The Mel Robbins Podcast - I Didn’t Expect to Record This: I Want to Talk to You About tWitch’s Death
Episode Date: December 15, 2022I’m checking in on you and me. There's a lot going on in the world right now, and I am still reeling from the news that Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss died from suicide. If you had to ask me to list the... 5 most positive people on the planet, The Rock would be #1, and tWitch would be #2. Having lost too many friends and people I love to mental health challenges like depression, addiction, trauma, and hopelessness – all of who died from suicide – I’m just so heavy with emotion. tWitch was beloved by millions for being Ellen DeGeneres’ executive producer, dance partner, and DJ on her talk show. He was a part of people’s lives 5 days a week, for years. He competed on So You Think You Can Dance and he had one of those million-dollar smiles that just lit up every room he walked into. He is followed by millions of people online who love the adorable dances that he, his wife Allison, and his 3 kids do. Seeing such a bright light like tWitch go out so suddenly at the age of 40, with 3 beautiful kids, a huge life, and adoring fans around the world… It just stirred up so much sadness inside of me, and this may be stirring up a lot inside of you. You don’t have to know tWitch personally (I didn’t – I am just a fan) to be profoundly impacted by the news of his death. This may be bringing up experiences of loss from your own life. It may also be reminding you of moments when you were really struggling, which is another reason why I felt the urgency to talk to you today. And I thought, maybe you’re sad too.Or having a hard time processing how someone who seemed to “have it all” and “so much talent” could come to a point where this could happen.Or maybe you are going through a tough time yourself.Or maybe you just need a friend to tell you it’s going to be okay and give you a boost. So I wanted to connect. I decided to roll out of bed, get right on the mic, and share what I'm feeling and how I'm thinking about tWitch's death so we can process this together. Please take 14 minutes to listen to this powerful message. I share my thoughts about how to process news like this and I also emphasize something tWitch always said: Be kind. Today, be kind. You never know what another person is going through, so be kind.And always, be kind to yourself. One thing you can do today is reach out to people you love. You never know what it’s going to mean to someone. If you don’t know what to say, you can share this episode. And, if you are in pain right now. PLEASE. There’s a difference between wanting to end the pain you feel, and wanting to end your life. You can end the pain with support and by taking small steps forward every single day. It can and it will get better. Please, if you need help, pick up the phone. You deserve support. Trained volunteers are standing by to help you. Call the National Suicide Hotline, which is 988 in the US. Different languages are available – click here. Or, text HOME to 741-741 for the Crisis Text Line. Thanks for reading this and listening to this episode. And I just wanted to end by saying, I love you and it means more than you know that you are here.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
So I just wanted to check in on you, because there's a lot going on right now.
I was sitting at my desk yesterday and I got the news that Stephen Twitch Boss had died from suicide.
And if you have not seen this news or you don't know who he is, let me just kind of share
a little bit about him and why it impacted me.
So he was best known, and this is how I knew him, for being one of the executive producers
of Ellen DeGeneres' talk show. So he was best known, and this is how I knew him, for being one of the executive producers
of Ellen DeGeneres' talk show.
And he was not only an executive producer,
he was on that show every single day, five days a week.
He was the DJ, he would do all the dance parties with Ellen.
He has this huge, amazing, megawatt smile.
And his energy, he's just one of those people that you didn't need to know him
to know that literally positivity, dancing, spreading kindness. That's what this guy was all about.
And you didn't need to know him to know that he was also all about his wife, Allison,
and his three like gorgeous kids.
And during the pandemic, not only was he there with Ellen, but he and his wife who are
both dancers started doing all of these choreographed awesome videos that went viral online.
And they spread so much joy for people doing these
dances and teaching people with their kids, all these dance moves. And they just
were this positive amazing force. And so when I heard the news that he died from
suicide yesterday at the age of 40.
It just rocked me to my core.
And I'm still processing it.
And when I woke up this morning, I also saw that I had missed the fact
that yesterday was the 10th anniversary of Sandy Hook.
And so I just felt this need to grab my coffee and to run up here.
I haven't even washed my face yet this morning and talk to you.
And I just wanted to share what I'm thinking and feeling because I think it's really important
that in moments like this, where the news feels overwhelming, or the world feels overwhelming, and I know the holidays can just bring up a
lot of stuff for a lot of us, too, I want to check in on you.
And I want to check in on myself.
And so that's why I decided I'm just going to get on this mic and I'm going to just talk
to you.
And that's it,
that's what we're doing today.
So first things first, I wanna share with you
what I'm thinking in the wake of learning
that somebody that was so light and positive
and amazing on the outside.
How do you process that kind of news
that they died from suicide? You don't need
to know Twitch personally, to be affected personally by the news of his death. You don't
have to have lived in the Sandy Hook community to be impacted by the news that it was the 10th anniversary yesterday.
Because these things that are happening out in the world
trigger you to remember experiences of loss in your own life.
And so for me personally,
I think one of the reasons why I have been so rocked
by this news is because, you know,
if you look at somebody like Twitch on the outside,
this man exuded positivity.
You never saw him without a smile on his face.
You couldn't watch those dance videos without feeling
the ripple of joy.
And for me personally, it reminds me of a really dear friend
of mine that died from suicide
over 10 years ago.
And the second that I heard this news about somebody who on the outside looked like they were just doing great,
it reminded me of losing somebody that was the same way.
And that may be happening to you.
And the other thing that this is bringing up for me is that
you just have no clue what's going on in somebody else's life.
You have no clue what pain or trauma or experiences
they're dealing with.
You focus on the beautiful smile that somebody has
or the great job or the bank account
or the awesome spouse or the wonderful kids or the big house,
but people don't live at their house.
You know where everybody lives?
They live inside their heads.
And you and I don't have a clue what it's like
for somebody else to live with the pain inside their heads. And so, you know, one of the major takeaways here for me is one of Twitch's biggest messages,
which is being kind, and the fact that being kind and being positive around other people,
in fact, we underestimate the impact that it can have on somebody else's life to just be kind to them.
And so that's one takeaway, that you just don't have a clue.
So please just don't assume that you know what's going on
and assume that everybody is silently battling something.
So it's on all of us to be kind to one another.
Second thing that I want to say is,
I need you to be kind to one another. Second thing that I want to say is I need you to be kind to yourself today,
because there's a lot swirling around right now. And so if you notice that you're thinking about
people that you lost, which I am, I mean yesterday what was happening for me as I heard the news and
I of course immediately thought about his family, is I was transported back to the day that I learned that our dear friend Fred
had died from suicide.
And it's like I started reliving that day again,
as I thought about the pain that twitches wife Allison
and it's three kids were feeling,
I thought about this particular moment
on the day that Fred died, where I was with his
daughter, and we were walking up the front steps to his house, and I knew that when we opened
that door, I was going to be present when she learned that her father had died.
It is a moment that changed me forever.
And so that's also what was happening for me yesterday.
And I was thinking about how much I misread.
And I was thinking about how sad and heartbroken I am about all the other people in my life
that had struggled with mental health issues and addiction or hopelessness
or depression and how they all died from suicide and just how much pain there is out there.
It can be really overwhelming.
And so if that's happening for you because I think we all know somebody
And so if that's happening for you, because I think we all know somebody who died from a struggle with mental health, if that's happening for you, just be kind to yourself.
Like you may need to sleep in.
You may need to go for a walk today.
You should probably reach out to a friend and talk to somebody about it.
It would be good for you to remember the person and the things that you miss about them, like remembering
somebody that is gone and thinking about the things that you really loved about them,
that's a really healthy thing to do on a day like today.
But simply being aware that news like this brings up stuff for you that's personal, that's
step one.
Step two is being kind to yourself.
Step three is being proactive about taking care of yourself today and reaching out.
And step four is understanding this issue in a larger context.
And so now I want to kind of switch gears and address something that's pissing me off.
As I see people processing,
twitches death in particular, because this hit me as hard as Robin Williams,
as hard as Anthony Bourdain,
and I think the reason why it hits people so hard
is because you're trying to make sense
of somebody who seems like they've got it all together
on the outside, and in your rational mind,
it just makes no sense.
And that is where the learning is.
See, your mind is rational right now.
You're objective.
You're not living with the pain the person was living with.
So when you look at the situation from your lens, you remove the pain that the person
was feeling.
And so it makes no sense to your brain because your brain wasn't compromised from the mental
health struggle that that person was really battling day in and day out.
I think about a death from mental health struggles the same way I think about a death from
cancer.
Like, if you have a friend that dies of brain cancer,
you say they died from cancer.
If you have a friend or a loved one
as every single one of us does,
who has died from a struggle with addiction
or depression or trauma or toxic stress
or any other mental health issue,
that mental health challenge deteriorated the physical
structure of that person's brain. That's what happened. The same way that brain cancer physically
deteriorates the brain until it kills somebody. If you have a friend that's dying from brain cancer, you see them deteriorate on the outside. You see what's happening. You would never, in a million years,
when somebody dies from brain cancer go, oh, that's so selfish. Why did they choose to
do that? What about their family? But they had so many resources. But I see so many people
writing this horse shit online, and it's pissing me off.
Because it shows that you don't have a freaking clue what it means to struggle with a mental
health issue.
You don't have a freaking clue and it really pisses me off when I see people that write
really arrogant, pretentious things like, well, I struggle, I was in a dark thing and I asked for help.
Well, that's great. I'm happy that you didn't get so bad, that your brain wasn't so deteriorated,
that you could ask for help. When somebody gets to the point that their brain functioning is so eroded, that they cannot
cognitively, rationally process the fact that there is a huge difference between ending
the pain that you're dealing with and ending your life.
When somebody gets to the point where they can't think clearly, it means the physical
structure of their brain has deteriorated from the mental health battle.
That's what that means.
And that smile that people put on their faces, the whole way through, that is so hard.
Can you imagine to get to the point where you love your family so much that you think
the only way to save them is to get rid of yourself.
This is just that's how compromised your brain is.
And so when I think about this, like brain cancer, that the physical brain functioning is deteriorating to the point
where nobody can think rationally.
That removes all judgment, and all I have is compassion and sadness.
That's it.
That is it, and that is all there is to have for the people that you've lost, for the
folks that we continue to lose.
And for anybody that's listening to this,
if this is you and you're in a really dark place right now,
I wanna speak directly to you right now.
Because you're meant to hear this right now.
You can address the pain that you're feeling
in your mind and your body.
You can.
And there are people standing by right now that are trained that want to help you.
And with support and with small, tiny moves forward every single day, you can make this
pain lessen.
You can loosen the grip it has on you and you can feel better. You can also
improve the physical structure of your brain. You can improve the way that you think so that
your brain starts to support you. You can face this with a little bit of support. You can.
And you can do that, and I want you to do that because we want you here.
You have a big, beautiful life. And I know that if you believe that you could somehow less
in the pain you're feeling, you would want to live that life.
And so please, please, please get support for the pain that you're feeling and hold on
to the life that you have because your life is worth fighting for.
And there are people that want to help you. And so I just felt the need to talk to you,
to check in with you.
Be kind to yourself today, stop assuming that you know what other people are thinking.
Remember the people that you've lost and the things that you loved about them.
And together, we'll get through this. We will, I promise.
We have resources in the show notes.
And of course, I want to tell you that I love you,
and I believe in you, and I believe in your ability
to just keep going.
And know that I'm gonna be here.
I'm gonna be here, holding your hand,
cheering you forward, and it means the world to me
to know that you're here holding my hand too.
I love you.
I'll talk to you in a few days. Stitcher.