The Mel Robbins Podcast - Simple Steps for Getting Unstuck: Do THIS and Change Your Life
Episode Date: March 12, 2026Today’s episode is going to change the way you think about your life. If you keep telling yourself you want to: -go after something bigger -start something new -speak up -take a chance -or... finally do the thing you know you’re meant to do in life… but you “just can’t seem to find the time,” or “make it happen,” this is the conversation you need to hear right now. Seth Godin is going to call you out in the kindest, clearest, most liberating way. Seth is one of Mel’s most beloved business mentors. He’s written more than 20 bestselling books, his ideas have influenced millions of people around the world, and he’s widely considered the godfather of modern marketing. But this episode is not about marketing. It’s about the life you want to live, and why you keep putting it off with busyness, scrolling, excuses like, “I’ll do it when…” Seth is going to teach you how to stop procrastinating and start moving forward, even if you’re scared, even if you’re tired, even if you don’t feel ready. Once you hear what Seth says about resistance, you’re going to feel a fire in your belly to make you take action. You’ll learn: -The one word that is keeping you stuck and the one word that will help you move forward -How to stop waiting for permission and pick yourself -The small, simple way to start that actually works, even when you’re overwhelmed -How to stop getting trapped by fear and what other people think -How perfectionism keeps you safe, but also keeps you stuck By the end of this conversation, you’re going to feel capable, and you’re going to want to take action immediately. For more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked the episode, check out this one next: Reinvent Yourself: How to Let Go of Past Mistakes and Create a New Version of You Connect with Mel: Order Mel’s new product, Pure Genius Protein Get Mel’s newsletter, packed with tools, coaching, and inspiration. Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them Theory Watch the episodes on YouTube Follow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast Instagram Mel's TikTok Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-free Disclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Today, I'm going to ask you to do something I have never done before.
I'm going to ask you to be selfish.
See, there's a project or a goal or there's something important to you that you just can't seem to find the time to get to.
Maybe you want to write a book or finally get that certification and become a yoga instructor.
or the license to be an EMT.
Or perhaps there's a closet or a room in your house that you know you've been meaning to
clean out or plans to go see that friend that lives across the country.
You've been talking about it for a year.
Or you need to get that photo album done for your parents from the trip that you guys took
last year.
There's always an excuse why you can't get it done.
Well, that's going to change right now.
Because today I have one mission.
I want to light a bonfire inside you.
So no matter how long you have been putting this thing off or how many excuses you've made,
by the time you're done listening or watching today, you will be getting started.
It is time for you to stop hiding and start leading, creating, and living a bigger, bolder life.
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's always an honor to be together and to get this.
this time with you. And if you're a new listener, or you're here because somebody shared this
episode with you, I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast
family. And holy cow, you have picked one heck of an episode because you're about to meet
one of my mentors, the one and only, Seth Godin. For the past 15 years, I have been reading
absolutely everything that Seth has written. He's written more than 20 bestselling books. He's
consider the godfather of modern marketing. But to me, his work has been pivotal in teaching me how to
stop hiding and how to start leading, creating, and living a bigger, bolder life. Seth is in our Boston
studios today to do for you what he has done for me for decades, to help you identify what is
truly important to you. And more importantly, teach you how to push through the resistance,
the tension, the noise, the fear, the self-doubt, the excuses. And finally, do the, do the
thing and become a better version of yourself. Please help me welcome the extraordinary Seth Godin
to the Mel Robbins podcast. Seth Godin, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. Dream come true.
Thank you for having me, Mel. It's a dream come true because more than anyone else,
I'm going to start crying and we're talking about more than anyone else you have really taught me.
how to overcome fear and resistance and put art out into the world. You have taught me everything
I know about how I think about making an impact with people and communicating and marketing
and having courage. And I'm really proud that you're here because our company, 143 studios in this
podcast is run by people who are students of yours. I can't wait to see the impact that this
conversation has on absolutely anyone and everyone that listens to it, that watches it.
It is my mission that together we ignite a bonfire inside someone's soul. And they not just listen,
but they do something with it.
Thank you. One of the measures of my work is not what happens if I teach somebody, it's what they teach
other people. And you have taught so many millions of people. And it's just a thrill to be in the
same room with you. All right. I think, let's do this. As you say, let's make a ruckus.
What could be different about my life if I take everything to heart that you're about to teach
and share with me today and the person who's listening and watching right now,
what could change?
You know, if you think about whatever situation you're in,
whether it's at work or at home,
is there anything you could do to make it worse?
Is there anything you could tell yourself a story you could tell yourself or an act
you could accomplish that would make it worse?
And I think we can all agree the answers, of course.
Well, by that measure, then there are things you can do to make it better.
and you can make it better by choosing intentionally a strategy.
And maybe we can rewire the story we're telling ourselves
and not be a victim or a cog in an existing system
but build something that's generative and makes things better
for people who care.
And that might sound like a tall order,
but if we can make things worse,
much with hardly any effort,
we can probably make things better as well.
I've never really thought about it that way.
that is true.
Like if you just really ponder that question,
how could I make my life worse?
I could come up with a hundred things
that would make it way worse today.
Yeah.
And yet we do not really stop and think
about the endless ways
that you could make your life,
your work, your relationships better.
Given how many people you have taught,
given how many people
who have been impacted by your work,
just to open up the aperture of possibility for somebody, what are some of the wide-ranging things that
people have made better by embracing so many of the concepts that we're about to dig into today?
It's tempting to just, you know, point to numbers and what did you grow, how big was your organization.
But I think it all starts at home. It all starts with the first noise we hear in our head when we wake up.
And the last thing we say to someone we care about when we go to bed.
and all of that is fueled by the story we tell ourselves,
the story of being a victim or the story of being an architect,
the story of saying,
that person, that one right across the table from me,
under the circumstances, they are doing their very best.
I can't change them, but I can change the circumstances.
And so we begin by realizing that people
who have had much worse things happen to the,
them than you or to me or to you have somehow figured out a way to thrive, to thrive given
where they are right now. Because the only place to begin is where you are. If you're waiting
to get to somewhere else before you begin, you'll never going to get there. We have to start
where we are, acknowledge what's happening right around us, and then make a choice. Make a choice
about whether we want to change things or whether we want them to stay the same. But you're only
only a victim if you want to be. I don't think anyone likes to hear you're only a victim if you want to be.
Well, let me be really clear. I won the birthday lottery. I won the parent lottery. I was born with,
you know, so many advantages compared to people around me or people through the ages. There are people
right now who are in relationships that are abusive. They're in debt up to their eyeballs. They're dealing
with physical or mental disabilities. All of those things are true. And, and that's the
And then what are you going to do?
And then what are you going to do?
So I'm using the word victim very carefully here.
I'm not saying that bad things don't happen.
They do.
They often happen to people who don't deserve it.
What I'm saying is how should we process what just happened?
Should we add a but or an and, right?
I'm on vacation, but it's raining,
means my vacation is ruined.
But if it's, I'm on vacation and it's raining,
it means I've opened up the door to, now what am I going to do with that?
Can you give me a couple other examples of the power of but versus and?
Those words do a lot of heavy lifting in many sentences, in many stories we tell ourselves, right?
I want this person to have exactly the wedding they want, but I also want it to fit into my budget and be the wedding I want.
Well, that word but is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
And this is one of the key things that's unlocked with the let them theory, which is you can let
people do things, but you can't have your butt at the same time. You can't have your and at the same time.
There are things that are in front of us that are problems, and there are things that are in front of us
that are situations. Problems have solutions. Situations do not. So if it's a situation,
we have no choice but to accept it because it has no solution. But if it's a problem,
It can be solved. You might not like the solution, but it can be solved. And so my takeaway from your
brilliant book is if that person's going to do what they're going to do, I can treat it like a
situation. I can have a big fight about it. Well, I can realize they're going to do what they're
going to do. And my solution to the problem is to let them. What is the difference between a solution
and a situation? Because I was sitting here going, huh,
A situation is something that you can't change or control. Is that what you're saying?
Correct. So I trained as a mechanical engineer years and years ago in college. You can't rewrite the laws of physics.
You can't be in two cities at the same time. You can't persuade a company to buy something from you if they don't want to buy it from you. Those are situations.
Problems have solutions. You just might not like them in the short run. But there is a way forward if you're willing to accept.
an outcome that isn't the one you've been dreaming of.
And so what I'm trying to do is let you off the hook if it's a situation.
Okay, I can't change this, but it means I have to accept it.
Or put you on the hook if it's a problem and say, yeah, if this is a problem,
I might not like the solution.
I'm probably, I have a solution in mind that I don't want to do,
but I know what I could do.
I just don't like it.
It's still a solution.
Breakups.
taking better care of yourself,
sticking to a budget,
putting yourself out there
and risking the judgment of other people,
these are all problems,
but they have a solution.
We just don't want to do it.
Yeah, so a simple technical one.
If you're willing to have an uncomfortable conversation
with your boss for 15 minutes a year,
you'll make more money.
Because in those 15 minutes,
you can share your honest truth
about where you are and where you want to go. But if it's too much trouble and too scary to do that,
then you should settle for what you have. So the solution to the salary negotiation is there's probably
going to be an awkward conversation. The same thing's true if your spouse loads the dishwasher
in a way that you find really annoying. But you want them to just know that. You don't want to go through
the 10 minutes of hassle to talk about it. Well, we know what the solution is. Tell the truth.
have a respectful conversation, offering the other person empathy, but letting them hear what you need
to say. You've solved the problem. It just wasn't fun to solve the problem. Well, most problems
aren't all that fun to solve until you solved them. The easy ones are already gone, yeah.
That's true. So you talked about noise, and one of the things that your work has taught me
is just how much resistance I was manufacturing
and putting in my own way.
And when you first bump into your work, Seth,
it can feel very confronting,
and you start to read Seth stuff,
and you're like, who the hell does it?
Solutions, problems, noise.
He has no idea.
And then you start to really consider
all of the resistance that you have
to that list of things that you can generate
that would make a situation better.
I would love to just start to pull that apart
because that's had the single biggest impact on me
is really being truthful with myself
about how much I am in my own way
and how much I blame my stuff on other people
and other things when it's really none of those things at all.
The word resistance means anything that we do to get in our own way to keep us from doing something
that's going to scare us.
And so let's talk about Writers' Block.
Writers' Block was only invented 100 years ago.
We know who named it, the woman who wrote Frankenstein's near-do-well poet husband,
and Writers' Block is based on the idea that you just don't have the muse telling you what to write
today. This is nonsense. There's no such thing as writer's block. What happens is if it feels important,
if writing a memo feels important, if painting something feels important, if going on a date with
someone you've always wanted to go on a date with and it's tomorrow night feels important,
we do something internally to insulate ourselves, to protect ourselves, to keep us from being on the
hook. Because we got indoctrinated by school to do that because factory workers don't have to be
know they just have to do what they're told. But it's also, I think, part of human nature.
And resistance then is something that we cannot make go away. If we're going to do something important,
there's going to be resistance. If you don't feel resistance, it might not be important enough.
So the question then is, what do you do when it shows up? And the answer is you say, thank you.
Thanks for letting me know I'm on the verge of doing something important. Thanks for reminding me that
this needs to be on the top of my priority list. The things I'm procrastinating, I'm procrastinating
because of resistance. And so I now have a compass, and the compass points me to the hard work to be done.
And hard work, I think, is worth talking about for a minute. Hard work in the old days was how many
pounds of gravel can you carry on your back, because we don't have many machines. But now hard work is,
did I come up with a solution that's not on the list of solutions?
did I tell the truth in a way that the other person could hear? Did I make a good decision? Did I write something that's never been written before?
Sing something that's never been sung before. Paint something that's never been painted before.
That's our job. And so when we think about how do we engage with our family, well, if we're just going to put the stuff in the microwave oven, check all the boxes and then sit down and watch three hours of streaming every night, you're fitting in. You're making all the companies happy.
but you're not facing the resistance, which is what is the work that needs to be done that I'm
afraid of?
Why is doing the work that you're afraid of doing, the secret to a more fulfilling life?
Because you could mistake the word work for something related to your career or something
that is on your to-do list.
but I know that you're talking about something at a way more fundamental level.
Right.
That is about your experience of being alive.
Yes.
And your experience of yourself as you're going through this life.
So can we go deeper into what that means, what the work is?
I don't know anybody who wants to spend the rest of their life sitting on a beach having a way to bring them Mai Ties.
every day, you're not allowed to do anything else.
I think that would drive almost everyone crazy.
When we have a chance to be productive in whatever form that is,
whether or not we are getting paid for it,
we have a chance to be fully alive.
It could be the pottery you make in your spare time
or the way you are raising your kids.
It could be the fact that you volunteer at the local animal shelter.
That's work.
You're doing it because the work needs to be done
and doing it well is gratifying.
There's a magical side effect.
And the side effect is this gratifying life translates into a whole bunch of side effects,
like more respect, like more independence, like more resilience in the bank.
Because the universe can't wait for people to show who do good work.
They will line up outside your door and offer you friendship or respect or even money.
if you are the person who's willing to do the things other people are afraid to do.
One of the things that is interesting is that if you think about something that you know is important to you,
whether it's cleaning out the attic now that the kids are going,
nobody else seems to care about it, but this just nags at you,
or it's really writing down all your grandmother's recipes and self-publishing a cookbook,
or it's starting that store on Etsy,
or it's volunteering at the community gardens,
there is this nagging thing
that is inside each and every one of us
that we just shove away and shut down.
And what you're talking about
is that the resistance that you feel,
because the things that are important don't go away,
there is no amount of busyness
that takes that kind of, it's an ache in there,
away. And so you're talking about and giving us this permission to really look at it differently.
It's not a to-do. It is some of the most important things that you could force yourself to spend
time on. Why is the personal nature of that nagging book you want to write, that YouTube channel
you want to start, the side business that you keep dreaming about? What is that thing actually
about Seth. Okay, two words. You ready? Yes. Pick yourself. The dominant system does not want you to
pick yourself. The dominant system wants you to wait to be invited to go on a reality show, to be
invited to apply for a job. They want you to go to the placement office and wait for the company
to come interview you. The idea that someone else will pick you and authorize you, they will call you up
and they say, Mel, we know you have a novel in you. Would you please write the novel and we will
publish it. And I'm speaking from experience here. I've talked to thousands of people in this very
situation who have a book inside of them. And my advice to them is it's simple. Make it into a PDF,
email it to 20 people, ask them to share it with others for free. If it spreads, your phone will ring,
and now you can get hired to write another one. If it doesn't spread, write something better.
The end. And almost no one does this because it's really awkward to say, yeah, I picked myself,
I wrote this here, I made this.
And those four words, here I made this, are so challenging, right?
That it's easier to buy a cookbook and follow the recipe than to invent something you're
going to serve to people you care about.
And so, if we can find a life where we can identify the things that are important to us,
truly important to us, and then pick ourselves not to do the work to win a prize,
or get a medal,
but because we have agency,
because we could,
the word for that is freedom.
It is the responsibility
of showing up to make a thing
and offering it to the world.
It might just be your family
that notices the attic is clean,
but you,
you realize that you hired yourself
to clean the attic.
Don't wait till you're going to sell
the house and the realtor
hires you to clean the attic.
You hired yourself to clean the attic.
and that sort of freedom and responsibility, that's where dignity lies.
And everyone I've ever met wants more dignity in their life.
Hang on a second, Seth.
I need to pause right here because if you're listening and feeling that spark like something just clicked,
don't keep it to yourself.
Share this with someone who needs it to, a friend, a coworker, your partner, your sister,
your adult kids, whoever came to mind.
Do it now while we take a quick break.
And then don't go anywhere because we'll be.
be right back with more from the amazing Seth Godin. Welcome back. I'm Mel Robbins. You and I are sitting down
with the extraordinary best-selling author and phenomenon Seth Godin. So, Seth, why is there so much
resistance to picking yourself? Why are we waiting for someone else to come along, Seth, and be like,
hey, you should write that book. Hey, you should quit your job. Hey, you know, I think you should start
that business. Hey, have you ever thought about getting out of that relationship? Hey, you should ask your
family to help you out a little bit more. Life is high school, isn't it? It is. And high school taught us a
whole bunch at a very important moment of our life. And the people who got by who seemed the safest
weren't the ones who were picking themselves. They were the ones who were sort of hiding out,
hiding out in a uniform, hiding out in an attitude, hiding out in a clique, hiding out in a group,
hiding out in a mob. And so the system wants us to hide out. It's much easier to sell you luncheables
and to sell you the next thing on television if you are part of the crowd.
So we have to do some work to unteach us to ourselves.
And that's one of the magical things about sharing this podcast.
Because when you say to a friend, I'm going to start acting this way, listen to this,
hold me accountable.
You picked yourself, but you now picked someone to hold you accountable as well.
And the cycle can continue.
that one of the things we notice is that when you are part of a scene,
whether that scene is jazz musicians in Chicago in 1964 or Silicon Valley entrepreneurs 10 years ago,
you want to fit in with the group, the scene you are a part of.
So if the scene you're part of isn't getting you where you want to go,
build a different one, build a different circle of people who ask each other hard questions
about their relationships, about the books they're reading,
about the books they're writing, about whatever it is you want to make,
because we become who we hang out with and what they expect of us.
I believe it's a fact that there's something about the hard wiring of a human being
that is a fundamental need tied to growth, tied to learning, tied to connection and expressing
yourself. And no matter how busy you get, no matter how much you drink, no matter how much
money you make, no matter how broke you may get, you will still never outrun the things that are
uniquely meant for you to do during this lifetime. They just have this kind of magical way of
haunting you. And so that presents you with this choice. Do I sit, knowing deep down, there's some
change I want to make. There's some way I want myself or my world or my family to be better.
There's something I want to do. There's people I want to find.
but instead of doing it, I am going to sit with the resistance that slowly is killing me as I think
about it and actively deny or talk myself out of it. One of the things that I see a lot, Seth,
when people write in is somebody will write in and say, you know, I've changed my life. I've lost some weight.
I'm exercising. I feel incredible. I've started journaling every day. I'm also now selling this
new skin care line or I got my realtors license, my partner hates what I'm doing. They're not
supportive at all. So can you talk a bit about the noise and the resistance that comes from the
people around you and what to do with it if one of the reasons why you're not making the change you
want to make is because of that outside pressure? So when in doubt look for the future,
There are three things that motivate people.
Fear, affiliation, and status.
So let's do them in reverse order.
Status is who eats lunch first.
Who's up and who's down?
What kind of car are you driving?
Is your desk closer to the bosses?
Are you mom's favorite kid?
Status.
Affiliation is who's to my left, who's to my right?
Am I wearing the right outfit?
Is my hair the right style?
Am I wearing the right glasses?
do I fit in. And between those two, underlying both, is fear. It starts, of course, with the fear of death,
because we're all going to die, but it extends to a million things. We figured out how to hook
almost everything up to fear. So the people who are around you, who care about you, are afraid,
so are you. And that fear might involve not knowing the person you're about to become. That fear might
involve catastrophizing what might happen if the world changed. But here's the thing, Mel. The world is really
crazy right now. And this is as normal as it is ever going to be again. If you're waiting for things
to get back to normal, you're going to be waiting a very long time. And so given that change is
happening whether you like it or not, the question is, should we take agency and control and influence
of that, or should we sit back and just wait? And so the people
who you are listening to,
who you are modeling your behavior around,
they mean really well.
Under the circumstances,
they love you and they care about you,
but the circumstances
determine everything,
and the circumstances involve
everything we've been taught,
everything we've been led to expect,
and the systems we're all part of.
And if it's working for you,
don't change anything.
But if it's not working for you,
then we get back to the and but thing.
If it's not working for you,
you have to decide
if it's not working bad enough that you're willing to deal with the short-term resistance and
challenges to change it. And you're not guaranteed it's going to work out the way you hope,
but you are guaranteed that you can influence it. So in the instance of somebody who has
changed their lifestyle, they're now healthier, maybe they've cut back on the drinking,
they're getting up earlier, their spouse is sleeping in, it feels like they're growing a little bit
apart, if we use the but and, you could say, I'm getting healthier and I'm feeling great and I'm making
positive changes, but my spouse doesn't like it, versus I'm getting healthier, I'm making positive
changes, I'm feeling much better, and my spouse doesn't like it. And if it's the second one,
yeah, now you owe your relationship something because your spouse can't fix this problem by themselves.
because if they could, they already would have.
So you can just announce a situation and live with it,
or you could say, what would it mean for me to really see my spouse,
to really see their fear, to really understand how they might feel rejected,
or denigrated by the fact that I'm doing this thing that they secretly would like to do,
do but can't?
How can I put effort into helping them feel the firm foundation
that our relationship has when it's at its best?
And there are lots of ways to do that, but none of them are guaranteed.
But if you don't work at it, it's probably not going to work very well.
Well, I love just the simplicity of but and and because when you say but, now all of a sudden
it means the spouse is the reason you got to stop doing it or they're the biggest reason why it's
hard for you.
When you say and you basically separate yourself and them and you hold space for both things
to be true.
And therefore they don't become the excuse.
they just become one of the problems or the facts of what you're dealing with.
And now you can decide how you're going to make this better.
Correct. It's exactly right.
It's super easy.
So if you think about the marathon, we're in Boston.
Okay.
Some people run the Boston Marathon and make it 24 miles and then they stop.
And some people finish it.
And the only difference between the people who finished the marathon and the people who
almost finished the marathon is the people who fail.
the marathon, figure out where to put the tired. They're both tired, right? But if you quit at 24,
you can't handle all the tired. You got to stop. But the difference is the people make it to 26,
they're tired too. They just figure out where to put it. So if you go to a running coach and say,
I want to run the marathon, you don't get to say, and I want to finish without getting tired,
not allowed. You have to say, I'm going to run the marathon, and I'm going to get tired,
and I need to be able to do both.
So this idea that forward motion,
changing your appearance of your life,
it comes with a form of tired that goes with it.
Where are you going to put it?
How are you going to put in the effort
to get good at dealing with the effects?
You just said a sentence is very liberating.
And even though I've read absolutely all your books,
I'm not sure this one has ever hit me
the way that it hit me right now.
I need to be able to do both.
There is this presumption, almost like a psychosis,
that when something's important to you,
you believe it's going to be kind of easy to do.
And if you were to start with the presumption
that this thing's important and I'm going to get tired
and it's going to be hard and there's going to be a lot of resistance,
so I need to be able to do both.
the thing that's important and also know that this is part of the package.
Right.
You know, for someone who's been really sitting with an idea or feels that pull toward a positive change, right?
But they've been sitting there, waiting for the right time, waiting to feel ready,
waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting.
what do you say or do?
Well, congratulations.
You got exactly what you wanted.
What do you mean?
No one's forcing you to not wait.
You're choosing to wait.
What a safe, lovely place to hang out.
To be able to say,
I've submitted my novel to 20 great publishers
and they all turned me down.
Okay, you're off the hook.
How safe could that be?
That I have a great talk I want to give,
but they won't let me get the main stage at TED.
As soon as they call,
I'm ready to go give the talk.
Congratulations.
You've built a perfect place to hide.
And we all do this.
No matter where we are,
no matter what we do for a living.
This is what we do.
We find a perfect place to hide.
And if it's working for you, don't stop.
But if it's not working for you,
then we get to this and thing, right?
I have a talk I want to give,
and I recorded it yesterday,
and it's on YouTube tomorrow.
That right there's like, oh, I don't want to do that.
Right.
Do it under another name.
I've suggested to people for years, you should start a blog, and if you want to do it under an assumed
name, I don't care. But after 100 days, you'll want to put your name on it. So tomorrow-
Why would I want to put my name on it after 100 days? Because you're going to be so happy with what you
are doing. You're going to be so proud that this work is there, that you did it, that you want to take
credit for it, right? It's just the act of saying, here, I made this. I put this into the way.
world for people who might benefit from it. And the generosity feeling, because remember, it doesn't cost us
anything to do this idea sharing, and it has leverage. It might be multiplied to a whole bunch of
people. This is not the same as going on Instagram and hustling everybody you know to give you a like
or whatever it is. They are structuring their algorithm so that you will feel bad until you do more
of what they want you to do. That's how they make a living. That when we are constantly
creating content without charging them and telling all of our friends to absorb that content,
we're doing their work. It's a trap because you can say, well, I've done all the things.
I've got the wide-briended hat. I've got the lighting. I'm doing all the things like everybody
else is doing. I'm going to be an influencer. I just don't have my 300,000 followers yet.
And now you found another safe place to be stuck. And so you end up burning your relationships
by selfishly asking people to do things for you online. And you're pandering,
a crowd you don't know and don't care about. And once again, you're trapped.
What you're saying is if you're sitting in your head, waiting for the right time or
obsessing over the right way to do it, probably because you're managing, I want people to like it.
So instead of picking yourself and saying, wait a minute, I want to put this out there,
whether it's my real estate business or it's my art or it's just me starting to write something,
thing, I want to do it because it's killing me to sit here and watch everybody else do stuff
and to know I'm quietly quitting on myself. There's something I call intentional design.
And it's two simple questions. Who's it for and what's it for? So this thing you're putting
on social media, who exactly is it for? Tell me exactly by name, if you could, who is it for?
If it's not one of those people, you don't want them to see it, you don't care if they don't like it.
What's it for?
Why are you putting in this effort?
What do you get out of it?
What do they get out of it?
If you can't answer those two questions, who's it for?
What's it for?
Then you're floundering.
Then you're hiding.
For the person who never actually starts, how do you pick yourself?
You're sitting in your house.
You're listening to this.
you're frustrated because you've been thinking about going back to nursing school forever.
And you've thought of all the bazillion reasons why you can't and the money and the this and the people and the timing and I'm old and all that other stuff.
In that instance, how do you pick yourself?
Because you've been in that, right?
Yeah, for sure.
It's such a grooved habit.
Two related ideas.
The smallest viable audience and the smallest viable piece of art.
So the smallest viable audience is what's the smallest group of people
that if you made an impact on them, it would be enough.
So if it's a household, one kid, that would be enough.
I don't care what the neighbors think.
It's for them.
And the smallest piece of art is, what's the shift I could make that would be worth it?
So if you've been paralyzed for 20 years by going back to nursing school,
why don't you go to the local senior home or hospital
and volunteer for one afternoon a week?
they're not going to turn you away.
What would happen if for two hours a week
you could change somebody's life?
Do you want to do that more?
Well, there's lots of ways you can do that more.
But you're not sitting at home wishing.
You're actually spending two hours a day
or a week changing someone's life.
The smallest viable unit of art is very, very small.
I say to people who say,
my boss won't let me,
which is a very common expression.
I want to make a difference at work,
but my boss won't let me.
What they're really saying is I want to revamp everything at work from the top down,
and they won't give me authority to do so.
Well, of course they won't.
But you know what you could do?
You could start a book group over lunch on Fridays,
and you could just invite five people and say,
we're all going to read Mel's book,
come next week, prepared to discuss it on Friday over lunch.
And if it works, you get to do it more.
And if it doesn't work, we can stop.
those are great examples of you picking you.
Is the smallest viable audience, could it also just be you?
You know what I'm saying?
Or is it important that you to really hack this well-grewed thing to say, how could I shrink this big thing and turn it into a little thing that impacts somebody else?
Is it really important to think about, well, I'm scared to put up a substack thing about my musings about whatever, but I could send an email to my sister.
is that kind of what you're thinking?
Yeah, so let's begin with hobbies.
I love hobbies.
I have so many hobbies.
Okay.
Hobbies are for you.
Do not stop your hobby because your neighbor doesn't like the canoe paddle you just carved.
It's not for them.
It's for you.
So if you're doing something just for you, please do something for you.
Call it a hobby.
Don't add any butts or hands to it.
It's for you.
But the smallest unit after that is your sister is one human.
And we have to talk for a second about attachment.
Okay.
Attachment is a Buddhist term, but it's pretty easy to understand.
Attachment means that you're trying to control the outcome.
You're attached to what the weather's going to be like at your daughter's wedding.
You're attached to whether people like the episode you're making.
You're attached.
You're trying to control something from the outside.
Here's the problem with attachment.
Let's say you and I want to swim across a small lake and we want to be safe.
Well, the safe way to do it is eight feet apart, we swim.
And if one of us gets into trouble, the other one can help.
The stupid thing is for me to attach my right arm to your right arm by a rope and four ropes,
arm to arm, leg to leg.
We're both going to drown because you can't survive that way.
So when we are going to do this work and bring it to the world, here I made this,
but it's not followed by and I need you to like it.
It's just here. It's a gift. That is what makes something a gift here. Not and you owe me a thank you note. And you owe me a big smile and you better clean your plate and you better appreciate it because now I'm attached and I'm trying to control it. That's not a gift anymore. That's just getting somebody else wrapped up in your story and that's a recipe for disappointment. Okay. Are you having those aha moments right now? Because I certainly am. And I want you to remember that's not
random. That's you getting exactly what you came here for and what you needed. So while you listen to our
incredible sponsors, I'm going to ask, please share this incredible advice and inspiration that Seth is giving to
you right now. Send this episode to someone else who might need the same push today because it's not
only going to help them. When you help somebody else, it helps you right back. And speaking of being right
back, Seth and I are going to be waiting for you after this short break. Welcome back. Welcome
it's your buddy Mel Robbins and today you and I are talking with the incredible best-selling author
Seth Godin. So Seth, what I, what we keep coming back to is the you, the picking you, the hiring yourself.
The, and I know that underneath this is that ultimately you're not necessarily going to nursing school for
anybody. You're going to nursing school for you. And a big part of
why you're going to like doing that is the way you make other people's lives better.
This is not some selfishane Randian thing of always do what's for you.
Because most normal people, what's for you is the reaction someone who gets the joke has.
Right. So it takes a long time of being in a Broadway show before you're tired of the applause
at the end of the show. The applause isn't for you to know you did a good job. You knew you did a good job.
It's for someone to engage, to connect, to make something happen there.
Oh, I think I just got something.
So one of the reasons why you feel so tortured as you're sitting there with this thing you want to do or this change you want to make or the ways in which you wish your life were better is because in doing it, somehow your mind, body, spirit, and soul knows that on the other.
end of you getting through the resistance and out of your own way and really expressing your
aliveness, whether it's through a community garden you start, or it's going back to school,
or it's changing the way you take care of yourself, or stepping back into the dating world
after divorce or losing somebody that you love, that I think deep down we know that there is
some profound connection that is missing in your life right now that can only be felt by doing this
thing that feels important to you. And it rhymes with another word that's keeping us stuck,
which is rejection. That if I put myself out there, maybe I'll get rejected. If I put myself out there,
maybe I will be seen as the fraud that I am. If I put myself out there, maybe some of the
bad will happen. So it might be easier to just stay here and whine about it than to do this
generous act. So I want to talk about my mom. I miss her every day. She died way too young. My mom
was a volunteer and then an employee at the most important art museum in Buffalo called the
Albert Knox. And it's considered one of the great art museums in America. And when she got there,
the museum store wasn't really an idea. The most museums didn't have stores. And they sold some
postcards. And she took it over and with her partner, Lita, grew it to 10 times the size.
She co-founded the Museum Store Association and museum stores around the country look to death thing.
So one of the things that she did was it bothered her that in Buffalo, a lot of people never came to
the museum because it was a status thing and it wasn't the way they were raised. And my mom came up
with this idea before the Antiques Road show was on television. She got two people from Sotheby's
to come to the museum.
It's like 1973.
And if you had antiques in your attic,
you were going to get these people from Southern people
who would be able to tell you if they were worthwhile.
So she comes home from work on Friday
and the things the next day.
And she had done a little press for it, but not much.
And she was notably insecure,
which was unusual for her.
And she said, Seth, I'm a little nervous
because we're doing this thing tomorrow
and what if no one comes?
And then she turned to me and she said, well, if no one comes, no one will know that no one came.
The next day there were 5,000 people waiting in line.
That's incredible.
But the lesson for me was, if she had just done what was on the paper in her job, it would still be a little phone booth that sold postcards.
and all the generous cycles that came out of her work happened because she was willing to do an event
and maybe no one's going to come because she realized if no one comes, no one will know that no one came.
It's almost like these little pulls and ideas and that thing that's inside you that you're waiting to do,
that you feel this like resistance, that your excuses, you're safe.
It's almost like I love flowers so much because it just amazes me,
from a tiny seed, the most extraordinary, intricate, big thing can bloom over time. That's how I
visualize these little impulses and seeds and stuff inside of us, that you have no idea when it could
bloom, what it would bloom into, but we don't allow them to, like, be planted. We keep them
deep inside in the dark. Like, you know, most, most seeds don't bloom in a bag in the cold in a shed
somewhere. Right. They need to be planted out into the open. You know, one thing that you ask people to do
is to be remarkable. What does that mean? If you want to make an impact, if you want to grow,
if you want people to show up, don't yell at them, make something worth making a remark about.
that what it means to be remarkable is someone will benefit if they talk about you.
They won't do it because of you.
They'll do it because of them.
So what it means to be remarkable is not to hustle or put on a weird show or, you know,
where a purple unicorn hat.
It means do something that other people will benefit from if they remark about you.
And to me, that has a lot to do with how you do it.
You know what I mean?
The personal flare that you bring into something.
the care that you do in terms of how you move through the world.
People are looking for the thing that's remarkable,
but so much of it is in the way that you operate.
I had this experience with the late Arn Sorensorensen,
who was the first non-family member
to be the CEO of the Marriott Corporation.
And I was interviewing him at this massive event.
There were like 5,000 people in front of the audience.
It was right when,
Starwood was merging with Merritt. Everyone was going bananas about their points. And so we had this
great interview. And he had also talked about the brand. And that at the heart of the brand was this
feeling that you felt like you were being welcomed home when you walked through the door and that
it was everybody's responsibility to create that experience. And so anyway, the conversation's
over. It was wonderful. And then we stand up the applause. And we go to head off the stage.
And without any fanfare, without anything demonstrative, he quietly turns and picks up both
our cups of coffee and the two napkins and the CEO of Marriott carried them off the stage.
And to me, that is an example. That is an example.
example of what you're talking about because I have remarked about the impression that that
left on me in terms of his integrity and just who he was as a person and a leader that no
words could have done. I have read where you often write you are not behind you are becoming.
Why is this an important mindset? So the single best way to get kids to behave.
is to award points, and then to say points will be deducted, that there's a huge business in the
United States now where they give kids points for behaving in class, which they can trade in for
sugary snacks later. Points are a wonderful manipulation tool. And, you know, when we think about
high school sports, they act like there's a trophy shortage. There's no trophy shortage. The purpose of
high school soccer should not be to win the game, because it doesn't matter who wins the game.
The purpose should be how do we develop into the people we'd like to.
to be, but it's much easier to just keep score of the game as a proxy for what should happen next.
So we're surrounded by this status game and it causes lots of marital strife because you don't
make as much money as to people down the street because they have to go on a nicer vacation than us,
etc. That's only on your radar because we live in a world where it's possible to fly to Paris.
No one went on vacation to Paris 300 years ago. So we just keep upping the game, a ratchet to say,
There's a carrot. It's connected to the stick. We've got to run faster.
And it's a trap. The alternative is to say, who do I seek to become?
Not compared to who. Back to who's it for? What's it for?
This work I'm doing at work, is it so I can make more money than my neighbor?
Why? What do I get by making more money than my neighbor? I don't think that's useful fuel.
I think when we choose our fuel, we choose the life we're living, and choosing the fuel of I'm better than you.
Getting into a status loop, it never ends.
And if you recognize as you're listening, oh my God, that's me.
Like I am obsessed with my neighbor's kitchen and now I don't like my kitchen,
even though my kitchen was fine a week ago, but then I went over to their house and then
they've got the dream kitchen and then you get into that thing.
How do you, once you recognize, okay, Seth, bingo, you nailed me.
I am in the status loop.
I have the wrong fuel.
What am I filling myself with?
let's name it first.
Okay.
I'm going to the jewelry store, I'm going to the handbag store, I'm going to the athletics store
because I need to buy some status.
I need to buy some armor.
I'm paying $400 for sneakers I could buy for 50 because the status will help me.
Just name it repeatedly.
I am doing this because I am afraid.
I am doing this because in high school I always felt left out and now I have a chance to spend
this money to not feel left out.
If you say these things out loud,
you might realize how ridiculous they sound.
So name it.
Then the second thing is, what am I going to rest my eyes on?
What am I going to focus on?
What are we keeping track of?
When we sit down to dinner as a family and we talk to each other about our day,
what do we announce and what do we complain about and what are we glad for, right?
So let's say you have a six-year-old.
A-year-old brings home their very first report card.
and they got an A and A and a C.
How do we respond?
Why do we care that a six-year-old got a C in something?
We care because we know that in 11 years,
they're going to start applying to famous colleges.
Don't use the word good colleges.
They're just famous colleges.
And we need to create a system in our house
where good grades are important
because I'm going to get a sticker for the back of my car
and that sticker is going to show I'm a good mom or a good dad.
You don't say any of those things out loud, but that's exactly what's happening.
I'm sure, like, this is something as you're talking, I'm like nodding my head,
nodding my head, nodding my head.
And for a very, very long time, I was fueled with the status.
I was miserable because I was chasing all the things that I thought,
all the other fancy people had that I couldn't afford.
And the endless cycle of trying to prove that we were good enough, that we were fitting in,
that we were keeping up was exhausting.
And I remember when I finally just started doing,
I didn't realize it at the time,
but what you're saying, which is naming it,
as dumb as it sounds,
I literally just turned to my kid and said,
well, we're not doing that because we can't afford it.
We're not going on that vacation
because we don't have that kind of money.
And just naming it
diffused so much of it
because now that I'm not,
in this battle with myself, and I'm accepting the reality of it, I can choose whether or not this is a
problem that I want to solve for a different reason, not because I feel I need to keep up,
but because, boy, like, it would feel kind of good if I worked really hard for the next three years
on something on the side and saved up a little money that we could actually go away for a week.
That would feel good, but I'm doing it for a different reason than to measure something that I've
been gaslit into thinking that I need to measure.
Yeah.
Naming it is key.
And we're back to the butt and the end, right?
We could go do that or we could have this, this, this, this, this, this, this, and this in our life.
Which one do you think would make us happier?
That's generous to have an honest conversation with our family about what we can afford and can't afford.
It's not selfish anymore.
It's not something we should feel ashamed of.
So we should be proud of because we're showing up where we're needed.
I'd love to talk about perfection because this was a huge breakthrough for me in your work
and just ship it.
Like just stop trying to make it perfect and ship it.
And I think you will be proud since I am a student of yours to know that there were about
117 errors in the Let Them Theory book when it went to print.
And people have painstakingly found them and pointed them out.
and I am proud that it wasn't perfect.
So many things to dissect here because the words matter.
There were typos in the book, but the concept of the book, the deliverable of the book,
is not an error.
Okay, let's start with that.
But now let's talk about quality, because quality is a really loaded word.
Quality means three different things.
So let's talk about each of them because only one of them has to do with perfection.
There is the quality of meeting spec.
This means that a 1984 Toyota Camry, it does exactly what it's supposed to do all the time.
The parts fit correctly.
That's all quality is.
It meets spec.
Quality simply means build a system that meets spec.
So in 1969, in Detroit, when they put together a car, one of the last pieces, all the people there had rubber mallets.
Because the only way to get the pieces to fit together was to hit them with a mallet.
in Japan, everything fit together like a watch. It was perfect. If you got the spec right,
everything works better. But that doesn't mean you want to be better than the spec. That's a waste.
Just meets spec. The second kind of quality is the quality of luxury. This is the word we use,
I think incorrectly when we really mean luxury. So Rose Royce is a more quality car than a Camry.
No, it's just more luxurious. And the third time is the kind of
kind we use as an excuse to be a perfectionist. And this is, you can find zero defects no matter how
hard you look. And by that measure, nothing is perfect. The point of perfectionism is not to make it
better. It's to keep you from shipping it. You can nitpick because you're trying to protect yourself,
not because it's who's it for, what's it for? So, I have never said just ship it. I say merely
ship it. They're different. Just ship it means this is junk, this crap, whatever, I don't care.
Merely ship it means this has met spec. Here, I made this. Without attachment, without argument,
here I made this. In the world of New York City book publishing, the spec is there should be no
obvious typos. Because that's their spec. It's attainable. But no one has ever published a perfect
book ever because every book could be improved. There is a word in the Great Gatsby that if we shifted
it just a little would make that book a little bit better. You could go on forever. That's the point
of perfectionism. We could go on forever. So what I say to people is simple. What's the spec?
The minute that is met, it's gone. Merely ship it, we're on to the next thing because we met the
spec. If you don't like the spec, make a better spec. Well, it's interesting because you said that
When you obsess about getting it perfect, you could go on forever.
But the fact is, you actually go nowhere.
Right.
And the confounding thing, when you really start to embrace everything that you're sharing today,
is that the only answer is to do, to start, to stop thinking.
That's how we become.
We become what we do.
We don't do what we become.
Say that again.
We become what we do.
We become what we do.
So if you want to be a truthful person, start telling the truth and you'll become a truthful person.
It seems so simple.
It's so hard.
It's so hard.
Mel, it's so hard.
Why is it so hard, Seth?
It's hard because the progression goes like this.
I will make a mistake.
It will cause me shame.
I will be ostracized from my community.
I will be alone.
And then I will die.
And so we can do that whole progression.
in less than two seconds.
And that's why there's expression.
Like, I was going to die.
There was lipstick on my teeth.
That's how we went from lipstick on my teeth to being dead.
And that's why I like to name it.
Because it's so absurd that lipstick on your teeth is going to cause you to be dead.
And so we have to decide, are we using as fuel in security?
I always need a better outfit.
I always need to be a little taller or a little thinner, better spoken, etc.
or are we going to adopt a generous mindset that says, I showed up, I said something that made things
better. That's the spec. And if you can do that wearing shorts, do it wearing shorts, because the shorts
have nothing to do with the spec. It's interesting because I immediately thought you could wake up
every day or end every day by saying, I woke up today and I did better. Yeah. No one says I did
perfect because it's not true, but you might have done better. So what's about authenticity? Can we do that?
Yeah, let's talk about authenticity. Authenticity is a crock. What do you mean? Authenticity is a crock.
It's a fiction. No one wants you to be authentic. Maybe you're best friend, but nobody else.
You're the most authentic person I know. That's why I like you. I'm consistent.
Wait, wait, you're consistent. So is the secret to being authentic being consistent?
The secret of being of service is to be consistent.
So let me ask you a question, Mel.
Yeah.
Did you ever have a day this year where you were just really off, a little cranky, not your best?
I call that Tuesday.
So when you were like that and you got behind the microphone to record an episode, were you authentically cranky and subpar?
Or did you show up as the consistently magical version of Mel Robbins that you're capable of?
I showed up consistently.
I don't do that with my family as much.
I let myself off the hook there.
And, you know, Seth, I am trying to be better there
because I think it's really awful to save the worst for me
for the people that love me the most.
So authenticity is for your best friend,
maybe for someone in your family.
That's what they want from you.
But what everyone else wants from you
is for you to make the story of you true.
And if you need heart surgery, God forbid,
you don't want the surgeon to do an authentic job.
You want them to do a consistently amazing job.
That's why you hired them.
And I can go down the list.
What it means to be a professional is to make a promise and keep it.
So the reason I wear this smock,
I wear it every day when I'm at work.
Because when I go to work walking there with my dog,
I'm Seth Godin, small S, small G.
But when I get to work and I put on the smock,
I am the person who's written 10,000 blog posts and 20 bestsellers.
that's a role I play
and my job is to play it consistently
now you should not adopt
a consistent role that is diametric
with who you want to be
that will burn you out
that will break you
don't do that right
but
when you can find a role
that you can inhabit
consistently
then you don't get to use the
get out of jail free card of
I was just being authentic
that's media social media
talk for I was being a jerk
it's not allowed
We didn't give you our attention so that you could act out.
We gave you our attention so you could be consistent.
So how do you create a practice?
How do you create the conditions where it's easier to do that?
When you look in the mirror when you wake up in the morning,
when you are making breakfast for your kids,
when you are dealing with your boss,
we get to say to ourselves,
if I was playing the role of the best version of me,
what would that be like?
And at first, it feels really odd to play the role of you, but pretty quickly you can live into it.
I'm just processing this right now asking if I were playing the role of the best version of me,
no matter how I feel today, no matter what my excuses are, if I were to consistently play the best version of the role of me, what would that be?
Well, I know the answer of that.
I think we all do.
I'm simply arguing a strategy is to create the systems to become the version of you that you would like to be today.
Because you don't get tomorrow over again.
You only get it once.
How do you want it to go?
If I take just one action out of everything we've talked about, what do you think the most important thing to do is?
I think the most important thing is to talk about it.
And to talk about it, you need someone to talk about it with.
And that's why, other than getting to spend time with you, this podcast was so important to me.
Because you are creating a system where people invite others along on the journey.
And if you can find one person or three people or five people to have a cohort that tells each other the truth,
that challenges each other to be the best version of themselves, it will work every single time.
Seth Godin, what are your parting words?
Go make a ruckus.
Yes.
What it means to go make a ruckus is not go call attention to yourself.
It's not go break every rule.
Go make a ruckus is simple.
It's work that matters for people who care.
Don't do it for people who don't want to hear from you.
Don't do work that doesn't matter.
Don't do work that just feeds a system you don't believe in.
Do work that matters for people who care.
It can be a little bit of work for one person.
That's enough.
and then do it again.
That's our chance.
Make a ruckus.
Seth Coden,
thank you for making a ruckus.
Thank you for teaching me how to make a ruckus.
Thank you for igniting something in me decades ago
that I think only now is starting to really be seen in the world.
Thank you, Mel.
I wouldn't be fully me if there wasn't you.
And I'm really glad you're here.
And thank you.
Thank you for finding the time and making the time to listen to something that is going to help
you raise the bar, make better decisions, and as Seth likes to say, make a ruckus.
And in case someone else tells you, I wanted to tell you as your friend, that I love you and I
believe in you.
And I believe in your ability to create a better life and absolutely everything that Seth taught
to you today, that he implored you to consider.
I know it will lead to a better life.
All righty.
I'll see you in the very next episode.
I'll welcome you in the moment you hit play.
Hi.
What a treat.
What a treat.
You want to get a fresh tea before we start?
Because it's halfway.
There's like a whole team that's busy making tea.
Yeah, we're here to take care of you.
So two cannibals are eating a clown,
and one cannibal says to the other cannibal,
does this taste funny to you?
You are just like you are in real life.
Well, that's one of the best compliments.
It's the highest honor I can.
offer you. Thank you for seeing that.
Um, hold on a second. I'm going to sneeze.
Oh, I see.
Hold on.
Okay. Okay. Okay. So, whoo.
You're amazing.
And one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language. You know what the lawyer's right 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.
Serious XM Podcasts.
