The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Reinvent Your Life Starting Today
Episode Date: December 8, 2025If you’ve been feeling the itch for something more in life: a new chapter, a new dream, a new version of yourself – this episode is your green light. It is a guide to how you can transform your l...ife at any moment. Today, Mel sits down with her friend Hoda Kotb. Hoda, more than anyone else, will prove to you that reinvention is something you CAN do. In her twenties and thirties, she climbed the ranks in newsrooms across the country and refused to quit until she landed one of the most coveted jobs in the world, a co-anchor of the Today Show. In her forties she became a breast cancer survivor, in her fifties she adopted her daughters and became a mother for the first time, and at sixty, she walked away from the peak of her career to launch a brand-new business with no prior experience. Every single time life whispered, “It’s too late for you,” Hoda said, “No, it’s not. Watch me.” The wisdom she is sharing, directly with you, will prove that it's not too late – you can reinvent your life. She is going to walk you step by step through how she did it, over and over again. She will teach you how to: -“Stop the train” of your life, zoom out, and honestly ask, “Is this actually enough for me?” -Find the courage to give voice to the quiet dream you’ve buried because you’re afraid it won’t happen -Keep going when other people say you're not good enough -Reframe fear, rejection, and “no” using Hoda’s wild early-career story (27 rejections and ONE person who changed everything) -Truly start to believe that you do deserve more If you feel stuck in your job, your relationship, your routine, or just in a version of yourself you’ve outgrown, this episode is your permission slip and your playbook. This is your sign. This is your moment.Let Hoda show you what’s possible. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked the episode, check out this one next with Dr. Martha Beck: 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 Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Our guest today, and the conversation you're about to hear, proves there is a bigger possibility waiting for you in life.
It's not too late. You can reinvent your life at any moment. You can figure out what you want, and you're also capable of creating it.
My very close friend, Hoda Kotby, is here to talk about reinvention, and I've been waiting for this
moment since I started this show. Hoda, more than anyone else, will prove to you that reinvention
is something you can do. In her 20s and 30s, Hoda climbed the ranks in newsrooms across the country
and refused to quit until she landed one of the most coveted jobs in the world, a co-anchor slot on the
Today Show. In her 40s, she became a breast cancer survivor. In her 50s, she adopted her daughters
and became a mother for the first time. At 60, at the peak of her career, she walked away from it
all to launch a brand new tech business with no prior experience. Every single time, life told Hoda,
it's too late. She said, no, it's not. Watch me. The wisdom she is sharing directly with you will prove
that it's not too late, you can reinvent your life right now. She's going to walk you step by step
through how she did it over and over and over again. She will teach you how to gain clarity
when you don't really know what you want. She'll show you how to stop closing the door on bigger
possibilities that are waiting for you, how to keep going when other people say you're not good
enough, and how to truly start to believe that you do deserve more. This is one of those conversations
that is going to hit you like a freight train.
You're in the right place, at the right time, and I promise you,
this is exactly what you need to hear.
Oh, I want to give you a quick heads up.
There's a special segment later in this episode.
Oh, my gosh, you need to hear it.
Because it's about taking a pause, a real pause,
and why it matters more than you think.
So stick around so we can take a pause together.
this special segment is sponsored by our friends at Celebrity Cruises.
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited that you're here. It's such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you. If you're a new listener or you're here because somebody shared this conversation with you, I just wanted to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
I cannot tell you how extraordinary today's conversation is going to be, because we're talking
about how it's not too late. You can reinvent your life at any moment. In fact, you can do it today.
Here in our Boston studios is the one, the only, Hoda Kotby. Now, if you know who Hoda is,
it's probably because for years, she was the beloved co-anchor of the Today Show. In fact, she and
Savannah Guthrie, they were the first all-female co-anchor team for a major network morning TV show.
Hoda is also the number one New York Times bestselling author who has written nine books,
including her newest bestseller, Jump and Find Joy, which is all about embracing change in
every season of your life. Hoda has won four Emmy Awards, three Gracie Awards, a Peabody Award,
and the Edward R. Murrow Award. And in my opinion, Hoda's life story is one giant,
demonstration of how you can change your life at any moment. Because Hoda has done it over and over
again in every decade of her life, from climbing the ranks in newsrooms in her 20s and refusing to quit,
to going through divorce, being a cancer survivor, adopting her daughters at the age of 52,
to walking away from her dream job on the Today Show to launch a new company in her 60s.
if there's one person on the planet
who can convince you
and teach you that it's not too late
and there is more
that your life has in store
for you, it is Hoda.
So please help me welcome
my dear friend Hoda
to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Hoda! Welcome to the
Mel! I've been waiting for this, Mel.
I've been waiting for you.
Well, I am so excited
to pay it forward because
you have shouted from
the rooftops and celebrated me every single time. I have been on the Today Show. We have become
friends. I am so excited to sit with you, to have the person that's with us right now, get to
have that infectious Hoda energy zapped right into your veins. And everybody knows you as the host
of the Today Show. But what they don't know is you're one of the wisest,
most honest, infectious, inspiring person that I've ever met.
Wow. Wow. Can I just say one thing? First of all, I received that and thank you and I love you.
But when I'm looking at you in this moment, I am having a total flashback to the first time you came on the Today Show.
And we wondered, like, who is this tornado? Like, who is this person who walked in? And I remember your energy
preceded you and what I remembered hearing your story and thinking to myself, my God, like so many
things in life are possible. I stroll through your studios today and I feel so like proud of you
and so it just shows what possibilities are there because you're walking it, you're talking it,
you're living it and I get to sit in it and it feels really good. So thank you to you. It's awesome.
awesome you know and that's that's actually what we're going to talk about today because i feel like
more than anyone that i know you have this incredible story where you are constantly reinventing
yourself you're constantly thinking about what's possible you're constantly challenging yourself
and the norm and you know where i want to start is if i take everything too hard that you're
about to share today what could change about my life i'll tell you what could change um
first of all, where you are in this very moment today, right now with all your problems and all the
crap that you're carrying and the job you may or may not like and the relationship you may or may not
be into, all of that is not your destiny. This is not where you are going. And the key to me is
something that I feel like I've learned is sometimes you feel like I'm on a train and I'm going to go,
to my grave. I'm on the way. Just pull on in. And I think what I realized is you can stop,
hit the brakes on your life at any time. I don't care if you're 20 or 40 or 60 or 80.
Breaks, pause, and look. Look at your life. Just look at it from 35,000 feet and then decide,
do I want to change it? And I'm here to tell you, like I feel like I'm living.
breathing proof that you can change it at any time. Things you thought were impossible are not
impossible. They are actually probable. You can do these things, but you have to know that the
possibility is out there. You are on fire. I'm on fire because I feel it in my bones. I feel it in my
bones because I was the person who thought, this is my life. This is as good as it's going to get.
And I am grateful and thank you. And that's enough. And I went from that's good enough to that's not
enough. And there's more for me out there. And Mel, it's out there for the taking. I think we sit there
and go up, you know, that's enough. Don't be greedy. Don't be selfish. It's too much.
Abundance, man. Abundance is available. I mean, look at you. Look at me. Like, it's out there and
available. I loved what you just said. So I'm going to take a giant highlighter and highlight it to
make sure as you're listening, whether you're taking us on a walk or we're in your car or you're
watching us on the big screen on YouTube at home, that you went from, okay, this is enough.
So that's not enough.
No.
No.
No.
I mean, good enough is not enough.
Good enough is not enough.
And I'm not saying be constantly dissatisfied.
Okay, so unpack that because I think especially, and we're going to get into it,
we're going to get into your story, because you have done this, stop the train, look around,
do I like where I am, do I want to get off, do I want to go to different?
You have done this so many times we're going to run through these kind of major points where you're like,
stop the train.
Yeah, stop it.
Stop it.
or freaking accelerate the train.
But talk for me for just a second about the difference
between, okay, good enough is not enough,
being an abundant point of view.
And anything is possible,
or what if possibility expansion point of view
versus good enough is not enough being something
that you bash yourself?
You see what I'm saying?
So I think sometimes you can feel like you're always having FOMO like what's over there.
I don't know what I have is good enough.
Look at their relationship or look at that job.
That looks better than my job.
I'm not talking about that.
I'm talking about that when you quiet yourself and sit and you think to yourself, is this relationship, is this job, is this whatever, giving me what I deserve?
because I think when you feel like you're not worthy, then you take the guy who's,
me, he's okay, I'm not okay. He's going to, I'll take that. Or the job where they grind you down
and nobody ever gives you any compliments and you're not really getting a raise and you've asked
for it 20 times and they're not responding. Like I think there are moments to look at your life,
reevaluate and change it. I'm not saying I want that beach house and I love. I love.
like what they have and I'm never going to be satisfied. No, I've been satisfied in my day to day
every day with what I have. I can also do that and look ahead and go, okay, I feel like I'm worth more
than what I have right here. So I'm going to, I believe I deserve more. And it takes a lot to say
that. It takes a lot. I mean, there were times where I thought, do I deserve any of this?
Do I deserve this job? Do I am I worthy of it? Do I even deserve, I mean,
At one point, I thought, like, do I even deserve my kids? Am I worthy of them? Like, I thought
those things before. And now I've kind of turned a page and realized that, yeah, yeah, I do deserve
my kids and I did deserve that. So in really listening to what you're saying, let me see if I'm
tracking because I think that is really important. When you're talking about as just a starting
ground. The, is this good enough? The mistake that we make is we look outside and go,
oh, at the things, the job, the this, the that, the other thing. You're actually challenging us
to go deeper and to ask ourselves honestly is how I feel about myself, how I feel in this relationship,
how I feel in this job. Is that good enough? Do I feel respect? You know, do I feel respect?
here? Am I being treated in a way that's attractive and that makes me feel like I'm loved?
Or can I be honest with myself and say, I don't like how I feel in this relationship. I don't like
how I feel in this job. And that you're actually inviting us to say that is where the shift has to
happen. That there is something better that you are worthy of that will make you feel different.
Is that? Yeah, that's it. That you put your finger on it squarely. It is like knowing and realizing
that, you know, you kind of have to stop it down and see and evaluate your relationship.
Really look at it and really look at your job and really look at your life. My friend Maria Shriver
had me do this exercise and it had me look at my life this way. So she said, okay, I want you
to get a piece of paper and I want you to cut it up in a bunch of pieces. I was like,
okay so I did that she goes on each piece I want you to write down a part of your life that
requires your time your attention your love all the things and each piece should correspond to how
much time effort energy you put in so oh so the pieces of the paper are different sizes and you're like
okay the big one there's job or there's taking care of my parents or there's taking care of my kids
or okay got it so I started writing down kids and that was a big piece the biggest piece
work was, you know, medium-sized.
And then it was visiting my mom, exercising, taking care of my dog, taking trips, blah, blah, blah.
So I looked at my whole thing and she goes, there's your life.
How do you, is that, shows, are your kids really bigger than your job?
And I go, no, actually they're not.
So let's change those.
So we flip those.
And are you really spending that much time visiting your mom?
No. Okay, why don't you switch that? Why don't you switch that? So make work even bigger. By the time it was done, I looked at my papers and she goes, that's your life. Do you like it? That's how you're going to spend your life. You've just shown me. Here it is. And I looked at it and I thought, pause, stop, re-evaluate. And look. So the job piece, the family piece, all of these pieces, and all of a sudden I looked at my life.
a totally different way. So I think what I'm saying here is like, take your life and try to 360 it,
you know, whether it is your relationship, your job, and how it all fits together, and then do a
reevaluation and take a look at it. Because otherwise, girl, you'll be marching off. You'll be going to the
end. You'll be like, and now I'm 90. And you're like, why didn't I, what was I think? And I could have gone,
Could have changed them back there?
Yes.
But it moves too quickly.
So it's like a stop down.
That exercise is an example of one way that you can stop the train.
Yeah.
And force yourself to look.
Yes.
You know, I want to read to you from your New York Times blockbuster bestselling book,
Jump and Find Joy.
I am reading from the introduction.
And you say, I truly believe that it's never too late to let go of what you know isn't
working and to go for what you want.
Yeah.
What does that mean?
Well, in that particular case, and again, I love this person, so I don't want it to be any
kind of a slight against him.
But one of the things I was referring to is I was in a long relationship with a wonderful
guy named Joel, who was a lovely human, great dad to the.
to our kids, all those things. But sometimes in a relationship, it just stops working. Or you realize
that as you grow and as things get better, something's not sinking in. Yeah. And, you know,
we tried all the things like there was a guy who said every couple of years, reintroduce yourself to your
spouse. Hi, I'm Mel. Hi. Just so, you know, I don't like Applebee's anymore. I loved it. I loved it.
I like Outback now. I know you always want to take me to Applebee's. I'm over it, okay? I know that was our
thing, but now I've grown and I'm here now. You know, in all these ways that you can reevaluate your
relationship. And I think after a lot of those kinds of things, I think there comes a point
where sometimes values don't align and sometimes things don't align. And so it's okay to take different paths.
different paths, but they're parallel paths. Like Joel just came over. He hung out with the kids on
Halloween. He dressed up. So he's a big part of their lives, and we are happier in this way.
But I think it's important sometimes, and I don't encourage. It's not like, you know,
look at your spouse, and I don't encourage that. But I think there does come a point where you say to
yourself, there's nothing innately wrong here. Sometimes it's the quiet,
parts that aren't there and not in a you know everything was fine you know well i love that we're
starting here and i'll tell you why because the act of reinvention is either something that will
be forced on you because somebody does something terrible and the relationships over or somebody
that you love is no longer here or something like it's either forced on you yes it's forced on you
when your kids grow up and move out it's forced on you when industries change it's forced on you
when a recession hits it's forced on you when somebody dies or it's something that you give yourself
and when you said really you can at any moment stop the train that is barreling down the tracks
you can at any moment break your life into these pieces and honestly ask yourself,
is this actually how I spend my time? And how do I feel in each one of these areas? And so what
you're pointing to is the permission to feel worthy and joy and to feel fulfilled in new ways.
And any woman that's ever had children who was a stay-at-home mom who quietly starts to feel like, I want to do more, that is the exact same moment of reinvention because it's not that there's anything wrong. It's a beautiful thing. It's an amazing thing if you can afford to stay home with your kids.
but there's something that's very quiet that is gnawing at you that just and what i believe that
is and i think the dots that we're going to connect is that that is this abundance that is
available to you that is the fact that there is something you're worthy of and you can claim
what's worth you're worthy of without making the thing whether it's parenting or the
relationship or the job that you're leaving, unworthy. You see what I mean? A hundred. A hundred.
And I think, too, it's like the first piece of the whole thing is speaking it out loud, even if it's a whisper, even if it's to yourself in the bathroom mirror.
Even if it's to your dog waffles. It doesn't matter. Like speaking the thing out loud.
What is the thing that whatever your thing is. For me,
One of the things that was missing in my life that I did not believe I could ever have because of life's challenges was motherhood. For me, I had gone through some challenges early in my life. I had breast cancer in a divorce and went through those things and I had missed that train. And it was crushing me, prushing me. But I buried it so deep down.
because it was not available to me.
I was not going to speak about it
because if I spoke it
and why would I say something
that would never come to be?
So one day, I was in my 50s.
I was 51, I think,
and I was walking down the beach
with a good friend of mine.
And her name is Jen Miller
and I love her so much
and she's kind of a mother to everybody.
And she said casually
as we were talking about life
and we were just at a baby shower
and she goes, oh, we didn't,
never wanted kids. And I stopped and I looked at her and I said, actually, Jen, I kind of always did.
And she said, but you've never said that. And I said, but I want to say it because it's like I want to
be an astronaut or whatever. It's not happening. And she goes, and she goes, is that why you always said
you wanted to be a teacher of elementary school kids? I said, yeah. She goes, is that why you said
you wanted to run a summer camp? I said, yeah. She goes, oh, my God. So I kept saying myself,
I can't believe I said it. And I go home, speak it out.
loud. I go home and I turned on access or something like that. And Sandra Bullock had just adopted a
baby named Louie from New Orleans. I was like, how old is Sandra Bullock? I'm like,
oh my God, she's my exact age. It's possible. And so this secret, this you can't have it,
don't say it, because you can't have it. I said it. So I was like, that was weird. So I was like,
is that a sign? So I ended up watching something else on TV.
there was this little boy, and I remember the image so clearly and vividly, he was in Syria,
and he was covered with soot, and he was crying, and it was terrible, and his parents had died,
and I looked at that kid, and I was like, that kid, that kid needs me.
Like, I'm not, like, what am I doing here?
There are kids who need me too just as much as I need them.
And one by one, after speaking those words out loud, things were happening.
So here I go.
I start the adoption process.
I'm 51, filling out papers.
Like, what is happening here?
Mel, I am like sitting at my desk because it's never happening.
And the phone rings.
And the lady on the other end of the phone says,
my two favorite words in the English language,
she says she's here.
Kaylee Kane.
This was solely because I saw,
spoke it out loud. I promise you, if I would have buried it, like I've buried other things in
my life because it's out of my reach. Something about saying it in the universe changes things,
and it changed it for me. So, I mean, what I guess I'm saying to your lovely, incredible listener
who's here is, it's not too late. It's not too late. Whatever you have in your brain or in your soul
that you're carrying, like, no, no, can't do it. Just say it. Say it anyway and see what happens.
Like, I think we bury things, and I think it's good to unearth them and give them a go.
You know, the visual that came to mind, as you were saying, say it, because something happens
when you say it, is I had this image immediately of a door that you open.
And when you bury something deep in you and you don't say it because you are convinced you miss
the window, you're convinced it's too late, you're convinced it won't work out for somebody like you,
you are the one that keeps the door closed. But when you say it out loud, you have just opened
up the door, which allows the energy to shift. And the possibilities. I mean, I've got at home now
an eight-year-old and a six-year-old.
Think about that for a second.
Because of that conversation,
that one day on the beach,
I have an eight-year-old who is in third grade,
who dressed up like a saint's cheerleader for Halloween
and who is, you know, God knows what she's going to be.
And I've got a six-year-old.
And the two greatest things in my life
happened because of a whisper,
of not being afraid.
And I think, you know, when you talk about, like, fear is what is holding us all back.
And I am just convinced that for anybody who's dreaming about opening a business, it doesn't matter what it is.
I don't get going back to college, you know, should I try that?
Should I open the flower shop?
Oh, no, I don't know.
Just frigging say it and try something and see.
Because you know what's going to happen if you're sitting at home?
Nothing. Nothing's happening. And so swing for it. And then see, at least you've tried. And I think
that's, I think that's one of them. But the open door is it. Because you're right, you're the one who's
locking it close. You're the one who's saying, no, it's not going to happen to you. Yes.
You're the one. Because you're the one that blocked all the possibilities that it could.
You know, as you're listening and watching, here's what I want you to do. There is somebody in your
life because I'm so struck by the fact that you can identify the exact moment, the exact conversation.
The train is going down the beach. Normally, you don't say anything. And you're like, whoa, wait a minute,
I actually want kids. Yes. And you stop. I can see it as clear as day. You stop. We've all had that
walk where you turn to a friend and go, are you really happy in that marriage? When are you going to
leave that job? Like, you know, just like, something. Something. But I want you because,
I know there's something you're saying to yourself, just listening to Hoda right now,
I've told myself, I can't start a business.
I've told myself, I'll never find love again.
I've told myself, I can't have children.
I can't be a parent.
I've told myself that there is something that it is not possible for me.
And here's what I want you to do.
I want you to share this episode right now with somebody that is in your life that you trust
and say, I just listened to this incredible conversation with Hoda, and it made me realize that I've been blocking the possibility of ever finding love again. I'm blocking the possibility of starting over. I've been blocking the possibility of getting out of debt. And I needed to tell somebody I trusted, and so I'm telling you. And watch what happens in your life when you open the door to the possibility that you could have this thing. And I think we want things so much.
that are meant for us.
That one of the reasons why
I know I've closed the door in the past
is because the thought that I would allow myself
to want it and it wouldn't happen
feels too painful.
That's it. That's the whole thing.
But if I open the door, Melanhoda,
and it doesn't happen, then what?
Yeah.
Then you have the life you have now.
Yes, right.
Nothing's changed.
Yes. You just spoke it out loud. I think the whole idea about the, like you said, the job that's not working, it's like there's this phrase I love, which is just repotting. It's like you're pulling yourself up by the roots. And when you're in the air, you're scared to death. You're like, oh, God, there's no water. I'm going to die. I'm going to die. I'm up here. My roots are flailing. And then gently placed into a bigger pot, nutrient rich. The soil's good. It's soaking up. You're like, wait a minute.
minute. Oh, look what it's like over here. I thought if I left this little pot, I was going to be
dead. And what you found is you just needed room to grow. I mean, your heart's ability to expand
is beyond measure. I thought I had all the love I could handle before my girls. I was like,
I have a great family. I have a great boyfriend. I have a great, great, great, great. And it's all
true it's all true but when you crack it open the amount of love that will come toward you that you
had no idea was even possible it was so out of the realm of even my wildest i couldn't dream that big
like i couldn't my my my brain wouldn't take me there but yet i'm actually living that life
And I often think, what would have happened if I didn't have that conversation?
What would have happened if I didn't?
There were many leaps and things I took in life.
What would have happened if I was too afraid?
Where would I be?
I mean, I could picture my life.
I would be probably married to someone who I shouldn't have been.
I probably would have been working in a job that was okay.
And my life would have had this kind of a parameter.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, I want to just go back and keep circling back to the fact.
that as you're listening and watching, you don't miss that this begins with you stopping the train for a second
and you asking yourself, how do I feel in my life? And is how I feel good enough? Because Hoda is here to tell you
it's not good enough. And there is something that is so much richer and deeper and more profound and
possible for you. But it begins with that quiet admission that, yeah, okay, this is okay, this is a good
life, and. And I think it's also, Mel, you're trying to, because sometimes you can think about
taking a leap or should I go. And sometimes your leap is up where you are and back down.
You actually are in a place that is perfect for you. Yeah. Sometimes the leap doesn't have to be
out, it can be up, oh wait, landing. This is it. Sometimes I just needed a different point of view.
I'm actually exactly where I should be. And I think that's very, very important to think about.
I mean, look, I was, you know, at the Today Show and I was leaping up and down saying what's better
than right here. Like nothing. I mean, to the rest of us, because I think this is another thing that's
really amazing about your story. You are at the height of your career.
You have one of the most coveted jobs on the planet.
When I was growing up, I always thought the job that you had was like the best job.
I mean, the anchor of the morning shows?
What?
The Olympics?
It's a good day.
Meeting everybody.
Guys are always having fun.
The people you get to work with.
Oh, my God.
And now, and it's like, wait, what, Hoda's leaving?
Wait, what?
And so I am saying that because, you know, what happened that had you go even in the height of everything?
And like to go, well, you know what, I think there's something else.
I'm not even quite sure what it is.
Yeah.
It's kind of weird, right?
Well, it's not only that it's, it's not, it's not, it's weird to me, because I'm watching you.
And being in your presence and in that space, like, it is custom made for you.
What you experience through the television with Hoda is 100x what you experience being on television with Hoda.
And so when that happened, it must have, like, was, were you afraid?
Were you, like, how did you walk away from what looked like?
was perfect on paper to become the CEO of a company that you are building in an entirely new
space. You know what's funny about, well, something hit me. It's about decades for me.
Okay. My 30s and 20s, I worked my tail off, which, and I worked through most of the decades.
My 40s was kind of my tricky one. It was, I'd gotten sick with cancer. I got divorced.
My 50s was like, wow, kids, Savannah, first female anchor team. You know, it was like, so then I was
approaching my 60s and I thought well what is what is this one going to be like yeah now it could be
an extension I thought yeah why not 50s 60s yeah we'll keep going and every now and then I got this
kind of thing but this is 60s like how is this decade going to feel for me I actually paused down
on that and I thought about it and I was thinking about how what I wanted it to look like and
I took some time and I was you know wondering is this have I done everything and
Is there more to do with the Today Show?
I feel like I've interviewed all the coolest people.
I've done the Olympics.
I've done all these fun things.
Like, is there more for me to do?
Or, you know, is the same great?
You know, could be great too.
And then something weird happened.
It was my 60th birthday party.
It was like to the party.
And it was on the Today Show.
And it was one of those big ones where people had signs.
They made.
They drove.
I drove from Minnesota.
Happy birthday girl.
My birthday, too.
I was like, g-h.
Like I loved it. My whole family flew in. It was like of a lifetime. Jenna's dad, President Bush gave me a painting. I was sobbing. I was crying the whole time. But something weird was happening. My sister, my best for everybody was there. And while I was there, I was almost having an out of body. I was literally like hovering above. I was like the top of the wave. I kept thinking the top of the wave. This is the top of the wave. I could feel it. I was like, I have chills now. I was like,
this is the best it's ever going to be. And I knew it. I knew it like warm hand on my heart. I knew it
for sure. And something just came over me. And as I was looking out, I was thinking to myself,
okay, did I just decide something on this birthday, on the plaza? Like, is that true? Like I was so,
I'd let the day settle, went home, when, you know, thought about it some more. We'd moved out to the
suburbs, me and my kids, and I was watching my kids play out in the, you know, climb trees and do
fun things. And I was like, huh, is there a different life awaiting me? And my little girl, Hope,
who was six, was climbing a tree in the front yard and up and down. I was watching her. I was just
thinking about, what am I going to do? What am I going to do? Watch her go up and down, a little tree,
up and down. Hi, Mom, look. I'm like, oh, here you are again. Up and down. Okay, good for you.
And then she's at the top. And I go, Hope, E, you're at the top. I go, what are you going to do?
Oh, she looked at me and I kid you not, she goes, I guess it's time to find a different tree.
I go, what?
She was a different tree, right, mom?
I go, yeah, a different tree, yeah, yeah.
So I left and I was like, my heart was full.
I was like, oh my gosh, I think I've decided.
And then there was some actor on the show and he was talking about waves.
And everything was, you know how it is when you say something?
He's talking about waves and I'm listening.
And he goes, Hoda, let me tell you about this.
I rode the Oscar wave.
It's high.
And he was telling me, it goes, and it's so high, but you know what's going to crash, right?
Because every wave does, and you ride it.
And you're like, yes.
And the wave goes down.
He goes, and then I made the decision to paddle back out.
So I paddle back out.
And I rode the next wave in it.
And that one was my indie.
And it was a fun one.
It was a little, but it was fun.
And the next one, he goes, you paddle out as many times as you want, but there'll be different waves.
So I was thinking about it.
And so with all of that, and I also started.
I started thinking about like my time pie. I was like, hmm, we all get a time pie. Here's how we carve it up. And I have one life and that's it. So what am I going to do with it? Is this time pie the way I want it? And I realized it wasn't how I wanted it. And in that moment, I thought about my kids walking into school, the suburbs, starting a new company. I was thinking about
I had that brewing in the back of my head, a little office. I'd walk my kids to school and walk to
my office in town. Like, I could see it. And so with that, I made, the decision became clearer and
clearer. And I thought to myself, if I can put my head on the pillow when I sleep, I know it's the
right choice. If I'm tossing and turning in, I don't know, and angsty. And Mel, I could sleep.
I could, I could sleep. I mean, the hardest part was telling my mom because she loves to watch me,
I love your outfit.
It's so amazing.
Like, that was my worry.
You know how you worry about how other people will react to your big decision?
Yes.
So that's how I decided in that moment.
It came with some angst, of course, plenty, but also some clarity.
So I feel like if I had unfinished business, if I hadn't have interviewed everyone I could have dreamt of and done all the great things, I probably would have been like, oh.
You know, but I'd done seven or eight Halloweens.
I'd done plenty of Olympics since Torino.
I've done, you know, all that kind of stuff.
So I knew inside.
Wow.
Yeah.
I love that warm hand on heart.
Yes.
Talking about that because when you open the door to possibility.
Yes.
Even because now you've given us two examples.
Well, actually, I always did want kids.
So that's one door that's opening.
another door that opened is
this is as good as it's going to get
and is
if this is as good as it's going to get
is this enough
and so you open the door
to is there a different
chapter in my life
even though this one is really amazing
and then the waves are coming
and then by opening the door
to that possibility
what happened, of course, is the,
I got to find another tree message comes in.
The waves come in.
You start to notice that you're not even in the biggest moment.
You're just observing that you are.
Yes.
And that's how this starts to unfold.
And to have the feeling of knowing,
which is very unusual,
I didn't think I would ever have that feeling,
But you're right. The doors open one by one. And there was some kind of clarity. You know, that feeling when we've all had a knowing. You know it. Deep down, if we sit quiet enough, you know. You know that you're supposed to be here. I know exactly what I'm supposed to be doing. But we were too busy sprinting to stop to think about what we're doing. Like the chapter of my 50s could have gone on.
until either the Today Show or I said,
thank you very much.
It's been a great run.
Bye-bye.
Because it is coming.
It's always coming.
That's true.
You know, there's a time in every career
where you go, you start off
and you are like, wow, wow, wow, wow, it's amazing.
And then you start going, it's still fun.
It's kind of fun.
Okay, oh, God.
You know, and I think we try to hang on to the end.
It's like, you know, white knuckle hanging on.
It's like, hang on, dude.
you know, maybe catch it before it drops off the cliff because this is gravity and life.
Everything's that.
Everything is this.
Everything is just recognizing.
I'm here now.
Oh, I'm here.
Okay.
This is a nice place to say thank you.
Yeah.
You know, I think it's knowing, like that knowing.
Hoda, you are on fire.
And I don't want to slow you down, but I do need to take a quick pause.
can hear a word from our amazing sponsors. And I also want to give you a chance to share this extraordinary
conversation because the people in your life who need and deserve to see a bigger possibility
for themselves, maybe you haven't been able to convince them that they deserve more. How about you
let Hoda convince him? And don't you dare go anywhere? Because when Hoda and I return, you and I are
going back in time with her, and you're going to hear this extraordinary story of how Hoda landed her first
job in television. This story is a must here, not only for you, but for any young adult in your
life or anyone who is feeling like they might just give up. So don't go anywhere. Hoda and I
will be waiting for you after this short break. Stay with us. The Let Them Theory is the best
gift you can give this holiday season. It's the gift you give to someone who's overwhelmed,
to the people pleaser, to the friend who carries way too much, to the sibling who's
exhausted from dealing with everyone else's emotions to the co-worker who needs a break. It's meaningful,
it's practical, it's hilarious, and it's life-changing. The Let Them Theory for everyone on your list.
Available at Letthem.com and wherever books are sold.
Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins, and today you and I are here with the one, the only Hoda Kotby.
And we're talking all about the fact that it's not too late.
You can reinvent your life at any moment.
So Hoda, you and I have spoken at so many of the same big conferences and big corporate events,
and you tell the most extraordinary story about landing your first job out of college.
Can you share that story with us right now?
I was a B-minus student at Virginia Tech, okay?
my SATs, I skimmed the trees, barely making it, okay?
I was a trite out, I had fun, yada, yeah.
So it wasn't my finest hour college.
So let's, I mean, it was fun.
But so when I graduated from Virginia Tech that did not have a big communications department
at the time, I went looking for a job and I borrowed my mom's car for a one-hour trip
from my house in Alexandria to Richmond to get hired.
I roll up there and I'm dressed up and I'm feeling good and then shake.
the news director's hand. I'm like, I'm Hoda. I'm like, I love it here. I'm going to sit there.
I'm going to date that guy. Like, I had it. I was like done. The guy takes my tape. He puts in the
machine. He plays it. He stops it. He goes, oh, God, you're not even ready for Richmond. Why did you
come here? I go, I had the interview. This is my only interview. I only had one. He was like,
well, you're not ready. You're green. Who sent you here? How do we get this even happen? And I had
a friend of a friend had sent up there. And it goes, but wait, I got a buddy of mine. He's
hiring in Roanoke. I go, Roanoke, Virginia. Okay, he goes, if you leave now, he's going on some
trip, some news director's trip, do you want me to call him and tell him you're coming? I said,
yes. So it's four hours away from Richmond. So I called my mom. I go, Mom, I'm not bar of the car.
I didn't. She goes, how was Richmond? I don't want Richmond. Okay, nobody wants Richmond. I want
Roanoke. So I drove to Roanoke. I roll up there. I'm like, okay, I'll sit there.
I'll date that guy. I don't care where it's good. Guy takes my tape, plays
it stops it after, I don't know, 30 seconds a minute. He goes, you are so not ready for Roanoke.
He's like, you're green, you're not good, you know, see you later. And I'm like walking out.
And he goes, whoa, whoa, whoa, Hoda. Before you go, I got a buddy of mine. He's hiring in Memphis, Tennessee.
I go, okay. He goes, he's going on the same news director's conference I'm going to. He's leaving
tomorrow. Do you want me to call him and tell him you're coming? I go, yeah, yeah, yeah. Call him.
Tell him I'm coming. So I go, mom, she goes, do you like Roanoke? I go, no, I need the
car for two more days. I'm driving to Memphis. So I hung up. Tennessee is the long, skinny state.
Memphis was over here. I drove across the great state of Tennessee all the way to the end.
The guy meets me. I look like a crazy, because I'm exhausted. And I handed my tape. And he goes,
plays in. He stops it. He goes, Hoda. Why would anyone send you here? Memphis is a big market.
Who sent you? Rowan out? No, no, no, no. You're not ready. And so this went on, Mel.
So he sent me to somebody else. I kept driving. I drove and drove and drove. I was 10 days
driving around. I got rejected in Birmingham, ABC, NBC, CBS. No, no, no. That was three. I drove
to Dothan, Alabama. Okay? That guy asked me, do you know how to put the tape in the machine?
Like, I was a child. I got rejected. I got rejected everywhere. It was over 27 nos. So I felt
terrible. I'm a loser. James Taylor on the radio. Take me home and end this nightmare. And I got lost because
this is what happens when you're driving and there was a big sign that said Greenville, our eye is on you,
CBS. I said, let me roll in. Let me get rejected in Greenville and let me get a map. I'm going home
and starting my job in PR or whatever. And this guy's Dan Sandroni was my life changer. I roll in there
hot. I look like a big old mess. I handed my tape. He goes, my name's Stan. I go, hey, Stan. I was
sports director yesterday and they promoted me. I was like, okay. He goes, what's your name? I go, Hoda.
Come on in, Hilda. Let's look at that tape. So he took my tape, Mel, he sticks at the machine.
Stan plays my tape. The worst tape in obviously history, I've played it for everybody around
the southeastern United States and got nothing.
man stopped the tape and he looked at me and he goes Hilda and I said yes it goes I like what I see
I like exploded in tears so what it taught me if you're a kid getting through college and trying
to figure out is not everybody needs to like you you just stage your one if you have one
and just to show you Stan love me I they told us to bring someone to Studio 1A who changed our
life, and I brought Stan Sandroni, who was like, I knew it from the beginning. I'm like, well,
you were the only one because nobody else thought it was worth anything. But I think that's the
thing. If you're graduating college during your 20s or whatever it is, and somebody tells you
you're not good, you're not good enough, because that's what they all told me. To my face,
you're not good enough. And that will bust your confidence in half. But when you find one person,
one who says
I'll take a chance
then you're like he changed
the whole course of my life
I would have gone into PR
and been in D.C. right now
probably doing something
but because of Stan I got to be here
because of Stan I got to anchor with Savannah
because of Stan I got to go to the Olympics
just one so I think it's possible
you know it's a possibility
if you don't quit if you don't quit
well I would say it's because of Stan
but it's also because of you
Because most people would not have gone through 27 notes.
And the important thing to extract from that story, whether you're 20 or you're 50,
rebuilding your life after divorce, is the 27 and the one.
Because all you need is one stand.
And if all you've gotten or knows, then you haven't met your one stand yet.
And as long as you don't quit, you can't lose.
Yeah. Yes, that's right.
Because quitting is the moment you lose.
Yes. Yes. And I have to say, Mel, I was questioning, like, is this God saying, like,
wrong door, stop knocking. How many nose do you have to get before you say, okay, I get the message now?
And I'm not sure if it was just stubborn. Like, I was thinking about it. I thought about it before,
like, was it just being stubborn and like being, you know, like, I'm not going to give up.
I played sports in high school, so I know.
never quit to the end.
Like, I believed we could win.
If we're down five points and there's three seconds, I play basketball, I was like,
we can get, we can do it.
Like, I had that mentality, like it's possible.
Well, just for the day.
Yeah.
Just for the day, try that mindset.
It's possible.
Yeah. It's possible.
It's possible for me to still get a job.
It's possible for me to still find love.
It's possible for me to start a whole new career at 60.
It's possible for me to have children.
It's possible for me to get out of debt.
It's possible.
And that is important because that opens the door to you continuing to work and walk toward it.
The second you say to yourself, I've become convinced, Hoda, convinced that the number one thing that stands in everybody's way is discouragement.
This deep sense that even though you know that you want something more, even though you know there are things in your life that you would love to experience, that you are,
capable of doing the work. You're capable of going through the 27 knows. You're capable of
finding your one person that says yes. But if you're discouraged, that means you said it's not
possible for me. That's huge. That is huge. The other day, we had like a, I had like a crummy weekend.
I don't know what it was. It was just like the kids were out of control and everything was not good.
And, you know, it's just like one of those weekends. And I was listening to.
something. And someone said to say the phrase, good things keep happening to me. And I was like,
oh, please do not even start with that dribble. I was like, this is not right. Okay. No one's
listening. My kids are barfing. It's not working. So in the morning, I decided, you know what,
I'm going to say the phrase. Let's see if phrases really work. So I woke up that morning.
I texted my trainer and I said, can you meet me at 515? And he said, yes.
I said to myself, good things keep happening to me.
Brian's available.
So I get in the car, I start in.
It's about 10 after 5.
He's really close.
I go, good things keep happening to me.
My kids slept through the night.
Good things keep happening to me.
There's a parking place because I'm early.
I never get this spot.
Good things keep happening to me.
I'm going to do a workout that's going to.
And I have to say it sounded cheesy when I started it.
By the time I got home, I was like, kids, good morning.
Like, I felt different.
I agree 100 that what you tell yourself, because I had to search for things that were good
in that morning because I wasn't feeling it.
I was feeling bleh.
I wasn't feel.
But they're there.
You just have to find them.
So I just was seeking.
I became like someone who was seeking.
Well, what you did in those six words.
Yeah.
is you manually and intentionally change the settings in your mind.
Wow.
And you turned on kind of the attention network in your brain to cast it out.
And there is so much extraordinary research.
We just interviewed Dr. O'Lea Krum.
Oh, wow.
Who's this incredible neuroscientist who studies the settings in the mind
and the impact it has on your body.
That is a beautiful example of her research
and how you can intentionally activate your brain
and change the settings.
And those words, you know,
good things keep happening to you.
Six words, change the settings,
signals to your body,
and now you have a completely different experience of the day.
And I actually think the best advice is always cheesy.
Do you?
Yes, because everybody goes through their day
in a bad mood for no reason.
Yes.
Everybody is a little resigned and suspicious
and, you know, and kind of beaten down
because we've closed the door to possibility
because we've spent years telling ourselves
we're not worthy and we're not good enough
or not this, we're not that.
And so when somebody comes along
who's as bright as the sun like you are
and is like, hey, why don't you just say
like, good things keep happening me?
And you're like, shut up, I don't want to say that.
Like, that's the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
This is the cheesiest thing.
Don't you dare tell me
in my crappy life
that good things can happen to me
do you know how bad my life
so then people start arguing
and yeah maybe your life is terrible right now
but
that's why we attack
the possibility
you know
that's so that's so interesting
I just had a flash moment
while you were saying this
I was at a retreat
with Maria Shriver
and this woman raised her hand in the back
and she said
thank you for that talk
it was at the end and she said
I just want to say something
I am lost
she said
my kids have left home
my job is
thankless and terrible
and my relationship
is dead
and now it's even more
in the spotlight
because the kids are gone
and everything's terrible
can you help me
and I remember Maria
looked at her
and she said well I would love to help you
if I knew you better
I don't know everything about you
she goes but I will say something
She said, language matters. She said, you're not lost. You're here. You packed a bag. You put on that
outfit. And you came to this session. You're not lost. You're seeking. You're not lost. You're
searching. And we talked about how language, what we say to ourselves matters. And I feel like that
feeling and that language and realizing that there are other words you can use to describe yourself.
My life's crummy.
My life's terrible.
My life, you know, you don't know my life.
Right.
And if you're listening to this, you are seeking.
Yes.
So you're not lost and your life is not crappy because it can't be.
You are seeking.
You're looking for something better.
And that's like, I think that shift is what I know has helped people I love and it's helped me through life.
It's like realize that you are, you're never really stuck if you're searching.
you're never really yeah that's true actually when you say i'm stuck i think it's an example of one of the
things that you told us at the very beginning you can stop the train at any time because when you say
i'm stuck the train is stopped and now you're no longer in the rat race you're no longer running
through your day you're actually present to the fact that the train's going nowhere and so i
would have clapped my hands and said thank you for being honest, thank you for recognizing that
your life doesn't feel like you want it to feel. Right, right. Now what? Now what? Are you going to
spend the next decade arguing about how bad it is with yourself and trying to prove to all your
friends why it's bad and that they should feel sorry for you? Or how about you, or how about you,
go over to Microsoft co-pilot and type into AI, this is what I hate about my life. What do I need
to do to make it feel a little better? That feels so good and easy and doable. It's not easy. It's
simple. It's simple, but it's not easy. And it's not easy because of that discouragement and that
fear. And so, Hoda, I would love to have you talk to the person that is like, I can't believe my sister sent me
this episode. This is exactly what I needed to hear. Damn it. It's so much easier to complain about
all this stuff and like not look in the mirror. I remember once I had a friend say to me,
why would I go to therapy? Find out I hate my husband and my life. Then what I'm going to do?
Yeah. Right. They'd rather bury it. Well, I've spent lots of decades of my life bearing stuff.
Me too. And so for the person who's sitting there having this wake-up call, you're starting to
to go, I'm opening the door to possibility. I don't like how my job feels or my relationship feels.
I don't like how I feel in my body. I need to start taking care of myself. I don't like the
fact that I'm becoming reclusive. And I never see my friends. I don't like the fact that I've grown
distant from my family. Whatever that feeling is. And you're quietly starting to draw together
the courage, especially to change something huge. I mean, walking away from the Today Show, saying out
loud and filling out the paperwork at 51 to adopt a child for the first time.
Saying out loud to somebody that you love, I'm not really happy anymore in our relationship.
These are really big things.
So what would you say to somebody who is cracking the door open and they're not ready for
their friends, Hoda and Melda, kick it wide open?
But you are at least feeling that tingling sensation of, like, they might even be reaching to hit pause because I don't know if I can handle calling off the wedding.
I don't know if I can handle my parents' disappointment when I change my major or I tell them I'm going to follow my dream and go move across the country or the planet.
Yeah. Well, it definitely takes a ton of courage to make a change. If you're thinking about it and it's eating inside of you, I think you have to take baby steps because don't fling yourself off a cliff. That is not smart. Don't quit your job. You need the insurance. Do not, don't jump out of your relationship without really examining. And I think it's important to take a deep look at what the dissatisfying.
is. One thing I do every morning that's helpful to me is in my journal, I have four prompts. And every
day I use the same four. Oh, I can't wait to hear these prompts. But Hoda, how about we take a quick
break right here? So I can give our sponsors a chance to share a few words. And when we come back,
here's what's going to happen. Hoda is going to walk you through those exact four prompts that she
uses every single day. Now, these are the prompts that have helped her reinvent her
life. It's going to help you do the exact same thing. And, you know, speaking of help, if this
conversation is inspiring you, and of course it is, it's going to inspire the people that you love.
So please, take a moment and share this with somebody that you deeply care about. But don't go anywhere.
We have so much more to dig into, including these four prompts. So stay with me. We'll be right back.
Welcome back. It's your buddy Mel Robbins. And we are here with the extraordinary Hoda. We're talking about the fact that it is not too late. You can reinvent your life at any moment. And Hoda, before the break, you were about to share the four journal prompts that you use every morning that help you gain clarity. So what are those prompts, Hoda? They are body, intellect, emotion, and spirit. And under each one, I write what they need. What does my body?
body need today. It needs a walk. It needs bath. It needs manicure. Needs sleep. Write it down.
What does my intellect need? About that book that's been sitting on my bedside table forever that I
haven't cracked open. One chapter. I need one chapter of something intellectual. What do my
emotions need? I didn't get time to put my kids to bed well last night. I'm going to take time and I'm
to read. And what does my spirit need? Oh, I need a better connection with God. So I'm going to read this or do
that. Once you start looking at your life on the daily, you understand what you need, what you need and
what's lacking. And I feel like that's like a mini roadmap for the day. Now you're thinking to
yourself, I want to change. I'm scared. I don't know how to do it. Okay, here's what you do.
I read this somewhere, but you do 30 minutes for 30 days. So you want to start new business.
Here's what you're going to do. Today, you're going to spend 30 minutes today, whenever it is. 30 minutes checking out, oh, go on AI. I want to open a coffee shop. What is the competition in my neighborhood? Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. 30 minutes done. Tomorrow, 30 more minutes. Okay, give me a business plan and blah, blah, boom. Number three, you do it for 30 days. When you're done, you have 900 minutes clock. 900. So you know whether you want to open a coffee shop. You have enough data. You're going to understand whether that's a good idea or not for you.
So my advice is baby steps toward the jump. You need to dissect it and figure out if it's really
what you want. Because I think sometimes we think we want it and you're like, I'm going to run and jump
off the cliff. Oh my God, what's down there? Don't do that. Like we're not idiots. We need our
paychecks. We need our insurance. We need these things. But we can explore possibilities at the same
time. And the biggest thing is, it doesn't matter what the, don't worry about the odds.
What are the odds of me starting a business? Oh, God, it's not going to work because the odds are,
if someone really said to me, what are the odds of me becoming an anchor on the today show?
I swear, if someone crunched the numbers, which AI could, it would have been a million to one.
Stop sign glasses, funny name. I was way overweight. I looked, you know, no one could say. It was like
a million reasons why it didn't make sense. But it does.
So don't play the odds, do your thing, do your dance.
And I think examine it.
And I think go for it because the option is being right where you are.
And that may be where you want to be.
Well, and the time's going to pass.
Yeah.
Anyway, yeah.
It's going to pass anyway.
Yeah.
But you get to choose what you're going to do at the time.
And so I want to just extract to make sure you got that incredible tool
because Hoda is now building from the deep down depths of really stopping the train.
asking yourself, how do I feel?
And as how I feel in my life, is this good enough?
Explore a mindset.
What if is something else possible?
Think about saying the phrase out loud.
And that opens the door to possibility.
Doesn't mean you have to become a parent.
Doesn't mean you have to end the marriage.
Doesn't mean you have to quit the job.
Doesn't mean you have to do anything.
You're just considering.
the possibilities, and you're opening the door. And now you've taken it a step further into something
very tactical with these journal prompts, where you're now asking yourself, what does my body need?
And the things that you said, I'm like, I do need a bath. Yeah. I definitely need a manicure and
pedicure. Don't even get me started on the pedicure piece. Like, I don't, thank God it's closed
toes, seasons right now. I need a wax. I need, like, I need, I need a lot for the body.
Like, all of those prompts, your spirit, your emotions, how this all plays together is, I guarantee
you, if you've said out loud to yourself, I need, I need a job where I feel engaged and
energized. I need a job where I feel respected and considered. I bet then when you go to
the tactical and you're like, what does my body need? What's going to come to the surface is,
oh my gosh, I am so stressed because now you've opened the door. And when you say my intellect,
I need to be engaged in my work. I need something interesting to do. Oh, my spirit. And when you
start to prompt the daily and then you use the 30 for 30 days, that's how it takes it into action.
And there's your roadmap to go deep, deep, deep into action.
And I think the thing that stops people and stopped me is like when you don't know what
your purpose is and you're like, what is it?
What is it?
I don't know where to go.
This is all I got.
I don't know which thing I should do.
I think that that piece of it is also so huge that it makes you think to yourself, I can't do it.
I actually heard a story that moved me.
And I was like, this is what purpose is about.
And it was, they called it stuff, more stuff, even more stuff, and purpose.
And this guy named Ken Bering was a real estate dude, and he made lots of money.
And he was kind of cranky and wasn't a happy dude.
But anyway, he made all this money.
He's like, now I'm going to be happy.
Bought his wife, the big house, got the jewels, got the car.
He's like, this is good.
Six months later, he was cranky old Ken again.
He was like, oh, God, this is not good.
He goes, you know what I need?
more stuff yeah so he got that house on the hill he got the Lamborghini get the better we'll get the
private plane yeah more stuff six months later cranky can again wasn't feeling good he was like oh god
he goes you know what i need i need to buy something big so this man bought the seahawks he actually
bought the team bought the team he was fist bumping on the field he was like this is amazing six
months later felt like crap again he was like jeez buddy has says hey come with me to bosnia i'm gonna drop off
some wheelchairs do you want to join he was like i'll go so they take 75 wheelchairs and when they land
there are 75 disabled people on the tarmac he's opening up the chairs and one by one they're hoisting
these people off putting them in the chairs gets to the third guy's lifting them up and the guy
kind of grabs his hand and he looks at ken can goes you you okay he goes yeah yeah i just want to
memorize your face so that when i see you in heaven i'll say thank you and ken said it was the first time
in his life, he felt sheer and utter joy and purpose. First time. And it changed the course of his life.
He ended up taking wheelchairs to people who needed them. But finding what can found or finding
the thing that gives you tingles, finding the piece that we're all searching for. Because I think
change is easy when you have the piece. You're like, up.
Now I know where I'm going, because it's hard when you don't know which way to turn.
But I think finding that concrete piece, and I was thinking, like, how do you do that?
And I did ask a friend of mine who's a professor, and she said, this is what I tell my students to do.
She said, I tell them to list five people who they admire and they want to switch places with.
Just even for a day. Who would they be? So they list them.
Could be anybody. It could be the lady who runs the coffee shop. It could be Beyonce.
say, it could be your mother, could be whatever. Boom, boom, boom, boom, five. And write down
the traits, why? Well, this, that, and the other, I like this, I like that. Then write in
another column, things you don't love about their life. She said, what you'll see is a pattern emerging.
She goes, one of them was like everyone was an entrepreneur, and she never even thought that.
One of them was, everyone was in the spotlight in different ways. Ah, so you like something in
the spot. One was everybody has kids. But a way to
to distill what you want, because I think not knowing what you want makes you feel helpless.
You're like, I don't know where I'm going. I don't know what I want.
Well, I think that's why most people are stuck. They're not even clear about what they want.
Yeah. So how do you think, like, how do you find that thing?
Well, there's getting clear about what you want and then there's opening the door to possibility
to say I can actually have some version of that. And a lot of people, in my opinion, get very
stuck because you won't even be honest with yourself. Yeah. And say out loud what you want.
Yes. Because you have convinced yourself that things like that don't happen to a person like you.
And so the clarity is buried by the discouragement and by what society has told you. And so I don't believe people don't know what they want.
I believe you know deeply what you want, but you have convinced yourself it's not possible
for you. So you do not even bother saying it. That's so good. Oh, that's so good.
It's good because it's true. It's true. And, you know, if you really sit with that.
Wow. That's big. You could have easily told yourself, nobody's going to hire me because my tape's
that bad. But you knew what you wanted. Yeah. And the desperation. Yes, that's what it was.
There was no inspiration. It was desperation. But I'm a negatively motivated person. Like, there's not a lot,
like, you know, I'm flipping more to the positive and the go, go, go. I want to go to that moment when
your life turned upside down in your 40s and you got the breast cancer diagnosis. And I read that you
felt like something cracked open in you.
Can you talk about how that experience changed you?
And I also love the line you would say to yourself, again, back to the language, back to
the words, back to the settings of the mind.
You can't scare me.
Well, when I was diagnosed with breast cancer, and I would guarantee that most people who
are listening probably either know someone who had it, had it themselves.
And it's scary and terrifying.
And I'm the kind of person who wandered it over.
I did not want to discuss.
It wasn't going to be part of me.
It was going to be one of those things that happened that I was going to forget about.
Goodbye.
I didn't like how I told a couple of people and the way they looked at me was horrifying to me.
Sad eyes, poor thing, she won't make it.
That was the feeling I got.
And so I was refusing to speak about it.
I was going to have a mastectomy.
It was going to take a lot of time and it was going to be over with.
No more.
No discussion about it.
And a funny thing happened while I was in the healing process, I was asked to go on this today's show shoot.
They wanted to get me back on the saddle and come on, you can go.
And I was like, yes, I wanted to go because I didn't want to be defined by anything that was happening.
And so I got on the plane.
I did this shoot.
It was overseas in Ireland.
And I felt horrible.
My body was failing me.
I looked scary, I felt horrible, and I was like, what the f is happening here?
I was like, I'm, you know, my body's broken, it's over, I felt terrible.
And I got on the plane to go home and a stranger sitting next to me who, at the time,
I was just trying to put my earbuds in and get away from the guy.
He was like, how you doing?
I was like, good, go away.
Jesus, he's like, no, you got, how, you're on one of those shows?
And I was like, oh, like I wanted to sleep so badly.
And the guy started talking and I liked him.
He was friendly.
And he goes, so he was asking me questions.
I was asking him questions.
And he said, what's that on your arm?
I go, oh, it's a compression sleeve.
Yes, what's it for?
I go, oh, I had a procedure.
He goes, what procedure?
I go, I had an operation.
Like, I was like, what the?
And he goes, what was it?
I go, God.
I go, okay, I have breast cancer.
I said, but I hope when you get off this plane, you don't say,
oh, I sat next to this girl with breast cancer.
He goes, what is wrong with you?
He goes, breast cancer is part of you.
It's like going to college, you're getting married.
He goes, let me give you some advice and you can go to sleep.
I was like, all right.
I go, and I'll never forget what he said.
He said to me, don't hog your journey.
It's not just for you.
He said, think of how many people you could help them a plan ride home.
He said, you can put your stuff deep in your pockets,
and you can take it to your grave or you can help somebody.
of chills. Ken Dwayne was his name. And I never forgot it. And I was like, I was hiding it. I wanted to
bury it. And this man just cracked it open, open the door. This guy, Ken, a stranger. He changed
everything for me. I was no longer hiding or ashamed or worried about what people would think
of me. It was part of me, just like going to college or getting married. And what
What happened as a result was, you talked about the four words, you can't scare me, because language matters.
I sort of had this epiphany when I was sleeping and healing.
And I popped up out of bed and I was like, oh, my God, you can't scare me.
It's like, wait a minute, the scariest thing just happened.
Maybe I wasn't going to make it.
I made it.
Here I am.
So now what?
Now what?
So with this kind of courage and like, you know, propelling me, they were starting a new.
hour of the Today Show, a brand new fourth hour, never been, you know, ever happened before.
And no one saw me in that job because I wasn't that girl. And with that epiphany, if you can't
scare me, you should have seen me, man. I ran up to the 52nd floor where all the big wigs were.
I met Jeff Zucker. I'm like, Jeff, I had this epiphany. I had cancer. But now, and I went on
this big speech, I ended up getting hired for the Today Show as a result of that conversation.
producers who are rooting for me.
And I thought to myself, it took me getting sick, being afraid of dying, before I had
courage to ask for something like a promotion.
It seemed so small and stupid and little.
Like how, and I was thinking to myself, if I hadn't gotten sick, I wouldn't have asked.
I would have sat quietly at my desk and worked hard and not.
been noticed probably. But it reminded me like, you don't need to wait till you're sick.
You don't need to wait till you have no fear. Ask for the stinking raise. Ask for the promotion.
So what if they say no? So what? You asked. You did something. You took an action.
I mean, sitting quietly at your desk is going to get you nowhere but at your desk.
No one's giving you a raise because they see you in the corner, still working at 8 o'clock at night.
me. It's like nobody sees that. You have to take ownership. And cancer, weirdly, made me believe that
I was afraid of nothing, which I was. And it changed the game. I had this visual of somebody
sitting in a cubicle, typing. Yes. And how this huge fear of Susan in HR, or this huge
fear of Robert, the partner in the corner, keeps you small.
Yes.
But at any moment, you could just be like, why am I scared of Susan or Robert?
There's a million other places to work.
Why am I staying in a job like this or a relationship like this?
Yes.
Because you have given so much power to both the fear and the other person.
Yes.
Can you speak directly to someone who's in the middle of facing something really hard and the fear is paralyzing?
Paralyzing.
Yeah.
I mean, look, if you are sitting in a place where you are scared because, number one, you can't leave your job because of all of the responsibilities you have, you feel like you can't leave your relationship.
because of what's out there. What else is out there? You don't know. All I know is I've heard
countless stories from people who are on the other side and they are, they will blow your mind.
Someone who I interviewed a long time ago named Ian La Van Zant, who's a woman who is like one of these
gurus in the advice space. Good friend of Oprah's told me the story about how she was in a
horribly abusive relationship and one day it was just the end it was enough and she packed her kids up
she had enough money for a subway token at the time and she went to a shelter and fast forward to
her life that was intended for her she went to law school she sleeps in a four-poster bed in a beautiful
house in maryland and has a wildly successful career on the other side of fear is the thing that you
want. It's getting there on the other side. Fear is paralyzing and you can sit on your hands and
picture yourself in five years from right now. Picture it. Like what would it be like in five years
from right now? It's 2030. Still sitting at the desk. Still in that relationship that maybe isn't
suited for you. I think the moment will come and courage comes when you speak it, when you have a good
circle around you where you can bounce it off of. And you know that there's good stuff on the other
side. Like being on this side is scary. All you see are clouds. It's like once you climb the
mountain on the other side, you're like, oh my God. Why was I down there? What was I doing? Yes.
Yeah. Yes. So one of the things that you have done that I am so proud of you for doing,
because I remember when I came on your podcast and you put your arms around and you're like,
I'm leaving a today show, but I haven't told anybody yet and I really want to talk to you about something.
And I was like, oh, my God, I'm so excited.
I'll talk you about it, whatever you want.
And our friendship exploded.
Yeah.
At the age of 60, you are stepping into the space of tech CEO.
You are launching a new wellness app, Joy 101.
This is a whole new chapter.
You have never run or built a technology app.
And what I love about this, Hoda, is that you're like,
Maybe it's possible.
Maybe I could figure this out.
Maybe I could like, you know, and what I would love to have you speak to the person who's
been telling themselves, I'm too old, it's too late.
I've never done that.
I wasn't an engineering college.
I can't do this.
I can't do that.
What has just jumping and saying, I know I don't know how to do it, but I'm going to figure out
how does that change your life and what do you want the person listening to know about
just saying, screw it, I'm going to figure it out.
Here's the deal.
I'm going to tell you what to do.
be a beginner again. Be a beginner again. I'm 61 years old and I'm a beginner again. It's like I'm on
the JV basketball team and I'm learning how to do it all over again. And I see all these varsity players
and I'm like, I can't believe I'm actually in this group. Being a beginner again is one of the
finest feelings in the world. I love it so much. I don't know. I'm learning every day.
I called you, Mel, you came on in a group meeting with my team.
Me. Mel came on with my entire team when we were just like toddlers, infants, trying to figure out, you're like, here's what's going on. This is what, this is what. We are learning as a group.
Joy 101 is a, it's a wellness platform. It has all of the things I love so much, and I'm learning how to run it. We're doing retreats. I'm learning how do you run that? Who do you hire for that? We have an app that has a place where you can put your, your information,
in and it gives you a kind of a curated special program just for you. It's mind blowing. So as I'm
going through this, I'm learning to build something brick by brick. First, I called my sister. I'm like,
Hey, Hala, do you want to do this with me? Yeah, my best friend, Karen, who's genius. I go,
do you want to do this? Yeah. She's like, I have a friend named Mike. Mike was one of the founders
of Open Table. He came and joined us. Mike said, I got someone named Roddica. She's an awesome
so she came. I got someone named Kate. And like literally we're like this band of friends that
came together to build this wellness platform. And I was always seeking those kinds of things,
like a breathwork I learned to do late in life and all these things. And I was thinking to myself,
like once you get bitten by that bug, once you do a breathwork class and you're sobbing and you go,
what the hell just happened to me? I go, so I was hooked on these well.
wellness practices that change, and you know, because you've had a lot of your guests on,
they change the chemistry in your body. So I was seeking a place where can I find all that stuff.
So I looked at Calm, which was great. And I looked at Headspace, which was awesome. But nothing was
speaking to me. And I'm like, let's build that. Okay, so here's what I want to extract for the
person listening. Yeah. Did you notice how Hoda just came alive? And she doesn't even know what
the hell she's doing. No idea. And so the thing I want to say to you is,
If you've been holding out on starting the book club.
Yeah, yes.
If you've been thinking, you know, it'd be kind of cool to grab my best friend and build a business.
I don't know, like doing pop-up things with art.
Yeah.
What's available to you is the energy and the vitality and learning and what it brings into your life.
Pursuing something interesting is what makes you interesting.
because you now have something and a reason to get out of bed and to start learning again.
And that's what I see in you.
And so I want you to really take away from what Hoda is now doing at 61.
And she's learning it's hard to do this stuff.
But it's worth it.
Yes.
Because you're opening the door to bigger possibilities.
And so be a beginner.
You will not know how to do it.
No idea.
But just imagine the possibility.
And flopping over and over is A-O-K.
If the person listening right now takes just one action from this conversation,
what is the most important thing to do first?
I think the most important thing to do is to tell...
yourself, that it's possible and believe it. Because you're not going anywhere if you're not
believing in the possibility. If you're trudging around saying, well, I guess I'll try,
it's not working, dude. It's not going to work. You don't even want it to work. You have to go in
with the belief that there is a probability of success for me doing this. And that's changing a
mindset, because you've got to feel the things inside. And I know it sounds blue sky, but it is not.
The only reason I have been successful in all the places where I have tried is because deep down
inside, I knew it was going to work. They wondered with me and Savannah together,
is it going to work? We're not sure. We're not sure. I knew it was going to work. I knew it was going to work.
I know this business is going to work. They're like, oh, my God, is it going to work? Is it going to work?
Yeah. I go, you call you.
couldn't make it feel if you try them. I'd tell some of my employees. We're working.
Get on the train. Like, we're going. And it's going to work because you're not quitting.
Not, oh, never. Well, that's why something works. Because I'm going to keep working until it does.
Yes. Yes. Yes. I love that. Hoda, what are your parting words?
My parting words are, it's never too late. You're not too old. And everything, everything, everything happens. Right.
on time.
That's it.
Hoda, I am so proud of you.
I love you.
I love seeing you win.
I love seeing you going for it.
I am constantly shouting from the rooftops for your success, for your joy.
I am proud to be your friend.
And I am grateful that you came to Boston.
and you shared everything that you did.
And every time I spend time with you,
I feel like the luckiest person in the world.
I love you.
I love you too, Mel.
Thank you.
Oh, my God.
I know I was going to be crying at the end,
but that's how it goes.
I love you too.
I love you too.
Thanks, Mel.
And I also want to tell you,
in case no one else tells you as your friend,
that I love you and I believe in you.
And I believe in your ability to create a better life.
And please take everything that Hoda poured into you and just consider it exactly what you needed to hear because it was exactly what you needed to hear.
All righty, I'll see you in the next episode.
I'll welcome you in the moment you hit play.
I love everything about this.
I just have to run into the bathroom.
Yeah.
This, you cannot fail.
You cannot.
By the way, what a great way to start, what a great way to start an interview.
I need to play my glasses.
I always forget to do this.
And then I realize, wait, what if I look at it?
Yes, it's true.
All right.
Are we ready, Bri?
And the Edward R. Murrow.
How do you say that word?
I knew what's going to, Murrow.
And the Edward R. Murrow Award.
Hold on.
Now, who is tell you?
Who are you?
you. 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, psychotherapism.
therapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
Serious XM Podcasts.
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Oh, my gosh, I needed that.
When was the last time you did that?
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And I'm not talking about the quick autopilot kind of.
I'm talking about the kind where you stop.
You breathe in.
You drop your shoulders and then exhale on purpose.
I don't know about you, but sometimes I move through my entire days without even realizing that I'm holding my breath.
In fact, when I said, let's breathe, you probably went, oh my gosh, am I breathing?
That happens to me all the time because there's always something.
I mean, there's deadlines I've got to meet. There's text and emails you got to respond to. My kids need
my help or advice on something. On top of all of that, don't even get me started about the news and the
headlines. All of this noise and that noise, it can get so loud. It's so hard to hear yourself.
And when that noise gets the loudest and life starts to speed up and pile up, you know what you and I
both do? We're both guilty of this. We start to speed up too. And I, for one, I know it's one of my
worst qualities because I start to match the speed of life. I start to bring more intensity and
eventually it turns into burnout. It's not a matter of if, but when? Here's the truth. You don't
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