grant and the Gruber Prize for Justice.
This was one of the most meaningful conversations of my entire career, and so many of you reached out from around the world and said the exact same thing, that listening to this episode with Brian felt like someone was turning on a life.
in a very dark room.
And this moment in particular that you're about to hear
is one that I've gone back to over and over again.
So let me take you back to one of the most powerful moments
on the Mel Robbins podcast this entire year.
It's a moment when I asked Brian Stevenson,
how do you find hope in those moments
when you start to feel despair?
Our hope is what can sustain us when things look bleak and difficult.
And that is the reason why I believe that hopelessness is the enemy of justice.
Justice will prevail if we allow ourselves to give in to hopelessness.
Hope is our superpower.
It's the thing that we'll get some of us to stand up even when people say sit down.
It will get some of us to speak, even when people say be quiet.
It's the thing that will get us to believe we can do things that maybe other people think we can't.
do. I have to give it to my clients, and I can't give someone something I don't have. And so for
me, it's an orientation of the spirit. I think learning about hope is a really important action
item. Sometimes I think we don't think of learning as an action item, but I do. I think to learn is to
do something. And learning the stories of what hopeful people did despite the odds is one of the
most important things we can do to prepare ourselves, to train ourselves, our minds and our bodies
to do hopeful things in our lives, just like we have to train ourselves if we want to be fit or
run a race. I think we have to train ourselves, prepare ourselves to be hopeful in the midst of so many
difficulties. And the world is just filled of stories about hopeful people. And I think we need to
learn them and be shaped by them. And I hope we prepare people to be better informed, better citizens,
better stewards of the opportunities we have to create a more just world. I just love Brian Stevenson.
Don't you feel lifted up when you listen to him speak? I know I do. And did you catch what he said
about hope that it is an orientation of the spirit?
it is something that you can train for and that learning the stories of hopeful people,
what they did, how they thought, that's how you can develop this orientation of the spirit.
And I know for sure that every time that I hear Brian Stevenson speak,
not only about his career, about the stories of the people that he is represented,
about the courageous people that have stood up to injustice,
it makes me feel more hopeful.
It's as if he's handed you and me a flashlight and a compass
at the exact moment you think you're lost.
Hope makes you realize that you're not.
And Brian Stevenson isn't just talking about the justice system.
He's not talking about the world at large.
He's talking about your life.
your relationships, your future, your dreams, your ability to keep going when everything in you
feels as though it's going to shut down. Hope is not a mood. It's not passive. It's not something
that you just sit back and wait to feel. Hope, the way that Brian teaches it, this orientation
of your spirit, is a discipline. It's a choice.
it's a muscle. It's a way of standing in the world, even when the world feels unsteady.
And I think that's why this moment rose above so many others this year, because it's true.
He's reminding you of something that is inside of you. And so many of you said the same thing to me,
that hearing Brian talk about hope made you feel hopeful.
a little less overwhelmed, a little less defeated.
You felt him pick up your spirit just a bit.
You felt more capable of choosing the next right thing,
even when life felt heavy.
And if you have not listened to that remarkable episode yet,
I'm telling you,
it's one of the most heart-opening, grounding, clarifying conversations
we've ever had on this show.
It will stay with you as it's stayed with me,
and it's going to strengthen you.
And after a year like this one,
we all need a reminder that hope is not naive.
Hope is necessary.
And I just want to say to you,
I am so proud of you.
I'm proud of the way that you showed up for yourself this year.
I'm proud of you for spending time together with me,
me sitting side by side with me as we have been learning from all of these remarkable people
who have flown in from around the world for one reason. They showed up for you. They showed up because
they believe that you can create a better life. And I believe it too. I'm proud of the things
you've learned, the things you've questioned, and the ways you've grown this year. And I want to
remind you that if there were things that you were inspired to dig deeper into, if there were
episodes after listening today that you wanted to go back to. Scroll down wherever you're listening
through the description and you will see a link to the show notes. The show notes are going to be
packed with links to the episodes that we featured today. They'll be packed with resources for you,
including this gift that my team and I have for you, which is a 20-page workbook that you can
download for free that will walk you through the six questions that my husband and I have been
asking ourselves every single year as a way to complete the year and create a plan to make the
next year one of the best years of our life. So you can find all that in the show notes as a
resource and a gift to you. Thank you, thank you, thank you from the bottom of my heart for letting
me be a part of your life. It is truly one of the best gifts I have ever received. And one more
thing, as your friend, in case no one else tells you this, I wanted to be sure to tell you today
that I love you and I believe in you
and I believe in your ability
to create a better life.
All righty, I will see you in the very next episode.
I'll be there to welcome you in
the moment you hit play.
Okay.
Tell me when you're ready, Trace.
Ready?
Okay.
All right, call Chris.
Oh, my God.
I don't know.
That sounds awfully loud.
Did I say it right?
Thank you.
Oh, wait, no.
I thought,
This one I expected.
I thought we were going into sex here.
We're going Dawn or sex?
Where are we going next?
And his work, and his work has also been featured.
And his work became the subject of an award-winning ESPN film, The Cave Ad-
Okay.
And she has published, check this out.
107 peer-reviewed research papers.
with peer-reviewed research papers,
groundbreaking work on mobility,
molest, how do you say that?
Musculos.
Okay.
Great.
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.
Sirius XM Podcasts.
