The Mel Robbins Podcast - How To Reinvent Yourself & Make The Greatest Comeback Of Your Life (At Any Age)
Episode Date: October 19, 2024In this episode, Mel is giving you the step-by-step roadmap of how to reinvent your life.Whether you’ve just graduated, you’re an empty nester, or you’re somewhere in between, this episode will ...provide you with the steps to make a pivot.You’ll learn why reinvention is not about fixing what’s broken, but about tapping into your desires, following your curiosity, and taking bold action. By the end of this episode, you’ll be fired up and ready to take control of your future. This is an encore episode with new and exciting insights from Mel at the top of the episode where you’re getting Mel’s simple guide for stepping into your next chapter.For more resources, including links to the studies mentioned in the episode, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode, you’ll love listening to this one next: 9 Small Things That Will Make a Surprisingly Big DifferenceConnect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeGo deeper with Mel’s free video course, Make It HappenFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I was just sitting here thinking, I cannot believe that we've been doing this podcast
for two years already.
I mean, it's just absolutely incredible.
And so I've been reflecting in particular about all of the questions that we receive
every single month from your fellow listeners around the world.
And I was looking through it recently and I wondered, well, what are the most common things
that people write in about asking for us to do an episode on?
And let me share a few of them with you.
Career change, finding purpose, making friends as an adult,
starting a new chapter after a major life change,
restarting after a setback, dating after a breakup.
And you want to know something interesting?
All of these are about the same topic, reinvention.
And that's what you and I are going to talk about today.
And one of the things that I'm going to do is I'm going to walk you through a step-by-step
process for reinventing your life.
I'm going to give you my favorite metaphor that I use when I have to reinvent some aspect
of my life.
And I'm going to remind you over and over again, you're never starting from scratch.
You've got experience, wisdom, and resilience
under your belt, and you're bringing that
to whatever change you wanna make.
And look, I know what it feels like to be overwhelmed,
to go through a major life change.
And I also know what it feels like
to not know what you want, or even how to get started.
So today, you and I are gonna flip that script
and break down the topic of reinvention step by step.
And by the end of this episode,
you're gonna feel so fired up to take control of your life,
you won't be able to sit still.
Hey, it's your friend Mel.
I'm so excited that you're here.
It's always an honor to spend time with you and to be together.
If you're brand new, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
Thank you for choosing to listen to this podcast because it tells me that you're the type of
person that values your time and you're interested in learning about ways that you can improve
your life.
And today, holy cow, you are in for an amazing experience, because
you and I are going to be taking our relationship to a whole new level and embarking on a road
trip. It's not just any road trip. We're going to be talking about the fantastic journey
that is your life. And can you tell I'm excited? One of the reasons why I'm so excited about
this topic is because I've met so many of you out and about
as I'm living my life.
And whenever I meet you in person,
you tell me that you love listening to this podcast
as you take a walk, as you're listening in your car,
as you start your day, which means that as you're listening,
you and I are walking, driving, talking, and learning,
and sharing this journey called life together.
It's true, isn't it?
Life is one big unpredictable journey.
The twists, the turns, the pit stops, the detours don't even get me started on the
freaking breakdowns.
But right now, you and I are together in this moment.
And we are side by side, traveling down the road together.
And I just love being here with you right now.
It certainly makes it more fun knowing
that I'm on the road of life with someone awesome like you.
But here's a question I want you to answer for yourself.
As you imagine yourself right now in this moment,
are you in the driver's seat of your life with
your hands on the wheel? Or are you just a passenger who's along for the ride?
Now the answer might not be obvious. Maybe you're in a career that doesn't really fit you.
Maybe you've worked really hard and you thought you would love the life that you've worked so hard to create.
But now that you're in it, not really.
Maybe you've navigated your life like so many of us do based on what your parents thought you should do,
or making your partner happy, or what your kids wanted, or what you thought you should be doing.
That's what it feels like to be a passenger.
And my mission today is to guide you step by step
to putting yourself firmly in the driver's seat of your life
and grabbing that wheel and taking responsibility
for navigating where you go next
on this extraordinary journey.
So no matter where you are right now,
whether you just graduated
or you're stalling out in your career
in your 20s, 30s or 40s,
or you're hitting the accelerator
and you just wanna know how to go even faster,
whether you're going through a breakup
or hit a major life change,
or maybe like me, you're an empty nester,
or like our son, you've just started college
and you feel like you're having to figure it all out
as you're flying down the road.
This episode is the roadmap you didn't even know you needed.
And I want to tell you something even cooler.
No matter where you are right now,
you get to choose your next destination.
And even better, once you know where you want to head next, there's
a million ways to get where you want to go. And that is why every single one of the questions
that I get over and over and over again, whether it's about dating, career change, creating
your next chapter, finding your purpose, it's all about reinventing yourself, learning how
to be the driver of your life, learning how
to be clear about where you want to go next, and then doing the work to chart the course
that feels the most exciting, aligned, and empowering to you.
And that is exactly what I'm going to teach you to do over and over and over again today.
And I'm also super excited to do this
by answering a few questions from your fellow listeners
about this topic.
And here's the thing,
as you hear their questions,
you might not be in the same specific situation
that they're in, but I'm gonna tell you something.
There's something about your life that you wanna change.
There's an aspect of a relationship you're in
that you wanna reinvent.. There's an aspect of a relationship you're in that you want to reinvent.
And today is an opportunity for you to just stop going with the flow.
It's an opportunity for you to wake up and realize that no matter where you are or what
you're dealing with, you always have the power to take the wheel and turn your life in a
brand new direction.
And that brings me to our very first
question from a listener named Sarah. Hey Mel, it's Sarah. Can you talk about starting over at 40
and being terrified doing it? I turned 40 last year and my life was not okay. I've been in a
toxic marriage for 11 years with a man who also has a lot of health problems.
Hashtag guilt. I was laid off from a job I loved and I have gained a crazy amount of weight.
That's just the icing on the cake. I don't even know where to start. I don't even know if I have
ever been truly happy. I would love to hear your advice on this topic.
I want the second act of my life to be amazing.
Help me Mel, thank you.
First of all, thank you to Sarah
for doing the work for all of us.
And I wanna say one thing out of the gate.
Sarah said that she is terrified of starting over.
First of all, everybody, you're never starting over.
You're always starting from experience. This is so
important for you to understand. Just because you got laid off, just because you've ended a
relationship, you're not starting from scratch. You have all the experiences, good and bad,
in your life that you can now use to reinvent and reimagine what the next chapter of your life looks like next.
And I'm seeing the same question that Sarah's asking, whether it's those of you in your 20s that are writing and you've graduated from college and you have no idea how to begin creating the
next chapter of your life, or you're writing in at the age of 33. And like Sarah, you've been laid
off from your job.
In fact, it seems like everywhere I go,
at some point, everybody's kind of leaning over going,
yeah, we just went through layoffs.
So you're not alone.
Or maybe you're on the other side of this.
Because so many people got laid off,
you actually have been promoted.
But now you're freaking out because you feel like
you're an imposter in this role
and you're not capable of handling it. Or perhaps you're 55,
seeing a lot of these kinds of questions.
Mel, I am now an empty nester.
I want this next chapter of my life to be incredible
and I'm starting to look at my spouse
now that the kids are gone and I'm like,
oh, I don't know about this.
Or maybe you just met the love of your life
and it's unbelievable, But you are worried,
terrified in fact, that you're going to screw it up. So I want to talk about Sarah's question
globally. Because she's not the only one who's feeling kind of scared about this notion of what
this next chapter might be. She used the word terrified.
You don't have to be terrified.
This is one of the greatest opportunities of your life.
So if you want to change,
you either wanna step into your power
when good things are happening,
or you wanna just look out on the road ahead
and create an exciting new possibility for yourself,
you are listening to the exact thing that you need to hear.
Now, 90% of the questions that I'm getting right now
are about the topic of reinvention.
How do I reinvent myself?
How do I reinvent my life?
You may not be using that word, I mean, Sarah didn't, but that
is exactly what you and I are going to talk about today. Because I want you to imagine a brand new
possibility for your life. And if you, like Sarah, can say, I want to be happy, I want the next
chapter of my life to be amazing, If you can just even start there,
all you have to do is start to think about what kind of a map do you need in order to chart a
course to make that possibility that you see for your life a reality. And I love this topic of
reinvention. I love it, love it, love it, because I have this metaphor that I've been using for years
when it comes to understanding reinvention.
And what is the metaphor?
The metaphor that I use is a road trip.
That's right.
Life is one big road trip.
And we're gonna use this metaphor of a road trip
to demystify the entire concept and process
of reinventing yourself or reinventing your life.
And for those of you that have listened
to my number one ranked audio series on Audible
called Reinvent Your Life,
you have heard me talk about this metaphor.
And this is such a powerful concept
because the fact is, life is a journey.
It's one big road trip.
And for too many of us, that road trip is boring and monotonous.
And I want your life to be the most exciting, exhilarating, amazing road trip that you could
possibly imagine. And every single year of your life is another mile marker
on this twisting, amazing journey called life.
For me, I'm at mile marker 56.
That is how far down the road I am.
And it's a useful exercise to think about it that way,
because when I say to you,
hey, I'm at mile marker 56,
that tells me that there's a lot of road
that I've covered behind me, but guess what?
There is a huge open road ahead of me.
And when you take responsibility for charting
that course of where that open road is going to
lead you.
You take control of your life.
That's what reinvention is all about.
It's about creating a map, picking a destination, and charting your course on this road called
life.
And here's what's exciting about that.
You get to choose.
You get to choose how fast you're going to drive, whether you're going to take the highway, whether
you're going to twist and turn, where you want to go next. And so Sarah's question was,
Mel, where do I start? We're going to start by pulling over. And the reason why we're
going to start by just mentally pulling over together for a second is because
Sarah is literally describing her life as if she is driving through a hellish, heavy
rainstorm with hail dropping down.
I mean, between the toxic husband and the weight she's put on and getting laid off from
her dream job, holy smokes.
It's like raining sideways in your life right now, Sarah. But that's okay. That's okay.
Because we know that the rain doesn't last forever.
We know that on the road ahead, there are going to be sunny skies and there's going
to be big fluffy clouds and all kinds of amazing views.
And you can make it through this rainstorm.
And so here's what we're going to do though.
You can't possibly assess where you're going
until you pull over for a second
and you reflect on where you're at right now.
And more importantly, where do you wanna go next?
I mean, think about the last time you got lost.
When you get lost, is driving around help you find yourself?
No, you gotta pull over, you got to figure
out where you are, you got to consult the mile marker, you got to look for landmarks,
and then you got to figure out, okay, where am I going next? And so pulling over is a
mental strategy. Visualize yourself right now, just pulling off the road of life onto
the side for a second, because you need that break for just a second. You need to hit the
pause if you've
been dealing with financial stress or you've been dealing with health issues. Because by pulling
over for just a second, you're acknowledging what Sarah's saying. You're going to hit the pause
button on your life as it is right now, and we're going to take a second to collect ourselves.
And then we're going to figure out the collect ourselves, and then we're gonna figure out
the destination and where we wanna go next.
Now that we're pulled over,
we're gonna talk about the next step to reinvention,
and we'll do that when we come back.
And we'll do that when we come back.
And we'll do that when we come back.
Welcome back, I'm Mel Robbins. We are talking about the topic of reinvention and we're using
the metaphor of a road trip. And what happens on a road trip? Well, a lot of times you break
down. A lot of times you get a flat tire. A lot of times there is a detour and life
is not going according to your plan. And that is exactly what has happened
to a listener named Jen.
Hi Mel, it's Jen.
I'm struggling going through a breakup
and it's hard because I thought I found the person
that I was going to spend the rest of my life with.
I was very happy and I guess I thought I found my person,
but this breakup has just affected me with work
and it's just a struggle.
It's just a daily struggle to get up and a daily struggle to get dressed.
I would just love some advice.
Thank you for being so honest about what you're dealing with.
And what you're dealing with right now is a detour on the road trip called life.
That is what this is. And all detours in life, whether it is a breakup,
or it's the death of somebody that you love,
or losing a job, or just anything that happens
that takes you off the route
that you thought you were gonna go down.
And in those moments, it is important to pull over.
It is important to feel sad
and to let those emotions rise up.
But you can't stay in that place.
You can't allow it.
You know, if you get a flat tire,
if you get into an accident, what do you do?
You pull over, you fix the car, and you move forward. And that's what you have to do
now. You have spent enough time being sad. You have spent enough time lamenting what happened.
You have spent enough time looking in the rearview mirror at this relationship. If you're somebody
that is looking backwards, you're looking at the past,
you're looking at the road behind you, and you're spending way too much of your time and your energy
wishing things were different, feeling sad about the miles that you've already been down and that
you wish you had done something different, you wish you would have ended up, you wish that here at 24, you would have majored in a different thing because that would like whatever it
is that you're doing that involves the rear view mirror, stop because you're not going
that way.
Think about the road trip analogy.
Does a car on a road trip drive forward down the road? Or do you go on a road trip by driving backwards?
Are you getting my point? There's a reason why the windshield in a car is so much bigger
than the rearview mirror. You're not going backwards and you can't drive forward if you're always staring in the rearview mirror.
And so you did the right thing by feeling sad.
You did the right thing by pulling over.
But now it's time for you to look out the windshield and look at the road ahead.
And here's what I want you to do. Stop and look at the road ahead. And here's what I want you to do.
Stop and look at the open road.
Imagine if this detour that just happened, somebody that you're in love with broke up with you.
That sucks.
There's no way around it.
It totally sucks.
Just like getting a flat tire sucks.
So what are you gonna do about it?
What are you gonna do about it?
Well, I'll tell you what I don't want you to do
because this is why you can't get out of bed.
You are telling yourself that this happened
because there's something wrong with you.
You're telling yourself that this happened
because you're not worthy, because you're not good enough.
And that is complete bullshit.
You want to know why this happened?
Let's go back to our road trip.
This happened because every single one of us has a completely unique
and deeply personal journey that we take on this thing called life.
And I choose to believe that whatever detour hits you, it is aligned with what's meant
for you.
I also deeply believe that the best years of my life are on the road ahead. And if you can embrace those two truths that every
detour in life that does not go according to plan, it's not what you wanted, and there have been so
many detours in my life that have been painful, but I can see now how they were aligned with pushing me
in the direction I needed to go,
giving me the lessons that were aligned with my purpose
or the things that I needed to learn
in order to make the years ahead even better,
even happier, even more purposeful.
You have to tell yourself that.
Because what's the alternative?
The alternative is you feeling like a victim.
You feeling as though, you know, you're never good enough.
Nothing's ever gonna work out.
Bull.
This detour is not something you wanted.
This detour is going to open you up
to something that you needed.
I swear to God, when you start to think like that,
when you grab the wheel of your life, when you take responsibility,
not for the detour, but for how you're going to navigate what happens next,
that's when you tap into your power and you can do that, Jen.
This isn't about some guy breaking your heart.
This is about you discovering how to love yourself.
So here's what I want you to do.
Clearly, you believe that finding your person
is something that you need to do.
So on a piece of paper, write down all the things that this person does for you.
How do they make you feel?
What are some of the things that they do for you?
The kind of person that you're gonna fall madly,
deeply in love with.
Now, all those things that you write down,
do them for yourself.
That is what this detour is trying to teach you, Jen,
that the one person that you need to truly love
and truly be in a relationship with,
your person, so to speak,
you already found that person and it's you.
And so I think that this detour is giving you
the breakdown you needed so that you could strengthen your relationship with yourself.
That's why this happened.
All right, next up, we have a question
from a listener about feeling blah.
And I know you're gonna relate to this,
but first we gotta hit the brakes
because I can only bring you this show at zero cost
because of our sponsors.
So let's hear a word from them
and then we'll be right back.
Welcome back.
My name is Mel Robbins.
I'm so excited you're here because we're talking about the road trip called life, how you navigate
it, how you chart a new course, picking the proper destination to go to next,
and most importantly, having the kind of attitude
that the best years of your life are on the road ahead.
And at any single moment, you can make a decision
to take the wheel of your life and turn it in a new direction.
And that brings me to our next question
from a listener named McKenna. Hey, Mel.
It's McKenna.
My question for you is, what do you do when you feel blah?
Everything is fine.
Life is going your way.
Nothing bad is happening.
But all of a sudden, you're stuck in the limbo of feeling absolutely nothing and lack sedatical.
It can last a few minutes or even days. How do you
push through and keep on keeping on? Right now I want to withdraw from the
world and recluse, but I have a family and young kids that I don't get to see
much because of my work schedule, so the time I have is very precious and I'd
rather not spend it a gloomy gus. Have you felt like this before?
What do you do to get out of it?
Thank you for everything.
Mekana, oh, boy am I glad you asked me this question
because there is no way in hell
I am going to let you stay in that blah space.
And you just asked if I've ever felt that way before.
Of course I have.
This is so normal to have periods of your life
where you feel blah, where you feel lackadaisical,
where you just kind of have no energy.
And there are a lot of words for this.
People describe this as feeling stuck,
being in survival mode.
Researchers have given it the label language. It's just sort of this like,
nothing's really wrong, but nothing's really right. You don't really have any enthusiasm.
And if I go back to our metaphor about life being one big long road trip, the way that I would
describe it is that you're just on autopilot right now.
That's right, cruise control is on.
You're rolling down the road of life.
You're exhausted.
You're trying just to get to the next mile marker.
Well, guess what?
There's really, really good news here.
And the first thing that I wanna acknowledge you for
is that you've already checked the box on
step one for changing this situation and that is you recognize it. Seriously, it's really important
if you relate to what McKenna is saying or you're going through the motions in life, you're just
sort of on autopilot, you're not really paying attention, nothing's wrong,
nothing's right, you're kind of blah, you're kind of bored. Step one is you got to check the box and
say, boom, that's me. I'm on autopilot. And I don't want to be on autopilot anymore. Step two,
Step two, you have to look ahead at that open road,
and you must intentionally figure out a specific destination
that makes you excited to drive toward it. One of my fondest memories from childhood
was the summer that my father rented a motor home,
and we did a cross-country family road trip to hit
as many national parks as we could. And the big destination that my dad was like super
excited about was we were going to reach Yellowstone and we were going to stay at that big lodge
at Yellowstone and we were going to be able to see Old Faithful. So I remember, you want to know why that road trip was so exciting?
It was because we always had something on the road ahead to look forward to.
Whether it was the world famous Corn Palace, which was a stop or Waldrug or Mount Rushmore,
we were inching our way toward the big destination, Yellowstone.
But along the way, there were all these cool things
on the road ahead that we were excited to check out.
You need that in your life.
And now some of this analogy is starting to make sense,
right?
Because if you're staring in the rear view mirror,
that's not exciting.
You're not heading in that direction.
If you look out at the open road
and you don't see anything in front of you
that you're excited about, that's a problem.
And so here's the solution as counterintuitive
as it may seem.
When you look out on the open road,
and for me, I always like to go and time travel
about two years ahead, because I think in 24 months,
you can chip away and make travel about two years ahead because I think in 24 months, you can
chip away and make just about anything happen. That's plenty of time for you to start working
toward something new. You have to get intentional about where you're headed next, about that
destination, about your Yellowstone, which had always been a dream of my father's to
take his family there. And there is something that you dream about
and it's time to start dreaming big again,
especially if you're feeling blah.
There are three reasons why you have to pick
a new destination.
And these are the same three reasons
why having dreams matter.
I've got super cool research to share with you
about why this is so important when it comes to your life and to your energy and to purpose and meaning and enjoying this road trip called life.
Number one, big dreams, a new destination that you're going to head towards, having something out on the horizon that you're looking forward to, that you're working toward,
it creates energy in your life, which is something that you're clearly missing.
I can hear it in your voice, McKenna.
It creates excitement.
It gives you something to look forward to.
It gives you a goal to work toward.
And when you have this sort of destination out there on the road ahead, just picking
your head up out of the monotony of your day-to-day life, it creates momentum.
And that forward momentum right out the front
on the road ahead, that's so important
because that's missing for you right now, isn't it?
When you see more of the same, same old, same old,
you got to create an epic road trip.
And speaking of a new destination,
a destination like a Yellowstone,
something out there two years ahead of now,
it changes the way you see the world right now.
It's very similar to opening up the aperture on a camera
to let more light in.
New destinations on the road of life
open you up to more possibilities in your life.
Things are hard right now.
I get it.
You got a lot on your plate.
Well, guess what?
Two years from now, you can change just about anything.
And when you start to open up to bigger dreams,
you start to retrain and reshape your outlook,
your mind, your attitude to be bigger and better
and more exciting than what you're dealing with right now.
The third thing that happens when you get very serious
about grabbing that wheel and cranking it
toward a new destination,
you're gonna suddenly, suddenly see all kinds of possibility
and changes that you could make.
See, this is the part where that blah feeling,
it goes away really quickly.
And I'm gonna give you an example,
and then I wanna talk about some research
about why adding something exciting on the road ahead
fixes that feeling of being on autopilot
and shakes you free from that heavy blah language
that you're in.
Have you ever noticed that the moment
that you plan a vacation,
let's say you're gonna take the kids to Disney,
you're gonna get away, you immediately feel better.
You're not even on vacation.
Research shows that when you plan something like that,
you get two bites at the excitement apple.
The first one is just planning it
and having that trip to Disney out on the road ahead,
because now you're excited
because you're looking forward to it.
And the second like boost that you get
is when you actually go on the vacation.
But the reason why it's so powerful
to have something out in the future
is just think about how it impacts you before you go away.
You're not even there yet.
It's a week before you're gonna board the plane
with your kids and go down to Disney
and you walk into work on a Monday,
your boss can pile work up to your eyeballs.
Do you care?
I'll think so, why?
Because Disney is in your future and that's pretty cool.
So even the demands of your current day-to-day, blah, draining life, they don't get you down. Why?
Because on the road ahead, you got something pretty cool. That trip, just planning it, just visualizing it, just thinking about what's in your future,
it boosts your mood, it picks your thoughts up,
it even helps you be more productive.
And this is all simply because you intentionally
put something out in the future,
a new destination that makes you excited.
That's why this matters so much.
And here's the other thing.
I know what you're thinking right now.
Mel, I don't have time for this shit.
A new destination, a trip to Disney,
I barely, I work so much, I barely see my kids.
Well, I gotta hit you with some research.
Because particularly when you're exhausted and overwhelmed
and it feels like something needs to give.
Guess what?
We tend to feel like we just need a break from it all.
But the research proves something very counterintuitive
because when you're overwhelmed like McKenna is,
when you're feeling checked out, blah,
you're on autopilot, cruise control,
you're just kind of zoned out in life.
Do you know what you need?
You need engagement.
You need to add energizing activities to your schedule.
And when you do that, something miraculous happens.
You feel like you have more time.
I know this is bananas,
but let me just kind of unpack this study for you.
This was done by Laura Vanderkam.
She writes about it in this essay in the New York Times.
There's a better way to reclaim your time
than quiet quitting.
She did a study in 2021 where she worked
with super busy people just like you
who feel exhausted and tapped out.
The people in her study said things like,
life feels very chaotic with so many different balls in the air. Same. My work to do list is
never ending. I bet you can relate to that. Or how about this one? I need a few more hours each day
in order to have time to just manage my family and my life? Wouldn't that be nice?
Well, what she did over the course of nine weeks,
this is really interesting.
Instead of asking people to scale back
or have better boundaries between work and life,
you know what she taught them to do?
She taught every one of these folks
that are as busy and as burnt out as you
that you need to add something.
Whether you're building in regular physical activity
or you're building in a new little adventure
or you're putting something that requires effort,
but it's meaningful to you,
that you choose action over no action.
So for example, instead of just passing out
on front of the couch and watching your favorite series,
pick up a book and read a novel instead.
She also introduced people as busy as you
to this principle of take one night for you.
And that just means commit for a few hours once a week
to doing something you enjoy.
It can't be work-related, not with your family,
but just for a few hours each week.
Instead of doing less, add something in.
Join a choir, a softball team.
And here's what's amazing about it.
When it's something you're interested in doing,
even though you look at your schedule right now and it's a giant Jenga puzzle and you're like,
I cannot add one more thing to this thing,
baloney, you can.
Because when you sign up for something that matters for you,
you commit to doing it,
it nudges you to figure out the logistics
to arrange the childcare to get your spouse or a friend
or a family member to cover for you,
even if life feels so busy
that you can't even contemplate such a thing right now.
And it works.
It works.
The participants in our studies, even though their schedules when they began the study
were just as overwhelming as yours, when they committed to doing something like just singing in the church choir, you know what they reported?
That their time felt more abundant. This is the Disney effect that I'm talking about.
This is like picking your head up out of a monotonous part of the road trip and seeing, oh wow,
every minute we're getting closer and closer to Yellowstone. Oh wow, I got church choir this week.
I got my pickup soccer league this week.
I got the tutoring that I'm gonna do
as a volunteer this week.
It re-energizes you.
And in fact, people even reported
making more progress at work,
finding more time with their family.
They had an increase of energy and engagement
that spilled out into all areas of their life.
You know, the fact is,
we all have the same 168 hours every single week.
But here's the thing about time,
and it's also true about the journey of life.
Your relationship to time
and your relationship to where you are in life
is also about the
stories that you're telling yourself.
Your life is always going to be filled with to-do lists.
But when you add something that you actually want to do, that's the secret.
You got to add something that means something to you.
What happens is when you add that in and it competes with your to-do lists, time
feels different. You feel more in control of your life because you're saying, I know
I got all this shit I got to do, but guess what? I'm making it to choir. I'm making
it to tutoring. Here's another study from just a few years ago that I think is
really fascinating. So they took university students and they divided them
into two groups.
One group of students were told they could leave class
15 minutes early.
So they gave them 15 minutes of extra time.
The other group was asked to stay 15 minutes longer
and help edit at-risk high school students' essays.
You want to know who felt like they had more time?
The kids who took 15 minutes to edit
those high school students' essays.
Why?
Well, logically, it doesn't make any sense, does it?
Because we literally gave the other students
15 extra minutes.
But what did they do with it? Nothing meaningful.
They probably like walked over to the co-op
or sat around and scrolled through social media.
What happens to you when you intentionally spend time
doing a rewarding and engaging activity,
your time feels less scarce.
That's pretty fricking cool. aging activity, your time feels less scarce.
That's pretty fricking cool. And when you put time into something
that is meaningful to you, or you find energizing,
your whole narrative about your life and your power changes.
You no longer feel like your life is a slog.
I do this all the time. I'm probably
somebody from the outside that you think is one of the busiest people you know, and I
am. And there's that saying, you want something done, ask a busy person, because they figure
out how to fit things in. And there's something about getting really disciplined and excited
about doing something for yourself, even though you're super busy,
that does spill out into the other areas of your life.
In fact, my husband, Chris, right now,
he's getting a master's in spiritual psychology.
Does he have time to do that?
No, not as a hospice volunteer,
not as he is busy launching a new program
for his men's retreat called Soul Degree.
He doesn't have time to do that, but actually he does
because he is making the time.
I have seen this research work in my own life.
I am telling you, as counterintuitive as it sounds,
please look at the road ahead.
The best days of your life are ahead of you.
You have to start dreaming big right now.
It creates this upward spiral. You can do this. There is a flame burning inside you. You have to start dreaming big right now. It creates this upward spiral. You can
do this. There is a flame burning inside you. There is. You know it. You can feel it. You
know that you're meant for more. You know you are not supposed to be broken down on
the side of the road on this road trip called life.
And I think we underestimate how quickly you can turn your life in a new direction.
We spend so much time thinking it's not possible.
We put so much energy into our excuses and our fears.
And when you get to a point where you can say, I'm done feeling this way.
I want this to feel good. I want to turn my life in a new direction.
It is amazing how quickly things can happen.
And so I want you to hear from a listener
to this podcast named Denise,
who had been thinking about doing something for 20 years.
As she's going down the road of life,
deep within her, the flame that was burning was,
I would love to be a voiceover artist. I would love to do that. And for 20 years,
she thought about turning her life in a new direction. Just thought about it, just like you
keep doing. And then she finally pulled over. She charted it a new course. And she did.
And check out what happened.
I have had the dream of being a voiceover artist
for 20 freaking years.
I felt like a part of me died each day in Monday 9 to 5.
And it's the sense of loss of a life unlived and unfulfilled.
I just knew I cannot settle anymore.
And now I'm reflecting on the past six months.
I set a goal to have a live voiceover ACX profile by June 13th so I could narrate books.
And the profile didn't go live until August.
I wasn't hard on myself, but celebrated what I did do, actually taking and posting a photo
of myself and taking action steps.
Just today, I received my second narration job, so there are now two books in the works.
I have three more auditions being reviewed.
I'm auditioning for commercials and reaching out to potential clients with plans to be
a full-time, thriving voiceover artist by this time next year.
So grateful for all the support and the lessons I've learned.
Wow.
I'm a happier, more committed to my dreams person with infused energy, drive, and excitement.
I know the best is yet to be.
Thank you, Mel and your team.
I'm just basking in
the sound of a person's voice
who is fulfilled
because she
got serious about what she wanted her life to look like.
She did that in six months and got serious about what she wanted her life to look like.
She did that in six months.
And this is something she was thinking about for 20 years.
You only get one life.
And what Denise said is right. Living on autopilot,
that is a life unlived and unfulfilled.
You do have dreams, and you do deserve to make this next leg of the journey of this
thing called life as exciting and as amazing as you possibly can.
So pull over, assess where you are. Remember, do not stare at the rear view mirror,
but focus on the windshield because you're going forward, my friend.
Remind yourself that the best years of your life are on the road ahead.
And I promise you, you will travel far beyond what you can currently see.
Because one day, this epic road trip that we call life, it's going to be over.
And if what everybody who has approached that final leg of the journey says is true, it's
going to happen for you and me in the blink of an eye.
So please, find the courage to create a new course for your life.
Find the courage to take the wheel and steer it in whatever direction your heart desires.
And find the courage to enjoy it.
And in case nobody else tells you, I love you, I believe in you, and I believe in your
ability to create a better life.
And I guess I'll see you on the road.
Ha ha ha.
I told you this would be a trip.
MUSIC
Hey.
Oh, wait. Hold on a second.
Let me try it again. Okay. Try one more thing.
Is that good setup, Trace?
Yeah, the setup is great.
Jesus, my...
What the hell?
I haven't even eaten anything today.
I got some stuff happening here.
Oh, why do I have the pickups?
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.
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