The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Let Go of What You Can’t Control & Redirect Your Energy
Episode Date: November 4, 2024If you feel a sense of overwhelm, dread, or uncertainty right now, you need to hear this episode.Right now, so many things are out of your control – whether it’s global events, elections, a health... diagnosis, or news you’re waiting on.In today’s deeply personal episode, Mel is sharing her best tools to deal with overthinking and negative thoughts. Your worries are stealing the joy and peace you deserve. And by the time you finish listening, you’ll feel more calm, grounded, and ready to handle whatever challenge comes your way.For more resources, including links to the studies mentioned in the episode, click here for the podcast episode page. What should you listen to next? Check out this episode about a powerful tool you can use to start every morning strong, no matter what is happening around you: Start Strong: Do This Every Morning to Get Out of Bed, Beat Anxiety, and Feel Incredible All DayConnect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeGet Mel’s new book, The Let Them TheoryFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
Transcript
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Are you ever just going about your day and then out of nowhere comes this thought?
And it's not just that.
It's like this thought just gets stuck in your head and then you get this sinking feeling
in your gut and you start to feel yourself brace. It's like you're paralyzed. You feel it in your body. You feel it in your
mind and next thing you know, you're spiraling. That's dread. And I know you've been dreading
a lot lately because you've been writing in and telling me about your dread over the election. While it's normal to feel yourself brace
in these moments of uncertainty,
it doesn't have to be that way.
You don't have to live like that.
And today, you and I are gonna stare down that dread
that you may be feeling,
that thing that you may be bracing for,
and we're gonna dissolve it with three big takeaways.
These are simple tools you can apply in your life right now whenever you feel yourself
brace.
I know there's a lot happening and there is a lot on your shoulders right now.
It feels like the world is holding in one big breath.
But today, you and I are going to exhale.
It's your friend Mel, and I am so excited that you are here with me.
It is always such an honor to be able to spend time together with you.
And if you're brand new,
I just want to take a moment and welcome you
to the Mel Robbins Podcast family.
I'm thrilled that you're here.
And I know that you're the kind of person
who values your time and you're interested in learning
about simple ways that you can improve your life.
And I love that you chose this episode
because we're going to talk about a topic that feels heavy,
but we're going to unpack it in a way that is going to be so empowering.
And I wanted to talk about the topic of dread for a number of reasons.
And the first reason is because here in the United States,
there are two things going on that people are dreading.
One is the fact that it's the time of year where we turn the clocks back.
And so it is literally dark at four o'clock in the afternoon,
at least where I live.
And people dread this.
The other thing that's going on right now
is we're in the middle of a very contentious election.
And I gotta just say right off the bat,
we are not gonna have a political conversation today.
This show is a respite from all the tension and politics
and scary news that's going on globally.
But all of these things, whether you're listening in the US
or you're listening in a country
where there's contentious politics
or you're torn apart by war
or there's something going on in your family,
we all have experiences where there are things going on
outside of us that
feel way beyond our control.
And in those moments in life, whether it's winter coming, whether it's something extremely
important like an election, and how that's going to impact people and their rights and
what's going to happen and how it impacts the economy at a national or global level.
These are really important issues.
Maybe you have somebody in your family
that's gotten a health diagnosis, or you have,
or maybe there's a conversation
that you need to have with somebody.
Maybe you're breaking up with somebody.
Maybe you need to talk to somebody about their drinking
or you're worried about them.
Maybe you need to give somebody feedback at work
or you have a huge test or
presentation coming up and you're bracing and you're dreading it. I want to talk about
this experience that is extremely normal and it happens more in your day than you realize it, which is bracing and dreading something
that is happening around you.
Whether it's global, whether it's national,
whether it's seasonal, whether it's in your family,
whether it's at work, whether it's in your love life.
Heck, you might just be dreading the fact
that you sent a text to somebody a couple days ago
and they haven't responded.
And I had this experience recently that made me think about this because my husband and I
went away and we, it's the first trip we've taken together where we've gone away for more than
for more than a long weekend. No kids, no friends,
no kind of work to do while we're traveling,
no family to visit.
First time Chris and I have gone away
for more than three days a long weekend in 28 years.
Like the last time we did this,
we were going on our honeymoon.
And so we go away and we went somewhere spectacular.
We went all the way to Bali and it sounds so sexy
and it was absolutely amazing.
And it's a place I've always wanted to go.
And one of the great things about traveling
for work for so long is I have a bajillion airline points.
Like that's the only good thing about traveling for work.
And so we go all the way to Indonesia. a jillion airline points. Like that's the only good thing about traveling for work.
And so we go all the way to Indonesia.
We have this fantastic time where we do nothing.
We were on a scooter, we're driving around in the jungle.
We are doing yoga classes, we're reconnecting.
Turns out I really like Chris.
Like, you know, after 30 years of being together,
we really like each other.
And I'm really excited now about all this time
that we can spend together.
So we're flying back and we have to take two flights. This is like a 26 hour trip and I'm
just talking the amount of time we have to spend in planes. So we fly from Indonesia to Dubai
and these planes, I'm like a kid on these planes.
These are the biggest planes I have ever seen
in my entire life.
I had never been on a plane that's a double decker.
I didn't know there were planes that have staircases.
I mean, that's unbelievable.
And so we get onto the plane and like both planes, both ways are double deckers.
Like it's literally like walking into a shopping mall that lifts off the ground and flies. Like it
is just fantastical to me that human beings have figured out how to take something that big and
get it off the ground and keep it in the air for that long?
I mean, it is just mind blowing.
So I'm just super excited, right?
And I'm not a nervous flier at all.
I've flown so much.
I've gotten over my fear of flying.
And so we are on the fourth flight.
We have gone to Indonesia.
We have had our amazing trip.
We have flown the first leg back.
We changed planes in Dubai. I know we have a the first leg back. We changed planes in Dubai.
I know we have a ton of fans that listen
to the show in Dubai.
So hi, a lot of you said hello in the airport.
True about Indonesia too.
Lots of fans.
So it was so fun to meet you guys.
We are on the final flight home.
I am so excited.
We are three hours out from landing at JFK.
We are on the double-decker.
Like we're up top.
Like, this is so fun.
Chris is sitting next to me.
And the cool thing about a plane this big, these suckers don't move.
Like, this is like flying on a stick of butter.
I mean, this sucker is cutting through the air.
There's no bounce.
There's no nothing.
There's nothing.
So we are over Iceland.
Hello to our fans in Iceland.
And all of a sudden the plane starts,
ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba.
It's like you're on a boat.
You got a light chop, right?
Not a big deal.
Then it starts to feel like you got rollers coming.
So it's now like this sensation.
This thing's the size of a shopping mall.
I mean, this is a big object
for it to be going up and down some rollers in the sky.
And that's one trick that I use when there's turbulence is I just close my eyes and I think
about being on a boat.
Choppy water, choppy air.
All of a sudden, the captain's like, turn to the please, take your seats, take your
seats, please, take your seats.
And I'm like one of these people that's hypervigilant. So I'm like,
is that alarm in their voice? I'm detecting a little bit of nervousness. When that happens,
I start looking for cues. So now I'm looking as the attendants are racing down the aisles
for hints of nervousness. Are they concerned? Do they look scared? And there was definitely, you know how,
like when if you've ever valet parked your car and you come out to get that and there's the valet
jog where they sort of trot to get the car, they're not like running. This was faster than a valet
trot. So a little bit of speed in there and I'm like, okay, slightly concerned.
I know that way, okay.
Because I'm already slightly concerned
that we've gone from light shop to this shopping mall
in the sky is now starting to go up and down.
I wanna tell you,
this is the worst turbulence I've ever been in my life.
This is the worst turbulence I've ever been in my life. This plane, and this sucker is huge,
is literally swinging left to right through the air.
It's not even going up and down.
It's like you can see it swirling.
And this is when I realized, oh my gosh,
Helena, the hurricane, this is probably all that wind.
Now, the worst part of this,
other than the fact that when this happens
and you feel like the trays bouncing
and people's luggage bouncing
and the planes kind of going through like weird things,
shapes and stuff.
The pilots are not saying anything. And I would just like to make a public service announcement
to every airline and every pilot who may be listening and every pilot in your life,
please send this to the pilots in your life and to the people that work at the airlines.
Could you please train pilots to just give us a heads up?
Cause you know this is coming.
And if you simply just said,
hey everybody, just want to let you know,
we're about three hours out from JFK
and due to the, you know, Helena, we got some strong winds.
And I think we're going to go through some
pretty significant shop and some rock for the next two,
and you know, 25 minutes.
If you could just strap in and for the safety,
like in a calm, smooth, velvety voice,
I would have no problem.
I'd put my headphones on and be like,
okay, you've told me the time.
I don't have to worry about this.
I now know with a certain level
of certainty that we will survive.
The pilots know this is coming and
the pilots are actually in control.
So they're warning us about this.
But when this stuff hits and there's like
and there's that nervousness,
literally I need to be wearing a diaper at that point.
Like I am like, what is happening?
And haven't you ever noticed that the second
that they make that announcement and you're like,
I now need to go to the bathroom,
but now I can't get out of my seat.
And now I'm trapped with my bladder
and the fact that I have to have diarrhea right now
because I literally feel like I'm about to die.
And that's exactly what happened.
I didn't poop myself, but I started bracing
and the worse the turbulence got
and the more time that went,
the more I just went south in my head.
This sucker's going down.
I am never gonna see my children again.
Why did we go to Indonesia in the first place?
We didn't need to take a vacation.
I should have stayed like,
I'm never gonna see my daughter's wedding
or meet my grandchildren.
I'm never gonna go back.
I just literally just go south and now I'm in full to go back. I just literally just go south, and now I'm in full-on brace mode.
And the interesting thing is my husband's been meditating for 15 years.
The man was sitting there like a Buddhist statue with his eyes closed
and his hands in a mudra as I'm having a full-blown brace,
I'm about to die moment in my seat,
which goes to show you something.
You can choose how you respond
to the things that are happening around you.
Chris was not allowing himself to get concerned.
I, on the other hand, was spiraling
and in a state of bracing and dread
and just like, oh my gosh.
And the thing that's interesting about this
is I'm a very pragmatic and rational person,
very logical person, even though I'm super emotional.
I could think in my head, okay, this is just the tailwinds
or the winds from the hurricane and the likelihood is X,
but I can't grasp those rational thoughts
when I allow the dread and the brace to take over
because I'm now convincing myself we're about to die.
to take over because I'm now convincing myself we're about to die.
And the fact is that there is nothing I can do
to change what's about to happen.
I can't fly a plane.
I can't change the weather.
I can't change what the pilots are gonna do.
The only thing I have control over in that moment
when I brace and dread and fear take over
is what I can do and how I feel
and what I allow myself to think about
and what I don't in that moment.
And seeing Chris so calm made me go,
okay, let's just take a deep breath.
And one of the first things that I did,
because this is one of the things I've learned
over and over and over again,
not only in the work that I do,
but with all of the people that we've talked with
on the podcast, is that there are approaches
in situations
where there's a lot of uncertainty.
And again, if we go back to the broader topic
of just uncertainty around you and what you can control
and what you can't control,
and even when everything is major high stakes,
like a very big election or a country torn apart by war,
or a wedding that you need to call off,
or a diagnosis, or a funeral.
Even in those situations, there are things
that are within your control and things that are not.
And what I have found in my life
is that I am very easily hijacked.
I brace, like I can slam on the brakes and hit the bracing and do the alarm as better
than anybody.
It's like, let's go.
But it doesn't help me.
In fact, it hurts me.
And the worry that consumes me and the death spiral of the thoughts and the racing heart
and the stress and the racing heart and the stress
and the bracing and the whole mechanism that is your mind
and then from the neck down your body,
it actually hurts you in those moments.
And that's what I've found over and over and over again.
I have avoided breaking up with people for over a year
because I couldn't move through the dread.
I have avoided getting out of bed at the worst moments of my life because I couldn't move through
the dread. The dread is not the problem. It's that you allow it to consume you. And I want to talk
about the fact that there's another way to meet these moments. And what happened on that plane is I tortured myself for probably 10 minutes and I death gripped Chris's hand.
So like my wet, slimy, sweaty, now I'm grabbing the poor man and I'm like basically not only
have I like snapped him out of his mudra and his meditation state, but I'm almost like
breaking the digits on his hand
as I'm gripping it.
And he kind of snaps out of meditation like,
I'm really scared.
And he's like, let's breathe.
And so he did this technique with me.
You may know it, it's box breathing.
It's just a simple technique.
I even know this.
And here's the thing, when you start bracing
and when you dread something,
what we're gonna talk about today is that your physiology,
your neurology, your psychology
overrides everything that you know.
And you can't access your tools.
But the tools work.
Box breathing is four breaths in, hold it four breaths,
breathe out for four breaths, hold it for four breaths.
That's it, that's all it is, four, four, four, four.
It's a box.
So Chris is like.
Ffff.
Ffff.
And then he starts counting.
One, two, three, four, hold.
One, two, three, four, out.
One, two, three, four, hold.
One, two, three, four.
And so we get into this rhythm.
And the thing about box breathing
is it signals to your body that you're okay,
because you're slowing your breathing.
And when you're bracing, what you'll notice,
like if you've ever had to break up with somebody,
that walk up to their apartment or up to the public cafe
that you're meeting them at,
because you know you don't want to be alone
when they explode at you,
and you want to be able to get out of there
after you've had the conversation
and said what you need to say,
you want to go, you don't want to be trapped
where they are.
That walk up, oh man, you don't even breathe on the way there because you're bracing.
Walking into a hospital to have a procedure, you're bracing.
Turbulence on a plane, bracing.
Waiting for election results, bracing.
Waiting for winter to come, bracing.
Very normal experience, but I'm here to tell you
and teach you what you can do in moments when it feels
like the world is spiraling out of control
or your family is, or your heart is,
and you're dreading what you need to face,
and you're scared about how things are gonna turn out,
or you're avoiding it because you don't want to have to face it.
There's another way. There's a better way.
There are simple tools we're going to teach you today that I use when I can remember them,
and that you can use because I'll tell you what happened with the plane.
Nothing. The captain came on and started talking,
and the co-captain came on and he started talking.
And they were like, hey, sorry about that.
Like super casual.
I'm like, what, what?
I've been sitting here, literally,
I've got a movie in my mind that you guys are freaking out
and you're so busy touching all the dials up there.
They got no time to make an announcement
for the normal people back here
who are literally freaking out and planning their funerals
and texting everybody that they love,
I love you, I said, which I did.
I sent the, I love you chat in the family.
I'm so proud of all of you.
Didn't wanna worry them by saying,
I think the plane's gonna go down.
Like you don't wanna do that, right?
So I've got this like whole story in my mind
that wasn't true.
They're just up there bouncing and riding the waves and doing I don't know what.
They're like, hey, sorry about that.
We're looking for some light air.
And next thing you know,
we got 10 more minutes.
I'm good with that. I let go of Chris's hands and it's crumpled up now
because I've been death ripping it like Iron Man.
He goes back to the mudras and the meditating
and I put my headphones on
and I start listening to my book again.
And that's how quickly you can settle yourself
if you understand the wave that comes
and you understand that you have control
and you understand how to settle your body
and then you pay attention to the input that you need
so that you can redirect your own thoughts.
Yes, you will be hijacked.
No, you do not have to stay there.
And in fact, I don't want you to.
Because you bracing doesn't help, it actually hurts you.
And you have more power when you learn how to settle into these moments and stay present
and calm and focused on what's within your reach and what isn't.
And that's exactly what we're going to talk about today.
So don't you go anywhere.
Because I want to hear a short word from our sponsors.
And when we come back, I'm going to introduce you to my colleague Phil.
And we are going to unpack this incredibly interesting and important and deep topic about
dread. And I'm also really excited because at the very end, we are going to answer some of your questions.
Our inbox has been filled with questions from you around the world about the things that you are dreading.
And it's one of the reasons why I wanted to talk about this, not just what's happening here in the United States.
I wanted to talk about this because this is happening in your lives around the world. And so at the end, we're going to dive into some of
the top themes and questions that we're seeing from you at MelRobbins.com slash podcast,
which is where you can submit your questions. So let's hear a word from our sponsors. And
don't you dare go anywhere because I'm going to be waiting for you after a short break.
Stay with me. Welcome back. It's your friend Mel. I am so glad that you're here with me today because you and I are going to unpack this topic of dread.
And I wanted to talk about it because of just kind of the,
I don't know, just like the emotions that are happening
in the U.S. right now,
but also because of what you are writing in about
and what's happening around the world
and the, I don't know,
the emotional impact that you're having
on the world right now, but also
because of what you are writing in about and what's happening around the world and the
things that everybody dreads from the little things like getting out of bed in the morning
to the big things like a big diagnosis or the state of politics in the country that
you live in.
Like there's so many things that make you brace in life.
And so we were talking about this as a team, and there's a new member of our team named
Phil who has joined us as a producer.
And he started sharing his story about something that had happened in his life that was personal,
that related to Dread.
And so I was like, Phil, how about you hop on the mic with me tomorrow morning?
Let's talk about this.
And he was like, game on, let's go.
And so Phil, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you.
It's an honor, Mel.
So Phil, I would love to start with, why don't you just kind of share the story about what's
going on in your life that had you feeling this sense of dread?
Sure. that had you feeling this sense of dread? Sure, so, you know, my father, a very stoic guy,
doesn't kind of tell you when he's having a problem,
just gets on with the day,
but he started to take a turn in his health,
wasn't feeling very good,
and eventually we got an answer,
and the answer was he was diagnosed with cancer.
This was about a month ago. Now
the doctor told him it's very treatable and immediately allayed any dread he had in the
moment about that just by giving him the facts. But then he said, let's do a PET scan just
to make sure it hasn't spread. That's like three weeks away. You don't go right into
the hospital and get the PET scan.
You're on a list. You wait. Okay. So now let's go to that moment. Like what happens for you,
Phil, when, okay, your dad gets a cancer diagnosis, everybody's tenses up and starts bracing. Okay,
now it's a treatable cancer. Now we're relaxed. Now we're back into the PET scan. Like what happens
for you when dread hits you? Right. So well, in that moment, you know, the diagnosis to begin with,
your brain immediately goes to the worst case scenario.
Yeah. This is it.
It's going to be horrible. All of that stuff.
But I try to take control very quickly of that by saying, you know what?
I have no control over that.
He doesn't have control over that.
But let's see what we can control.
And what's that?
It's paying attention to your doctor.
It's shutting out the noise from what the medical sites say online.
It's maybe not even listening to your friends who are well-intentioned, but might be leading
you down a wrong path.
It's focusing on the parts of your health
that you know you can control. Eating right, going for a walk, meditating, and
that's all you can do. That's true. So when they said PET scan and now you got
three weeks of the unknown, what happens for you when you feel yourself dreading?
Well, I go back to that place where I was initially. I go back to that dread of, oh
my gosh, this is going to be horrible. It's going to be the worst news ever. And it's just like training
a muscle. I very quickly try to take myself out of that and go back to what can we control?
And it's the same things. You know, nothing's changed between the diagnosis and the PET
scan. It's take care of yourself and we'll see what happens.
And what happened?
Well, the results came back and the cancer has not spread.
That's fantastic news.
It's huge.
But what did you notice when you got that news?
My shoulders dropped. I took a deep breath. I was here at the studio.
I was in the elevator going downstairs. I got the text from
Mom. That's a beautiful visual because I also see as an elevator is going down, I see your shoulders
dropping and the bracing dropping and the kind of exhale because even when we try to rationalize these things and focus on other things, our body still braces.
Right.
And so there are two tools that I think are just,
we're gonna keep coming back to it,
I'm gonna keep reminding you as you're listening.
There's the tools that Phil is talking about
where you are reminding yourself
to focus on what you can control.
And then there are the tools that are from the neck down, which is learning how to drop
into your body and calm your body state from one of Bracings.
I think it's really interesting that you're using all the intellectual tools to keep your
mind focused on what you can control, which certainly helps.
But at the same time, your body is still in a brace mode,
whether you realize it or not.
And that's where the second tools come in
of understanding that this is both head and body,
and learning how to use even just the breathing technique
that I described when I was on the plane
of breathing in for four seconds,
holding it for four seconds, breathing out for four seconds,
holding it for four seconds, that box breathing,
signaling to my body that we're okay,
even though I was terrified the plane was gonna go down.
It just allows that elevator in your nervous system to slowly
lower so you're not subconsciously breaking.
Leave it to you to find the perfect metaphor in how I got it.
You're the one in the elevator, dude.
Yeah, but I hadn't even made the connection. And that's such a beautiful way to put it.
And the doors open, walked outside, it was a nice sunny day. And it was like being in a new reality.
See, I think that is a beautiful piece to the story, Phil,
because that is what's available.
Even though I was in that plane and for probably 10 to 15 minutes,
I was swirling in my head, imagining my funeral, imagining the fire.
And I get really dark.
I'm like, okay, is this thing exploding?
Is this gonna be a 10 minute free fall?
And my husband is very stoic like you.
And so as I turned to him and I'm like, I'm really scared.
And then he held my hand, which helped.
And this is before the box breathing.
I'm like, I'm really scared, we're gonna go down.
He literally turns me and he's like,
well, you'll be unconscious at the last 10 seconds.
I'm like, what? This is your way to relax down. He literally turns to me and he's like, well, you'll be unconscious at the last 10 seconds. I'm like, what do you, what, what, what?
This is your way to relax?
Now my ears are up on top of my head.
Now I'm like really bracing for this.
But it was when the box breathing,
four in, hold it, four out, hold it, holding Chris's hand
and then starting to visualize truly
that things are gonna be okay and visualize the open doors,
the sunny day, a future state that allowed me to drop
in to that moment.
And I'll tell you, the plane kept bouncing and swinging
and doing all these crazy things,
but I was in a physical state, Phil,
just like you were when the doors opened on the elevator
and you walked out to a sunny day.
And I think that's a thousand percent what's available
to you in any situation where you feel like things
happening around you are out of your control.
Steadying yourself and your physical body and trying your best to focus
your mind on things you can control and on an optimistic outlook.
Because you know, what if it does work out?
We're so quick to jump to the negative.
Like I'm thinking about dying on a plane, you're thinking about your dad.
You know, what is it about our parents, by the way, I just have to say, because I'm thinking
about my father.
He had this situation where he passed out on a golf course.
My parents didn't even tell me and my brother.
They go and get it checked out
because they're worried about vertigo.
And they have an incidental finding
where the guy has an intact aneurysm.
And now they're going to University of Michigan
to do this massive brain surgery
where they're gonna literally take the top of his noggin off
and it's amazing what doctors can do
and literally clamp an aneurysm
before it explodes and kills him.
And then they're gonna put the noggin back on
and staple it all together.
So my parents are going through this, Phil, for two weeks.
And then they pick up the phone and they're like,
well, we got something to tell you.
We didn't want to tell you till we knew for sure,
but dad needs brain surgery and he has an aneurysm
that could explode at any moment.
We're like, what?
You can live here with us for two weeks?
The line from parents often is, oh, we
didn't want you to worry.
Yes. As if you're not going to worry about it when you do find out. Yes. And then be mad that
you didn't tell me. And now I'm really bracing because now this sounds really terrible. But I
can see both sides. I don't know. I think that's a common experience. Just a quote I found from
Dalai Lama, who is a smart person, just talking about how if-
Here, let me read it real quick.
Right, yeah.
So I love this quote from the Dalai Lama.
If a problem is fixable,
if a situation is such that you can do something about it,
then there's no need to worry.
If it's not fixable, then there is no help in worrying.
There is no benefit in worrying whatsoever.
And that's actually true.
Because unless you're worrying about it so that you can solve the problem and come up
with solutions, worrying doesn't fix anything. It just really frustrates you and stresses you out
and keeps you stressed.
And there's a study from Cornell that found that 85%
of the things that people worry about
actually never come to pass.
And of the remaining check,
I think this is the even more important thing. So if you think about the fact that 85% of the remaining check, I think this is the even more important thing.
So if you think about the fact that 85% of the stuff that you worry about, that you probably
then start dreading, right?
Never even happened.
So what a gigantic waste of time and energy.
What a sad thing to do to yourself in your life.
But here I think is the even more important thing to lean into.
Because I know you might be listening, and you might go, yeah, but 15% of the things do come true, Mel. So how do I know if the thing that I'm worrying about is actually the 15%
that come true or the 80% that don't? Well, here's what I want to tell you.
Of the remaining 15%, I'll give you this, that actually come true that you're worried about,
78% of people find that the thing
that you were worried about, that challenge,
it's easier to handle than you expected,
and that you learned something valuable from it.
That's incredible, which means the worrying
actually didn't help you with it anyway.
And so the things that actually happen,
the majority of them you don't even need to be worrying about because it's easier
than you think and you're going to learn something from it anyway.
And so if you can face uncertainty in these moments,
not with bracing and dread,
but with the ability to go,
okay, I'm going to be able to handle this, and I'm going to learn something about this.
Then you are able to show up differently and focus on the things you can control,
what you think, what you say, what you do. And that's pretty cool. Really cool.
What if it all works out? What if it all works out?
What if it all works out?
And no matter what, it does because worst case scenario,
you're going to learn something.
That's true.
That's an awesome way to look at things.
And so I feel like that's a tool too.
The next time that you feel a situation coming up
and you feel yourself dreading it, embracing,
you've already presumed it's going horrible, which means you're going to get hijacked and
you're going to align your thoughts and actions and feelings with it going horrible.
And the truth is, it's always just uncertain.
And that creates an opportunity for you to learn this incredible skill of living with uncertainty.
And coaching yourself through these moments by saying,
well, if we're uncertain how it's going to go and how could I know the funeral hasn't happened yet,
we don't know the diagnosis yet, We haven't had the breakup conversation yet.
I haven't done the presentation yet.
I don't need to dread this,
but I can create room for uncertainty
as I sit here on this plane,
or as I prepare for this presentation,
or as I walk to that person's apartment
knowing that I need to sit them down
and tell them that this isn't working.
If I can keep myself in uncertainty,
then I can keep myself in the space
of what if this all works out?
What if this is, even if it's bad, it works out.
Even if this is uncomfortable, it works out.
You stay there and now you're building
this extraordinary skill that we all need in life
of navigating these moments.
And instead of bracing and assuming the worst and just like hijacking it, actually staying
steady.
Wow, that's a really good insight.
It sounds to me like when you do let dread take over, are you almost manifesting things going wrong?
It's bigger than manifesting.
Now, it's a good word.
This is a super interesting topic.
So there's a couple things happening when dread takes over because dread is literally
anticipating the worst.
And when you start to focus on the negative, it triggers you to go from a state where you're
really present to the alarm system in your body going to fight, flight, or freeze. This is
evolutionary. This is hardwired in you.
It is a defense mechanism that actually protects you.
And it keeps you in many ways alive.
And I can tell you right now,
like if the fire alarm went off right now in this building
and we smelled smoke,
the fire alarm inside your body and my body
would also go off.
Fight, flight, freeze, like run, right? And we would literally run out of this place.
And if we were running out of this place, there is no way you and I could do a math problem
at the same time. Because your body's wiring takes over to keep you safe.
And that's why this is kind of bigger than manifesting.
It's actually hard wiring in your body.
There's something that a lot of experts
that come on the show,
or if you're interested in neuroscience,
they talk about this negativity bias in your mind.
Your mind is wired to magnify things that are negative or things
that are scary or things that could go wrong as an attempt to try to protect you and to keep you
safe. Like if we're on a hike, your mind is likely to spot the rattlesnake over there because it's
dangerous versus the leaf that's turning orange, which is beautiful.
Because if your brain can see the rattlesnake, it can keep you away from it.
And that's a good thing, except for when you start to feel this sense of dread and bracing
and being in this mode all the time where all you can do is think about what could go wrong
or beat yourself up.
And so what happens is you don't just manifest the negative,
you put yourself into a mental, physical,
and spiritual space that is very negative.
And that overrides your ability to think,
to problem solve, to be calm, to be present.
And back to your word manifesting,
because you're in a negative state
and because your energy is bad
and because you can't actually tap into your thinking
and because you're now spiraling,
you actually do create more bad because you're now spiraling, you actually do create more bad.
Because you're living in this mindset that everything is falling apart and you also can't
take the proactive steps to make things better.
And so yes, it's partially just the hard wiring.
And I do think that when you get hijacked like that, you attract more negativity.
You cause more negativity
because you can't meet the moment. And the truth is, if you recognize what's happening in the moment,
you can absolutely train yourself to go, oh, this is what Mel was talking about with Phil.
This is that moment of dread. This is where my shoulders are going up. This is where I feel myself
procrastinating because I'm stressed. I don't have to do this. I can settle myself with breathing in for four, holding it, breathing
out, holding it. I can just do the box breathing. I can tell myself what if everything works
out. I can remind myself there are things I can focus on that are within my control.
I can remind myself that if I get a good night's sleep instead of drinking an entire bottle
of gin right now because I'm nervous, that probably helped me. I can remind myself that if I get a good night's sleep instead of drinking an entire bottle of gin right now because I'm nervous, that'd probably help me.
I can remind myself that even though I'm stressed out, I can prepare for this speech.
I can eat a healthy dinner, which is going to help me in the thing I need to do tomorrow.
I can remind myself that even though I'm terrified of the conversation that I'm dreading, that
I'm going to get through this.
And this is important to break up and do what I need to do,
even though it's going to hurt somebody,
or they're going to be disappointed,
and I'm dreading this.
And so that 1,000% is why this matters so much.
It doesn't change the horrible thing.
Like, I think a lot about that moment in my life
where I was getting ready to go to a friend's funeral.
Anytime you go to a funeral, you dread it.
Like it's just something you don't want to have to do.
In this particular case,
it was also somebody who had died by suicide and was a very,
very close friend of ours and he was like the second father to our daughter.
And it just was horrifically awful.
And I remember just bracing and feeling like,
I don't want to do this.
I don't like, this can't be what's happening.
And I ended up just sitting down and settling myself.
I remember it like it was yesterday,
and this was probably, God, like 14 years ago.
I remember I didn't have a bra on yet.
I was sitting on the edge of the bed with my pants on,
and my shoes were on the floor.
And I just sat there and I put my hand on my heart
and I said,
it's gonna be okay, you can get through this.
You need to be present for his kids and his family,
and you need to be present for your kids and your husband
because they loved him too.
And getting into this mode where you, Mal,
leave your body and you're not present for this,
celebration and mourning of this person
that so many people love,
that's not the way you wanna show up right now,
even though this shit's really hard.
And so I remember just consciously,
I don't know, I don't think I knew
about box breathing back then, but I just kind of instinctually put my hand in my heart And so I remember just consciously, I don't know, I don't think I knew about
box breathing back then,
but I just kind of instinctually put my hand on my heart
and just said, we're gonna get through this.
Like no matter what happens today,
we're gonna get through this
and I wanna be present for his kids
and I wanna be present for him
and I wanna be present for my kids
and my daughter in particular.
And just settling yourself and reminding yourself
that even though you don't want to go through this,
you are stronger than this moment
and being present for it
and moving through it in a way
where you are connected to yourself
and you are reminding yourself that you are going to yourself, and you are reminding yourself
that you are going to be OK and that you're not
going to go through this alone.
And to just keep showing up and to believe,
that's how I settled myself and got through that moment.
Because had I allowed all of that to consume me,
I probably wouldn't remember anything about that
day or anything about that moment. And it was an absolutely breathtaking
celebration of him. And I remember every single detail. And I was able to show up,
you know, for my daughter in a way that I wouldn't have been able to if I had been just
dreading it.
And so I think there are these moments where you're deeply scared like I was on the plane.
Or maybe your dad was when he got the diagnosis or my dad and mom were when they got his diagnosis
where you nurture yourself.
And then there are these moments where you need to rise above this
dread because you actually have to show up for someone else.
No matter what, I feel like it builds resilience in you to, to show up,
to give yourself that, that courage, that trust that you can make it through.
You look back on that service for your friend now,
that'll never not hurt to have lost him,
but how do you feel knowing that you were fully there
for one of the most difficult moments?
I'm definitely really proud of myself.
Like I think it would have been, you know,
this is a weird thing.
I think you need to do what you need to do,
but it would have been really selfish of me
to allow my own upset to consume me.
And everybody needs to mourn the way that they need to mourn.
But I also oftentimes, at least when I think about my own past, there are a lot of things that I allowed get to me that I kind of feel like weren't mine to be upset about. This was one,
but you are capable of rising above these moments. You are capable of showing up in ways
for other people that really matter.
You are capable of not getting sucked into drama.
And you are certainly capable of recognizing
when in life you're in control and when you're not,
and what you're in control of and what you're not.
I love this.
This feels like a great moment to hit the pause
and give our amazing sponsors a chance
to share a few words with you.
Please also share this with somebody that you love
because this is part of the hard wiring of human beings,
but it doesn't have to control your life
or run your day to day.
And for too many people,
especially based on what I am seeing in the inbox from those of you listening to this show, this is something that is dominating
your day to day life, this feeling of bracing. And so share this with people that you care
about and don't go anywhere because Phil and I are going to be waiting for you after a
short break and a little bit later, we are going to be getting to your questions. And
I know you're going to see yourself and the people that you love in the questions
and in the answers, and you're going to want to hear it.
So stay with us. We'll be right back.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins.
Today, I am joined by one of the producers on our team, Phil.
We are unpacking
this topic of dread and giving you very simple tools to help you take control of what you
can control in those moments in life where you feel yourself brace or you feel yourself
worry or you feel yourself starting to get really gripped about what's happening over there.
And we're teaching you how to come back to the power that you always have in here.
And I'll go back to the plane story that I told in the very beginning.
There have been times in my life several decades ago where I was on a plane
that suddenly drops, and then the air bags drop and then they start
swinging which they don't so in those cute videos, you know, and then the air conditioning
starts to condense and people start crying and screaming.
I'll tell you, your life flashes before your eyes when that happens.
And I was lucky because when that happened, it was over in a matter of two or three minutes.
And the pilot came on and just said,
wow, we just hit a huge air pocket.
Sorry about that.
Really scary.
We're going to stay at a lower altitude.
There's nothing wrong.
You don't need to wear the air masks.
But I just want to go over the safety instructions again.
Whatever. We land in like 30 minutes. But I just want to go over the safety instructions again, whatever.
We land in like 30 minutes.
In those 30 minutes, I took stock of my entire life.
And I realized there were a lot of things about myself that I wanted to change.
And if you are in a moment where you have kind of one of those experiences where you really, the thing you're dreading
is whether or not you're gonna make it.
It's incredible what a reality check that is
of how short life actually is.
And in a moment, you're gonna realize what matters.
And what matters are the people that you care about
and the state of your
relationships and whether or not you are showing up and whether or not you are loving and whether
or not you are loved, whether or not you are prioritizing friends. The other thing that shows
up is your relationship to yourself and how you feel about yourself. And at the time, I didn't
like myself that much. I had a lot of work to do. And the
other thing that shows up is how are you spending your time? And do you enjoy how you're spending
your time because it is such a limited commodity that you have? And I realized at this moment in my
life that I did not want to be a lawyer anymore.
This was a huge defining moment for me.
And I got off that plane and started making changes.
Now, fast forward to the plane story from the opening,
which honestly, this was way more terrifying than even the plane
dropping and airbags dropping in two minutes of this is over.
And the reason why this one was more terrifying is because I didn't know what the heck was
happening. It was going on for a long time. And the difference though, is once I got control of the dread,
and I got peaceful with the truth,
which is there's nothing I can do here.
I am in a giant shopping mall flying through the sky
that is bouncing around like a trampoline
through the air right now.
I'm holding my husband's hand,
who is my favorite person on the planet,
and I'm really proud of myself.
And the only thing that I have
that I am worried about right now is that I'm pissed off
that I wouldn't get more time on earth
at this moment in my existence, that I wouldn't get more time with
my kids. And that almost like kind of anger and realization, like I'm not going out like this.
And even if I didn't, I'm really proud of the person that I am and I can hang my hat on that.
Like there was something around that moment that also just dropped the dread. But if you are dreading going into work in the morning,
or you're dreading a conversation
because you know you need to end a relationship,
or you know you need to give somebody some difficult feedback
because you want the relationship to get better,
or if you're dreading a health diagnosis,
that's like a wake up call because
dread literally can be these moments where you assess what's actually important to you.
And you can use that to catapult yourself in a different direction. And if I bring it
back to like the topic that we were just talking, and the reason why I want to talk about this today
regarding the US.
If you're dreading what's happening in this country
or you're listening somewhere around the world
and you're dreading what's happening in your community
or in your family or in your part of the world,
that's a sign that you care deeply about this.
And while you might not be able to control what's happening in the larger sense of things today,
there is no doubt there are things you can do. There is no doubt that it just takes one person
to change the world, to change your community, to change your school system.
And that overwhelm and dread can galvanize what you do next and what you commit yourself to.
And that's a really important thing that I've noticed in my life in these moments.
They really show you what you care about, whether it's you dread a presentation because you care about doing well at work,
or you dread this conversation
where you have to have a very hard conversation
with somebody you love,
but the reason why is because you actually value love,
and you value honesty, and you value integrity,
or you value yourself enough to know
that the love that you're getting in this relationship
is not the love that you deserve, that you deserve something else and you're willing to
stand up for that. And that dread is an important thing that basically goes, okay
I'm a person that cares about myself and I care about the person I'm about to
break up with because you know I still like them and I don't want to
disappoint people but I got to care more about me. And so I do think these moments of bracing actually, if you're willing to
slow down and not let it hijack you, you can unpack the moment and truly connect more deeply
with the things that you care about. You care about your mom and dad. That's a big sign
to spend more time with them. I care about my family. The plane situation, I wasn't thinking about work.
I was thinking about my parents and my husband and my children and my friends. I wasn't thinking
about the normal stuff that makes me like nuts fell. I was thinking about the things that actually
matter. And to me, that's the gift that's available to unwrap, that you are learning
something about yourself. And regardless of how things turn out, use that information
to guide the kind of person you show up as in this next chapter as you move through this thing.
I love this.
in this next chapter as you move through this thing. I love this.
So where I wanna go now is to some of your questions
because there has been an absolute,
just it's unbelievable how many of you
are using the word dread.
We literally went and searched dread.
And so Phil, we've collected a ton of emails
of all different types of things that people
are dreading.
What are some of the topics just to give us a wide arraign?
The short answer is a lot.
No motivation, uninspired, fear of telling my parents things, going to let them down.
I'm an empty nester, dating again, going the wrong direction at work with my career, spending vacation
time with my in-laws. And on and on and on and that's just the tip of the iceberg.
Tip of the iceberg. All right, well let's just jump in. What do you want to start
with? Mel, I want you to check out this one from Nicole. Okay great. So Nicole is
a listener who is 24 years old and she's writing in because she has been single for a long time,
for the past two years.
She used to be a serial dater, Phil,
and then was like, forget this,
I'm just gonna take a break.
And she said, being single these past two years
has been the best thing I've ever done for myself.
I think that's really cool, actually.
I love that you took time to be single. You did not even worry about finding somebody
just like chilled with yourself.
That's super cool.
But here comes the downside.
I'm now so hyper independent and comfortable being single
that the idea of dating again or changing my life up
to incorporate dating makes me want to run
and hide under my bed forever.
Actually, I have heard this from so
many of our listeners in their 20s and 30s. And here's what she writes. She literally writes
that I wish we had more discussions around the shame women feel in their 20s for not prioritizing
dating, the hookup culture. She goes on and on and on. And then she says,
is it really the worst thing to dread the day
you have to start dating again?
Because let's face it, it's slim pickings out there.
Ask any woman on a dating app.
So here's what I would say.
First of all, I don't think you're ready to date, Nicole,
because it sounds like you just love being single.
So don't even add it in.
It feels like a should.
But the piece I want you to take away is you used the word dread.
Dread means you've already decided it's going to go horrible.
All I'm going to tell you is switch the word.
Uncertain.
You don't know how it's going to go.
And you don't have to be on the apps.
You can talk to people in your day-to-day life.
You can tell your friends that you're open to data.
You don't have to do it that way.
But when you use the word dread,
you've already assumed it's gonna be horrible,
which is why you're bracing,
which is why you're avoiding it.
And when you get to the point where you say,
this is something I'm interested in,
I'm uncertain about how it's gonna go,
do you feel the freedom in that?
And I think that's gonna help a lot.
I've got one here that is about
having a husband that is negative.
My husband generally only tells me bad news
about his job and his day.
He's not making nearly as much money as I do.
I encourage him to listen to self-improvement books
and podcasts, but he refuses.
How do I navigate this negativity, but still be supportive?
How do I keep my love for him
when I feel dread talking to him?
Oh boy.
Okay.
So can you imagine, I think we've all,
have you,
I've been in periods of my marriage
and I've certainly been in relationships
where I dread the person that I'm with
walking through the door.
Sure.
Yeah, like you just, it's a terrible place to be.
And so you're bracing for the negativity.
I'm going to tell you to do something opposite.
You ready?
First of all, live in uncertainty.
Maybe he'll be in a bad mood today.
Maybe he won't.
And you have to use the let them theory.
You have to.
You have to let him be in a bad mood.
And you can also start like, I don't like what I know based on the research is her trying
to tell him to be positive actually just makes him negative.
Because what I know about the research is that trying to change someone else doesn't work.
So if you try to make him positive, it's just going to make him more negative.
If you try to make him listen to self-improvement, it's only going to make him more resistant to it.
And so here's what I want you to understand.
Everything that we've talked about, you have the ability to shift this in yourself.
Part of the dynamic is you bracing
and your mindset going and your nervous system going.
And so I would recommend that you do the box breathing.
I would recommend you start to talk about uncertainty.
And I'm gonna give you one tool from the LetThem Theory book.
Ask your husband, how do you feel about your attitude about your life?
Or I've noticed that you're really like down. How are you feeling about things? So instead of
just getting a report, just ask him an open-ended question, because it
gets him to start to talk about the conflict that he's feeling versus just complaining
about it.
I write about this extensively in the book.
It's a technique that gets somebody out of their negative state, because what's happening
with your husband, if he hates his job that much, he dreads going.
He wakes up every morning in a state of dread,
which what, makes his mindset negative,
which makes his body brace,
which makes the entire day at work negative,
which then makes him come home and talk to you about it.
And so until he stops bracing and he recognizes
that he wants something different, nothing's changing.
Because people only change when they feel like changing.
And one of the things that this conversation is revealing
is that dread is something that is a natural instinct in us
that can hijack your experience of life.
And I think a lot of people dread going to work.
But what you don't understand
when you're the one dreading it is that you have power.
This isn't the only job on the planet.
And the more you stay stuck in this state of dread,
the more likely you're gonna stay in this job,
which is ironic that the dread keeps you locked there.
And so your openness, your shifting,
your ability to create space for him to figure this out for himself will also help him shift it.
Mel, so we're setting the clocks back. The seasons are changing.
We're getting a lot of questions about dealing with seasonal depression, dread getting up in the morning because of it.
Oh, I relate. I hate turning the clocks back.
If I ran for president of any country or city,
this would be my number one thing.
You know, like in high school or middle school,
and people are like, more ice cream in the cafeteria.
Be like, one of my initiatives would be
no daylight savings.
I hate it.
But here's the thing.
Dreading the darkness and dreading the winter months
and dreading the cold, is that helping?
No.
Why?
Because what have we learned about dread?
It actually locks you in a state
that it is going to be horrible.
And here's what I want you to understand. It actually locks you in a state that it is going to be horrible.
And here's what I want you to understand.
Through your own actions and attitude, you can make it better.
I'm not saying that seasonal depression isn't a thing because it is a very real thing.
And I absolutely struggle with that dip in the mood and looking outside at 430 p.m. in Vermont
and it's already almost dark and just thinking I can't live here another
winter right I can't I'm not doing this to myself again but there are things you
can do there are things you can do and so instead of locking in on dread winter
is coming right Game of Thrones winter is coming, right?
Game of Thrones, winter is coming.
I want you to loosen and I want you to start to think
about what can you do?
What can your routine look like?
How can you shift the time you go to bed,
the time that you wake up,
the things that you do during your day,
the things that you do at night.
How can you map out a new plan for this season
so that it's not just the drag the light box out,
here we go, let's brace for the long winter everybody.
It doesn't have to be that way.
You can focus on your thoughts, your actions,
creating a new routine, doing a little bit of research.
If you have the ability to create a plan,
to get away and go visit a friend
that lives in a nicer place and go on a road trip, do it.
These things help.
If, you know, another thing that I think can help a lot is
if you've ever wanted to take a painting class
or you've ever wanted to learn a new skill, sign up for a class at night.
Get yourself out of the house.
These sorts of things help, but the more you say, I dread it, the more you're going to
feel locked into negativity and the less power you're going to feel that you have.
And you do have power.
Even if this is a diagnosis that you're dealing with, you still
have power. I do want to end on this question from Nora about dreading getting out of bed
and dreading starting the day. And can you talk more about how we can talk ourselves into getting
up immediately when we feel like crap and are dreading our day.
So there's two things I wanna cover in this,
and this is why I wanna end on this.
The first part of this, dreading starting your day,
is the tactics.
And there is no better tactic for solving this problem
than using my five second rule and counting backwards the moment the alarm rings five, four, three, two, one, and moving and
getting out of bed and just starting the day.
You can wake up and feel dread and bracing and anxiety and overwhelm and you can still
start your day five, four, three, two, one.
Two things can be true.
You can not feel like doing it,
and you can five, four, three, two, one, do it.
And the reason why this matters
is because movement shifts your emotions,
and getting going helps you keep going.
And lying in bed and lying in the dread
and lying in the overwhelm,
which is something that I am very familiar with.
It's something that I struggled with profoundly,
especially as somebody that has had a lot of anxiety
in the past.
And the five second roll in counting backwards,
five, four, three, two, one,
was something I created precisely to help me
when the alarm rang and I felt dread
and it pinned me into the bed
and I would just lay there and rot
in my negative thoughts and my emotions.
So five, four, three, two, one, boom.
Just like they say,
nothing good happens at a bar after midnight.
Nothing good happens at a nightclub after midnight.
Nothing good happens when you're lying there in bed consumed in dread.
Okay, five, four, three, two, one, get up.
That's the tactic.
And that is going to help you.
And you may need to use that every morning of your life for 15 years, like I have.
I still use that to get out of bed.
I had to use it this morning to get out of bed because we had a huge workday and a lot
of exciting news and I was so emotionally drained.
And plus I ate a double stack hamburger with cheese fries and then I had an ice cream cone
and a gin and tonic and then I went to bed.
So talk about bed rot.
I got it.
And when I woke up, I was like, oh, I got to use my own stuff five, four, three, two
and get up because I got to go talk to Phil about dread.
That's the tactic.
But here's the bigger thing I wanna say to you.
If you dread your day,
that's an opportunity to take a look at your life.
You were not put on this planet to wake up and dread your day.
There are things about your life you need to change.
It might mean that you need to take your mental health and your physical health more seriously.
It might mean that you need to take sleep more seriously.
And my simple rule for better sleep is if you want eight hours of sleep,
spend nine hours in bed,
just not an hour of it in the morning,
dreading your day, right?
Takes time to fall asleep.
Might mean that you gotta change your job.
Might mean that you gotta have a hard conversation
that you've been avoiding.
Why? Because you dread it.
Might mean that you gotta make some changes
to your morning routine. Might mean that you gotta make some changes to your morning routine.
Might mean that you have to ask your family
to step up a little bit
so that everything's not on your shoulders.
And I guarantee you, if you go through your day
and you list all of the things that you dread
about your day, you'll notice that there's lots
of places where you have
braced in small ways and where you have negative opinions and where you think this is just
what it is and there's nothing you can do about it, which is why we brace, which is
what you've learned during this conversation.
And it's how you lose your power.
And the truth is, you're not stuck anywhere. You're not stuck in a relationship. You are not stuck in a you lose your power. And the truth is you're not stuck anywhere.
You're not stuck in a relationship.
You are not stuck in a dynamic with your family.
You are not stuck in a job.
You are not stuck with the current state of your health.
You are not stuck with your mindset.
You are not stuck with your current morning routine.
You as a human being are hardwired to change.
But if you continue to dread all these small things,
you are keeping yourself locked
in something that doesn't work.
And so I think that moment where you wake up
and dread the day you're waking up into,
I think that moment where you wake up
and dread the day you're waking up into
is one of the greatest gifts that your life could give you. Because it's a gigantic wake up and dread the day you're waking up into is one of the greatest gifts that your life could give you.
Because it's a gigantic wake-up call
that there are things that are not working.
And it is time that you wake the hell up,
metaphorically, physically, mentally, spiritually,
and you start doing the work to change it.
I want you to look at your life
and look at the things that you dread
and understand these are just things
that are uncertain. But here's what I'm certain about. You have the power and you are capable
through your thoughts, actions, and your attitude of changing anything for the better. Period. Full
stop. You cannot convince me otherwise. So stop bracing, stop dreading, relax into this,
look at what you need to change,
look at what's within your control and focus on that.
And I think you're gonna be shocked
at how much more powerful and calm you feel,
no matter what's going on.
And in case no one else tells you,
I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you,
I believe in you, I believe in be sure to tell you that I love you, I believe in you,
I believe in your power to create a better life.
And I just love that this topic was so deep
and so useful on global levels, on personal levels,
in small moments, in big moments,
in annoying moments, in scary moments.
And I'm absolutely thrilled that I got to unpack this with you and with
Phil today. So I will see you in the very next episode. And I cannot wait to hear what
you got out of this one. Alrighty. I'll see you in a few days.
Are you a stoic kind of guy?
I try to be.
Okay.
I don't think of myself that way.
I think of myself as striving to be a stoic.
Okay.
What is happening?
It's literally wind and trash and.
Well, this is a reminder from the universe that, you know, there's only certain things
you can control.
They got a dump truck.
They have a construction crew. They have special forces grade airplanes
and helicopters flying around today.
Reminding us, why would we get tense
about what's happening out there?
It's trash day here, everybody.
Yeah.
Is that good enough?
It's great.
Okay.
Do you want one more?
No? Maybe just do that last... Let me do one more. Okay. Do you want one more?
No?
Let me do one more.
Okay.
Here we go.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write 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.
Sticher.