The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Move On, Let Go of Past Mistakes, and Create a Better Future
Episode Date: July 24, 2025Today’s episode is a deeply honest conversation about what it takes to let go of mistakes, forgive yourself, leave your past in the past, and create a new version of you. In this moving episode, Me...l sits down with her friend Carl Lentz, a former megachurch pastor, who watched his life implode in real time. Carl doesn’t dodge the truth: His actions shattered trust, cost him his career, and nearly destroyed his family. But this is not a story about scandal. It’s about what you do after the worst moment of your life. It’s about the courage to face what you’ve done, to stop running, to forgive yourself — and to rebuild something stronger from the wreckage. Carl doesn’t pretend to have it all figured out. What he offers is honesty without excuses, wisdom forged in pain, and a raw invitation to stop letting your past dictate your future. If you’ve made mistakes, if you’re struggling to forgive someone, if you're trying to put the pieces back together, this conversation will meet you right where you are. Because you are not your worst moment. And your next chapter is still yours to write. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode and want to know more about how to write that next chapter, listen to this episode next: How to Find Your Purpose & Design the Life You WantConnect with Mel: Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Are there things from your past that you're trying to outrun or a chapter of your life
that you just don't want to talk about or think about anymore?
A moment you regret so deeply?
Maybe it was a lie, a betrayal, a decision you can't undo.
Maybe you hurt someone,
or maybe the person that you hurt was yourself.
Whatever it is, I'm gonna tell you something.
You can't outrun it, outdrink it, outignore it.
And if you're tired of feeling the weight of shame
or guilt or just unsure if you'll ever feel happy again,
let's talk about it.
Let's talk about what it actually takes
to forgive yourself when you mess up.
And I'm not talking about like a,
oops, I made a mistake kind of way.
I'm talking about the real gut wrenching,
I hurt people I love kind of way.
This conversation today is about those moments
that split your life into a before and after.
Here's the truth. You can't heal what you won't face and you can't move forward by pretending the
past never happened. Today you and I are gonna dive deep into the heart of what
it means to own your mistakes when you know what you did was wrong and finally
forgive yourself and move on.
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins
podcast. I'm absolutely thrilled that you're here.
And it is always such an honor to spend time with you and to
be together. And if you're here. And it is always such an honor to spend time with you and to be together.
And if you're a new listener,
I also wanted to take a moment and personally welcome you
to the Mel Robbins Podcast family.
Because you made time to listen to this particular episode,
I know you're the kind of person
who truly values real, deep conversations
that make you think differently about yourself,
about your life, and the conversation we're about to have today. Oh my gosh, it is going to be
incredible because we're gonna be talking about what do you do after you
truly royally screw things up? Is forgiveness even possible? See, in our
Boston studios today, I have the perfect person to help you and me
think about forgiveness and how you rebuild
after making so many mistakes.
And the reason why he's the perfect person
is because he's had to do this himself.
I'm gonna introduce you to a very good friend of mine.
And when you hear who this person is,
it may even surprise you.
Wait, Mel Robbins is good friends with this guy?
I am.
And by the time you're done listening
to the conversation today, you'll understand why.
It takes a lot of courage to be the kind of person
who can admit to what you've done wrong
and take accountability for making it right.
To face yourself in the mirror.
To go out in public or show up at school or work
or with your friends or your family
when you've done something really wrong
or you've ruined your reputation
or you hurt the people that you care about most.
And that's exactly what my friend Carl Lentz
has had to do after destroying the life he had built
just five years ago.
Now, I didn't know him back then.
I only met him a few years ago,
but let me tell you a little bit about who he was then.
Carl was one of the most recognizable
mega church pastors in the world.
He co-founded the church Hillsong in New York City.
And then he built it from scratch
to be almost 150,000 members strong.
I mean, in 2017, 2018, 2019, Carl was a cultural icon. He was in
the news all the time because he was disrupting what everybody thought a Christian church should
be like. I mean there he was up in front of the pews dressed in leather and skinny jeans and he's
all tatted up and rock and roll music is blaring. And from the outside, boy, did it look like he was on top of the world.
I mean, he couldn't be more blessed.
And then in 2020, it all fell apart
in a spectacular train wreck of his own making.
He was publicly fired from the church he built.
And according to the press release,
it was due to quote,
leadership issues and breaches of trust.
It was all over the tabloids.
This married mega church pastor and father of three,
beloved by so many, had been having an affair
with someone in the church.
He lost his job, his reputation,
almost every single friend he had,
his family lost their housing,
and he lost the life he had built
because of the choices he had made.
And he couldn't outrun this. I mean, there were docu-series made about this thing.
It was trending all over the news. Carl owns the mistakes he made. He takes full accountability
for what he's done wrong. And today, he'll tell you what it feels like to feel like you're driving
a locomotive and it's about to hit
the wall and you can't stop it. The dread, the weight of it, the anxiety, the secrecy,
the arrogance, the lies that you tell yourself and everyone around you. But the reason that
I invited him to be here today with you and me is because of what he did after the wreckage.
I love that he owns what he did and that he's leaned into the
worst things that he's done to extract some of the biggest lessons anyone could learn about life.
I love the way that he and his wife and his three children lean toward each other because it's so
easy, isn't it, to lean away from people when things get hard? And I also love what they've
taken from it as a family and how the entire experience
in the past five years have changed him for the better. If you've ever screwed up and
gotten fired or lied or cheated on somebody or had a relationship end or done something
that you regret, I'm going to tell you something. It's not the mistake that you made that defines
you. It's what you do next.
And today we're going to flip the way that you think about it on its head.
We're gonna teach you how to look at it all differently
and forgive yourself.
And you're gonna learn how to turn the page,
take accountability for what went wrong,
learn what you need to learn, forgive yourself, and move on.
So please help me welcome my friend, Carl,
to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Carl Lentz, I am so excited that you are here.
Thank you for jumping on a plane.
Thank you for being here in Boston.
I am just, I know that this is going to be
a transformational conversation.
It's an honor.
You know I love you and Chris a lot.
And this is a, it's a special place to be.
Carl, we have been friends for a couple of years.
And since knowing you, you are the kind of person
that has really opened up my heart and opened up my mind.
And I'm so excited for the person
who is here with us right now,
who's hit play, who's watching, who's listening.
And I know that by the time we're done,
they're gonna say to themselves,
this is exactly what I was meant to hear.
This is exactly what somebody that I care about
needs to hear right now.
And so I'd love to have you start by speaking directly
to the person that's with us.
And if you could share with them, Carl,
what they might experience
that could be different about their life, if they take to heart everything
that you are about to share about your own life
and lessons learned and the wisdom that you've gained,
and they apply it to their life, what could change?
What you're gonna find on this episode with Mel and I,
if you need more peace and you need more presence, you're gonna find that here.
Because I feel like I don't know a lot,
but I know a little.
If you've ever faced something in your life
that has just been hectic and heavy and hard,
and you're like, is it going to get better?
We're gonna share some thoughts on how you can create peace,
avoid the wrong kind of pressure,
and step into
power maybe you've never known. And it's a privilege to be able to talk about it.
Well, Carl, you're the perfect person to talk about it. You know, when you talk about turmoil
or a season of your life where just it's a disaster. And there's not a human being that
goes through life that doesn't have a chapter that you wish
would end or never happened. And, you know, one of the things that's interesting about you is that
after everything that's happened in your life, and we're going to get into that, you know,
in just a minute, nobody would have blamed you if you're just like, okay, I'm just going to disappear.
I'm just going to take my things and quietly sneak out the back door and I'm never
going to show my face in public again. I'm not going to talk about what happened, but you and
your wife and your family made a different choice. And I would love to have you talk a little bit Why did you decide to start to be so open and honest
about probably the worst thing that's ever happened to you?
People relate more to our losses than our wins.
And because that's true, I had a moment of clarity
where I thought I'm gonna, I'm faced with these options
of hiding, which is a great option.
And I did for a little bit and it felt okay for a season.
And then you realize, what am I gonna do with all this?
And for me, I felt like A, I had a responsibility
because the platform I had in people's lives
was one of trust and example and in preaching
to other people how they should proceed in life.
And so that's a deeply vulnerable place to be
when you've broken people's trust in that way.
And I felt like I had a responsibility to prove in a way
what I've been preaching all along,
which is your worst chapter is not your last chapter.
I preached it my whole life.
I never had to live it in this way.
But for me to not show people more of the story,
to me would have been unkind to just leave it there.
Cause that's not the whole story.
We're alive.
Our eyes are bright.
Our family's better.
I'm better.
I've realized things I never could have realized
had we not walked through that fire.
And the option to hide is tempting until you realize what if what I've gone through
is exactly what somebody else is going through
and if I can help somebody else build a bridge,
then why not give it a shot?
And I think for me, someone once said to me, to my face,
the moment you can take the hardest thing in your life
and take more from it than it took from you,
your life will change forever.
And I thought, that's what I'm going to do.
So this chapter, which took everything.
So I thought, I'm going to take more from it.
And we're on that side of it now.
For a while, it took everything.
My dignity, my reputation, my life's work,
the trust of my family, took everything.
And you're sitting there going,
what am I gonna do with this?
And then you hear something like that and you said,
you're telling me I can get to a place in my life
where the worst thing that ever happened to me,
I can take more from it.
Let me see if that's possible.
And I am here to testify that it is possible
to take the worst thing that's ever happened to you and spin that thing
and start to take from it.
So what I've taken from the season
where I broke my wife's trust,
where I broke my kids' trust,
where I destroyed rightfully so the reputation
and I worked hard to build,
now I've taken from it peace, power, presence, margin,
safety, honor, vulnerability, consistency.
I didn't have some of those things before that.
So now I look at that chapter
and it's not what other people might deem it.
Is that the hardest chapter in your life?
Now it's like, of course I carry it with reverence
because there's pain and there's carnage,
but it might be the most pivotal in my life
because I wouldn't be sitting here.
I wouldn't be talking to you,
I wouldn't have my Australian bride outside hanging out
with me, still wants to be around me.
So that's everybody's opportunity,
that's your opportunity.
And when you look at a situation that has robbed you,
you're gonna be faced with this,
whether it's a trauma, maybe someone's hurt you,
maybe someone's betrayed you,
maybe somebody's let you down,
they took stuff from you.
Do you wanna accept that?
I didn't wanna accept that.
I didn't wanna accept that this chapter
is gonna take all this from me.
I'm gonna figure out a way to take some of that back
with some interest.
I love that statement that you can figure out
how to take the hardest thing that's ever happened to you and take more from it
than it takes from you.
Could you speak directly to the person that feels
that they are in that right now?
Yeah.
You know, cause when you're in the eye of that storm
and you've blown up your whole life
or you've blown up your career or someone else has,
and you hear that, you're like, that is not true.
But if you could just speak to that person
about what is possible and what does that actually mean
to take more from it than it takes from you?
It's a great question.
If you're in that spot where maybe you're in the backside
of it, where it's taking stuff from you,
now you're sitting there holding the bag.
Like for instance, I was sexually abused.
That's something that can take from you forever.
If you make the choice to let it.
Now I'm able to take from that situation. You can
rewire your brain pathways. You can sit down with anybody and
say, I can relate to what it feels like to be betrayed on
that level. You can do a whole curriculum on how to recover.
You can be a support to people who have been through that.
Otherwise, it's one thing to talk to somebody
who's encouraging you that hadn't walked through it.
It's a whole nother ball game
when you're sitting across from somebody
that has understood what that feels like.
So here's what I would say to you,
if you haven't seen some of the fruit yet,
keep watering and keep planting seeds.
And you will look up at one point
and you're gonna see a garden of things
that you didn't even dream.
It's possible.
A lot of people get tired when they're planting.
So I'm not seeing it.
I'm still broken and I'm still hurt and I'm still going backwards.
A, I'm not sure that's even true.
You're healing.
You're better than you were yesterday.
You're still here.
You're listening to this.
You're still trying.
Those are seeds.
And you plant enough seeds eventually.
God is faithful to water.
That's a fact.
You cannot stop the rain from falling.
Only question is, what have you put in the ground?
And so when it came to my life, I looked at a desert, basically.
And I'm like, I got no choice but to just get busy planting.
That's what I did.
And now I'm starting to see some things blossom that, you know, it makes me,
it makes me well up with emotion of gratitude because I was just happy to survive.
And I don't think that's God's will for anybody to just survive.
So if you've ever said that, if you ever said, I'm just happy just to make it through the
day, that's okay.
What if there's a day where you say, not only am I going to make it through this day, I'm
going to crush this day and I'm going to brighten up this day for somebody else.
That's where you can go
So if it's dark right now as sure as the Sun will rise
There's a better day coming and that's a fact. It's just as true as you sitting in that moment going out. Everything's been taken
You know Carl you said that
One of the things that happens when you go through something horrible or painful is you have
the ability to help someone else go through it.
And the conversation that we're having today is ultimately about forgiveness of self mostly.
It's about giving yourself permission to rebuild. It's about allowing yourself to be seen
when you wanna hide.
It's making yourself whole when you feel very broken.
And you are the perfect person to hold our hand
and walk us through this because you have been there.
And so before we go forward,
I would love to have you just go back
and tell the person who's listening
a little bit about what your life looked like,
you know, 10, I don't even know when this all happened.
Like you and I have been, I met you after,
so I didn't know anything about you.
Yeah, yeah.
But what do you want the person to know
about what your life looked like
when you thought that you were at the top?
Hmm, great question.
My life had areas that were on fire
and other areas that were really fruitful.
And that's a dangerous place to be
because you can function because of the fruit
and you could ignore the fire.
And if you do that long enough,
everything will burn eventually.
So you mean on fire, like you have parts of your life
that are working amazingly well
and then you've got stuff that's burning
to the ground in the background
as it's working amazingly well.
Correct.
Okay, so put us at the scene.
Okay.
What was happening in your life?
Because just assume that the person who is listening
has no idea who you are, has no idea about this story.
And I think that's another important thing.
When you're in the middle of it,
you actually think everybody on the planet knows.
Sure, yeah.
And this was a huge public story,
but I didn't know it was Sure. Yeah. Yeah. This was a huge public story, but I didn't know it was
happening. Yeah. If you don't know anything about my story, my wife and I
planted a church in New York City and it was incredible and we loved every second
of it. And with that comes a lot of platform. It comes with criticism. It
comes with acclaim. The whole nine yards and we were very visible. We had a big platform.
But explain though, Carl, because it was like record breaking.
Yeah.
Like what was the church?
How big was it?
Thousands of people, you know, worldwide impact.
So the Hillsong Church in general is a worldwide organization.
And we were the first church from Hillsong in America.
So we were able to really hit the ground.
And our goal was to serve the city of New York,
like our hair was on fire.
And we did, and it was amazing.
And there was a lot of it that we really loved.
And meanwhile, throughout that time,
as you find out in life, your problems don't go anywhere.
You either fix them or they destroy you.
And the only difference sometimes is what your life will look like when they crack.
So it's like a fracture.
And I don't know if you've ever spoken
to an athlete that has a fracture.
You can play on a fracture for a while
and even function pretty good.
But other parts of your body start to overcompensate
for what you should have fixed.
So if you fracture your ankle,
there's a guy who might gut it out for a year,
maybe two, put some Toradol in it, numb it out.
And he might get through a couple of games.
It's the next year.
It's the year after his career shortened
because he played through a fracture.
That's kind of how I describe my life.
I had some fractures.
We all do.
We all have fractures in our soul, brokenness.
And I was, I think under the impression
that if I run fast enough, I can outrun this pain, I can outrun these addictions,
I can outrun these propensities.
I had things in my private life
that were really inconsistent with who I wanted to be.
And including I cheated on my wife
and broke our marriage vows and hid it from her,
hid it from anybody that I could and started to
rationalize why it was okay for me not to come clean. And what you learn as you
recover is the first person you lie to is yourself as an addict. So I'm telling
myself the whole time, okay, I've cheated on my wife, I'm gonna bury this because
the best thing for me to do, because there's so many people that are attached
to me, that if I come clean, probably have to step down and then everything crumbles,
now I'm responsible.
So you start to become the hero in your own broken story.
Think about that.
So it goes from me being accountable to me going, the best thing for me to do is just
to gut this out.
And it's easy to lie.
It's not easy to live with lies. And that's what people forget. Ooh, say that again. Hold on a second And it's easy to lie. It's not easy to live with lies.
And that's what people forget.
Ooh, say that again.
Hold on a second.
It is easy to lie.
But it's not easy to live with lies
because we're not designed to be dishonest.
So lying, that's human.
To live with it is destructive.
And when you start compiling lies,
then you start losing who you are.
And then you start forgetting what's real.
And then if you have a public life, you have to deal with the dichotomy in the duality
of preaching to people about honesty while knowing in your own soul.
There's areas that do not match up.
And there was not an unrealistic standard.
People are like, yeah, but you're human.
If you are a preacher, you are held to a different standard as you should be.
So it's not like, you know, preachers can't be human.
No one's saying that.
Preachers cannot be living on lies.
And there's plenty still doing it, Mel.
Please believe that.
But for me, it was rotting my soul.
And it began a spiral that led me into a drug addiction,
that led me into other ways to cope with my own duality
that I never thought I
would come face to face with.
And it came crashing down hard.
I love the visual of the fracture.
And as you're listening to Carl, I want you to think about the fracture that you're living
with right now.
Or maybe you've got somebody in your life and you can see the fracture
and you know the break is coming.
But they are like Carl is telling you in this story,
the hero of their own story.
It's gonna be fine, I got it under control.
And you're thinking, no, you don't, I see this thing.
Or you feel it in yourself.
And yet you are still playing the hero in your own story
that you can live with this.
If you hear this and you're like, I might have some fractures, great way to find out
what could be deadly is what are you afraid to get checked out? Have you ever been sick
and you're like, I don't want to go to the doctor because if they tell me that I have
mother f-ing COVID again, I'm going to lose my mind. It could just be a cold.
Yes.
And then you just kind of deal with this discomfort and dysfunction. Like everybody's got to deal
with some sort of dysfunction, right? Men say this discomfort and dysfunction. Like everybody's got to deal
with some sort of dysfunction, right?
Men say that all the time.
Like you'll hear them tell their story
and you're like, you know, that's a major trauma.
And they're like, nah, that's just being a man.
I'm like, no, bro, that's not being a man.
You can get that fixed.
There's help for you, right?
So there is an element of understanding a fracture
that it's like, if you don't think you have any fractures,
okay, if you have something in your life that you're afraid to bring out, that's the thing that's
gonna kill you.
So bring it out.
What that would have looked like for me is like, I don't know how to get peace.
I can't slow down.
And somebody probably could have helped me.
And by the time I did, I went to go see a brain doctor with a friend of mine who was
in trouble.
And he did a brain scan on me
and he called me a couple of days later.
He said, hey, you need to come in here and talk to me.
And I sat down with Dr. Amon
and he said, Carl, you need to resign.
You need to go get help
because your brain is not functioning correctly.
And if you haven't made bad decisions yet, you will.
It's a matter of time.
You need to step down.
And I looked at him and I thought,
no, it's never going to happen. There's no hope for me. Now, I just got to keep,
I'm going to run as fast as I can on this fracture and see how far I can go. And that was a big deal
for me. And on this side of the tracks, that's why I'm really quick to ask people. I appreciate
all the stuff that you're telling me. What are you not telling me? What are you not telling me
about? All the stuff that you really quit, hey, help me with this. And they're cool. What's the
thing you don't want to share?
That's where your power is.
So whatever you're hiding is taking the place
of what could be power.
So you might want to bring it out.
So for me, it was, if I go back to our story,
we had a lot of areas that were great as a family,
even our marriage, there's a myth that when you see
infidelity, like you did in our relationship,
that the marriage was
bad. And it's just not true all the time. I love my wife and she loves me and we have
a phenomenal family. I just was extraordinarily broken. There were times where Laura would
catch something, feel something, sense something. And I would lie to her one way or the other,
whether it was by omission or whether it was by painting another picture or whether it
was just overpowering her conviction and making her think that she didn't see what she saw.
And that began a hesitancy in her to trust me.
And when you have that in a marriage, you're in trouble.
And she did what a strong woman would do, which is challenge me over and over again.
And I would just go further and further back.
So it went from, I don't want to lie to my wife, so I would just go further and further back. So it went from,
I don't want to lie to my wife, so I'm just going to distance myself from her. It's hard
to think back on. Because I can't imagine that now, which is again a testament to taking
more from it. Like I took from that chapter now, I have an intimate relationship with
the woman in my dreams that I probably never could have known. But that's what happens
with fractures. So my story is filled with that.
And then I got to a place at the end
where the spiral was such where, I mean,
I had trouble sleeping and I had trouble communicating
with people that I loved.
And I was just really good at what I was doing.
And that'll get you into a place where people are like,
well, I'm not sure you're okay,
but you know, some of the stuff's still working
and that can be a problem.
So sometimes your strength can be the greatest cover
for what you need help with
in the secret places of your life.
So the day that it all happened,
I had been ruminating on that for a while.
And I-
Like literally thinking at some point
this is gonna blow up. This is gonna crumble
and when it does, it's going to be this bad.
In my mind, I had, it's going to go really bad.
It was a hundred times worse.
A hundred times worse.
And that's important for people to know.
Because often people will think if you have a secret, if you have something, you're thinking
it's not going to be that bad.
I can just keep this going.
If you are digging a hole for yourself right now, the first thing you need to do is stop digging.
Put the shovel down.
Because what we do is just like,
well, this is gonna go really bad.
Let me just keep digging.
Put the shovel down.
That's why I always tell people, I'm in a bad spot.
What should I do?
So first thing you should do, stop digging.
Just stop.
And then put your hand up
and tell somebody you've been digging
and allow them to pull you out
of this thing you have created for yourself.
You have gotten people to put the shovel down.
And there is somebody listening right now that's like,
Carl, how do I get them to put the shovel down
before they take it and just throttle themselves
in the head with it?
It's tough because of my faith that you know
runs pretty deep with me.
God's grace is something, it's unmerited mercy and
favor and sometimes there'll be a graceful revelation where God will give you a gap for
you to go, I got to do this. You can't even explain it. Like I don't, even though I got
caught, I still didn't have to change. That's what people don't understand.
What do you mean?
Like someone asked me one time, like, did you only change because you got caught? And
I'm like, no,. Getting caught is actually a word
that can be a little bit fluid.
Normally when you get caught, and I experienced this,
the first thing you do is how much?
How much do you know?
My assistant had seen messages
and then I was confronted on it.
And my first instinct was not, let me be honest,
it was, I wonder how much?
I'm glad this is over, but how much do you know?
And you don't have to change,
only you can make that decision to,
because there's not enough consequences in the world.
Rehabs are filled with people that you cannot understand.
Logically, why are you doing this?
If you sat there with someone,
I've spent a lot of time with drug addicts in my life,
and I've sat there with people who are,
they've lost everything, and you go, do you wanna change? And they go, no, no, I don't want to change. So now you
realize this isn't normal logic you're dealing with. It has to be something deeper. And if
you are in a spot, it might not be drug addiction. It might not be something that you think is
catastrophic. But if you're in a spot right now and you know it could hurt you, this could
be the moment where you, after you're done watching this,
you just call someone and say,
I'm going to be honest,
and I need it to be a safe space.
I don't want to do anything with it,
but somebody needs to know.
If that could save not just your life,
but your family's life,
your legacy,
the lines down of generations,
it might be worth a shot
just to tell somebody,
this is what I'm dealing with.
Because if I look,
it's not worth holding. It's not worth holding in your heart. We're not designed to do that. be worth a shot just to tell somebody this is what I'm dealing with because if I look,
it's not worth holding.
It's not worth holding in your heart.
We're not designed to do that.
Carl, thank you for saying that.
Let's take a quick pause.
I want to give our sponsors a chance to share a few words and I want you to have a chance
to share this with someone in your life.
I mean, we're all guilty of beating ourselves up over our past mistakes. And this is a podcast episode that could truly change the trajectory of anyone's life that
listens to it.
So share this with people that you care about.
Don't go anywhere.
Carl is just getting warmed up and so am I.
And we will be waiting to welcome you back after the short breaks.
Stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Robbins and today you and I are spending time together with my friend Carl Lentz who has been telling you about how he's made
a lot of mistakes, he blew up the life that he had,
and we're learning lessons about forgiveness,
about making sure that the hardest things that happen to you in life,
that you know how to take more from it than it takes from you.
I just love that line.
You know, Karl, there's so much that you've already shared,
but, you know, I've been thinking about a particular question
I wanted to ask you, and it's this.
So have you ever read a book where you just know,
this is gonna end horribly. Like I don't even know if I want to keep on reading. I feel the
pit in my stomach or they start to reflect back on a character's past and you're like, oh my god,
that and then they reflect again. You're like, it's worse. That's what it was like to be you. To know that, what's that like?
And I want you to speak to that.
Dread, dread, horror, pressure.
I can't even articulate the feeling every day that you have to swallow just to function.
It's a weight that is like, it's unbearable and it drives people crazy.
I mean, I was probably on the doorstep of losing my mind.
And I mean that wholeheartedly.
Like there were days, and when you ask how long,
I mean, there would have been at least a couple years.
A couple years?
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
But you know, if I want to widen this out,
I want to widen this out real quick
because that feeling of dread and knowing and the fracture,
you may be listening right now and you're in a relationship
that you know needs to end, but you don't say it.
Like I was on the phone with somebody the other night
and they were really upset because they know they need
to break up with this person who's a really good person.
And it's the dread, it's the, I don't wanna,
I just, maybe if I just push it off a little bit longer.
And so there are lots of moments in our life
where we live with that pit and that dread.
I mean, you had it at a million X,
but it's a very common thing to do.
Whatever's causing dread
demands an immediate confrontation.
Immediate.
Because dread compounds.
And we feed dread every time we spend another day not
confronting it.
So if that thing is dreadful today,
it's going to be twice as dreadful tomorrow.
Two, three years, now your life is just suffocated
because you chose that route.
I put myself in that position.
I'm dreading the day that this is going to crumble.
It's the most selfish thing we can do.
Why is it the most selfish thing?
To go back to the hero of our own story, when I did get help finally, I sat with a really
incredible therapist and she said, Carl, why didn't you come clean quicker?
And I said, I didn't wanna let people down.
I didn't wanna hurt people.
And she goes, oh, isn't that sweet?
So you've made yourself the hero.
So you've told yourself that the reason
why you continually lied is to help other people.
And I was like, I see where you're going with this.
That's what I mean by selfish.
So by putting stuff off, ultimately, you're not just robbing yourself, but you're going with this. That's what I mean by selfish. So by putting stuff off,
ultimately you're not just robbing yourself,
but you're robbing other people that need the best of you.
And most of you is filled with dread.
So I look back at that season of my life
and I'm like, I did the best I could.
And there's a lot of me that was consumed
with the maintenance of dread
and things I didn't need to be carrying.
So there came a point where this all blows up.
You said it was a hundred times worse.
Yeah.
And can you just put the person like right?
Like what happened?
Yeah.
I mean, I got a call from my assistant and one of my best friends who was also my staff.
He said, I got to talk to you about some stuff.
And they confronted me on the beginning of some things. And I did, you know, throughout the
course of that day, get as honest as I knew how to be. And it went from there to, I got
to tell my wife. And it was a bad day. And I'd tell Laura, like, and that was a, that's
a tough memory that I will never ever
let leave me.
Because that's a memory I want to keep.
And as weird as that sounds, because we try to push some of that stuff, I don't ever want
to forget her face on that day.
I don't want to forget that.
Why?
And because I-
Why do you not want to forget that?
Because I'm never going to be there again.
And so I then, we went back and we told my kids, Ava.
Now, why did you tell your kids?
How old were your kids at this point?
Ava was, I want to say like maybe 16.
And Charlie's 14.
Roman's, I think at that time, 12, 11, young.
They're in the prime of their adolescence right now. And we told them because
we knew stuff was going to come out because it was a very public life we lived. And so
I told my daughter, Charlie at the time was in a place getting help for her own mental
health. I had to tell her over Zoom. That was hard. And I told my son, I really didn't
get it. We had just sold our house in New Jersey for this fun adventure and we hadn't picked a place yet
So we're staying at my friend's apartment in Brooklyn beautiful apartment when all the news broke that person texted me and said I want
You out of my house. I want you out by the end of the night and I said to my friend. I'm sorry
Okay, we don't have anywhere to go
And he said I want you out and so within this out these hours span
I had to we got two u-hauls and there's paparazzi outside and there's the it was like a
Swirl of I just felt like I was in a different world
And we had to load up everything we had into these two u-hauls and we just started driving and Laura
So we were going I said, I really don't know because I didn't know who to call
And some people wouldn't return my calls and other people would and then and we just didn driving. And Laura said, where are we going? I said, I really don't know, because I didn't know who to call. And some people wouldn't return my calls,
and other people would.
And then, and we just didn't know where to go.
And we had a friend, her name's Kim.
She lives in Jersey, got ahold of her.
She said, come here, come stay at my house.
You guys can stay at my house.
And it's tough to go back into some of these places,
but it matters because people need to know, you know,
that you can make it out of these moments,
but it runs deep.
And I'm in a U-Haul, Romans, this little guy.
He said, dad, where are we going?
I said, I don't know, man, I don't know.
And I remember thinking, I'm in a car in a U-Haul,
headed to Connecticut.
My life is on fire,
and I don't know if I'm gonna get out of this.
I don't know if we're gonna make it.
And I remember looking at my son, who's just petrified,
doesn't know what's going on.
You don't give a kid more than he can bear at that point.
So I'm not going to sit there and say, buddy, I did A, B and C. It's just, we're making
some changes. You know, these big, you're just doing your best.
When people ask me about a rock bottom moment, I'm like, well, I moved to rock bottomville.
Rock bottom is not a moment. I moved into a rock bottomville. And that was a night that
is etched in my mind as well, because I don't
want to forget that either. And it was the beginning of this slow unraveling. And so,
if you're watching this, my church is connected to so many other churches and it began a domino
effect where my issues exposed other issues. And next thing you know, everybody's on Front Street. And to a degree, I was the impetus to some of that.
And it was a really hard time.
But that's, for those of you who really wanted to go
to the moment, if you've ever had one of those nights
where you never think you're gonna get out of it,
maybe you're even in that season right now,
just do not give up.
That's one thing I can say about my wife and myself
that I am proud of is that we didn't give up.
A lot of people stop right there.
And somehow by the grace of God,
we found the fortitude to keep trying to figure this out.
And those are some tough memories to pull up,
but they matter.
I love that you keep reminding us
that you don't wanna push those memories away.
No.
If you have had an experience in your life
where you've gone through something horrific,
it really can shape and make you
in ways that are so important because when you
really get just absolutely burnt to the ground
in those moments, it does give you this level
of convention to go, I'm not going back there ever.
Like I will never be in a position again with my spouse
where I will ever have anything but transparency.
There is no, like I will never get myself in a position
where I will not have peace or I will not have.
And so the other thing that I think that's very interesting
and this may be an odd thing to reflect back to you,
that on some level there's something beautiful
also in the memory of, you know,
you find out in those moments, immediately,
who was with you and who's actually never been with you.
Well said.
I had to do some serious work here, Mel,
because I love my friends, I had great relationships,
so I thought, and when you go through something like this,
and if you do it, what I think is the most healthy way,
you focus on what's on your side of the tracks.
So when you have a relational breakdown,
it is extremely easy and convenient
to look across the tracks.
And it's not that there's not stuff there.
The question is, what's best for you right now?
So I had that choice of,
am I gonna look in the mirror or out the window
when it comes to my friendships?
In the mirror is where's my role?
Out the window is your role.
And I stuck to this mirror and thank God I did.
Cause if I even glance at the window,
I thought I'd lose my mind.
I'm so hurt, so betrayed.
Even though I was the one who broke the integrity
of my life in some ways with my friends.
And what a tragedy will sometimes do is give you,
it's called tragedy amnesia,
where it's like you only remember the part
that suits your narrative right then.
Everybody left me, everybody did not leave me.
In fact, amazing people helped me and more came.
But when you're in it, you just see what hurts the most.
So if you are in a spot just like that,
and you feel like everybody's abandoned you,
I wonder if that's totally true.
Not only do I think there's probably room
for you to look around
and maybe see there's other doors opening,
you haven't abandoned you.
And when you deal with relational breakdown,
that's the most empowering thing to know.
Even if, let's just say everybody did leave you,
you still have you and you're the only one
that could control you and you can't control anybody else.
So there's hope there.
So even if I did lose everybody,
I still stuck with this broken man in the mirror.
Let me work on this guy.
Carl, for somebody who is waking up right now
and they are just in the shame spiral,
it's not, I did this bad thing, it's, I'm a horrible person.
Yeah.
They have regrets hanging over them.
Would you speak directly to them about how they can start to loosen the grip?
If you woke up today and you genuinely are ready for the shame shower to cover you like it does every day.
I want you to imagine grabbing shackles
and putting them around your feet
because that's what shame is.
Shame, they are shackles of our own creation
and we attach them to our legs.
And you can move kind of fast,
but you're never gonna be able to know
what it feels like to run.
When it comes to shame, understand this, this is a hard reality that I am just submitting
for you to think about.
There are other people who have other definitions.
I was told that shame is inherently selfish because my eyes are still on myself.
When I heard that, it immediately made me a better dad. It made me a better husband because for me to spend time in shame,
it ultimately means I don't like what people think about me.
I'm embarrassed about me.
I can't believe what I've done.
So not only have you made a mistake,
not only have you hurt people,
but your response to it is to think about yourself again.
And if you see it from that angle, because I get shame, I understand the pain of it and
the prison that it can become.
And I also understand what it means to be free of shame.
As I sit here with you today, I'm telling you shame has no hold on my life because only
I can put shame shackles on my feet.
And if you look at it like that today in your own life,
rather than put those shame shackles on,
what else might be true about you?
Can you grow?
Can you change?
Can you get better?
Can you love people more?
Can you give people evidence that you're a new person?
Yes, shame is all about stuff you cannot control.
You cannot control what people think about you.
You cannot control what their commentary will be
about your change or lack thereof.
So why then would you spend any time shackling yourself?
So if you want to live free of shame,
understand that nobody else has the key to those shackles,
but you, and they're in your hand right now. This could be the last day you ever feel the pain
of being shame shackled.
Where you're functioning, but you know it's not all of you.
It's not the best of you.
You don't have to live like that.
There's a better way.
And that's what hope will do.
It's what passion will do,
but only you can make that choice.
Carl, I love that you said it was selfish
because the focus is on you. And I just want to unpack this because, you know, when you look at regret, I did this
bad thing and the focus is on the thing that you did.
When you feel shame, you say, I am a bad thing.
Right.
It's about me again.
I'm bad.
Yeah.
I've never thought about it as like,
it's such a selfish, you once again
are pulling the focus to you.
I'm ashamed.
Oh, sorry, you're ashamed.
Now what?
You know, in rehab is where I got this headbutt
because we say a prayer after every single session,
which is as we lift our eyes from shame.
which is as we lift our eyes from shame.
There was a day I could not do that. But eventually you did.
Oh my gosh.
And then you can't, you can't unsee it.
As I lift my eyes from shame to grace,
to different views, shame, grace.
Condemnation is shame.
Conviction is change.
And I've always been a proponent of that's what my faith leads me to teach people.
God's not trying to condemn you.
He might be trying to convict you because there's something better.
Conviction will get you out of the bed.
I'm convicted to do this better.
But shame, I mean, for me, like, I'm ashamed that I wasn't there for my kids for a chapter because I was mentally unwell.
I'm ashamed.
Now that's what I think about.
So at least 30% of my mental energy is going to me being bad.
So my son still gets that part of me.
It's not fair to him.
If I'm really like regret is very different than remorse.
Remorse is an engine.
Turn that thing on and it'll change you. So
I'm remorseful about the mistakes I've made. I'm remorseful that I wasn't there for my
daughter in the way she needed me at one point in her life. And it's convicted me to change.
But to be in shame is a hard word for people, Mel, but sometimes people need to hear it.
I think you need the headbutt because I've never heard anybody say it. The focus is on you.
And the only way that I've ever been able to move through those periods, and I didn't even have this
powerful distinction, is by looking at the thing and going, okay, so I did a bad thing.
That doesn't mean I'm a bad person. And the only way I can prove I'm not a bad person
is if I can learn from this bad thing,
the lesson I need to do a little better.
And if I can do that, then that for me is the key.
But that headbutt that you just gave is the focus on you.
How's that, how's that help anybody?
It doesn't.
Well, think about what people say in a mean way.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
It's even a selfish insult.
You back to you.
It's a party for you.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
So you want me to take my eyes now and go back and look at the horrible things I've
done so I can feel shame about them.
That's what you want me to do.
And that's what I'm going to do. And that's what I'm gonna,
and so all the people living in shame today,
they bought that lie.
Now everybody loses.
There's a better way.
It's called healing.
It's called grace.
It's called mercy.
It's called change.
This is so important.
I know I've felt that way,
and I'm sure you've felt that way
as you're listening or watching too.
And there are people in your life who have felt this way and so here's what we're
gonna do. We're gonna hit the pause button so our amazing sponsors can share
a few words but I want you to share this with people in your life who deserve to
be happy again. I want you to share this with people in your life who are beating
themselves up over mistakes that they've made and I don't want you to go
anywhere after you do that because we have so much more to unpack with you when we return from this very short
break so stay with us.
Welcome back it's your buddy Mel Rob, and today you and I are talking all about
how you forgive yourself with my friend, Carl Linz. So, we were just talking about shame.
The next thing I wanted to talk about was forgiveness.
I got to a really clear revelatory moment with God where I was like, if the God that
I believe exists that loves me and saved me, God has forgiven me, it's
ridiculous for me not to forgive myself.
And so I began to live in that reality of I forgive myself, I'm going to let that go.
And if you want to know tools when it comes to how to forgive yourself, oh my gosh.
Yeah, because saying that sentence is one thing.
What the hell did you do that helped you stop punishing yourself?
Here's how you know somebody has forgiven themselves.
They start to invest in the new version of who they are now.
That's how you know.
So if you are struggling to forgive yourself,
number one, let's make that leap.
I forgive myself.
If you do that, the only way you can prove that is by investing in this new,
better version of who you're becoming.
And that's the evidence on the board.
So when people struggle to do that, you know it because there's so much about what they
were and what they didn't want to be.
There's no evidence of who they are now.
So if you look at me, hope you know I've forgiven myself because there's no way you can walk
around with bright eyes in any sort of confidence knowing the wreckage of my life.
Yeah, I know.
It's not that I don't know that.
A lot of people get thrown off by that
because they want you to be sad.
They want you to be broken.
And that says more about them than it does you anyway.
But for me, it's like I've forgiven myself.
How can you even show your face in public?
Well, I forgave myself.
God forgave me.
My wife forgave me.
My kids forgave me.
I forgave myself.
That's how.
What would you like me to do?
Think about what shame does.
Shame is the opposite of your chest out.
Shame is your shoulders down and your head down.
Even the body language of shame is demeaning.
And I just don't have time for that.
How long did it take though?
Because you know what I mean?
Overnight, Mel, I just nailed it.
Just stop.
I just figured this out an hour ago.
Because this was how many years ago?
Almost five years.
Okay, so five years.
How long after the complete implosion and the scene in the U-Haul?
Did I start to see a little bit of light?
Yeah, because look, it's easy to say I forgive myself.
It's easy to say I got to invest in the new me, but we all look backwards.
It took a long time to get there.
And I think it's important to know that some of that stuff you have to feed every single
day, because there is a chapter where it's completely normal.
If you're in the middle of a humiliating thing, you got to accept the bad days where you just feel ashamed and you feel bad. That's part of the growth process.
Like there's this mythical thing. It's like, no, I forget, I forget myself. But there are
still times now where I have to catch myself wondering, like, is that person wondering
what kind of person I am now? Is that person thinking like every person I meet, I have
to go over that hurdle of how are they meeting me? What do they think they know about me?
And that can either make you never come outside and just shut yourself off to people because
you don't want to deal with that.
Or you can get stronger internally and say, there's a good chance that this person may
or may not know what they think they know about me and I'm okay either way.
Because I accept me.
If you accept you, it takes the weight off
other people accepting you.
You know what's interesting about this?
What I just got from this is that a lot of us do
look at the relationship as evidence for the forgiveness.
Like if this person continues to be my friend,
it's evidence that they've forgiven me.
If this person continues to be my spouse, it is evidence that they've forgiven me. If this person continues to
be my spouse, it is evidence that they have forgiven me. What you're actually
saying is forgiveness is something way deeper. Way deeper. Because it is the
freedom that you give yourself to no longer allow any of it to have power
over you. And in that freedom and space,
there is choice to create something new.
Whether that means a new version of your marriage
or a new version of a friendship,
or there is space to create something new,
which means this next chapter,
we are not actually friends.
We are not married, but I am not carrying that.
Absolutely not.
I'm healing.
And if you are hesitant to forgive somebody, this is a beautiful way to look at it.
There has to come a moment where you realize I no longer want this person.
So if you haven't forgiven someone, maybe it'll be helpful for you to consider this
thought.
They're still in your life.
That got me changing quick.
And that's not definition doesn't have to suit everybody,
but think about it like that.
So if there's people in your life right now
that you're bitter against and you resent them
and you've never forgiven them,
what if the truth is also,
they're still actively involved in your life.
Do you want that?
Because that's a tough thing to accept.
Once I realize, there's people who have hurt me in my life.
If I don't forgive them, release that,
they're with me forever.
I'm not okay with that.
How do you do that though?
Because I think it's this thing where,
if you have the bitterness and the anger,
and I want you to, as you're,
we're about to hear what Carl's gonna tell us.
I want you to think of somebody that you are bitter to her. I want you to think of somebody that you think wronged you.
I want you to think of somebody that you're angry at.
Maybe it's one of your parents.
Maybe it's an ex.
Maybe it's a business partner
that screwed you out of something.
That there's some aspect of your life where like,
that's not fair and it's that person's fault.
And you may think you've forgiven them,
but the fact that you still have that like tension
and anger and animosity is evidence that you haven't
because they still have power in you
and they're still in your life.
Yeah.
So I would say if you are struggling to forgive somebody,
make the decision.
I believe forgiveness is a decision.
The follow through is daily.
So don't get fooled by your feelings.
A lot of people, well, I thought I forgave this person,
but I still feel that's a feeling.
Like you're not gonna feel,
I don't think forgiveness is like fairy dust
where it's like, oh, this person who abused me
for 10 years, 15 years, I forgive you, let's have dinner.
No, you might still feel at times
that that person is,
you know, God should smite them from the earth.
Gotta accept that.
You know what, I have forgiven you
and there are some aftershocks
and there are some after effects.
That's on me.
I gotta work through those.
And again, rather than push them off,
which creates dread, face them down.
Today is a day where I'm struggling to follow through
with the forgiveness I've given.
Say that.
That's more true.
It's not that I struggle to forgive.
No, I have forgiven
and the follow through is challenging today.
Especially if that person continually does stupid things.
It's like, I gotta re-up every day to forgive you?
No, I think that forgiveness is a choice for sure.
The follow through requires support,
maintenance, therapy, prayer, meditation, soul work, because
it's one thing to say it and you must.
It's another thing to live it out.
But again, how much is your freedom worth?
If the person who's listening right now is wondering if they're ever going to be proud
of themselves again, what's your message to them?
If you are ever wondering if you're gonna be proud of yourself again,
I believe the answer is yes.
And you have every opportunity to fill your life
with new experiences and new change and new process
to ensure that that happens.
But you can be proud of yourself today
because you didn't give up.
So we can handle that right now.
So if there's somebody out there going,
I don't know, you don't know what I've been through,
you don't know what I've done,
I'm never gonna be proud of myself again.
You can be proud of yourself right now.
You made it through.
You're here.
You made it.
That's something to be acknowledged.
I don't take it for granted.
We've lost people in the blink of an eye.
And if you do that enough, if you're experiencing that enough,
you don't ever take life for granted.
So the fact that you made it today is worthy of being proud.
I'm proud of you.
I'm proud of you.
I'm proud of you for making it to this point.
And it's okay to say that.
Look in the mirror and say, I'm proud of myself.
What did you achieve today?
I achieved another day.
I didn't give up.
That's worthy.
It's worthy of giving yourself some real significant esteem because it matters. Sometimes that's the best
you can do is survive that day. I've had a bunch of those now. I was like, what's your
big achievement today is that I didn't give up.
That's one of the most courageous things in the world to do when you feel like giving
up. And you know, I think that it can be really hard because when you're in that mode where
it's like day by day and the progress is coming slow.
Yeah.
You know, the thing about changing your life and moving through this chapter, when you're
in a pivot chapter, oh my God, there's nothing glamorous about it.
It's grueling, it's boring, it's tedious.
So if somebody's in that chapter
and the progress is not coming
and they're listening to Carl and Mel telling to keep,
like, is there something to say other than this part sucks?
First of all, pivot should be spelled with like 14 Vs.
Because pivot, it sounds like such a strong word.
It's like no way, man.
It's a rounder word.
It's like a circular word.
You cannot get away from farming word pictures when you talk about growth and change.
You cannot do it.
And so if you can accept that, here's something to accept today.
If you don't see a lot of growth.
I accept that I'm playing the long game and in time, I will reap a harvest by keep planting
the things I know I need to plant.
Like I've never seen a farmer plant something and go out there the next day and be like,
damn it. Where are these? Where are these crops at? We would
say that farmer's nuts. Yet, we can spend decades making destructive decisions. Pivot, and then
we spend a couple months showing up to some therapy and locking in some good pods, maybe
even showing up to church once or twice a month and be like, this doesn't work. Well, maybe you had a faulty expectation.
This is going to take, I always tell people at least give your best self as much time as you
gave your worst self. Oh, hold on. Say it a little louder for the person in the back, please. At least give your best self the same amount of time to build your life,
that you gave your worst self the time to destroy your life.
And then we can talk.
Because you could spend decades thinking terribly
and try to shift it and go through a challenge,
be like, man, this isn't working. It's not working.
You gave the club 20 years
and you've given this two months.
Does that even seem logical?
At least give yourself a little bit of margin
to understand this is a new way to live.
Like rewiring your, I mean, for me,
I had to go all the way back to my sexual wiring
as a young kid that was sexually abused.
That damages you.
I'm not going to fix that in a day.
Me and Laura, we have ups and downs and peaks and valleys, but we're both fully cognizant
of like, we're not rebuilding our marriage, by the way.
We are on a fresh one.
Well, you know what they say, second marriages are amazing, particularly when it's with the
first person.
I'll take it.
And I do think that you're leading and preaching and guiding.
I do.
I am.
Correct.
And so I also think there's a level of trust that people will have with you because they know that you're not perfect
and now you're actually guiding from experience.
I've heard that a lot actually.
There is an element of culture,
of people that I know that have said,
I love you more, I trust you more.
Not because you did stuff that was wrong,
but because I see your humanity
and I see what you did with it.
And when I hear that, I appreciate it.
Because I hear the other stuff too, which is I don't trust you.
I can't trust.
And I have grace for that.
I can't control it either.
I am a person who will forever believe in the ability for any human being to change and get better.
And if we as a society, as friends, as family members,
cannot create the space and the grace
for people to learn from their mistakes,
for people to grow and get better,
then what hope do we have?
So for the person that's listening, Carl,
that is struggling and there are truly just can
so relate to everything that you've shared.
And you have shared so much and you have been so generous and life-changing.
What do you think the most important thing is to take away from everything that you've
shared with us today.
The most important thing that I would tell anybody that I care about, which is you, you
control your story, nobody else. Even if you've given away your pen and someone else has written
some things, or maybe you don't even like what you've written in the past, you control this one here, what will you do with it?
That is where your power is.
You can do nothing about the chapters that are behind you,
but you have so much opportunity to write
the best chapters that are in front of you.
The revelation is, I control my pen.
I am the greatest narrator of my life.
I will control the narrative and the commentary about who I am.
People can make of it what they will, but I'm in control.
So if you don't like the stories and the chapters that have preceded whatever you're dealing
with right now, what a great day to maybe start that first sentence of what your new
chapter is going to look like.
You control that.
Nobody else. Nobody else can do it for you, nobody else can write it for you, people can encourage you,
but at some point you've got to pick up the pen of ownership and say, this is me, this is my life,
this is who I want to be. Who might you become if you invested in that person?
It's an exciting proposition. Carl, what are your parting words?
Carl, what are your parting words? My parting words would be that there's deep
and immense value in you.
So much value.
And we live in a world that starts to eat away
at the identity of what might be inside us.
Here today, you are far more valuable than you know.
There is so much to come in your life that will even shock you. But today, maybe it's just enough to be able to consider, what
if I'm right? What if you were valuable? What if this world wouldn't be the same without
you? What if your contribution can be something that brings light to so many people? You're
valuable. So if you haven't heard that today, hear it today. If you haven't thought that in a while,
think it today. I am valuable because you are. And it's hard to stop somebody who knows
that they're valuable. They don't go on sale for anybody.
Carl, I love you.
I love you. I love you. You are such a gift in my life.
Chris and I love you and Laura,
I am so glad that the holy roller
that is Carl came rolling into our life.
You, I'm really proud of you.
Thank you.
And I'm proud of how you showed up today.
And I'm so excited to see the chapter that you're writing now.
And the world is such a better place because you're in it.
Thank you.
I love you.
I'm grateful for you.
Thank you for pushing me.
It has been such an honor of mine to introduce you to my dear friend Carl and I am so just moved
by everything that he shared with you and with me today. I'm so
Grateful that you're here. Thank you for sharing this with people that you care about. I know that this is a conversation that will change
people's lives and
In case no one else tells you,
Carl told you that you're worthy and you are.
I also wanted to tell you that I love you.
And I love you for listening and watching this.
I love you for listening to something
that could improve your life.
And take everything that Carl shared with you to heart,
because if you do, your life will improve,
and you deserve that.
All right, I will see you in the very next episode.
I will be waiting to welcome you in
the moment you hit play.
I'll see you there.
I'll see you there.
Do flies mean anything to you?
They don't.
Like no dead relatives come to you as a fly?
No, I'm open.
I'm open though.
You're open.
Oh my God.
Oh, here we go. Well, you know, Carl, we are new friends,
meaning you're fired.
These great questions are coming up from email. Golly, screw you and that whole production
team back there who did this.
But have you ever read one of those books where you just have a pit in your stomach?
I've actually got a book coming out called Let Us.
You stop.
I was going to get to that later.
Did Jay Shetty cry at all or is it just me?
Shit.
Is my TV makeup still where we need it to be?
Because that's a huge part of my ministry right now.
But the thing that I wanted to say is that holy shit, what was I saying, Terrence?
Sorry.
You're so fucking funny. it's rare to get you.
No, you just got me, god damn it.
Bang.
Okay.
Carl!
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.