The Mel Robbins Podcast - If You Feel Overwhelmed & Uncertain About Money, Listen to This
Episode Date: May 12, 2025If you’re feeling overwhelmed about money, this episode is for you. Whether you want to pay off debt, increase your income, or have more money in the bank, this episode is a must-listen. For the f...irst time on the podcast, Mel is sharing, in detail, the step-by-step approach she took to get out of $800,000 in debt, create financial freedom, and get good with money.Mel is also joined today by Lewis Howes, two-time New York Times bestselling author and host of the hit podcast The School of Greatness.Before he reached the success he has today,Lewis was broke, living on his sister’s couch, with no college degree. He shares the specific steps he took to start over, learn new skills, and the mindset and success habits he used to make and save money.Together, Mel and Lewis share the exact formulas they used to turn their lives around.Whether you’re trying to pay down debt, create an emergency fund, start a side hustle, or just have more money in the bank, you’re going to learn the things you should be doing right now to change your financial future.By the end of this episode, you will have the simple tools you need to start getting good with money. You’ll know that change is possible. And that you are worthy of financial peace and ease. You CAN get good with money. Starting today. For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode, and want to hear more about improving your financial life, listen to this episode next: 5 Rules of Money: How to Make It, Save It, & Be Smarter About ItConnect 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Have you noticed how expensive basic things have become?
I mean, egg prices, they've doubled and that's not even for organic.
It's absurd.
Don't even get me started on the price of rent, insurance, copays, student loans.
I mean, there's lots of people going on and on
about what's actually causing this.
But today, I want you and I to talk about
what do you do about it?
What do you do when you feel overwhelmed
by the cost of living?
Or overwhelmed by paying your bills?
Or overwhelmed by managing your money?
Like every time you log into your bank account,
you're feeling panicked. Well,
I want you to hear me when I tell you this. You're not alone. One in three working adults
lives paycheck to paycheck right now. And I know exactly how that feels. The pressure,
it is crushing. And you start to feel like nothing is ever going to change. When I was 41
years old, my husband and I, we were $800,000 in debt. I mean, we could barely buy gas or groceries.
And I believe for a period of time that that would be my life forever, that I would never get control
of my money. And if I could go back in time and talk to the 41-year-old version of myself, you know
what I would tell her?
I would say, Mel, I know this is scary, but you can figure this out.
And even though you've been bad with money in the past, Mel, because that's how you get
$800,000 in debt because you're bad with money.
Tell you what, step by step, you can get good with it.
And that's what our guest today is also gonna tell you.
Because just like me, he's been there.
14 years ago, he was broke sleeping on his sister's couch.
But today, he is proof that a complete financial transformation
is possible for you too.
You can get out of debt.
You can turn things around,
and you can change your financial future.
And yes, you can get good with money.
And today, he is going to give you simple steps and habits to follow so that
three months from now, things will look and feel very different than it does today.
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so excited for our conversation today.
I'm excited that you're here.
It is always an honor to spend time with you, to be together.
If you're a new listener, you've picked a winner.
Welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
And because you made time to hit play and to listen to this particular episode, I know
you're the type of person who values your time.
And what's that saying?
Time is money.
You wanna make more money.
You wanna get good with money.
And not only do you wanna get good with money,
you wanna transform your financial future.
I'll tell you what, you're in the right place.
And if you chose to listen to this
because someone shared this episode with you,
I just think that's so cool
because it means you have people in your life
who not only care about you, they want you to make money.
They want you to have a fantastic financial future.
And look, you're not going to be rich by the end of this episode,
but you're going to leave with something more valuable.
You're going to get the building blocks and the simple tools
that will create a different financial future for
you. And you're also going to learn the step-by-step approach from two people who had to completely
rebuild their financial life from the ground up. So if you've been bad with money, today you're
going to learn how to start getting good with money. And you don't need to be embarrassed by where you are,
because I'm going to tell you where I've been.
And it's probably way worse than where you are today.
See, I used to be like a walking financial red flag.
If you were a credit card company,
I would not have given Mel Robbins a credit card.
If I were a bank,
I would not have given Mel Robbins a mortgage.
If I were a bill that was being delivered to Mel Robbins' house, I would not have expected
to have been paid.
I'm about to tell you some very embarrassing stories about how bad I used to be with money.
So if you got unpaid bills, if you're living paycheck to paycheck, if you've got insane
embarrassing credit card debt or student loans that are burying you alive. I have been there.
I know that pain because I've felt that pain.
And I need you to hear me say this,
you can get good with money.
In fact, you can learn how to be great with it.
It took me 15 years to climb out of the financial hellhole
that I had created for myself
and learn the skills and habits that led me
to where I am today.
And I want you to learn from my mistakes. So today, I'm going to walk you step by step through the
things that you should be doing immediately to change your financial future starting today.
And I'm going to be doing it with the help of a very good friend of mine, who is our guest in our Boston studios today. I'm talking about the one and only Lewis Howes.
Lewis is a two-time New York Times bestselling author.
He's also a two-time All-American athlete.
You may recognize his name or his voice because for the last 12 years,
he has hosted the School of Greatness podcast, where he interviews some of the
most successful people on the planet in business, entertainment, sports,
science, health, medicine, money, and so much more.
And here's what I love about Lewis.
He's been where I was, dead broke,
no clue of what to do next, but he figured it out.
Just like I figured it out,
and that means you can figure it out for you too.
And today, he and I are joining forces
to help you unlock your financial greatness. And that means you can figure it out for you too. And today, he and I are joining forces
to help you unlock your financial greatness.
And what I love is that Lewis, he's just a regular guy.
We're not talking fancy degrees
or complicated talk about markets.
He was able to turn his life around
using the tools he's gonna share with you today.
He's also written a brand new book called,
"'Make Money Easy'," which I've read and it's fantastic.
So are you ready to get good with money?
I thought so.
So please help me welcome my friend Lewis Howes
to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Lewis Howes, welcome to Boston.
Welcome to Mel Robbins podcast.
I'm so fired up that you're here.
I'm pumped.
Well, I wanna congratulate you.
Thank you.
I think this is your best work ever.
Thank you.
And it is hitting the world at a moment where money feels so hard and finances feel hard
and the news headlines are hard.
And so I cannot wait for you to share with us how to make money easy.
Thank you.
Yeah.
And I wanted to start by having you speak directly
to the person who is with us right now.
This is somebody who does not have a lot of time,
but they have made time to be able to learn from you.
Could you tell them what they might expect to change
about their life if they take everything that you and I are about to share with them today and they put it to use?
Now more than ever, it seems like it's scarier than ever because you don't know if you're
going to have a job in six to 12 months with AI.
You don't know if you can afford your bills, your rent, your car payments, food.
Like you said, egg prices are going through the roof.
It's like $10 for an egg or something now.
Gas prices are through the roof.
The economy, inflation is still high.
It just seems like harder and harder to get ahead,
to stay ahead, and to get more than month to month ahead.
So now more than ever, there's uncertainty and fear,
and it seems scary.
But it's also a time of great opportunity.
If you can have clarity on what you want,
why you want it and where the money's going to go.
I think a lot of people think it needs to be hard and stressful to make money.
And it needs to be complicated. And it doesn't need to be complicated.
You just need to learn the tools and have the needs to be complicated. And it doesn't need to be complicated.
You just need to learn the tools and have the courage
to be curious, to understand more.
I love that.
And the other thing that is applicable here
is that if you're listening
and you're in the middle of reinvention
because something has happened in your life
or you're in a decade where
you feel like you don't know who you are or what your purpose is and you're just feeling
overwhelmed and lost, you could actually find purpose by saying, I'm going to learn how
to be good with money.
Yes.
But if we go back in time, because I think your story is very relatable.
You have no money. You are sleeping on your sister's couch.
How old are you at this point?
23 and a half to 24.
So could you put us at the scene
and tell us what was happening?
And then once you put us there,
I'd love to know how would you have described
your relationship with money
or what the person looked like?
Yeah, I mean, I was sleeping on my sister.
I pursued the dream to make the NFL.
I never made it, but I played in the Arena Football League.
And in the Arena Football League,
I was making $250 a week.
And I was living in a free apartment with another teammate
that they put us up on the team.
And we had food stamps to pay for food during the week.
So this is in Huntsville, Alabama, 2007. And again, $250 a
week you can't live on. So it was, they paid for our rent and they gave us food stamps and about
a thousand bucks a month. And I didn't care at the time because I was getting to live my dream.
Most people, I talked to my nephews and nieces and their friends in their early and late 20s,
they don't know their purpose. They don't know how to manage their emotions, how to regulate emotions, how to navigate their nervous system. They
don't know how to navigate when someone's ghosting them. They're just in chaos mode emotionally,
and they don't understand why am I here? What's my purpose? Let alone understand money. They don't
have the energy to even think about money. Got it. So, but back then you had a sense of purpose.
I had purpose. So you were directed so you weren't screwed
like a lot of us are in our 20s.
Exactly, I was at least clear,
but I didn't have the ability to regulate my emotions still.
I was still a mess emotionally,
but I was excited about the path that I was on
with my career at the time, which was playing sports.
So is there also this sense in looking back
that at that exact moment,
even though you were hand to mouth, literally,
you were not stressing about money
because you had something bigger that you were focused on,
and then bare necessities were covered.
I could live off very little.
And yeah, my rent was covered.
You could buy a lot of ramen with 250 bucks a week.
Exactly, yeah, yeah.
I didn't need a lot then.
You're 23, you don't need a lot
if your rent is covered, right?
Yes.
And so-
What happened?
I got injured.
I had to have a surgery.
I had a bone taken out of my hip, put it in my wrist, and I was in a cast for six months.
So during that time, it was a lot of stress because I was thinking about, oh, I can't
play football again.
I don't have a college degree.
I'm in all this debt.
I don't have any savings. I can't walk still
because they took a bone out of my hip and I had 15 staples in there. I couldn't use my arm. So,
I was just feeling like the grief and sadness that my dream was over. I had no backup plan,
no college degree, no money. I'm a grown man in my young 20s, but I feel like a child because I'm
sleeping on my sister's couch.
She's providing, she's taking care of me, she's feeding me.
You don't feel worthy if you can't take care of yourself.
If you don't feel like you can appreciate your own value or believe in yourself that
you're capable of creating or generating, you have shame and guilt associated with that.
And that energy made me feel worse.
I had to first learn how to grieve the loss of my dream.
Grieve.
So you're like 23 years old with your hand permanently
like in a high five.
In this position for six months.
For six months.
You can't walk, you have no money,
you are no longer on the team.
Nothing.
And it makes sense that you would not feel motivated
to get a job or to feel like you had any sense of purpose.
And I think that this moment of the story,
a lot of people can relate to whether or not
you were going for a dream or not,
the sense of I'm just existing right now.
Yeah, and try to understand why am I here?
What's the purpose of my life?
If this was my dream and I felt like I was supposed to do,
most people don't even know what they're supposed to do.
I knew what I wanted to do, but now it's done.
So I was like, what's the point of this?
Also, my dad had gotten into a pretty bad car accident
about a year and a half before that.
So he was still recovering from this accident,
this brain trauma that he had,
and he was never the same man again. So I was losing the loss of my dad emotionally. He was physically alive,
but emotionally a different person. And this was also in 2008, when you know how bad the
economy was, the housing market crashed then. It kind of felt like the uncertainty of right
now, 2025. There's a lot of uncertainty what's going to happen financially.
It does feel similar, doesn't it? There isn't a crash in the market, but it feels like people can't
afford anything, right? We don't know how to afford anything and we don't know, are
we going to be able to keep making money in the future? People are losing their jobs left
and right, gas price keeps going up, I can't afford rent. How can I save to even get ahead?
So it had that feeling, that energy for me. I was just like, I don't afford rent, how can I save to even get ahead? So it had that feeling, that energy for me,
I was just like, I don't know what to do.
And I felt stuck, I felt trapped, I felt paralyzed.
You know, that's exactly how I felt.
I mean, and here you are 23, I was 41 when this happened.
If you're listening and you don't know
kind of how I got started, it's very similar to Louis
and right around the same time,
right around 2008, my husband and I
got into the restaurant business
and we had secured the whole thing with our house,
like complete morons.
We also cashed out every credit card we could get
and took out a home equity loan,
cashed out the kids' college savings,
the 401ks, all of it.
All of it?
All of it.
You had no investments left, you had no...
Nothing. Really? Yeah, now you no investments left, you had no. Nothing.
Really?
Yeah, now you're looking at me like, you're real.
I didn't know you took out the kids' college fund money.
Oh yeah.
Oh wow.
Dude, everything.
You were all in.
We were all in, cause the first location,
little pizza joint, did well.
And so, you know, we.
Let's scale this thing.
Oh, let's scale this thing.
We listened to all the freaking entrepreneurs out there
going like, don't give away equity,
like go all in on yourself.
Cause what could go wrong in the restaurant business?
Every day.
Yeah.
So looking back, I can laugh,
but of course what ended up happening is 2007, 2008,
there was a huge recession and the housing market collapsed,
which meant the house, even though we owned a house,
because we had secured the business with the house
and home equity lines and credit cards,
the house was not worth anything
because of the amount of debt leveraged against it.
And so-
So you couldn't sell it.
Oh my, no, cause we would have owed money.
And so we were just that, that feeling of being paralyzed
and I lost my job and I remember feeling so ashamed.
And I had made the vision boards.
I had had a vision for my life.
And nowhere on any of the collages
that I created about my dream life
was an image of alcoholism, bankruptcy, a million dollars
in debt, like none of that.
And so when you said paralyzed, I remember,
because there's an excruciating level of stress
that you never forget when you cannot pay your bills.
And you're living in that fear and stress and anxiety.
And I had this whole line, Louis,
because I knew that,
I would go into the grocery store knowing
that the checking account was in the red.
Gosh.
And I would have this whole line rehearsed
where I'd be standing at the checkout counter
and they'd be scanning the items, beep, beep,
and I'm thinking, dear God,
let there be an electronic glitch.
And I have a kid or two or three of them with me.
You're like, let them have a glitch.
Yes, let them, let them please.
And they would, I'd pass over the card, debit or credit.
I'd go credit, because I knew if I hit debit,
it would definitely pass. There's no cash.
And when it ultimately, there were times
where there was a miracle and it went through. But when it ultimately didn there were times where there was a miracle and it went through,
but when it ultimately didn't go through,
I had this whole line rehearsed.
I would just cock my head and go, well, that's strange.
It just worked at the gas station.
Wow.
Let me, I'm just gonna run out,
you can hold the, I'm gonna run out to the car
because I've got some money out there and we would-
Never come back.
No.
Oh my gosh.
And- That's the shame associated with that. The stress, the judgment. Oh, it's not fun. Yes.
And then the anger that I'm in this situation, because as much as I wanted to blame Chris or
the business, I was just as big of a cheerleader. I said, let's go all in. Yeah, of course. I ignored the advice of the experts.
Like I like did this too.
So how did you start making money?
At that time in 2007, eight and nine,
LinkedIn was just getting started really.
And the president of my school that I had a relationship
with, I reached out to him and he said, go on LinkedIn
and try to find a job on LinkedIn.
So that's what I did.
I just took his advice and I started emailing
and messaging executives in Columbus, Ohio
and asking them to meet with me.
And I started going to Toastmasters
because I was afraid of public speaking.
And at Toastmasters,
this is where I started to develop skills.
At Toastmasters, I met really great public speakers
who are executives in my city as well. And some of
those started helping me out. I remember one time I went to a Toastmasters session, which is for
public speaking. This was when I was in my cast. I went to this Toastmasters. I swear to God,
I had to have a cutoff shirt because shirts wouldn't fit over the cast. It was so bulky.
I had a cutoff shirt. I went to this Toastmasters. I give speeches like this. Believe it or not,
this is crazy. Like the guy from Rookie of the Year,
but I didn't have superpowers with that.
And so I'd get up in front of a podium
and give a speech and I'd stutter, I was terrified.
I could not speak.
I would read aloud word for word
the thing that I would say like this,
and I'd speak word for word
and I wouldn't look up at anyone, I was so terrified.
But I knew at that moment
that if I didn't go all in on my fears,
the fears would never disappear. So I just said, I got to go all in on this.
And at this one Toastmasters club that I went to, they had like, I don't know, like snacks in the
back. And I shit you not, this is so sad, but this is what it took at that time. I had really baggy
jeans that I'd wear
and a cutoff shirt to this like professional
board meeting speaking.
In the back they had, you know,
carrots and broccoli and like dip.
And I was getting napkins, stuffing carrots
and broccoli and crackers in my pockets.
Cause I had no money for food at this time.
And this guy taps me on the shoulder,
he goes, what are you doing?
I go, I literally was like, I don't have any money.
I'm sleeping on my sister's couch.
Like I just got injured playing football.
I'm trying to figure out life.
And he said, let me get you some lunch.
He took me down the street, got me some lunch,
and he became one of my mentors named Frank Agen.
And he coached me on public speaking.
We wrote my first book together.
He co-wrote it with me, a book about LinkedIn after about a year and a half.
So I was just putting myself out there to learn new skills and meeting people and people
started helping me by when I put myself out there.
These are embarrassing stories that I don't tell anymore because it's like I didn't have
any money.
I was taking food wherever I could get it and stuffing it in my pockets.
That's how bad it was.
Well, yeah, but I think the important thing here
is that you were not sitting on your sister's couch.
I took massive action.
You took massive actions.
I was emailing people, I was going to clubs,
I was learning salsa dance,
I was like, whatever I can do to develop skills.
And by the way, reaching out through LinkedIn
made you an expert on LinkedIn, which is what
you then started marketing yourself at.
Started making money around that skill that I developed.
Something I had no clue how to use in the beginning and made a lot of mistakes around.
I eventually learned to master it and people started coming to me and saying, hey, can
you teach me about how you're using LinkedIn to build all these relationships and network
with mentors and leaders.
And I started hosting these LinkedIn networking events for free around the country because
I was building groups and communities on LinkedIn and bringing people together.
I didn't know how to make money with it at first, but then someone said, hey, can I have
a sponsorship booth here and promote my business for 200 bucks?
I said, sure.
Okay. Ding, ding, ding, ding,
let me sell more sponsorships.
Then someone said, will you do one-on-one consulting
with me to optimize my LinkedIn profile?
Sure, okay, they paid me.
Then I said, why don't I just write a book about this
and sell the book at these events?
So that's where all these things started to come.
It was right in front of me.
This wasn't like my dream in my life is to teach
people about LinkedIn, but the money was available right there. So it was part of the mission to make
that money to help me get out of debt, to help me get off my sister's couch, to be able to pay for
my own apartment, to buy my own food, all these different things, to not rely on anyone else.
As I started to save that money and have more in the bank and realize I'm not
going to go broke, I had maybe two years of runway of savings. And I was also living very
beneath my means. I was paying $4.95 a month for a rent in Columbus, Ohio. I didn't have
a car and walked everywhere. I mean, I was living frugal life.
Wow. As the LinkedIn guy.
As the LinkedIn guy.
Wow.
I was taking Greyhound buses, you know, to events.
I was like-
Okay, it's because you're like around the country.
I'm like, how the hell is he paying?
So now I know how you're paying for it.
You're taking the bus.
I was taking the bus.
I was taking like the cheapest middle seat
of the back of like Southwest, wherever I could go.
I was staying on friends' couches.
I was afraid to spend at that time also.
I would stash it, but I wanted to spend it
because I didn't want to go back to the couch
and be broke again.
And there's a season for everything. You don't want to blow it all when you get it, but I want to spend it because I didn't want to go back to the couch and be broke again.
And there's a season for everything.
You don't want to blow it all when you get it, right?
But over this time, this is about a five-year window.
I started to make good money.
I started to save money.
I started doing online courses and hosting events and just doing anything that was right
in front of me to make money.
And I think that's the right thing that people should do.
Of course.
And I think it's also important to hear,
you're talking about a five year period.
Five year period.
And you're also talking about, okay, first I took the bus,
I'm sleeping on people's couches,
I'm saving, saving, saving, saving,
and five years of just putting in the reps and doing,
pushing this forward,
you're now in a different place and what happens?
So then I started to reevaluate,
do I really want to be making this type of money?
Like, do I wanna go online and just teach people
about how to optimize their LinkedIn profile
for the 10,000th time?
It wasn't my calling anymore.
It was right for the time, but not for the next season.
So I started to evaluate and I was like,
what are the things I really enjoy about this?
What are the things that I'm loving the most?
What would I like to do?
What would be amazing to be able to make money doing something with my time?
And everything went back to, I really love just like connecting with people who are doing
inspiring things on LinkedIn and asking them questions.
Everything they're teaching me taught me how to build my business now.
And everyone was asking me like, Louis, how did you build this business so fast? I mean, five years for me was fast where I was doing,
I guess, but I thought I could have been faster. They were like, how did you build this? And
I go, I honestly just like asked the most successful people that I knew that I could
find and they just did what they told me. That was it. And I go, Oh, maybe people would
want to hear these things. Huh, okay, how can I interview people
and make money with it?
I don't know, but I'm hearing this thing called podcasting
coming out, this was 2011, 2012,
and I was like, maybe you can make money in this one day.
And so I had two friends who had a podcast
and I called them, this was early stages.
Like you were like a-
There was like a thousand people in the world podcasting.
A pioneer, nobody knew what this was.
You just were like, huh.
No one knew.
And I wasn't a really a way to make money back then.
Right.
But I knew it would fuel like my heart's desire.
I was like, if I can interview the world's smartest people
and I can share that information with others for free.
That's gonna make me feel good.
And that's a generous mindset.
So it was helping me, but it was helping others.
And so I literally just researched it for a few months
and I was like, ah, let me just record one on my phone.
I did it with Robert Green, it was my first interview.
Robert Green, the author?
Robert Green was my first interview, yeah.
Oh, but geez, very the lead for crying out loud.
It was a big one, yeah, it was a big one.
And I was hooked, I was just hooked,
even though like 10 people listened in the first week
or whatever, I was just like,
in my first year of podcasting,
that was a full year of me every single week
doing an episode and then messaging everyone
on LinkedIn and Facebook one by one saying,
hey, go listen to this episode,
I think you might like this one part.
It was just the little reps every single day
for that whole year to get that.
And I made $0 in the podcast the first year.
It took me years to make money with it.
Now it fed my soul, didn't feed my bank account.
But again, this is that five year run.
When you were the LinkedIn guy sleeping on couches
and taking buses and sitting in the middle row
of the back of the airplane to try to get places,
and you're like putting in the Lego bricks
to build something,
that's exactly what you were doing
when you jumped into podcasting.
And I started and I developed skills and confidence
and reps and I understood certain things
and I had a certain level of credibility at that point.
I was like, okay, let me go launch this.
I feel confident.
Even if I don't make money, I'd save money. And I was still building the other business. I was like, okay, let me go launch this. I feel confident. Even if I don't make money, I'd save money.
And I was still building the other business.
I was still running things, but I just wanted to get away
from that eventually.
So it took years to get away from it.
What I love about the story, Louis,
because here we are 12 years later,
you have one of the most successful podcasts in the world.
You're an inspiration to certainly me.
Like you're one of the people I used to look at and be like,
why didn't I start podcast?
Look, Louis is already doing it.
I can't, you know, like literally you inspired me,
you blazed a trail for people,
you showed people it was possible
to build a business around it and to make a difference.
Thank you, appreciate it.
You know what's interesting, Louis,
is that if I think back to how scared and paralyzed I was,
at that period in my life,
my story for quite a while was,
we're never gonna get out of this.
I'm never gonna fix this.
I will always be this stuck.
I will always, I will never figure this out.
We're gonna lose everything.
And I can see for months and months,
telling myself that story kept me spiraling in place.
And it hid from at least my view and my motivation, my ability to see some of the things that
the experts said, this is what you do when you're in that situation.
It certainly doesn't change things overnight, but there are simple actions you can take
that if you felt like, okay, I'm going to figure this out.
Okay, I'm smart enough to listen to Lewis
and to read, make money easy,
and to listen to information that is going to help me
because people have been in this situation before
that you can actually figure this out
and that you can learn to make money easy.
That that is what motivates you
to start doing something different.
Is that why this matters?
100%.
I mean, you were just saying exactly
how I was feeling back then, that money is hard.
Money is stressful.
I don't understand money.
I went all in on money, but then it just escaped me
and now it's left me in this horrible place.
I'm never gonna get out of this place.
It's always gonna feel hard.
I'm always gonna be overwhelmed.
And that's what you kept telling yourself
as part of your story.
And it's too hard for me to figure this out.
And it's too hard for me to get out of debt.
There's no way to get out.
I think a lot of people think it needs to be hard
and stressful to make money, and it needs to be complicated. And it doesn't
need to be complicated. You just need to learn the tools and have the courage to be curious,
to understand more. And when you don't understand something, it seems extremely complicated.
But right when you start to figure it out, right when you start to be able to pedal and stay in alignment on that bicycle, you're like, this is so easy.
It's effortless.
Most people are unwilling to get on the bicycle and fall a few times because they just don't
understand it.
This foreign object over here, how am I supposed to sit on these two wheels and go down the
street without killing myself?
It seems so foreign and scary until we do it.
It seems like why was I ever afraid of this
in the first place?
Are there commonly agreed to steps that after 12 years
of interviewing so many financial experts
on the School of Greatness that help you manifest money,
success, and happiness, Louis?
One of the common themes that some of the wealthiest people
in the world all have told me
through the School of Greatness show is that the more they give, the more they're generous with
their money, the more they make, the more they earn, the more comes to them.
And when you have no money, it's hard to think, oh, let me just give my money away.
Let me be generous with it because you don't have much.
But they all tell me that that's the place when you need to learn and develop this habit.
Not when you have a lot to give, but when you have a little to give.
It's not how much you give to people, it's that you're giving something.
Okay.
A generous mindset.
Being generous.
So if you were giving advice to you, when you're on your sister's couch stuffing broccoli
in your pocket, like you got nothing, dude.
How do you be generous and adopt that
when you feel like you have nothing?
If you have no money to give, can you give time?
Oh, I love that.
And one of the things that got me to where I am,
and you could probably tell
because you've known me for eight years this month,
we met eight years ago,
and you've seen me over the years.
And the thing that I bring to the table, I feel like, is I'm curious, and I ask people
questions, and I get them to open up and talk about themselves in unique ways, just like
you do.
And that is a generous thing that we can do.
And when I was early on, these mentors, I would reach out to people on LinkedIn, and
initially I said,
hey, can you give me some advice? I'm broke. And no one replied. I can't imagine why. No one replied
to me because no one wants to give their time to someone who needs something from them. I was taking
from them. Hey, I'm broke. I've got no skills. Can you give me 20 minutes of your time so I can pick
your brain? I know you get that all the time.
We don't have time.
So I realized, oh, this strategy isn't working.
Let me actually dive in deeper on the person
I'm wanting to learn from
and actually research their story,
learn about the things they overcame,
read some articles about them
and see if I can like find something unique
that is meaningful to them
and see if they're willing to tell me about that.
So I started emailing people differently saying, gosh, it's really interesting how you, you
overcame this one challenge in your career and you jumped to this position.
I'd really love to hear about the mindset you had when you were facing that challenge
and what got you there.
I'm not asking for advice.
I'm asking for someone to relive a story that is triumphant for them.
And one by one, people started replying, saying, yeah, I'll call you, I'll take you out to
breakfast.
They're buying me lunch just to tell me their story.
And I'm not asking for advice, but they're giving me all the advice they have through
their storytelling.
And so, if you don't have money, you can be generous with your time, you can be generous
with your energy, with your questions,
and you can have a generous attitude.
You can be of service in some other way.
You can show up to support at your local church.
You can just call a friend and say,
hey, I know you're struggling right now.
Can I take you out?
Can we go for a walk?
Can I FaceTime you?
Well, I love that because when you are really struggling,
you tend to close yourself off to the world.
And so I love this advice,
because energetically you can feel like you're spinning.
That am I doing anything to actually drive this forward?
And you did that by just taking the action.
It's like me opening up these bills
and just being like, can't pay that today,
but I can call the company and explain what's going on.
You know, I don't have a job today,
but I can call a friend and start networking about what's going on. 100%. I don't have a job today, but I can call a friend
and start networking about what's going on.
And I just kept telling myself,
I'm gonna get myself out of this.
I don't know how.
And these consistent actions that you took, that I took,
it was the consistency and the courageous conversations
that gave me more confidence.
Whoever's listening or watching right now,
if anything has resonated with you in any way, the best way you can develop a mindset of generosity is to share this with one or
two friends in your life.
Share this with your sister, your girlfriend, share this with your mom, your brother, your
spouse, and say, hey, listen, I know things haven't been maybe horrible around money,
but I'd love to improve our relationship with money together.
I'd love to start asking questions and having conversations and feeling more safe around money with you.
It doesn't mean we've had a bad relationship with money together, but I want to increase our ability
to feel stronger around money so we can both create more abundance in our life financially.
Is that something you're open to? If so, share with me your biggest takeaway from this episode
with Louis and Mel, and let's talk about it.
Just starting here and having a conversation
with one or two friends or family members
is a huge step forward.
Oh, I love that.
Text one or two friends, go to your WhatsApp group chat,
and say, hey guys, I heard a great episode around money.
I would love your biggest takeaway from this episode.
Alrighty, Louis, let's give the person who's listening
a chance to share this conversation with people in
their life that they care about, who they want to learn all of this amazing stuff, and
they want to have a better financial future.
And I also want to give our sponsors a chance to say a few words.
So don't go anywhere.
Lewis and I are going to be waiting for you after a short break.
He has so much more to share with you.
It is so fun to get good with money
and that's what we're doing today.
Stay with me.
Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
We are here today.
I'm with my friend Lewis Howes.
I'm so excited you're spending time together with us
because we are talking about the simple habits and steps
that you can take to change your financial future.
So Louis, what do you think the top skills are?
Let's say the person listening is like,
Louis, if I want to put myself in a position
in the next two years to be able to earn six, seven figures.
Is there a particular skill
that I should be leaning into right now?
The skill that I'm gonna say is leadership,
but learning to lead yourself.
It's not the skill that you think, which is like-
Yeah, I thought you were gonna say learn to code AI.
No, AI, no, no. I'm like, lead myself.
How the hell am I gonna make six figures, Louis?
Because you might, there are certain hard skills
you're gonna want to learn.
For me, public speaking was one of the greatest skills
that I learned, it's more of a soft skill.
Leadership overall is the skill that you wanna develop.
Learning to lead yourself, learning to navigate
your emotions, learning to regulate your emotions,
learning to believe in yourself, all of that self leadership
and self-emotional intelligence within you.
And that takes reflection,
that takes listening to this episode,
that takes journaling,
that takes having a great evening routine, morning routine.
It's leading your life to be proud of you
and accepting of you.
If you're not there yet, it just means great.
There's something I get to do every day to improve.
Stack the wins every single day.
So have a conversation with someone every single day
for five minutes about money.
Create a game plan in your morning routine
about what three steps you're gonna take today
to support you on learning something new about money.
Read 10 pages in a book, listen to this episode,
have a conversation with a friend.
Start stacking the wins with where you're at in your life.
And if you have a lot of money,
it might look different than if you if you have a lot of money, it might look different than if
you don't have a lot of money. Right. But start stacking the wins so you feel the momentum
of that money. And you're going to feel more confident when you have that momentum. If you
just feel stuck, you don't have momentum. So in order to get unstuck, you have to start taking
actions every single day. When I was 24, broke on my sister's couch, no clear game plan. I gave myself one
and it was a nine month game plan because it was like around this time, it was like March
in the beginning of the year. So I was like, all right, by the end of this year, I want to have one
goal accomplished from money. And I did this, which was I wrote down $5,000. I just thought of
something for me that seems so unrealistic. Five grand at that time was
like, I don't know how I'm going to make this money. I don't know where the money's going to
come from. I have no clue. But let me just write down a goal for myself, five grand.
And I said, how do I want to make this money? I would like to make it from public speaking.
I just got into public speaking classes at Toastmasters.
With your cast.
I was my cast.
As you're stuffing broccoli in your pockets.
Exactly. And reading word for word, not looking at the audience, like sweating out of my at Toastmasters. With your cast. I was my cast. As you're stuffing broccoli in your pockets.
Exactly.
And reading word for word, not looking at the audience, like sweating out of my cutoff
shirt, smelling up the room.
And I literally said, it would be a dream to make five grand from one speech.
But it terrified me.
It excited me and terrified me at the same time.
So this is what I did.
I wrote it down on a piece of paper and I signed it with a date
that I wanted to accomplish it by.
I just wanted to create a visualization practice for myself
with a clear goal and a clear date in mind.
Got it.
Five grand date, by when, how I'm gonna do it.
I put it on the wall.
I framed it on my bedroom right behind me on my wall.
So every day I woke up, I turn around,
I see the goal in mind.
So I just had a clear direction.
It wasn't like what I'm gonna do in 10 years
and I'm gonna be a millionaire one day.
It was like, I just wanna be five grand in nine months.
Give me a speech.
I don't know how I'm gonna do it,
but I'm gonna show up every single week to Toastmasters
to take action and get better at the skill.
And I'm gonna start giving free workshops through LinkedIn,
which I started using LinkedIn to build relationships.
So I said, I'm gonna find a way to do free events,
tell people I'll speak at their company,
I'll do a lunch and learn, whatever it is,
I'll do anything for free to practice, to get reps.
So every week I went to public speaking class,
and then I was doing free workshops
for those next nine months.
At one point, someone gave me $100,
and I was like, this is incredible, I'm rich.
And I just said, okay, I need to do more of this thing.
And eventually by the end, I shit you not,
$5,000 for one speech came to me by the end of that date.
And I think the deadline created such a level of urgency
for me to take action.
Again, I was working hard.
It doesn't mean I was like, just like,
I'm going to think it and money's going to flow to me. That's not what this is about.
I was showing up weekly. I was terrified weekly and I showed up to develop skills for myself
so that my value appreciated. I love what you just said because one of the things that I got
from reading your book and digging into it is that you're revealing all of the mistakes
that we've made that we didn't know we were making
based on our past or the stories we tell ourselves
or self-doubt that put obstacles between us
and the money that we can create
that make it feel hard and complicated.
You just need to learn the tools
and have the courage to be curious to understand more.
I am so in, let's jump into the tools.
Okay, so there are three key steps
to improving your relationship with money.
And that's really the first thing that we need to understand.
What is our relationship with money?
The first one, really understanding your money wounds.
A money wound, what does that mean?
It becomes a money wound,
which is a part of your money story.
Okay, a money story.
When you can write down and journal,
here are some of the things that happened to me when I was younger
around money that caused me to feel a little anxious,
a little avoidant, that make me feel stressed about money,
and just write down the stories that you remember.
For me, I remember stealing money.
I remember stealing candy bars at stores.
I remember the shame that I felt by getting caught
when I was younger, stealing money.
And just like, man, that was a wound.
That was a trauma in my life.
I remember also, this is a really sad story.
I didn't really have many friends growing up.
Being dyslexic, similar to yourself,
you probably had a lot of friends,
probably missed popularity.
But I was dyslexic and always in the special needs classes
in school.
And I remember when any time kids would hang out with me
or talk to me, I was like, just holding onto it.
I was like, oh, please hang out with me.
And there was these two kids that wanted to start a club,
an afterschool club, like in their basement, right?
And they said, in order to join the club,
you either need to answer a
couple of questions or you need to pay money. And I was like, well, I don't have any money,
so what are the questions? And I didn't know the answer to the questions. And I felt like
the dumbest kid in the world. And so I went home and I talked to my mom and I said, mom,
I need $5 to join this club. And she was like, I don't have the money.
And I go, I really need this.
And she could see the desperation in my heart.
And so we turn over the couch cushions
and she's looking for quarters.
She's going into a room, her drawers,
and she gets together $5 and change,
puts it in a shoe box.
And I walk to the house where the kids are.
I hand them the shoe box with $5 in it and I hang out with them for like an hour.
They're talking with themselves in the basement and it's just me by myself and I just feel
like I'm the dumbest person in the world.
I can't answer their questions.
I barely had the money to just be their friends.
And even when I did, I'm not their friend.
It's a fake friend.
And I never went back to that because I was just like,
man, this doesn't feel good.
So this is a money wound.
These are just stories that I had,
these memories that still live with me today.
And I had to learn how to create a new story.
Well, what you write about this on page 63 of the book,
and you talk about how the first question
was named someone who walked on the moon. you talk about how the first question was name someone who walked
on the moon.
Second one was name the first three presidents of the United States.
I still don't know the answers.
You know, it's like I still don't know the answers to these things.
You know what?
We still love you, Louis.
Most of us don't either.
And you're right.
Not only was I not smart enough to join the club, but I had to pay to have friends.
I later came to realize that the deeper message
I took away from this experience wasn't just
that I didn't have much money,
but that I didn't have much value.
Yes.
And so I can see how the story, and you write down,
so the first kind of struggle that people have is.
It's really getting clear on what your money memories are
through your money wounds.
So just taking a, writing a list of like stories,
memories around money wounds.
What are the things where money was tied to?
Maybe something your parents said and they struggled
and they had arguments or they fought.
Maybe you had to move schools
because you couldn't afford something anymore.
Maybe you had to move out of the house, whatever it might be.
Maybe you had to live with your your aunts and uncles for a season of time
because your parents didn't have money.
Maybe kids made fun of you because you were wearing something that wasn't cool.
Whatever it might be, just write down the memories of your money history, your money story.
Yeah.
And these are some money wounds that still, if you haven't learned to heal
and have a better relationship with those stories
and learn to essentially forgive yourself,
create a new relationship with yourself around that,
and just kind of hug yourself emotionally like,
okay, this is what I went through as a kid,
and it sucked, but as an adult, I can do things differently.
And these stories don't have to define me.
These wounds don't have to stay open anymore.
But a lot of us are unconsciously still acting
out of wounds that we haven't healed.
And when it's tied to money
and you're in intimate relationship with your partner,
your boyfriend, your girlfriend, your husband, your wife,
there's even a greater charge to that emotional feeling.
And it's not a feeling of freedom.
It's a feeling of stress, overwhelm, chaos. So I don't know what conversations you heard from
parents or peers or friends growing up around money. Did you have like, were your parents
very cautious around money? And did they have a good relationship? Did they never argue around
money? Did they never stress about it? Did they teach you and empower you around money?
Or did it feel like money doesn't grow on trees,
money is challenging,
we're fighting because of money conversations,
we don't have enough, there's never enough,
these bills I gotta pay, like was that part of your story?
You know, not really.
It's interesting because
I never heard my parents talk about money.
So they were avoided.
I don't know what that means,
but I never heard them talk about money.
They were both extremely hardworking.
And I do remember my vivid, vivid memory
of both my grandmother on the big cattle farm
that my mom grew up in.
She would sit in her house code at the end of the day
with one of those little tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap,
like calculator things.
And she would be balancing the cash receipts
from the roadside farm stand.
And then when I grew up,
my mom would literally be tallying and paying bills
and balancing the checkbook.
And that's the only conversation
that I ever heard about money.
Now, my husband, on the other hand,
grew up with a family
that there was a lot of shamor on money.
Like, his dad started to ascend in his career
when Chris was in high school,
but there was a lot of,
don't get used to this, this isn't yours,
you don't deserve that,
you know, you need to pay your own way,
like, even though there was money.
And so my husband was very, very, well, not anymore, you need to pay your own way, like even though there was money.
And so my husband was very, very well, not anymore. He's changed his story around money,
but very tense, very restrictive, a lot of I don't deserve this. So Lewis, how does improving
your money story help you when you feel lost?
It helps you because when you heal your relationship with money, then you can feel free with money.
And if you feel stuck and trapped and anxious and avoidance or overwhelmed with money, you're
not free.
And it's hard to create from a place of scarcity.
It's hard to just experience joy and love and passion
and fun in your life from a place of scarcity.
It's really challenging.
So why would you think that having that same energy
with money is going to create
more financial freedom for you?
Let me see if I can like unpack,
because I think I know what you're saying.
And so I want to make sure as you're listening to Louis,
and maybe you're the 23-year-old
who's scared you're never going to be able
to move out of your parents' house
or ever afford a house of your own,
or maybe you're like my husband and I were,
and you're now in a situation
where you thought you'd be further along,
and you're now just paycheck to paycheck.
When you say free, I think I know what you mean. What I can recognize in that word,
if I go the opposite. So if freedom is one extreme that's available, if I change my story
about money, the opposite of that is imprisoned. If you're imprisoned by your debt, like I used to
be, and you're also keeping yourself trapped there
with the story you're telling yourself.
Like criticizing yourself, and I'm an idiot,
how could I let myself do this?
Why could I let myself get in debt?
Wait, were you there with me?
How do you know that's what I was saying, Lewis?
But I mean, that's how a lot of people feel,
and that's how I felt at that time.
I was like, why didn't I just try harder in school?
Why didn't I go get that medical degree?
Why didn't I do something that was safe?
Why did I try to pursue this crazy dream
of playing football? Yes. I got got injured. Now I have nothing. It's like this guilt,
shame, energy that only keeps you trapped. It doesn't create a space of flourishment,
of growth and abundance. It keeps you stagnant, stuck and feeling not enough. It's going back
to this word of peace. Most people have a lack of peace when it comes to money.
Oh, isn't that true?
And also, like if you can't pay your bills.
You're stressed.
Of course.
There is no peace.
There is no peace.
There is no peace.
And I'm not saying like, oh, you're broke
and you're in chaos mode right now, just feel peace.
That's really hard to do.
It's first step is understanding your story.
This feels like a great moment to hit the pause button, Louis,
and give our sponsors a chance to share a few words.
And I also want to give you a chance to share this episode
with people that you care about, people that deserve to have a great financial future
and that need to be reminded of the simple things they can be doing now
to change the trajectory of their life and the amount of money that they make.
So don't go anywhere. We've got more to share with you when we return.
And Lewis and I are gonna be waiting for you
after a short break.
Welcome back.
It's your buddy Mel Robbins.
Thank you for still being here.
Thank you for spending time listening to this.
I'm so excited that my buddy Louis Howes is here
and that we are talking all things money.
So Louis, what's the second step?
Once you know your story,
the second one is to reset your money mindset.
What do you mean money mindset?
This sounds weird.
We need to reset and rewire our brains
to have the ability so that more money can come
to us effortlessly and easily, even though we're going to be working and taking actions
to get there on a consistent basis.
But we need to rewire our brains to allow for money to come to us.
Okay.
So how do I get a better mindset?
You start educating yourself.
You start educating yourself, you start getting mentors,
you start learning about it,
you start having conversations around money
where you can feel comfortable as opposed to scared.
Okay.
Again, most people feel afraid
of just having a conversation about it.
I agree, I agree.
They won't speak to their parents about it,
their parents are hush hush, they don't talk about it,
you don't talk to your partner about it,
it's just confusing and scary.
And so you have to rewire your mind to think about money.
So is it actually possible?
Because here's the thing, you've rewired your mind.
Yes.
I certainly have.
It's a constant work in progress.
OK, but I've clawed my way out of that.
People are like, how did you get out of that?
I'm like, 15 years.
You have hard work.
Of hard work.
And it's not getting rid of hard work. No one can say that you don't work hard, that I don't work hard.. Of hard work. And it's not getting rid of hard work.
No one can say that you don't work hard, that I don't work hard.
We work hard.
But it's about the energy around money.
How can we make that feel easier when we receive it and when we give it away?
It's shifting the energy and the relationship with those things so that you feel more free? You know, I get a lot out of that
because when I think back to,
like it was in my freaking 40s,
I was supposed to feel like I'm on the uptick now,
and so I felt all the regret and the beat down,
none of which helped me to climb out of the debt.
What helped me to climb out of debt
was to get serious that I actually wanted to. And so I think it's really important for you to understand it's not going to be easy.
It's not easy to open up your bills. It's not easy to look at your bank account and
see where the money is going. It's not easy to recognize that you're paying for apps and
you're paying for subscriptions and you're paying for things that you don't use and that you
got to tighten up the belt.
But when you get very clear that you value something different than where you are, I
have no doubt in my mind that no matter how old you are or how young you are and in the
hole you are with student debts, that you can start to chip away at this.
Yes.
And the chipping away at this,
even though it's not a glamorous thing to do,
that is what actually changes how you feel.
And that is what changes your money
and your financial life over time.
And it takes time.
And I'm gonna be honest about that.
But that doesn't change the fact
that you could actually make a decision today
to use the advice that you're learning
and just dig in.
100%.
And look, it just started with opening up the bills, which I had been avoiding doing.
It started with calling the credit card companies.
It started with printing out my actual monthly bank statement and highlighting all the dumb
ways I was spending money.
It started with looking at the savings that I did have.
It started with having conversations with family members
about where we actually were.
It started with really questioning,
can we afford to hold onto this house?
Can we afford to have this car?
Can we afford to be a Netflix subscriber?
I mean, that's the level of honesty you have to get to
because I think, you know, you look a lot at like
how much you earn and you forget to look at,
well, how much is actually going out the door?
And you're not even looking at it
because you're telling yourself you're bad with money
and you feel demoralized about the price of everything.
Well, look at where your money is going
and then get very clear about what you want to create.
And then for me, what that meant is get a job
and then get a second one
and then figure out how to make money on the side.
And it's not easy, but with time,
and for me it took a decade,
you can actually change what things look like.
You can.
100%.
A strategy that I've learned over the years
is when money comes to me, I thank money.
If you don't have that feeling of,
man, I'm grateful that you're here.
I'm grateful that money just came to me.
Again, it's tying it to the mindset,
which is a generous spirit.
And when you have a generous heart,
you have a thankful heart.
So I'm thanking money when it comes,
and when it goes, this is the hard thing,
you have to thank it when it goes.
Why?
Most people don't like spending money on their bills.
For me, this was one of the hardest things I've had to learn, spending money on taxes.
And for years, I freaking hated it.
I hated it.
I hated it.
And that energy kept me trapped.
It kept me stressed out and trapped.
It doesn't mean I have to love it and enjoy it, but I have to shift my relationship
with spending money on bills, spending money on taxes, spending the money on things that you don't
feel like you want to spend on. Just shifting that small thing when you send the check to the student
loan. You're just like, thank you. I'm proud of myself that I can afford to do this. Yes. I'm
grateful that I have an education.
I'm one step closer to being financially out of debt.
It's repeating these things every time, like when you're paying for your cell phone bill or
whatever, it's like, thank you for giving me an ability to communicate with the world.
Thank you for the ability to be able to call my mom.
Thank you for the ability to call my best friend when she's struggling.
It's when we create more of an emotional appreciation around these things.
We can then feel emotionally safe around money and have conversations in a unique way.
I get emotional thinking about that because I'm like, just being able to call my mom on
FaceTime, I don't see my family that often.
But my cell phone bill, I don't know, it's probably a few hundred dollars a month that
I pay automatically. And if I was paying it by itself and writing a check, I would say thank you for giving
me the ability to connect with the people I love the most.
And looking at it that way as opposed to, ugh, this is freaking another cell phone bill.
Oh, they garrison me on these fees.
Like, oh man, I'm getting screwed here.
It's like the energy is not good.
And so it's learning how to shift out of that stressful
energy into more of a healthy, peaceful energy.
Well, and what else is cool is you're clearly in control
when you do that.
You're in control.
You may not like it or love that you're paying these bills
or paying off this debt.
Yeah, I ain't paying taxes.
No, it's not enjoyable.
No, but I'm proud of the fact that I can write a check.
So is there a statement or a mantra or something that you would recommend
based on all the research that you've done,
the people that you've spoken to,
that if somebody doesn't even know how to reset
their mindset, here's something you could adopt
and just start saying to yourself.
I would say money is good.
Money is my friend.
Oh.
Money comes to me effortlessly.
I just need to- Oh God, but what if you're like, but it doesn't, but it doesn't, Lewis. Money is good. You is my friend. Oh. Money comes to me effortlessly.
I just need to-
Oh God, but what if you're like, but it doesn't,
but it doesn't, Lewis. Money is good.
You have to start training yourself.
Money is good. Money is my friend.
I'm not afraid of money. I feel safe with money.
And you're going to be saying things
that aren't true to start with.
You're not going to feel these things,
but you need to reinforce these things
with your behaviors on a daily basis.
It took me years to have money conversations where I felt more comfortable talking about
money.
Years.
I was not comfortable asking questions and talking about it and talking about how much
I make, how much I spend, how much debt I have.
It didn't feel good.
But the more I practiced, the more I did it on a consistent basis, the more I felt safe
around my money situation.
So what's the third step?
The third one is really about getting clear on your meaningful money mission.
What is a meaningful money mission?
There's different seasons of life.
Some seasons we just need to make money to pay the bills.
But the goal is to get clear on your meaningful money mission.
Because if you're just making money to make money, it still stresses you
out if there's not a clear goal in mind that is bigger than making money. How is this money going
to serve you? How is it going to serve your family? And how am I going to be generous with this in the
future? Even if you can't think about being generous with your money now, start planning.
What will I do with this money that can help others around me? Is it my friends?
Is it my family?
Is it a charity that I love?
Is it my community?
Is it the school?
Is it the church?
How am I going to use this for good?
That'll attach more meaning to your money mission.
So when I was getting started,
my money mission was to get out of college debt,
was to get off my sister's couch,
was to be able to pay for my own rent,
make my own money so I could pay for whatever I needed to.
People have a lack of clarity on what they want,
why they want it, and where the money's gonna go.
That's so true, and especially right now,
I see this epidemic of people seeing things on social media
and the mission is get, get, get, get, get, get,
get, spend, spend, spend, look better. And what you're talking about is if you don't have a
powerful enough why, 100% and a game plan that's tied to values and then some sort of plan for
what you want to achieve and why, then you're going to be rudderless.
Yeah. Or you're just going to be back in the place of like, okay, I got this money, I spent it,
and now what do I do? I need to go make more money for what? So just getting clear on your money mission. For me,
I was very clear and I defined it early on. I want to impact and inspire a hundred million
lives every single week to improve the quality of their life. So it just became a clear mission,
which also allowed me to say no to money that I didn't want. And most people say yes to any money that comes their way.
And I say no to a lot of different things
that don't align with the mission.
So for instance, I don't have alcohol sponsors,
gambling sponsors, porn sponsors, whatever it is,
they just don't align with me and my mission.
So you have to know when to say no to money
that isn't meant for you as well.
And say yes to the money that is meant for you and your meaningful money mission.
Would you talk to the, like a 20 year old that's listening, how do you create a money
mission?
Because for me, when Chris and I were really, really struggling financially, my mission
became safety.
I want to be able to pay my bills.
I was not thinking about beach houses
or millions of dollars in the bank.
It literally was, I want to feel like
I can fall asleep at night
and know that I can pay my bills.
100%.
So there's a pendulum on this,
and I call it the priority pendulum.
And on one side, it's kind of chasing your passion.
Like, I'm really excited about this thing is when it go all in on it. But most people, if they're lucky, they's kind of chasing your passion. Like, I'm really excited about this thing, I'm gonna go all in on it.
But most people, if they're lucky,
they can make money with their passion.
It's hard sometimes.
And it might take years to develop skills
and tools and resources and networking
to be able to make money full-time with your passion.
Then the other side is like,
okay, I'm just gonna go the practical route.
And I'm just gonna get any job I can get,
but there's zero fun. It's miserable. It sucks the life out of me. It's like,
I'm drained every day when I go home from work. But I'll tell you, when I couldn't pay my bills,
that first freaking job I got, it was the best damn job I'd ever had because it was aligned with
my mission of I got to pay bills. 100%. And so there's a season for that as well.
Okay. Like you're not going to stay in that for 20 years if it's sucking the life out of you.
Or you got to learn how to make it fun.
The goal is to get more towards the middle, which is kind of the meaningful mission area
around money as opposed to just being practical.
And there was a time where I drove trucks.
I was making $250 a week driving a truck six hours a day.
I needed to make money.
I had to do what it takes to make some money.
So I was in that season of more practicality and I made the most of it, but I didn't enjoy it. Now I wanted to go
play football, but I couldn't play football at that time. That was the passion. So I eventually
got into more of the meaningful mission area of this, which is figuring out how can I align my
passion with making money the best way possible and start working towards that more and more.
Again, you were a lawyer and you turned it into,
but I'm also a really good communicator.
I love inspiring people, I love empowering people.
And over time, you eventually learned
how to bring that into where you are now.
And when you can do that, that's a beautiful thing.
But that took years and steps to happen.
So that's part of the mission side of things.
You know what's interesting is that I can see
how particularly if you take the struggle
around not having a money mission.
And so let's just say you're in your 20s or let's say-
If you're not clear at all, you're screwed.
Yes, correct.
You're screwed because you're like, what's the point of making it?
I don't know.
And I'm just trying, I got to keep it.
I don't want to get in debt.
Yes.
You're stressed.
So having a true mission is giving yourself the time and space to say,
this is what I want my life to look like.
And it can simply be, how much do I want to make this year?
It can just be a goal. It doesn't have to be like this mission for the rest of your life,
but it can just be like, okay, for the next three months,
I'm going to take on this job to help me get out of this debt.
That can be your mission for right now.
It doesn't have to be figuring out your money mission forever.
Right now, I'm going to read a book about money.
I'm going to talk to a financial advisor.
I'm going to ask my parents about money, and I'm just going to learn a little bit in the
next few months.
That's my mission.
It doesn't have to be, I'm going to figure out how to get out of debt forever.
It's just give yourself a map and a game plan that you can take actions every single day to support
you feeling more clear and safe around money.
You know what I love is I think that it feels attainable and dare I say, exciting to give
yourself a three month money mission.
Just write it out for yourself.
What is your mission around money in the next three months?
Is it to learn more?
Is it to spend less?
Is it to pay off one credit card?
Is it to learn how to cook so that you're not spending your money going out?
Like a mission that gives you a purpose.
And then if you also combine that, Louis, with the things you just said, where every
day you're like, I have a good relationship with money.
I'm learning about money. You start to say things positive
tied to that mission.
Well, I'm taking actions to mend
my relationship with money.
I'm taking actions daily.
I'm having conscious conversations
to mend and heal my relationship
with money.
Well, just one shift that you
could make if you truly want to
change your relationship with money
is notice the input on social media
and notice where you spend your time. How much time are you on there? Yeah, are you
are you watching content or listening to content that makes you want to spend
money you don't have or are you actually listening and watching content that
teaches you how to become better with money? 100% that educates you. You start
educating yourself, you start getting mentors.
If you're missing mentors,
the School of Greatness is an extraordinary podcast.
It's been around for more than a decade.
I think you celebrated your 12th year anniversary this year.
And some of the most successful episodes
that you have done in those 12 years
are with financial experts, with billionaires, with people that are wildly successful.
You know, one other thing I'm gonna say is,
we've all had that friend who all of a sudden
drops out of the social scene,
and then you see them six months to a year from now,
and they're completely ripped.
Like, different human being.
They've been training for a marathon.
They've made this decision.
I'm just out of the party scene.
I'm gonna get serious about my health.
And you're like, what happened?
And in that instance, you know,
they got sick and tired of where they were.
They said, this isn't working anymore.
I have to change my story about myself
and I need to wake up every day
and kind of align my actions and my time with this mission.
And I think we see it with health,
but it's the exact same thing with money.
I've lost so many friends over the years
that really hurt me early on,
because I didn't understand why.
But it became clear that if your friends or your
friends circle, if you want to make different changes based on your friends circles, current
situation and you go six months like a ghost and you just kind of focus on your goals,
you take action, you never go out and you really overcome, whether it be financially
or physically or whatever it might be, people aren't going to necessarily like that or appreciate
it when they see you come back in six months or a year
of you changing your habits and changing your mindset
because you're killing off the person they once knew.
And they don't like feeling like,
oh, you're doing something different.
You're used to going out on the weekends.
You're used to going out and drinking a beer
after work on Fridays, whatever it might be.
And when you wanna change your vision and change your map
and change your mission towards something new, you're gonna have to work on Fridays, whatever it might be. And when you wanna change your vision and change your map and change your mission towards something new,
you're gonna have to make sacrifices.
And people don't like that, they really don't.
Let them.
Let them, let them.
Someone wrote a great book that helps you overcome the fear
of worrying about what people think about you.
Cause that's one of the greatest things
that holds people back is when you're worried
about what your friends or family or online community is gonna think about you when Because that's one of the greatest things that holds people back is when you're worried about what your friends or family or online community is going to think about
you when you change.
Well, isn't that also why we spend a lot of money we don't have? Because we want people
to think a certain thing about us?
Yes.
So, Louis, I want to ask you the question that you ask all your podcast guests. You've
asked me.
Oh, man.
Now I'm going to ask you.
I have to reflect on this.
Imagine it's your last day on earth.
Yep.
Many, many, many years from now, you've accomplished everything you've ever dreamed of, but for
whatever reason, you sold your library of content.
So you have no access to it.
It's all been taken down by the person that purchased it.
But you get to leave behind three truths, three lessons that you want to leave with
the world.
What would those three things be?
I've asked this so many times.
I have to reflect on my answers now.
The first one would be the greatest priority you should have is taking care of your health,
physically, emotionally, and spiritually.
Because if you don't have a healthy life, it's hard to really create the life of your
dreams.
The second thing would be to live in gratitude every single day for the good, the challenging, the ups and downs, because gratitude is the gateway
to love and abundance.
The third thing I would say is to pursue your dreams and the calling in your heart with
all your strength until that calling goes away. Never give up on your dreams and make sure you leave it all on the playing field.
What are your parting words, Louis?
It's interesting, you know, I'll be 42 next month.
And I was having a conversation with my wife, Martha,
last night before I went to bed,
just thinking how blessed I am,
how blessed I am that she's in my life, how blessed I am that I did so much work to heal so that I can receive love and feel I'm
worthy of love. And I just truly believe that when we can take care of our heart, we can heal,
we can mend the pain from our past in any way possible to know that we are
love.
Know that we are lovable, that we are worthy and deserving of love.
Just everything in my life has changed since then.
And it's been a beautiful gift and blessing in my life to be in a peaceful, harmonious
relationship when most of my life felt like chaos inside.
And one of the reasons why I wanted to do this book
is because I didn't want people to stress.
There's a lot of people who are just feeling stress
and overwhelm and anxiety from everything in life.
Relationships was one of the big stressors for me, intimacy.
Everything in life, relationships was one of the big stressors for me, intimacy. And I just want to leave people with the knowing, I am certain and know that you are lovable
and you're deserving of love.
And I don't want your past wounds, I don't want your money struggles to get in the way
of you knowing that.
And that would be the thing that I would leave with people is trust that you will figure
it out if you're willing to do the work.
Don't try to do the work on your own.
I had lots of mentors, therapists, guides, friends who supported me over the years, but
I reached out to them constantly.
I seeked the advice and the help.
I didn't just say, oh, no one's helping me.
And I want people to know that they are loved,
that they are worthy, and that they matter.
You know what I love about what you just said, Louis,
is that at the end of the day,
it's really just about empowering yourself
to live a great life.
And I just want to thank you for everything
that you shared today because taking control
of your financial future and telling yourself
a different story and creating different beliefs
and taking the steps that lead to a different future,
that helps you build a great life.
So thank you.
Thank you, appreciate it.
And I also want to thank you.
I want to thank you for being here
and for taking the time to listen to something
that is going to help you learn how to be good with money.
You deserve to have a fantastic financial future
and you can do everything
that Lewis and I share with you today.
Yes, you can.
And the fact that you chose to listen to this
and invest time
in learning is evidence that you are going to do it. So thank you for being here. Thank you for
sharing this. And in case no one else tells you, I wanted to tell you that I love you. I love you
for listening to this. I love you for investing time in learning about how to improve your life.
I also believe in your ability to create
a better life. And there's no doubt that what you learn today, it's going to help you do
that.
Alrighty, I'll see you in a few days. I'll be waiting for you to welcome you in to the
very next episode as soon as you hit play. I'll see you there.
Lewis Howes, welcome to Boston.
Welcome to Mel Robbins podcast.
I'm so fired up that you're here.
I'm pumped.
It's freezing out, but I'm excited.
Well, at least you got to wear your coat
for the first time in four years.
I did, I pulled it out of the closet
and I got to bring it out, which is fun.
So I'm excited.
Yeah, you're making money easy.
You're making everything easy, my friend.
Scott, you got to.
Holy cow, I gotta go to the bathroom.
Go to the bathroom.
Things will look and feel very different than it does today.
Ooh, that's a good one.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
You're welcome.
Wow.
Beautiful.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Of course.
All right.
Move it out.
Move it out.
Let's go! Let's go!
Woo!
Woo!
Woo!
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank 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,
psychotherapist or other qualified professional.
Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode.