The Mel Robbins Podcast - Feel like giving up? Before you say F*** It, listen to this.
Episode Date: January 9, 2023This is the pep talk you need. Change is hard. Which means you’re going to want to quit or give up. I call those moments F*** It Moments. Today’s episode is a little different because you’re... going to hear me get in someone’s face who is about to throw in the towel on a big goal and a promise that she has made. When you hear me coach her, it will be like I’m coaching you. And once you’re done listening, I promise you won’t be saying F*** it, you’ll be saying F*** yes. Xo Mel  PS: If you’re frustrated with somebody in your life who keeps calling it quits, let me do the honors and deliver the ass-kicking for you. For full show notes, including all research mentioned in the episode, go to melrobbins.com/podcast. In this episode, you’ll learn: 2:55: Why I started to cry when it came time to record this episode6:22: The one stupid thing that sent me spiraling into anxiety10:40: What Chris told me when I was ready to quit that made all the difference11:55: What I especially want you to know about you and these F-It moments12:50: Listen in as I coach a woman through her own F** It moment32:15: What triggers most addictive behaviors35:40: What’s REALLY a F*** It moment?37:55: Why F-It moments are actually good38:35: How to process your F*** It moment40:05: One thing I want you to hear loud and clear about screwing up  Disclaimer
Transcript
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Hey, it's Mel and welcome to an absolutely incredible.
Like this is gonna be an amazing episode.
I can feel it of the Mel Robbins podcast.
Let's do this thing.
Oh, okay, I gotta take a breath.
I gotta take a breath because this is one of those episodes
that I love, but they're also nerve-wracking because it's something that's unfolding in real time.
But I just know I need to talk about this, and I know you need to hear it, because this is what's showing up, and so we're going to go for it.
So I'm just going to take a deep breath. First, whether you've been a fan of the show for a long time, or this is the very first
episode that you are listening to, I just wanted to say I'm so glad that you're here.
My name is Mel Robbins.
I'm a New York Times bestselling author and one of the most trusted experts in the world
on behavior change and mindset.
And in fact, we're in a month-long series right now about the foundations of creating a better life.
So I've been covering the research around goal setting, habits, mindset, anxiety, healing, trauma, success, and confidence.
And a couple days ago, I released an episode about the science of goal setting.
And if you haven't listened to it yet, don't worry about it.
You can listen to it right after this one.
Because all these episodes they work together and they also stand alone.
But what happened is that there was this avalanche of questions that came in. And so I walked into the office yesterday
and I had planned on
following up on all the questions and jumping into the science of habits,
which are the topics for the next two episodes
on the podcast.
We've been researching it like crazy.
I was gonna talk all about how you break habits,
how you make habits, and I sat down.
And I mean, we've been researching this for weeks.
And I've been teaching this topic of the science of habits
for years and years and years.
I write about it, but I got behind the mic and I just froze.
I felt this wave of emotion hit me.
It was this like really, oh my God, this like uncomfortable feeling rise up, And my mind went blank.
And when I tell you, I know the science of habits
like the back of my hand.
I mean, I could talk your ear off at a dinner party
about the science of habits and cite all the studies
and explain all the steps.
And here I was yesterday behind the mic.
And my mind went blank.
And I just felt off something was off.
And I even started to cry.
And I know why.
I had a really lousy ending to 2022.
And it came out of nowhere.
I had been working for a long time on all of these incredible
plans that were going to happen the first week of January and just everything when completely sideways.
And so now it's the beginning of the year and it doesn't feel exciting and it doesn't feel like
I've got a clean slate. Honestly, it feels like piles of shit all over the place. And if you want
to know the formula for feeling unhappy, here's what it is. Your expectations for how things
should be right now don't match the reality of how things are. I don't know if anybody
else is feeling this way right now. Doesn't feel like the normal. Woohoo! It's a new year.
And look, I know all about what researchers call the fresh start
effect, how you get this clean slate the moment that the clock strikes midnight on January 1st or
the moment you close your eyes and you blow out the birthday candles. But the fact is, I'm not feeling
the fresh effect right now. I'm feeling the, I feel kind of fucked effect right now. That's how I'm feeling.
And it may strike you as odd to hear that, you know, somebody is inspiring and motivational as
Mel Robbins is going to say, I could honestly give a shit about the new year, new year at this moment
because I've got piles of shits surrounding me that I need to shovel and clean up from last year.
And I honestly thought I was fine. I thought that, okay, all this stuff had happened.
I'd push it in the rearview mirror.
I'm starting January 1, clean slate.
I also committed to doing this crazy challenge
called 75 Hard with my husband and our daughter
and her boyfriend and my brother
and a bunch of other amazing people
and I've been plugging away at it.
And what is 75 Hard?
Because I know you're thinking it means you're not going to drink for 75 days. a bunch of other amazing people, and I've been plugging away at it. And what is 75 hard?
Cause I know you're thinking,
it means you're not gonna drink for 75 days.
That's gonna be kind of hard for me.
It's not like I drink every day,
but I have not gone 75 days without drinking
since I was 16 years old.
You also have to drink a gallon of water every day,
which is not the easiest thing to do
when you've had bladder surgery.
You also have to exercise twice a day, no gluten, no gluten for 75 days.
I haven't gone five days without gluten.
And so I've taken this challenge on and I've been really excited about it.
And I thought, okay, Mel, you're moving, you're grooving, you've got these goals,
you're taking the steps to achieve them, you're feeling excited, you've got your why, you've got your
your will, your way, your how, all the stuff we talked about in the last episode. And then boom,
I woke up yesterday morning and I got triggered. That's what happened. And I bet you're also not feeling the new year new you thing either.
No one in my house is feeling it this year.
I don't know if it's the crappy weather here in southern Vermont where it's been raining
instead of snowing.
I don't know if it's just that it's been kind of a hard couple years.
I don't know what the hell is going on.
All I know is I had my head down and I was plugging away
and I was really proud of myself.
I'm in day four of 75 hard and I am kicking ass
and taking names and I woke up this morning
and you will not believe what triggered me.
Do you want to take a guess?
What sent me spiraling?
My holiday cards.
I woke up this morning,
and the alarm goes off,
and my alarm is one of
those alarms that mimics the sun rise.
So the sun is rising in my room,
and I even have a bird sound now that I know
the research that we covered a couple episodes ago,
and so the birds are chirping.
And the first thing that I saw on my night side stand was a stack of 200 holiday cards.
Now, I should be proud of myself because it's been three years since our family has been able to agree on a photo
and upload it to a website and get the holiday cards printed in time to mail them out three years.
So you would think seeing the stack of holiday cards would make me feel proud. No.
I saw them. They're still wrapped in plastic wrap. I have not even opened them up.
wrapped in plastic wrap. I have not even opened them up. And I see them and I'm like, what the hell, Mel? You have had those things sitting there since the beginning of December. And
you can't seem to get your ship together to get them in the mail. Come on, woman. How
the heck can you possibly get behind a microphone and teach people about the power of habits and the science of habits
when you can't even follow through on the fricking Christmas cards that are sitting on your desk and there.
That was my trigger right there.
The wave of the emotion went flying through my body and I had an experience that you will have when you try to change anything in your life. When you
try to become healthier, when you try to become more organized, when you're playing a bigger
game, when you're trying to learn new habits, when you set big goals. At some point, it's
going to become too much. Some little,ly, weird-ass thing like your Christmas cards
is gonna send you spiraling
and you're gonna have something that I call the fuck it moment.
That little thing triggers a wave of uncomfortable emotion
and you say, fuck it.
Happy fucking New Year.
I'm not doing it this year.
And let me tell you, one small fuck at moment like that
can spiral into a big ass fuck at moment.
Because I first saw those cars and I'm like, fuck it,
I am never gonna get my shit together.
And then I go into the bathroom and I'm like,
oh my god, my ADHD medication, it is completely out.
I just let the prescription run dry.
How the hell am I gonna get through this?
Fuck it. And then I'm like, well, I know what I could do.
I could throw those cards in the trash can.
Fuck it.
I'm not doing it.
How could I possibly talk about the science of habits to you?
When my house looks like this,
my Christmas cards are not mailed.
And I feel like I am surrounded by a ton of shit
that I still need to deal with from last year.
Two days ago change seems easy. Two days ago I'm like, 75 hard, this is 75 easy for me.
And then I woke up and I'm like, I can't do this. And it's going to happen to you. And I felt an
obligation to talk about this because we're doing this series
all month long.
I mean, this show is about creating a better life and part of creating a better life
is having moments that you're going to have to navigate where you get triggered by something
stupid or something profound and all these emotions come up and you say, fuck it.
And I do not want you to give up in those moments.
I do not want you to throw in the towel or throw out the Christmas cards or say, I can't
do it.
I mean, that's what I did yesterday.
I felt that huge wave.
I said, that's it.
Fuck it.
I came up into the office and I started crying and I said to the team, I can't do this.
I can't talk about habits.
I can't even get Christmas cards out in the mail.
I can't do this. I went to my husband and my daughter and I said, I team, I can't do this. I can't talk about habits. I can't even get Christmas cards out in the mail. I can't do this.
I went to my husband and my daughter and I said,
I'm not doing 75 hard.
I got too much going on.
This is not the time for me to do this.
Like I'm setting myself for failure.
And you know what they said?
They said, yes, you can.
Yes, you can.
And they sat there and they listened to me wine
and wine and wine.
And Chris looked at me and he said,
Mel, you got to have a breakthrough. You have to take on something that feels hard and you have
to do it for longer than the month or the, you know, 45 days that you've done in the past.
And right now is the perfect time. The fact that you're feeling the fuck it just four days in,
this is a good thing, Mel, because it's pushing buttons in you.
And you know what, he's right.
He's absolutely right.
And so I went to bed like immediately.
I didn't even want to tempt myself
because I was so frazzled.
I went to bed, I slept all night,
and when I woke up this morning and came up to work,
what was so interesting is that life doesn't always give you what
you want, but it does give you what you need.
And I think, fuck at moments, sometimes are what you need, because you need to see that
you can have a moment where you want to give up, and you can even screw up in those moments.
And you can get back on the transformation train
and you can keep going.
That you are bigger than the fuck at moment.
That the fuck at moment is there to test you.
It's there because it's part of the process of growing.
It is there because you got to learn
how to manage these emotions that are going to come up.
And sure enough, when I came up here this morning, going, okay, everybody, I can do the science of habits
because I did my workout this morning for 75 hard and I've had my half a gallon of water
and I've read my 10 pages of fiction and I'm halfway there and I'm back on the horse.
My team said, you know what, Mal, hold up a second on the science of habits because there's a question that came in from one of the listeners
on the podcast. It might just interest you. It's a question from Liza. And sure enough,
this question does interest me because guess what? Liza? She was having a fuck it moment too. Check this out.
My question is I've been doing really well with a habit and I just broke down a couple
nights ago. So what do you do when you're burned out and you know the right thing to do and
you can't do it?
Boy, can I relate to that that and I know you can too.
And that's why we're going to talk about those fuck it moments today.
And even better, after a short word from our sponsors, we're going to have Liza here.
And we're going to dig in and find out what's actually going on. Welcome back.
We're talking about that moment.
When you're chipping away at changing your life and all of a sudden something happens and
you're like, that's it.
Throw it in the towel.
I'm out.
That's exactly what happened to me yesterday.
It's what happened to Liza.
And so I'm excited because Liza's here.
Liza, welcome to the show.
And I'd love to start by having you ask the question
that you sent to me again.
My question is, I've been doing really well with a habit and I just broke down a couple
nights ago.
Was the end of the day I had these uncomfortable feelings.
I don't know where they were coming from.
So what do you do when you're burned out and you know the right thing to do and you can't
do it?
So tell me specifically the habit that it's drinking.
Okay.
So do you have a problem with drinking or do you just not want to drink
because it's poison and it's impacting how you sleep and it's a good thing not to do.
It's probably a little bit of everything.
Okay.
It's the time has come for me to just give it up
and get on with my life.
Okay.
And how long were you able to not have a drink?
300 odd days.
That's a big deal.
Yeah. So I don't know where this whole thing came from.
I think you do.
So let's talk about what triggered you to reach for whatever it was.
What did you make?
I had some champagne.
Okay.
I had bought some tea for my husband first birthday. Okay. Walk me through
that moment when you basically were like, fuck it. Sunday night we had gone to a parade.
We had seen some friends but I knew that there was another group that I wanted to go be with.
And then when we went to the next party, everybody was drinking.
And for some reason, I just really wanted to drink.
Okay.
And I also was like munching on all of the good munchies, and I've been such a healthy eater
that I felt guilty about my munching on all of the good munchies. And I've been such a healthy eater that I felt guilty about my munching.
I was just very frustrated.
So was it frustration that caused you to drink?
And the reason why I'm digging is because
I wanna figure out what instance,
what emotion specifically triggered you?
And what I wonder is the folks that were at the second party
are they aware that you're no longer drinking?
We did a discussion.
Do you feel shame about the fact that you don't drink?
Do you feel shame about the fact that you don't drink? No, I think it was more I felt like I was missing out.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
I wanted to relax.
Okay.
Well, I can relate to the wanting to relax part.
It's kind of weird because we had had somebody at church who had fainted while she was
reading early, you know, at the beginning of the day.
And that really threw me off.
And I probably had a fear of being alone, you know, because she was alone in town.
And so I thought, well, what if when my husband dies and I'm living somewhere alone, what
would I do?
Maybe that was it.
Do not make yourself wrong.
Because I guarantee you you've been beating yourself up
about this.
Is that right?
Yeah, sure.
But what have you been saying to yourself about it?
to yourself about it.
What am I going to do when it really gets hard?
And how does that make you feel?
It feels like I've lost any kind of progress that I've made.
And I want to be a health coach, so I don't want to be speaking out of both sides of my mouth. Well, you shouldn't be if you're coaching people.
Yeah. And this is a very important breakdown for you because in truly digging deeper
as to what was triggering you and unpacking it for yourself,
you're going to be able to help a lot more people. Because most addictions, most unhealthy habits
are triggered by really uncomfortable feelings and negative emotional states and our inability to tolerate it. And what I want
you to get to the bottom of is what was that core feeling. And maybe it was sadness or a lack
of control. Maybe it was something that is really scary for you to feel. And so the alcohol becomes a
fuck it, a way to numb it, a way to pretend it's not there. And what I want you to
understand is that there are going to be moments that are way more scary and
confronting than being at that party. But if you can choose not to
drink for 300 days because you know it doesn't serve you, you can choose not to
drink in moments that are wildly confronting. And you have not lost progress at
all. All of the hard work that you've done for more than 300 days in a row
are still in your neural pathways. It's still in your nervous system.
And beating yourself up is going to make you feel
disempowered. It's going to make you feel unmotivated
to continue to do the work to stay sober and to make the choice that actually
empowers you.
One of the things that I believe that you need to come up with is mechanisms to coach
yourself through those moments.
And those mechanisms can be anything from, oh, when you notice the
feelings coming up, naming the feelings.
Do I actually want to drink or do I just feel uncomfortable right now?
Simply asking yourself that question when you feel triggered is a way to become more
conscious of what's driving you.
The second thing that you should always do, no matter what, is always have some alternative
beverage that you're excited about. Make sure that you've got a non-alcoholic wine, or you've got
a kombucha, or you've got one of the number of non-alcohol
spirits that are out there, or non-alcoholic beers, so that you can raise your wine glass,
you can feel included, without needing to break the promise that you have with yourself.
Well, I was able to get through the whole party as long I got home.
Oh, now that's interesting. So what happened when you got home?
That's when I went in the French and I fell on the champagne. I went up and watched all
lifetime movie or drank my champagne.
And so when you got home, what were you feeling?
I was like, what is wrong with me? Why do I feel so weird?
It was like I was looking at myself and not knowing what to do next.
Where was your husband?
We have to learn how to be uncomfortable with being,
or be comfortable with being uncomfortable with being uncomfortable
is what they say.
Well, it's, do you believe that?
No, that's what somebody said.
Correct.
You have to learn how to be comfortable being uncomfortable.
Do you believe that?
I'm not comfortable with that.
So.
Okay, but what I'm asking you is, do you actually want to learn how to do that?
Yes.
Okay.
And tell me why you stopped drinking.
Because it was a habit that I was dealing with just about every day.
You're not going to like what I'm about to say. I think you need to go to 90 meetings and 90 days and truly get to the bottom of why
you no longer want to drink and the role that alcohol played in helping you avoid uncomfortable
feelings. Because if you were to go to 90 meetings and 90 days and
just sit and listen, it would be very uncomfortable. And I think it would also
provide a level of support that you need in order to have a profound breakthrough.
And I also believe that this is happening for a reason.
It's happening because you've done so much work on yourself,
and this is now requiring you to level up.
You want to go make a huge difference with people,
and you wanna coach people
in being able to form better habits. If you put on
the, I'm a student of truly understanding how to live in discomfort. And I'm going to
put myself in a situation that I don't want to go to because I can tell you don't want
to do this, do you?
No.
But I wouldn't mind having a breakthrough.
I think this is a bigger deal than your saying it is.
And it's just because of the casual nature of the way that you're talking to me about it. And I want you to have a huge breakthrough in this.
And I believe you told me this because you knew I wouldn't pussy foot around with it.
Thank you for that.
You're welcome.
And your clients are going to need that from you.
And that's why you need it for me.
Now, we've got to take a short break, but when we come back,
Blazza, you're going to tell us,
what can we count on you for? Welcome back.
So I adjust as Liza to go to 90 meetings in 90 days.
Liza, what can I count on you for?
My commitment that I will definitely go to meetings. How many meetings?
See, this is...
The thing is 90 meetings in 90 days.
That's what my friend did.
I don't care about your friend.
What are you gonna do?
90 days, that's what my friend did. I don't care about your friend, what are you gonna do?
Well, maybe there's a reason why this stuff is out there.
I, that's not the answer to the question,
what are you gonna do?
See, you're uncomfortable right now
so you're getting squirmy.
Because what I feel right now
is if we were to end this coaching conversation right now,
I would bet all the money in the
world that you don't do it, because I don't hear commitment from you.
I hear, I need some wiggle room.
And I also don't hear that you see the value in this, that you see the opportunity.
I'm not shaming you.
I hear the power in you.
Right.
I have the power.
I just don't know if the meetings are the thing for me.
I didn't ask you if they were the thing for you.
Is it working for you to do this on your own?
Most of the time, but maybe...
Clearly not. You're asking for advice.
Right. We think that we can do it on our own. It's a hell of a lot easier. Clearly not, you're asking for advice.
We think that we can do it on our own.
It's a hell of a lot easier when you get support.
And if you don't have a problem with alcohol and sitting in a meeting for 90 days won't
trigger you.
Because you'll be there as a student figuring out what does it look like when people are breaking
through things that make them uncomfortable? What does it look like to tell the truth? But I think
you're going to discover that there are layers and layers and layers and layers of this and
probably history and your family and God, you know, who knows what else that you have not gotten to of and the opportunity for your growth is to confront this head on. And there's no shame
in this.
I want to. This is probably the best way to deal.
If you want to, why would you question whether or not going to 90 meetings, 90 days in a row would make a difference.
I don't know, I just never thought it was for me.
I think it's scary to consider that maybe you need more help than you think.
I think the issue is truly saying I have an issue with alcohol and I need support.
That saying that you don't is a way to try to keep control
and stepping into the unknown and saying this is a real issue for me
and I need support and I'm going to go to 90 meetings in 90 days because it's fucking uncomfortable. And I'm going to see what happens. And I think
you're going to have a huge breakthrough, and I think that breakthrough is going to have nothing
to do with alcohol. Oh, yes, it's going to be deep seeded because it's been since I was 16 or
something, really.
Now we're getting somewhere.
This is a coping mechanism.
You reach for alcohol when you're uncomfortable.
And you're not the only one.
And so there's a couple of rules here coming out of this coaching conversation.
Number one, do not make yourself wrong.
I am so proud of you.
I am proud of you for the 300 days. I am proud of you for
asking this question. I am proud of you for telling me what you did because underneath that, I hear
somebody that knows that she is sick of this shit and who's willing to say so and who's also
scared to death of what you're going to find on the other side of this. So I need you to hear that I think you're awesome.
Okay?
Second thing.
Ninety meetings and 90 days and walk in there with an open mind and use it just like you
have used sobriety as a way to get to know yourself better.
It's just an experience.
It's all that it is. And then
number three, stop making yourself wrong. Stop making yourself wrong. Stop making yourself
wrong. Okay. Maybe I need help. We all do. We all do. And I'm proud of you for going to get it.
Thank you very much.
I'm really proud of you.
It's okay to break down.
I can see you trying to hold it together.
Oh, yeah.
What's up?
Yeah.
Well, so stop.
What's coming up for you?
It's probably some form of relief. Well, so stop. What's coming up for you?
It's probably some form of relief.
Say more about that, what do you mean?
So it's always a release for me to cry.
It just makes me feel better.
I think it's a lot of work to hold on to habits, patterns that no longer serve us.
It's not easy, but there's a lot of effort that goes into keeping something that's broken in place.
And I think there is a whole new life on the other side of this for you.
I'm ready.
I can tell. I can't wait to hear how it goes and just know that I'm here cheering for you every step
of the way.
I love you.
So if you're confronted by the conversation we just had because you know there is something
that you're reaching for to cope with uncomfortable feelings and it's the range of stuff everybody. Smoking, vaping, a weed
habit, pornography, shopping addiction, shopping addiction is on the rise. These are all behaviors
that we use to numb out and to distract ourselves and to avoid uncomfortable feelings.
And one of the reasons why it's so easy to form a addiction or a negative habit is because
when you light up a cigarette, you get a drop of dopamine.
And what we've learned from habit research is that it's that drop of dopamine, that reward
when you hit purchase in the shopping cart, or when you watch porn online, or when you
take a hit off a cigarette or a joint, that reward is the dopamine and the release from
distracting yourself or from the guilty pleasure. And that's why these
coping mechanisms form so quickly because you've got the reward there. And it's also why almost
every single addiction that people struggle with or habit that people struggle with breaking, is triggered by a negative emotion,
an uncomfortable feeling.
And so, if you're triggered by this conversation,
you need to take a look at this period,
that there is some kind of pain or emotion
or discomfort that you are avoiding or masking or numbing with emotional
eating, emotional spending, emotional drugging, emotional whatever.
Like it's your way to check the fuck out from these uncomfortable emotions.
Look, my husband was this exact same way. When he left
the restaurant business in 2014, he believed he had failed at life. He began a daily weed habit
to numb out. Period. There have been periods in my life where I can have a glass of wine
or one cocktail, and that's that. And then there are periods where I can have a glass of wine or one cocktail and that's that.
And then there are periods where I know, okay, something else is going on,
Mel, because it's now kind of careening into a bottle of wine or three manhattens.
And so that's my go-to. It also runs in my family, so I'm prone to it neurologically DNA-wise.
But this is the opportunity to truly look at it through the lens of habits.
You are not the problem.
What's triggering you to reach for this thing?
And I want to address one other bigger thing.
There's a huge connection between trauma and addiction because if you've experienced
small tea or capital T trauma,
and we now know that that can include racism,
discrimination, poverty, that when you have this
in your past, a ton of us feel tremendous pain
when you experience trauma, which also leads you
to wanna numb out that pain that you're not quite sure
why you're feeling on edge all the time, which leads you to reach for things.
And so here's what I want to say to you, if you're triggered by this conversation.
Good. Good.
Because I don't want you to spend your whole life numbing out.
You have the ability to experience scary feelings and to not lose
yourself or lose control in those moments. You can get support for this. You can use the science
of habits to also break habits that make you feel like shit. And if you have the courage to admit what's going on to yourself,
I promise you, you got the capability to change it.
Ultimately, you want to know what a fuck it moment is.
It's a moment when you get triggered.
You're just overwhelmed with emotion.
That's it.
It's an inability to handle uncomfortable emotions.
And so we say, fuck it. We go, let's numb out, let's check out, let's throw in the towel.
And I'm here to tell you, those moments are normal and you can tolerate those uncomfortable
feelings. It's almost like instead of chucking the towel,
throwing in the towel,
like I wanted to do with my holiday cards,
how about you visualize ringing the towel out instead?
That almost sitting with that rise of negative emotion
is a lot like letting a towel soak in the water
and then you're just gonna take a deep breath,
and you're gonna ring that towel out.
And then you can like shake it out too.
This is so important because this is a skill that you need.
If you can gather up the strength in the self-awareness
to go, oh, I think I'm having a fuck at moment.
I'm like ready to throw in the towel on this thing.
I'm only seven days into not doing dairy and I want to kill my entire family because I'm so irritable.
Oh, this is a fuck at moment. I'm ready to like just be like, that's it. I don't want to date you
anymore instead of having the conversation because I don't like the emotions that I'm feeling.
like the emotions that I'm feeling. Recognize it because taller rating uncomfortable emotion and then supporting yourself in creating the ability and
the skills to stick to your goals and to chip away at who you want to become.
Well, there's a lot that we've covered
in this short little episode,
and I want to make sure that you do not miss a beat.
And so let me recap all of this,
and you want to listen all the way to the end
because there's a lot that we covered.
Number one, the fuck at moment, it is common.
Number two, when that fuck at moment happens,
do not make yourself wrong. Number three, when that fuck at moment happens, do not make yourself wrong.
Number three, fuck at moments, they're actually really good.
You know what a fuck at moment means?
It means that as you are pushing yourself and as you're taking on new stuff and
as you're attempting and trying to change, a fuck at moment happens when you are
expanding your capacity for new behavior and for new
experiences.
A fuck at moment happens because you have to shed that old stuff that is stored in your
nervous system and you have to shed these old behavior patterns.
And that, that stuff like sends shockwaves through your system.
And here's the other thing, handled correctly.
These moments, they help you grow.
And I also want you to remember, yep,
they're gonna rise up, but they also pass.
And what helps me whenever they come up,
did you notice in my story what I did repeatedly?
I told people, I told people, see when I talk to my colleagues, or I talk to my husband, or I talk to my See, when I talk to my colleagues or I talk to my husband or I talk to my family or
I talk to my friends as something's coming up, it helps me process it.
And instead of just venting at people, just say, hey, I'm going through something.
Do you have the capacity right now to let me just vent for a minute so that people know
it's not about them and that your frustration has nothing to do with them and that they're
also okay to hear it and that they're not going to hear it, and that they're not gonna get,
like, their own fuck at moment by listening to you.
Another thing I want you to know is that you deserve
more help than you're willing to ask for
or even admit that you need.
We all do.
So whether it's 90 meetings and 90 days,
or asking a friend if they'll text you every day
to check in with you on this commitment
that you have that you're working on.
Or maybe it's getting professional advice
or screening biomedical doctor that you've been avoiding.
Seeking help doesn't make you weak, it makes you strong.
And it's also a sign when you seek help
that you are serious about changing,
that you're the kind of person
that doesn't let these moments
and these obstacles that are going to come up, stop you.
You haven't thrown in the towel.
You're just ringing it out when it gets filled with emotion.
And one thing that I want to make sure you hear loud and clear,
let's say you're like me, and you say,
I'm not doing this today. When you
show up tomorrow and you are ready to keep pushing forward, you have not lost
progress. Studies in research say that whether it's three days of progress
before the fog at moment or 300, your progress is still there in your neural
pathways. You are not starting at zero and I think it's really important for you to hear that, because
a lot of times we throw in the towel instead of ringing it out, because we think that we
have screwed up by screwing up once, and that's not the case at all.
Everything that you have worked for is still there, and so I say, fuck it.
Let's keep going.
And in case no one else says this to you today,
I'm gonna say I love you, I believe in you,
and I believe in your ability
to just ring that towel out and keep pushing forward.
And I'll be back in just a couple days
to help you do that by teaching you the science of habits.
Oh, one more thing. It's the legal language.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician,
professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professionals.
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