The Mel Robbins Podcast - This One Study Will Change How You Think About Your Entire Life
Episode Date: February 5, 2024Today’s episode is a wake up call. Before you waste another day of your life, you need to hear the six shocking statistics from a ten-year long study about what you’re doing with your time.Becaus...e the hard reality is that time is passing you by.And if that bothers you, this episode will get you doing something about it.You’re probably spending too much time on things that are not important to you, and not enough time on what is.It’s time to change that.In this episode, you’ll also learn:Surprising life changes that happen at ages 18, 21, 29, 40, and 70.6 things you must pay attention to if you want to make the most of your life.The most important decision you’ll ever make. (It’s not what you think!)The ten-year research study that Mel couldn’t stop thinking about.The truth about your relationship with your family.The advice you need to help you find the right person for you.A short quiz to help you see what matters most in your life.The big takeaway that will change how you see your relationships.To go deeper into the topics shared in today’s episode, including the study Mel shares, the graphs, and the resources mentioned, click here for the episode resource page.Follow Mel:Watch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s newsletter Get Mel’s free 29-page workbook to make this your best yearReady for your next listen? If you liked this, you’ll love this episode: 2 Ways to Believe in Yourself & Achieve Cool ThingsDisclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend, Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Thank you so much for being here with me and also thank you for taking the time to listen
to something that could actually help you improve your life.
Now there is something that I cannot wait to talk to you about.
I saw this 10-year-long research study. It's called like the American Time Study. Wait till I explain what this study tells you about time. Seriously, there are
six shocking statistics about how you are spending your time and who you are spending
your time with over the course of your life. And here's what I want to talk to you about this.
When I saw this data about how I'm spending my time over my lifetime and who I'm spending
it with, it was like a wake-up call that lit a fire under my ass.
And oh my God, when you see these six takeaways and the data, it's like depressing and inspiring
because what you're gonna learn today
is there are critical moments in your life
that change your relationships forever.
Like for example, when you turn 18,
the time you spend with your family and siblings
drops off a cliff.
When you turn 29, something crazy happens with friendship.
When you turn 42, something else dramatic happens.
And then again, when you're 50, when you're 60, again, when you're 70.
And you are always asking me for information to help you make your life better.
And let me tell you something.
Today's conversation is absolutely going just asking you a couple questions.
They're easy, don't worry about it, you don't need a pen or paper, you can answer these
in your mind as I ask you.
You ready?
Here's the first one. Can you name the last five
artists that won Artist of the Year at the Grammys? Me either. Or what about the
last five companies that were at the top of the Inc. 500 list? The last five
winners of the Olympic gold medal in women's gymnastics? Nope, me either.
You want to know why?
Because it doesn't really matter to the average person, right?
Who cares?
But I bet you can name your five favorite people that you've ever worked with.
Just stop and think about them.
You probably even see their faces pop up into your mind.
Or how about the five people that you always laugh the hardest with?
You know if you're going to see these five people, you are going to have the kind of
laughter where your head hurts, you're laughing so hard.
Or what about the five people who had the biggest impact on your life?
Five favorite memories with your siblings?
Or if you don't have siblings, five of your favorite memories with your parents?
Here's another great thing to think about.
Think about the five people you used to spend a ton of time with, but you don't see them
anymore, but you really do miss them.
You know what's interesting about all those questions I just asked you?
I bet you can answer all of them.
You can give me five specific names or five specific memories for every one of those questions.
Why?
Well, because of how those people made you feel.
And that brings me to today's topic.
So I mentioned this research study.
The research study I want to talk to you about is called the American Time Use Survey.
And it's this big study where researchers collected data for over 10 years.
And here's what they were looking for.
They were looking at how social connections evolved through the average person's lifetime.
I'm sure you've heard that saying, it's all over the internet, that you are the average of the five
people you spend the most time with. There's no doubt that having healthy relationships
with other people and with yourself is one of the single most important pillars of a great life.
yourself is one of the single most important pillars of a great life. Now, what we're going to look at today is what the research found over 10 years about
who you spend time with over the course of your lifetime and how that changes over the
course of your lifetime.
And one giant caveat is that they only looked at data over 10 years with Americans.
And regardless of where you're listening though,
or whatever your cultural background might be,
I guarantee you, there is something that you will learn
in this data that will make you approach
your relationships differently.
It will make you look at friendship,
your relationship with your parents or your siblings,
where you're working, your relationship with your kids or your siblings, where you're working, your
relationship with your kids, with your partner, with yourself in a very different way.
I know it did for me.
And so here's my intention with our conversation today.
My intention is to wake you up, to wake you up to the reality of how time is passing you
by. And how much of your time,
you're probably spending on things
that are not important to you.
And so here's how the conversation is gonna go today.
I'm gonna walk you through the six key takeaways.
And if you wanna see the data and the charts,
which I think you would find them very compelling.
All you gotta do is go to my social media, Mel Robbins, that's the handle on all the
accounts or go down to the resources which we have for every show and we will link to
the post because I want you to see the grass with your own eyes because they are so compelling
and I got them right here in my hand, okay?
And when you see the reality and that's what I want to hammer into your head and my head,
the reality, the reality of how time is impacting your relationships with your parents, your
siblings, your partner, your friends, your kids, and your coworkers, this is not a fantasy.
This is the reality of your life.
And I want you to be more intentional from this point forward about how you spend your
time, who you spend your time with, that's
what this is about.
To align your life with choices that match the reality of how fast time is going by.
And look, everything that's already happened, that's in the rearview mirror.
We cannot change the past.
We know that.
But you can learn from it, and you can learn from this data, and you can take from this moment and look forward,
and you can use the data you're about to learn
to change your life for the better.
So let's go through these six crazy statistics
on who you spend your time with over the course of your life.
And the first one is about family.
So let's talk about your family.
I mean, everybody loves to complain about their family, don't we?
In fact, as I record this right now, I'm in a bit of a little, like, you know, tiff with
one of our kids.
They haven't talked to me in 48 hours.
And so I'm not immune to the kind of challenges that can come in family relationships, but
this little tiff will pass.
And I noticed that any time I post something online about narcissism or toxic behavior,
you guys go crazy over those kind of posts.
Yeah, yeah, cut them out of my life.
Yeah, narcissists.
But today, I want to talk about the reality.
And the reality is your time with your family is limited.
And I'm talking about both your parents and your siblings.
Your time is limited.
And I'm gonna break this down for you
because I don't think we stop and think about this
in terms of the data.
We think about it in terms of kind of generally
how your life feels.
But let me just explain what happens for the average person.
From zero to 18, those are the years that you will spend the most amount of time that
you have with your parents and your siblings.
And sometimes that time can feel like a prison, but the truth is when you zoom out and you
really look at the data, it's very sobering.
Here it is. When you turn 18, the amount of time that
you spend with siblings and parents, it basically drops off a cliff and you know this. And it
keeps dropping until you reach about age 26. And when you reach age 26, based on the data,
you are now at a flat line for the rest of your life.
That whatever time you're spending on a daily basis with your family, meaning your parents
and your siblings, that's it.
And if you're lucky, it tops out at less than an hour a day.
Now for those of you that are part of a big family farm or you have a big family business
or you're a family where you have a multi-generational house, which I think is super cool.
You see your family a little bit more than average, but I want you to stop and think
about this.
You never see your family, do you?
We lived a mile from Chris's oldest brother as we were raising our kids outside of Boston.
We never saw them.
And Chris and I, we would talk about it all the time.
Why don't we hang out with your brother more?
It's almost like because of their family, you sort of put them in the box of just defaulting
to see them over the holidays, right?
Here's another example.
My mother-in-law, she lives three miles from me.
Now, she's 85 and her social calendar is busier than mine, plus I work full time. I'm lucky when she's here in Vermont if I see her once every two weeks.
Why?
I don't know.
I guess I don't really prioritize it.
It's not that I don't like her.
I just don't really think about it.
And let me just take a giant highlighter and really put this in perspective about how fleeting
your time is with your parents and your siblings.
My dad, Bob, he is turning 80 this year.
His father was dead by the age of 81.
Chris's dad died at the age of 69 from esophageal cancer.
So let's just say I'm lucky and my dad lives another 10 years.
Now, my dad and mom, they live in Michigan.
So I only see my dad three or four times a year.
So let's put that in the context
of how much time I have with him if he lives 10 years.
That's 30 more weekends with my dad.
When you do the math that way,
doesn't it make you think differently about it?
Like take my sibling, my brother, he lives in Chicago.
And Derek's got two twin boys who are freshmen in high school
and his public high school schedule
and our public high school schedule,
they are not on the same breaks ever.
And so it's not like we can go on spring break together, plus his kids are in competitive
sports all summer long.
Our son's going to go to college next year.
When are we going to see each other?
And this isn't a statistic where I'm trying to kill you.
This is the facts.
And I don't know what kind of relationship you have with your parents or with your siblings.
So I want to ask you this question in the context of this statistic, especially as your parents
are getting older.
If you think about this moment and you look forward and you think about the limited amount
of time that you have, what kind of daughter or son do you want to be from this moment
moving on?
What kind of a brother or sister do you want to be
from this moment moving forward?
And look, maybe you've been listening to the experts
that we've had on narcissism and difficult people
and you're like, that's it, I'm cutting them out.
But for most of us, when you really stop
and think about the reality, that time is slipping
through your hands and this person is the way that they are, and they are the way that
they are because of their upbringing, their past experiences, and their unhealed trauma,
and there's nothing you're going to do to change it, but who do you want to be?
And I want you to really think about this.
This is why I call my parents three times a week.
I just do it to check in because of who I want to be.
And I find personally that the more that I check in, the better our relationship is,
the more that they soften, the warmer that they are.
And I realize why.
It's because when I call, they don't feel forgotten.
And it does make me incredibly sad to think that I might only spend 30 more weekends with
my dad.
And look, I need to say my mom and dad, but my dad's older, so he's the one that's top
of mind and my mom just turned 75.
She's still kicking.
So mom, I need to see you too in case you're listening.
And as I'm sitting here, I can't help but think and I bet you're starting to think
this too.
You know, maybe I should find a weekend in the next month to go down and see them.
I mean, you just never know, right?
Even though I saw them a couple of weeks ago, maybe I should make another plan and I think
that's a big takeaway.
First of all, your time is limited. Do the math and think
about how little time you actually have. And the second big takeaway is always have the next plan
for when you're going to see them next. That helps me a ton to know that I've got something in the
books, we have something to look forward to,
and that I'm checking in just because that's the kind of person that I want to be.
And it's important that you think about this because enjoying your relationships is not
just about savoring them and being grateful that you have the time to have with them because
we all... And I don't mean to be making fun of being grateful, but it can become very
surface level.
My message today is look at the data, look at the reality.
And if you value this, your parents and your siblings,
wake the hell up and start prioritizing it.
And that's what I've been doing.
In fact, over the holidays,
we went on two back-to-back grandparent trips.
I don't know if you've done any of those, but when the big milestone birthday happens,
it's pretty awesome.
Chris's mom turned 85, and so she brought together her three sons and all the kids,
which meant nine cousins, six adults.
And Judy and her partner on two sailboats, it was super awesome.
And here's what I realized as we were all together. Do you know the last time that all 18 of us got together? It was 10 years ago. And I bet that's true with your
family too, because the older you get, the harder it is to get everybody together. Like
if I think about my family on Chris's side, nine cousins, they're all over the place.
We've got cousins in Texas and Colorado and New York City and some in
college and some graduate and they're living their lives. It's the reality and it's difficult
to get that many people together. And so I'm proud that we did that for Chris's mom for
her 85th. And by the way, right after that, we went and spent the weekend with my entire
family to celebrate my mom's 75th. And if you've ever been at a big gathering like that,
a milestone birthday for a parent or a grandparent
where everybody's there, I'm willing to bet
it's one of the happiest times you'll ever see him.
Because it's insanely difficult to get everyone together
once people turn 18.
And that is what the state is saying.
Your time with your family is incredibly scarce
once you turn 18.
Take it seriously.
And you wanna know one thing I'd love for you to do?
One way you could take it seriously?
Share this episode with your siblings,
and your parents, and your kids,
and your favorite niece or nephew and your kids and your favorite
niece or nephew or your cousin or your favorite aunt.
And if you're listening to my voice right now because one of your family members sent
this episode to you, the message from that person in your family to you that they want
to meet and deliver is this, they miss you.
They love you.
This matters.
So let's get a date on the calendar and let's get together because we're going to regret
it if we don't and time is going to keep on going regardless of what we do with it.
So make a date and make it happen.
I told you this would be eye-opening and sobering and inspiring and that's just statistic number
one about who you spend your time with over the course of your lifetime.
We still have five more statistics to unpack, all of them equally profound.
The next one is very eye-opening, because it's about what happens to you between the
ages of 20 and 60, this 40-year span.
During the ages of 20 and 60, who do you think you're spending most of your time with?
The answer will surprise you and we're going to unpack it when we come back. Stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your friend, Mal, and you and I are talking about six shocking statistics.
I got the graphs right here in my hand, and it's shocking statistics from a 10-year study
on who you spend your time with over the course of your life.
This really changed a lot for me.
It's a study called the American Time Study. It's a 10-year study.
And when I first saw these six takeaways from the study,
it was depressing.
And then once I kind of sobered up a little bit
from the depressing news, it lit a fire under my ass.
And it pushed me to prioritize certain relationships
while I still have the time to do it.
Now you and I have already covered take away number one,
which is when you turn 18, the amount of time you spend
with your parents and your siblings falls right off a cliff.
And then it flatlines at age 26 for the rest of your life.
And if that bothers you, the message is,
do something about it.
This is happening not because your siblings hate you,
this is happening because of how we start to spend our time as we age.
There is data that explains all this, but just because this is the average, you don't
have to be the average.
You got that?
Good.
So let's dig into the next five, okay?
And this next one is really interesting.
The second key takeaway shows who you spend the most time with between the ages of 20 and 60.
Any guesses?
If you guessed your coworkers, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, you're right.
So what is the takeaway from this?
Well, the takeaway is something that I believe is really important for you to grasp.
It's this. The people that you work with day in and day out
have a huge impact on the quality of your life because based on research, 40 years of your
life, these are the people you spend the most time with. Be choosy. Such as about the money.
If you prioritize a great work environment, which I want you to do, you're not only going
to reach your financial goals, but you will also surround yourself with coworkers that
create energy in your life.
That help you tap into a deeper potential inside of you.
Your coworkers are a net positive or a net negative.
And so I want you to think about this
because we think about work in a really selfish and narrow way.
What's my job?
What's my title?
How much money do I make?
How do I climb the ladder?
How do I get this?
How do I get that?
But I want you to kind of lift your head up
and wake up to the fact that you're gonna spend 40 years
in the workforce or volunteering
or doing something outside the house.
And the people that you are doing something outside the house.
And the people that you are doing that with really matter.
Companies are not just spreadsheets.
Companies are made up of people.
So pick good people.
And one more thing, because I can hear you start to go, but, but, but, but, but, but,
you're not stuck with a boss.
You're not stuck with a toxic coworker.
You're not stuck where you're working right now.
And if I ask you, name your three favorite coworkers that you've ever worked with, immediately
three faces would pop into your mind.
You'd immediately remember laughing in the break room or that all nighter that you peeled
doing something or some other thing that you did while you're on the road for work.
If I asked you, name the most toxic person you've ever worked with. Boom. Bad
Apple right there cannot stand that person, see them coming, duck into a
cubicle. Oh my god, avoid them like the plague. In fact, there's research that
shows that person you're thinking about.
If they are festering, they can take down an entire team. It's called the bad apple effect.
This is how important the people around you are in terms of influencing how you feel in
your day-to-day life. And there's just endless research about why people leave jobs. And
one of the biggest reasons why people leave a job, this comes from Gallup, number one reason,
is because they can't stand the person they work for.
So here are the takeaways.
Do not stay in a job you hate with people you hate.
Do not tell me you need the money.
Because the fact is, if you have this job
paying you this much money,
you can find another job in a better environment
that also pays you that money.
And I'm not hearing your excuses.
I'm not hearing any of the BS that you're about to spit out that you can't make it happen
or I live in this place, but I'm this years old.
This is 40 years of your freaking life.
Second, if you don't like the people you're working with, be intentional about either
getting out of that company or cultivating relationships with people in other departments
while you're looking for another job.
And finally, just like there can be a bad apple at work, be the right apple.
Don't let the attitude of where you're working bring down your attitude because there's always
something you can do.
And I want to wake you up to the fact that where you work and how you feel at work and
the people that you are spending time with are going to make up 40 years of your life.
And as time is passing and it's going to keep on passing, you get to choose whether you're
going to be in a place that lifts you up or brings you down.
And that's takeaway number two.
Between the ages of 20 and 60, you spend the majority of your time with your coworkers,
so get serious about where you're working.
Alright, let's go to the third statistic.
And I'm gonna warn you, the third statistic right here,
got the chart right here.
This one's a little sad,
because it explains why you never see your friends.
I want you to reflect on your own life for a minute.
Can you pinpoint the age
when you really started to feel
like you didn't see your friends as much?
You got that age of mine?
It probably doesn't surprise you when you hear that for the average person, the time
you spend with friends starts to decline at the age of 21.
And over the course of your 20s, you start to see less and less of your friends.
And that brings us to the pivotal age of 29,
where all of a sudden the amount of time
that you spend with your friends on a daily basis
drops off for the rest of your life.
And for most people, here's what that means.
Your friends become the group
that you spend the least amount of time with as you age.
I'm gonna say that again. of time with as you age. I'm going to say that again.
For most people as you age, friends are the group of people you will spend the least amount
of time with.
And if you stop and think about it, it kind of makes sense, right?
I mean, just think about your own experience.
You saw your friends every day in middle school and high school, or if you went to college
or to trade school, and then what happens?
You graduate. And maybe for a year, some of you move in together,
and then exactly what the data says starts to happen
in your 20s, doesn't it?
Everyone starts to do what you're supposed to do.
You start focusing on your own life
and creating a life for yourself.
Maybe you move to a different city
or you have different roommates
or you take a job that takes you in a new direction,
or you go to graduate school and that consumes your life,
or you meet somebody and start falling in love,
and then you start to spend more time with them,
and slowly but surely, it's not the same.
In fact, I see our daughters going through this right now.
They're 25, 23, post-college,
and the words they use?
Evaporyate dispersing
Everyone I went to school with is going in different directions and I really feel it and based on the data This is going to keep happening until you turn 29 and unless you do something about it
The amount of time that you're going to spend with friends after you're 29 at flat lines. Why?
Well, you now know because a takeaway number two you're going to spend with friends after you're 29 at flat lines. Why?
Well, you now know because of takeaway number two, you're spending all that time with your
coworkers.
And as you're going to learn in the next three statistics, a partner starts to enter the
scene.
Perhaps children, if you decide to have them, they start to enter into your world as well.
But here's my message.
This data is the average, but you are not average.
This is what happens to people who are not paying attention, who are just letting life
sweep them downstream.
You can create whatever you want.
In fact, you know, as I think about some of the conversations that we've had recently,
you'll probably remember me saying that one of the conversations that we've had recently, you'll probably
remember me saying that one of the main reasons why people get so stuck and lost in life is
because they don't know what they want.
And that's why I was like, oh my God, I have to talk to you about the American Times study.
I have to share these statistics with you because I want to wake you up and make you
realize that this data is reflective of what's happening
in your life.
And if you're feeling lonely or you've lost touch with friends and it bothers you, you
don't have to live like that.
You don't want to be in a crappy work environment.
You don't have to let it define your life for a decade.
If you like your family and you really want to see them and you kind of make it a priority,
I'm not immune to any of this data either.
I mean, I feel like my friendships evaporated.
And I also feel, I don't know if you feel this way, maybe this is something that happens
when you get older, but I tend to feel like the people that I like also would prefer to
be in bed on a Friday night.
You know, I'm the kind of person that I can text you at 9.35 p.m. and be sound asleep at 9.37.
So having this framework and having these statistics and these graphs that you can check
out and the resources, it really helped me because I'm like, oh, it's not just me.
Oh, this makes a lot of sense.
Oh, this is what happens in life when you're not really intentional about what you want.
And so let me share a framework with you that has really helped me around friendship because
I do want to see my friends.
But this framework will really simplify it.
You ready?
When you think about friendship, think about two Ps and I'm talking about cultivating friendships.
So you are going to be friends naturally based on the first P and the first P is patterns.
So when you have overlapping patterns in your life, you tend to become friends with people.
For example, work.
You show up at work every single day.
That's a pattern.
You tend to become friends with people at work because you have an overlapping pattern.
Another one, your kids are playing on the same sports team. There's a pattern. Another one, maybe you've
taken a pickleball and you're in the same league or you're taking an introduction to
pickleball class. There's a pattern. You can become friends with those people. You frequent
the same coffee shop. There's another pattern that overlaps you with other people and makes
it easier for you to become friends. Now that brings me to the second P.
You're only going to see the people and become friends with people that you prioritize. Period. End of story.
Because even if you have all these patterns in your life and you bump into people at the coffee shop or at work,
or you stand next to them on the sidelines, unless you prioritize it, you make a dinner date.
You invite them to a painting class at the local museum.
It doesn't happen.
And you don't always need to make new friends based on the patterns.
Most of the people that I love and that you love, they probably don't live anywhere near
you.
I know it's annoying, but you've got to make it a priority to create a plan to get together
once a year.
That's it.
Patterns prioritize.
Otherwise what?
After 29, you're screwed, it drops off a cliff,
and you're not gonna see these people.
It's happening for everybody,
but it doesn't have to happen for you.
So that covers the first three statistics,
and there are three more incredible time truths
about who you spend your time with
over the course of your life.
And if this last one about friends or the family
is like, oh God, that's so depressing.
I don't know if I can keep listening.
You better keep listening
because there's a whole lot of good news coming up.
And the whole point of this conversation
is for me to get you to truly stop time for a minute
and ask yourself, what do I actually want?
What do I wanna feel in my life?
Who do I want to see in my life?
Who do I wanna surround myself in my life? Who do I want to see in my life? Who do I want to surround myself in my life?
Who is a priority moving forward?
And I think you're starting to get my main message loud and clear.
Time is going to pass you by no matter what.
You get to create what you're doing in the time that you have.
So coming up, we're going to talk about what happens when you turn 29.
Yes, your friendships fall off the cliff and flatline, but something else interesting happens.
There's actually a person that you will be spending more and more time with
for the rest of your life. We're going to talk about who that person is when we come back. Stay with us.
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins, and you and I are talking about the American Time Study,
and six shocking statistics on who you spend your time with
over the course of your lifetime.
And you've already learned that at the age of 18, the time you spend with your parents and
siblings drops off a cliff. Unless you do something about it, I hope you have already
forwarded them this episode. You're probably thinking also about statistic number two,
40 years of your life. You're going to spend it with your coworkers and now you're thinking as
you're driving to work, oh my God, I got to look for a different job. Or, hopefully, you're thinking, I'm the luckiest person on the planet.
I work with people that I love.
How cool is this?
We've also just unpacked the third statistic about friendship and how friendships basically
peak at the age of 18, meaning the amount of time you spend every day with them.
And as you get older, it gets harder and harder and harder
to spend time with friends
unless you pay attention to the two Ps I taught you.
What are the patterns in your life
and who are you making it a priority to spend time with?
Take the initiative.
And I just wanna remind you again
that this awareness of these trends of how you're spending
time, self-awareness is the foundation of creating a better life because if you don't know what the
issue is, you're never going to be able to solve it. And the issue is simply that we all just go
through life and let time pass us by. You have the opportunity from this moment forward
to be the architect of building a life
that makes the most of the time that you have.
And just because these are the trends in data
and these reflect what most people are experiencing,
it doesn't mean that these need to be the trends
in your life.
And I was so personally moved by this data
that I wanted to share it with you
because I believe that knowing this, And I was so personally moved by this data that I wanted to share it with you because
I believe that knowing this, it will empower you to make very meaningful changes.
I think everybody needs to hear this.
I think everybody is struggling with this and kind of feeling it, but not really understanding
the context.
And to me, when I look at the stuff that we've already talked about,
no wonder loneliness is an epidemic,
because nobody understands why it's happening.
When you see it over the course of a lifetime
in terms of the trends of how you're spending your time
and who you're spending it with,
you start to see, oh, oh, of course you become lonelier
unless you do something about it.
If you don't understand what's happening in the background, you think you're the problem
and you're not the problem.
It's not true.
The problem is that time is passing and the more that time passes, the more you just kind
of go with it and I want you to do the opposite.
I want you to feel inspired and empowered to get intentional about how you're spending your time
because how you spend your time
is what your life is all about.
And that brings me to the fourth takeaway,
which is that your life partner
is probably the single most important decision
you will ever make.
This is that statistic at about age 29.
There is a person that enters your life or multiple people as you're dating
around that you start to spend more and more and more time with as you age. And
here's the thing I want you to understand. Do not rush this decision.
Do not get married to someone who you know in your gut is probably not the right person,
but you kind of feel like you should do it because everybody's getting married and you're
starting to get a little worried.
Do not settle because the time you spend with your partner increases every single year until
the day of your death. And after age 60, this person that is your life partner,
they really matter because it's the person
you will spend the majority of your time with
for the rest of your life.
And that's kind of a great test.
Like if you're dating somebody right now,
don't look at the person who's standing
in front of you right now, you know, with the nice car and the fake tan and the group of popular friends
and the really cool profile on a hinge.
No, ignore what's in the present.
Close your eyes and ask yourself this.
Is this person at their core?
Is this person on the inside who I would want to be along with every day, day in and day
out when I'm 60?
And I want to remind you of the questions about naming your five favorite memories with friends
or family.
What do they all have in common?
Those memories about your favorite friends or the people that make you laugh the loudest
or memories with your siblings, they're all about how someone makes you feel.
And when you are choosing a partner, dear God, focus on how they make you feel.
The looks are going to fade.
The friends that seem all shiny and popular, they're going to disappear into the background.
You know that happens in the 20s and it's hard to keep up with friends as you're an adult,
but this human being and how they make you feel up with friends as you're an adult, but this human being
and how they make you feel, this is what you're signing up for for the rest of your life.
And if you're single, what we're about to talk about next is really important to embrace
right now because the very best relationship advice I can give you about choosing a partner
to do life with is to choose life with yourself first.
And by that I mean do whatever you need to be doing in your day-to-day life right now
so that you really like yourself and that you are proud of yourself as a person.
You're proud of your character.
You're proud of how you take care of yourself, how you talk to yourself, the way that you
spend your time.
Because when you get the inside right, that relationship with yourself in terms of how
you feel about yourself, you're not going to be swayed by the bright, shiny, popular
people.
You're going to be attracted to people with true character, someone who is worth going
the distance with.
And that brings me to the fifth statistic about who you spend your time with over the
course of your lifetime.
And it's this, that when you hit 40 years old, the amount of time that you spend alone
climbs and climbs and climbs.
That means from 40 on, the number of hours per day that you are alone is going to increase.
Those 30 years, every single year from the age of 50 to 80, based on the data, you are
alone every day more often.
And for most people after age 70, you're alone most of the time every day.
Well, not me.
I am going to an old person's home, you know, like one of those places that's like college
for old people, back to the dorms, hanging out with people.
I'm not going to sit alone in this house, but joking aside, this is a huge takeaway.
And the first takeaway is I want to normalize that it is normal to find yourself spending
more and more time by yourself.
And for me, this can be a really positive thing because this is not a message about
you needing to look out into the future and going, oh my God, I'm going to be alone and
I'm lonely.
No, this is about the need to learn to enjoy time with yourself. Because when you're really present to being with yourself,
whether you're making a cup of tea or reading a book or taking a walk in the woods, think about
it. You're not by yourself. You're with yourself. I'm with myself a lot. I'm in my car driving alone.
I'm often at my house or working remote alone. I'm down in my kitchen making lunch alone. I'm in my car driving alone. I'm often at my house or working remote alone.
I'm down in my kitchen making lunch alone.
I'm heading out the door to go for a walk and yeah,
maybe Yolo and homie, my dogs may be there,
but there's no other human being.
I'm spending time with myself.
But here's the thing,
and this is what the opportunity is for you.
I don't feel lonely.
I enjoy spending time with myself, and that's what's available for you. I don't feel lonely. I enjoy spending time with myself and that's
what's available to you. And when I do start to feel like something's missing or I feel
a little lonely because I have a good relationship with myself, I can see that, oh wow, like
I'm missing connection and I can go back to the two Ps. I either got to change my patterns
of behavior so I start bumping into people again
or I've gotta prioritize reaching out
and that almost always solves the problem.
So the big takeaway here is learn how to love yourself
and enjoy yourself and be kind yourself.
Learn how to sign yourself up for a yoga class
and take yourself to it.
Learn how to reach out to friends
when you're feeling a little lonely
and be the one that is doing that for yourself
Do that for yourself learn how to take yourself out to lunch or for a manicure learn how to be kinder to yourself
learn how to find happiness in
The time you spend alone and you will enjoy the time that you have
now the final
statistic
On who you spend the most time with over the course of your
life.
This one is about kids and it broke my heart.
And you can probably guess what the statistic is going to say now that you know take away
one, remember take away one, which is that once you turn 18, the time that you spend
on a daily basis with your parents and your siblings, boom, drops right off a cliff.
And by the time you are in your 20s, that number has flatlined.
And unless you do something dramatic, it's not changing.
And here's how that translates to our final statistic.
When you become a parent, depending upon when you first become a parent, the majority of the time that you have with your kids will happen in your 30s and 40s.
And for most of us, there is a precipitous drop that happens in your 40s.
As your kids enter high school and they become more and more independent, you see less and less of them.
And that's supposed to happen. I mean, they're supposed to make friends, they are supposed to go build a life of their
own, and then they turn 18, a lot of them go off to college or a trade school.
And here's the sad news.
Based on the data, when you turn 52, that number, which is the amount of time you spend with your kid, flatlines.
And that's where it stays the rest of your life.
And it is shockingly similar to how little time you spend with your own parents or siblings.
Now when I first read that, I beat myself up because I'm 55 right now.
That window of time is closed.
It's over.
My kids are launched, Oakley leaves for college in the fall, still trying to figure out where,
but he's going.
If I reflect back on those zero to 18 years, I spent way too many years of their childhood
working.
I was traveling for work.
I missed out on so many milestones, so many sports matches, so much in-person time.
However, I love knowing the statistic, and here's why.
I'm not allowing myself to become a statistic in this regard, because here's the thing.
There is something you can do.
You can become more proactive about going to your kids.
You can become more proactive about creating and sustaining that relationship with them
as adults.
Yes, the whole point of parenting is to help your children grow up and become who they're
meant to be, which means your job is as a guide and a coach through life.
It means helping your children understand who are they?
What are they value?
What are the implications of their decisions?
What are their passions?
Who do they want to be?
And if you take that approach that your kids are supposed to become independent human beings who are going to leave you and
go build a life, that's what success looks like.
You can still do that and not lose connection.
And how do you do that?
Well, based on every expert that's ever been on this show, it seems like the advice is
the exact same.
Do your kids feel seen?
Do they feel safe?
And do they feel supported by you?
Because if your kids feel seen and safe
and supported by you, guess what?
They're not going anywhere.
And I want you to stop and think about your own
experience with your parents.
When you think of your fondest memories as a child,
I bet it's in those moments where you felt safe
or seen or supported.
That's the glue.
And the same is true with your kids.
If I were to ask your kid,
what are your fondest memories of childhood?
I guarantee you at the top of the list are those moments
where you made them feel safe, seen and supported.
That's the secret to everything.
If you have a complicated relationship
with your parents or a sibling right now, I bet
you feel none of those things with them.
It is all about how people make you feel.
And that means you have some control here.
You know, and the interesting thing is, is that I don't know about you, but I've found
that the older that my kids get, even though they've physically left, they have not left
emotionally.
It's like they need me more, but they need me in a different way.
They don't need me to drive them somewhere.
They don't need the money.
What they need is someone that they trust, somebody who they know they can go to and
get the support that they need, that they can talk to, run ideas by, to call, to laugh,
to talk through an issue with.
It's a different relationship.
And honestly, I enjoy this part of parenting
way more than when they were little.
I am not the best parent for little kids,
but I'm loving this adult parenting thing.
Which by the way, here's my secret plan
to not be a statistic.
I'm gonna rope my kids into business with me
because then I can turn them into my coworkers,
which means I'm gonna see them a ton
between the ages of 20 and 60.
See how you can make the data work for you or against you?
It's never too late.
And that's the other thing here.
When you know what you're dealing with in terms of what the actual issue is, you can
solve the right problem.
The more that your kids or your parents or your siblings feel seen and supported,
the closer you're going to be. And by the way, it's never too late to apologize. I feel personally
like I apologize all the time for things that I screwed up way back when or screwed up yesterday
or could do a little bit better. And it doesn't weaken your relationship, it actually makes it stronger. So there you have it.
Six surprising statistics about who you spend your time with over the course of your lifetime.
And here's one thing I'm going to ask of you.
Please send this episode to anybody in your family or a former coworker or a friend you've
lost touch with as a way to reach
out and get closer to the people that you love.
Do not become a statistic.
Become seriously intentional about how you spend the time that you have and who you spend
it with.
And on that note, I got to wrap up our conversation because our son Oakley is a ski racer and
he has a race this afternoon and there is no way in hell I am going to miss it.
Why?
Because time is slipping through my fingers.
He turned 18 this year.
And I know how good it feels when someone shows up.
I mean, think about it.
When you're dead, nobody stands up at a funeral and says, boy, I wish they would have worked
more hours,
but they will remember that you always showed up
when you could.
So thank you for showing up today
and spending time with me.
And thank you for choosing to listen to something
and to learn about something that I believe
will truly change how you spend the rest of your life.
And in case no one else tells you,
I wanted to tell you that I love you and I believe in you.
And I believe in your ability to create a better life.
Now go do it.
I'll talk to you in a few days.
Yeah, this might be the ticket. Okay, you ready?
Yep.
Into simple tools. Okay, let me start over. I'm like literally talking in my chest.
Sounds like you're rushing. Yeah.
Yes. Okay.
Deep breath.
Okay, Ready? You prioritize it.
Jesus.
But could Chris make more noise with this garage?
My shot looks weird.
Hold on a second.
Let me go back up.
Hold on a sec.
Go up.
That's kind of jumbly.
Sorry.
This is super jumbly for me.
Could you go up one more time?
Go back up, back up, back up. Okay. Sorry, sorry is super jumbly for me. Could you go up one more time? Go back up back up back up. I love a lot. Okay. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Okay. Here we go
This is awareness
Hold on a second. I don't know what the sentence means
Okay
Excellent way better, okay
Oh Way better. Okay.
Oh, 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.
["Stychian"]
Stitcher.
["Stychian"]