The Mel Robbins Podcast - Understanding This One Idea Changes the Way You See Your Life
Episode Date: April 22, 2024This one idea will change how you think about your entire life. Today, you are getting a step-by-step guide to overcoming any challenge that comes your way. Mel is sharing one tool that has profound...ly helped her and the 4 simple steps that help you apply this concept in your own life.This singular tool allows you to:- Find your purpose- Change how you think about the past- Move towards your truest potentialIf you can’t stop procrastinating, are battling self-doubt, or you just need a reminder that your best days are ahead of you, then this is the episode for you.For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode, here’s one you should listen to next: The #1 Neuroscientist: After Listening to This, Your Brain Will Not Be the SameIf you are looking for more coaching, Mel just opened the doors to the once-a-year, science-backed, community-packed coaching program, Launch with Mel Robbins, and wants YOU to join her. Over 6 full months, you’ll get step-by-step support through 3 personal or professional projects that are important to you. If you’re ready for deep support, dream-chasing, and a LOT of momentum, this is for you. Launch with Mel Robbins closes enrollment on April 25th. If you miss the date, you can hop on the waitlist for next year’s course.Connect with Mel: Sign up for Mel’s 6 month coaching program, LaunchWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s newsletter Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
You and I are going to go on an extraordinary journey together.
You are being called to a new adventure in your life, and you might not even realize it.
If you got that little feeling inside of you that you're meant for something greater,
something different, you're right.
There is so much untapped potential for your life
and that's what you and I are gonna talk about today.
I mean, just consider, there's an entire world out there
that you have yet to discover and power and bravery
inside of you that you have yet to tap into.
You are the hero of your own life and it's time to answer the call.
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and I am so happy that you're here with me today.
And I cannot wait to dig into this topic of being the hero of your own life.
And you know, there's this one thing that you may not know about me.
When I'm not busy creating episodes of the Mel Robbins podcast for you, you want to know
what I'm doing.
I do a lot of research.
And my production studio is 143 Studios.
We develop courses and custom trainings and curriculums for some of the world's most inspiring
brands.
In fact, we are responsible for researching and creating the single most popular course
of all on LinkedIn.
It's called the Science of Confidence.
And we've also created courses for companies like Starbucks and Alta Beauty.
And right now, we're working on our seventh original audio production with our partners
at Audible.
And one of my favorite things to do when I'm thinking about the episodes that we're
gonna create for you or I'm researching a new project is I love to find and
teach frameworks that come from different disciplines and figure out,
how can you apply this thing from engineering or from neuroscience or
from business strategy to your personal and your professional life.
And you might have experienced this thing that I love to do when you've taken one of
the free trainings that I've offered.
For example, the latest training that I've created for you as a thank you to you for
supporting this podcast is called Make It Happen.
And more than half a million of you have already taken that free two-hour training.
If you haven't, no worries.
It's there for you for free. You just go to MelRobbins.com slash make it happen. And that
free training draws on principles of physics, for example. And it teaches you how to use
the domino effect and velocity and momentum to master the skill of taking action so that
you can stop thinking about what you want and actually take the steps to go do it.
Today, I'm really excited because you and I
are gonna dig into one of my all-time favorite frameworks
for thinking about life.
And I cannot believe that we haven't talked about this
on the podcast yet.
It's called The Hero's Journey.
And if you've ever seen a Disney movie or a superhero movie
or you're a fan of The Avengers or Lord of the Rings
or Harry Potter or Toy Story or books like
A Court of Thorn and Roses like I am,
then you are also a fan of this framework
called The Hero's Journey.
So let me explain what it is.
The Hero's Journey is what is called a story archetype. And that's just a fancy way to
say that there's this outline or this series of steps for any movie or any book that tells the
story of a hero and the journey that the hero has to take in order to discover their true self and
their true calling. And what they ultimately find, whether it's Luke Skywalker
or it's Nemo or it's Frodo, is that when you go on this
journey to find yourself, you end up also saving the world.
And I love this framework, and it's something that I use
in my own life.
In fact, my therapist and coach, Anne Daven, she uses it
all the time to help me understand where I am in the journey of my own life.
When she brings up the hero's journey,
what she's doing is she's pointing out
based on the steps of a hero's journey
that I'm just at a point in the struggle
that every single hero goes through.
And when she does that, I'm like,
oh my gosh, that makes so much sense.
And I don't feel so lost.
I feel like the challenges that I'm experiencing
have a purpose, that they're part of the path
that I'm meant to walk down.
And so today, you and I are gonna walk through
some of the steps of the hero's journey
and how you can use this story archetype as a framework
to learn more about yourself than ever before.
Because the hero is within you, whether you believe it or not.
Your life is trying to pull the hero out of you.
And the only way you find out more about yourself is if you go on this bigger journey.
Not necessarily to save the world like the Avengers do,
but perhaps to save yourself.
And in doing so, you'll ultimately save the world
around you.
So what exactly is the Hero's Journey framework?
Well, it was created by Professor Joseph Campbell,
and he was a brilliant mythologist who spent his life
studying the stories of religions
and myths of culture around the world.
And he had this huge epiphany that there is a common pattern in all of these stories that
we love, that there's a narrative that goes way beyond time and culture and the geography
of where the story's coming from, that in every single story about a hero, there's the exact same
patterns of steps, things that are universal about the human experience.
And that's what he called the hero's journey.
It's a narrative structure that follows the hero as they embark on an adventure, face
challenges and trials, undergo personal growth and transformation, and ultimately
return home to their community with newfound wisdom or a valuable new treasure.
And it's what you see in every single movie that you love.
In fact, when Star Wars came out in 1977, it was unlike anything any of us had ever
seen before.
The story of Luke Skywalker blew the world away.
And here's a very interesting fact that you may not know.
Can you guess who George Lucas considered his inspiration and his mentor?
That's right, Professor Joseph Campbell.
See, the hero's journey isn't just a pattern
that happens to pop up in all your favorite movies.
The hero's journey is the reason why the movies
and stories and myths that you love become popular
in the first place.
You and I absolutely love the hero's journey
because it always begins with striking out
from the safety of your home
and searching for your true calling and your larger power.
And today, you will realize
that this is the story of your life too.
Because you and I are gonna break down the framework
of the Hero's Journey to help you understand
exactly where you are right now as you are living it.
And by the end of our conversation today, my mission is not only to get you to really
embrace the simple truth that, yes, just like Luke Skywalker and Milan and Frodo, you are
the hero of your own life and there is a bigger calling for you.
But I also am on a mission to make you think about
what that calling might be for you.
Because the hero's journey isn't just about
storytelling or mythology.
It's a metaphor for the human experience,
for your experience.
And it mirrors the journey of discovery and growth
that you undertake in your
life, whether you realize it or not. It's a guide to understanding change and transformation.
And it gives you the insights that you need to overcome any challenge that comes your way.
It is the path to reaching your true potential. And we're going to talk about the stages of the
hero's journey and how you apply them to your life, both to provide deeper meaning to your past, but also, and this is where it gets real fun, to provide a roadmap for your future.
So, let's start at the beginning.
In Joseph Campbell's research and scholarship, there are 17 levels to The Hero's Journey.
But today, you and I are going to focus on the four most important ones, the ordinary
world, the call to adventure, crossing the threshold, and the midpoint.
And so, let's start with the very first phase of The Hero's Journey, and that's called the
ordinary world.
And let's think about, you know, kind of some of our heroes
and our favorite movies and stories,
because when you first meet the hero of a story,
where are they?
They're living a normal, boring, irritating life, right?
I mean, you may not remember this from Star Wars,
but when you first met Luke Skywalker,
do you remember where he was living?
He was living on the desert planet Tatooine.
And he has no idea who he really is or what the potential of his life is.
He's just living a boring life on some desert planet.
He's completely unaware of the enormous world that is out there and his role in it.
Same thing with Milan.
She's living in China and her sole duty, remember this,
was to bring honor to her family by getting married.
She has no idea who she really is
or what the potential of her life is
or what lies beyond the little town that she lives in.
Or what about Lord of the Rings?
Same thing, right?
Frodo, where does he live at the beginning of the movie?
Oh my gosh, he's there with his big feet
in the beautiful Shire.
He has no desire to leave it.
He's completely unaware of the world that's out there.
He's never left the Shire.
Are you kidding?
He doesn't know he's the person
that's gonna save the world.
Neither do you.
So how does the ordinary world, this first step of the
hero's journey, apply to you? Simple. You have no idea who you really are and what the
potential for your life is. I mean, how could you? You only know what you know based on
the life that you're living right now. Same with me. The life you're living in this tiny
little part of the big wide world. And that's okay.
That's okay. I hope our conversation today makes you open your eyes a little wider,
makes you look around and consider there's an entire world that you have yet to discover.
And there is power and bravery inside of you that you have yet to tap into.
And let's think about the next part that happens in every movie.
This is the call to adventure.
It's the moment when ordinary life is suddenly disrupted by the call to something greater.
Now in The Lord of the Rings, you remember when this happened, right?
Frodo, he's sitting there in the Shire,
he has no intention to leave.
Who shows up? Gandalf.
And next thing you know,
he's hearing all about the One Ring and Mordor
and all the world that is about to be destroyed.
Holy cow, talk about a call to adventure or Milan. Milan is told
she's not worthy of a husband. Remember that? And so she wants to find a way to make her parents
proud. And she thinks, oh, wow, I know how I'm going to make my parents proud. That could be
going to war in my dad's place. In Star Wars, Luke discovers a message that's hidden in the droid.
Remember that little projected message?
Which leads him on the path to becoming a Jedi.
Now let's talk about you and step two of the hero's journey, the call to adventure.
Now Luke and Frodo, they were both lucky enough to have someone actually give them these calls.
But your life probably isn't going to work that way.
That said, the call to adventure is all around you right now.
And there are four things you must know in order to recognize it.
And before we get to those four things that help you recognize the call to adventure that's right there right now,
I want to take a quick pause to call upon our amazing sponsors who bring this podcast to you at zero cost.
And while you listen to our sponsors, share this episode with someone who you think is ready for their hero's journey.
And don't go anywhere, because I'll be waiting for you when we come back. Welcome back.
It's your friend Mel, and we're talking about Joseph Campbell's The Hero's Journey.
And we're focusing on four specific steps of it.
And you just learned the first one, which is the ordinary world. And now we're about to jump into the second one, the call to adventure.
The call to adventure is all around you, and there are four things you must know
in order to recognize it in your own life. So here's the first thing.
Number one, the call to adventure will not likely come from someone else.
I mean, a robot isn't going to come and project a message to adventure will not likely come from someone else. I mean, a robot isn't gonna come
and project a message to you.
A wizard is not gonna show up at your front door
and be like, come on now, we gotta go save the world.
This isn't someone coming to you
with your future on a silver platter saying,
you're the chosen one.
That's not how it works in the real world.
It works that way in the movies and we love it.
But this call to adventure is something you have to be open to and be willing to see for
yourself.
And here's one way you can start to open your mind up to this.
Ask yourself this question.
What is your life trying to tell you?
I'm going to ask you that question again.
What is your life trying to tell you?
If you really sit with that question, you'll notice that your life is trying to nudge you
in a certain direction.
There's something you can't stop thinking about.
There's some sort of sign that keeps showing up.
There's something that you've wanted to do,
but you haven't done it.
And I need you to realize that you've got to be willing
to start to look for this call to adventure,
because if you don't pay attention, you're gonna miss it.
Now the second thing you need to know
about the call to adventure in your life
is it can come as a very positive signal,
or it could be a negative one.
And here's an example that you might be able to relate to
of a negative thing that represents a call to adventure.
So one of my best friends, Jody,
she and I have been literally friends since the fourth grade.
Well, she has lived in Santa Barbara for years
and all of a sudden her rent started going up.
She recently left a job she didn't like
and she has just felt like something's been off
about where she lives.
And then both of her parents ended up in the hospital at the same time.
Talk about a wake-up call.
She had this instinct, this pull, I should really move back home to Michigan.
I mean, I don't know how much longer my parents are going to be around.
I'm so far away.
I really feel like I should move back home to Michigan.
That right there is her call to adventure.
Rent going up, leaving a job you don't like,
all of a sudden something changing with her family.
That's an example of what I'm talking about.
And how much more positive do you feel
if you look at that situation and you frame it
as a call to adventure?
Very different than feeling like life is breaking apart.
Let me give you now a positive example of what could be a call to adventure.
And this is like a small thing.
My husband Chris and our daughter Sawyer, when it's snowing outside and it's the winter months, they go
to this mountain nearby and they do what's called skinning up the mountain, which is
you take these skis and you put these sticky things on the bottom of them and you basically
hike up a mountain, a snow mountain, with your skis on it.
And then when you get to the top, you take the sticky things off and now you can ski
down.
And Chris has organized this whole group of people
that meet in the parking lot and they now do it twice a week during the winter. I feel pulled to do it.
But I'm scared of it. I'm not in great shape. I'm not as good as they are at this, especially
thinking about pulling into a parking lot where Chris has organized this group and there's 30 or 40 people there that do this all the time.
But here's the thing, as I think about this, I feel the pull.
I could see myself as somebody that gets up super early to do that, as somebody that has
that level of adventure, of somebody that's doing something that's that cool. And I'm using the word pulled because that's an example of a call to adventure.
For you, you might feel pushed or you might feel pulled.
Could be positive, could be negative.
Both are a call to adventure.
The third thing I want you to be aware of is that it can be big or it can be small.
I am so moved by the number of you who listen to this podcast around the world and write
to me and say that simply taking on something new or bringing back something that I used
to do, that it's made you so happy.
It's made a part of you come alive, it's made you tap into something deeper, like taking a painting class or writing
every day in your journal again, or just the instinct that you have
that you want to make your life a little bit better.
These are all examples of small things that are calls to adventure for you.
And number four, and this is super important,
it is so easy to refuse it.
So easy to refuse it.
And I think this is why we identify with characters
in our favorite movies who are the reluctant hero.
You are the reluctant hero in your own life,
just like Luke.
I mean, do you remember what happens
at the beginning of the movie?
He's bending over this robot as he's trying to fix it,
and all of a sudden this message pops out,
you are my only hope, you are my only hope.
And you remember his response?
His response was not like,
where's the first flight out of here?
His response was, mm, I don't think that I can do this.
I hate the Empire, but there's nothing I can do about this right now.
I got stuff I need to do on my desert planet.
I don't think this is meant for me.
Isn't that what you say too?
That there's nothing I can do about this right now.
See, whenever you find yourself in a place where you feel kind of stuck, or you feel
like you have to stay where you are
for the betterment of the people around you, even though you don't want to?
That's a sign of this tension between the call to adventure and staying where you are.
Luke always felt so different from who he actually is.
He always had this inner turmoil between who he is on the desert planet and who he actually is. He always had this inner turmoil between who he is
on the desert planet and who he knows he's being asked to be.
And I think that's so relatable
because it is the human experience, right?
That you don't know what you're meant for.
So you stay stuck in this tension
and you never leave the comfort of your ordinary world
because you don't know where to set out to.
And so I'm gonna keep coming back to this question
that I asked you just a few minutes ago.
What is your life trying to tell you right now?
This may be exactly where you are in your life right now,
the reluctant hero, resisting the call,
refusing to acknowledge that there is something more,
maybe because you're afraid,
or you're not sure what more is.
Well, that tension, that right there is evidence
that the call to adventure exists right now in your life.
Because whenever you say, I'm stuck, that's a way for your soul to say, can you answer
the call to adventure?
Get me out of this neighborhood.
Get me off this planet.
Get me out of this little village.
We got something to do.
There is a hero inside you.
And ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding,
ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding,
ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding,
ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding ding ding ding ding when you feel stuck that hero inside you is trying to rattle the cage and say, wake up we got stuff to do.
And so here's how you are going to use Joseph Campbell's framework, the hero's
journey. Start labeling these moments of tension as a call to adventure. That
breakup, that heartbreak you feel, guess what that is, call to adventure. That breakup, that heartbreak you feel, guess what that is?
Call to adventure.
That layoff you didn't see coming?
Call to adventure.
The jealousy that you feel as you watch your friends move forward with their lives, whether
they're moving across country or they're going to graduate school or they're moving in with
a significant other or moving out for that matter, call to adventure.
And if you're like me, I am looking ahead at my life
and Chris and I are gonna be empty nesters this fall.
Now I can sit around and worry about what I am gonna feel like
as an empty nester when Oakley heads off to college,
or I can see this as an amazing call to adventure.
A whole new journey is about to begin.
A journey where I will only discover what's possible by going through it.
I mean, how cool is that?
To think of changes in your life as an opportunity, to see changes in your life as a moment and
the ability to find yourself,
to become the hero that you need,
to discover some power inside you
that you didn't know existed.
And by the way, you can only find
by going through this journey.
And you know what's interesting about the hero's journey?
Is that if you look backwards at your life,
especially in moments of challenge,
you can see many heroes' journeys.
You can see how going through something
brought out the hero inside you.
It offered up this opportunity for growth
and discover some sort of treasure
that you didn't realize was there.
What's so cool about using this as a framework, because my therapist does this all the time,
I'm constantly writing down the notes that she tells me as we're having these conversations,
is that you can use this framework moving forward.
You can stand where you are right now and say, okay, my life is great, but I'm in an
ordinary world, right? There's a call to adventure.
And when you open your eyes and you see tension or feeling stuck or you feel the pull or the push
and you frame it as a call to adventure, now you're ready for stage three in the hero's journey.
And that is crossing the threshold.
Now this is the moment where the hero leaves behind the safety of the ordinary world and
ventures into the unknown, fully committing to their journey of transformation.
Now in Star Wars, Luke leaves his planet and he goes on this new quest, Mulan.
She leaves her home.
Remember in the middle of the night she even disguised herself
as a man to sneak into the army's training camp to take the place of her father in the war?
Lord of the Rings, crossing the threshold, Frodo leaves the safety of the Shire.
I even remember that moment where they stop and turn to one another and say,
where they stop and turn to one another and say, we've never been this far.
And then they set out on their journey
and cross the threshold.
It's the moment that you move from thinking
about the bigger picture for your life
to actually taking action.
Now, my friend that I mentioned, Jodi,
she crossed the threshold.
She packed up her house in Santa Barbara.
She loaded up her car.
She got her bulldog into the passenger seat next to her,
drove across country, and moved home to Michigan.
She's going to live with her parents.
She texted me last night,
I just arrived for my next adventure.
She moved back home and she's turning the upstairs of her parents' house into an apartment. Last night, I just arrived for my next adventure.
She moved back home and she's turning the upstairs of her parents' house into an apartment.
Why?
Because she felt pulled to, to take care of them.
Now they never asked her to do that.
And I'm sure now that she's crossed the threshold, she's probably gone, oh my God, what the hell
have I done?
And here's the thing, it's not just the physical act of leaving a place.
If you say to yourself out loud, I want something different, that can be its own kind of commitment.
That can be its own threshold that you cross.
You could submit an application.
You could step into the gym for the first time.
You could throw out all the alcohol in your house. You could make the doctor's appointment.
In fact, just sitting down in a calm and mature way
and expressing a boundary about something
that needs to change,
that's a way that you cross a threshold in a relationship.
And yeah, it is hard, as I mentioned,
to see the call to adventure,
but you want to know what's actually more difficult
than recognizing that you're called to do something more?
It's actually committing to it.
Crossing this threshold is the most powerful step,
in my opinion, because it's a huge turning point
in the hero's journey, and once you do it,
there's no turning back.
It's a declaration of intent. It is a bold and courageous act. And this is why
you hear me talk about taking the first step or getting started or signing up or
saying what you need to say out loud all the time. Five, four, three, two, one. Take the
action. Because it's bigger than just that first step.
If you look at the courage that it takes for you to answer the call to change, to be greater,
to do something that scares you, this stage of crossing the threshold is no joke because
you can live for years with that tension, knowing that you're meant for something greater
and never do anything about it.
And this is the part of the hero's journey
where most people fail.
Because there is no journey until you take this step
and you answer the call and you cross the threshold.
It's when you commit to yourself and to the journey
that you're officially on the journey,
not by thinking about it.
I mean, think there would be no Star Wars if you're officially on the journey, not by thinking about it. I mean, think, there would be no Star Wars
if Luke just stayed on the planet and thought about it.
There'd be no Lord of the Rings
if Frodo was still just laying around
and eating good food in the Shire.
There'd be no Mulan if she was like,
okay, I guess I'm not marriage material.
I guess I'll just die single in my parents' house.
No, at some point, you have to not only answer the call, but you have to begin it.
That's what it means to be on the journey.
And speaking of a journey, I want to make a hero's call out to our amazing sponsors
who bring you the Mel Robbins podcast at zero
cost. So take a quick listen and when we come back do not go anywhere because
we're just starting this journey now and the next and most pivotal stage is one
that you cannot afford to miss. Stay with me.
And you want to know one of my favorite sponsors?
It's me.
That's right.
I'm coming in right now with my own ad.
And if you're loving the hero's journey, you're probably thinking, but Mel, I want allies.
I mean, Frodo had Gandalf and Sam and Luke had Han Solo and Princess Leia and Milan had
Mushu and Cricky.
I mean, come on now.
What about me?
If you're nodding your head, first of all, consider the Mel Robbins podcast your ally.
But second, once a year, I gather amazing people
from around the world together, and we spend six months
going through our own hero's journey.
You can think about it as a way to do like a six-month quest
with people around the world and discover the power within you
and go create something amazing. If you want to learn more about this program, to do like a six month quest with people around the world and discover the power within you
and go create something amazing.
If you wanna learn more about this program
and how to participate in this quest in 2024,
just go to melrobbins.com slash launch.
And if it's not available,
you can just hop on the wait list
for when I open up the quest in 2025.
Melrobbins.com slash launch.
It's time to become the hero of your own life.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel and you and I are talking
about Joseph Campbell's The Hero's Journey. And we just
talked about the powerful step of crossing the threshold. And
now you have come to the midpoint.
This is where you've left the ordinary world, you have answered the call, you've crossed
the threshold.
This is where the work begins.
This by the way is also where the magic happens.
It's also where you tend to find your mentors and your allies because once you set off on this journey, have you ever noticed that all kinds of people
start to show up to help? It's pretty cool, right?
But here's the thing about the midpoint. It's also where there are so many challenges along
the way. And it's also not the end of the journey yet. See, this point signifies the second half of the movie, right?
And you're probably gonna spend the second half of your life
on this part of the journey too.
I mean, this happens in all the stories that we love, right?
In Star Wars, along the journey, Luke faces challenge
after challenge after challenge after challenge,
and one ally after another shows up.
And same thing happens to Milan, including a huge battle that she thinks is the final
stand, but it isn't.
And in the Lord of the Rings, holy smokes.
I mean, just think of how it twists and it turns and Frodo and his companions also are
facing challenge after challenge and increasing dangers.
And just when you think it's about to all end,
boom, something unbelievable happens.
And in the movie world, this second act is so long.
It just keeps going.
I mean, how many battles are there?
How many challenges?
How many times are they gonna fall down?
Well, it's testing your strength and your resilience. And you also
get glimpses of success, little wins that keep you going.
And here's the thing about the midpoint. Don't you dare turn back. Do not do it. And in your
life, the midpoint in your journey could show up in so many different ways.
It could be a series of challenges or setback.
It's the moment that you may question yourself.
You know, I think of my friend Jodi who just moved back
and I imagine her kind of pulling into the driveway,
moving in with her parents
who were both recently hospitalized.
Can you imagine how she's gonna face the challenges?
I mean, you can imagine how she's going to question, is this the right decision?
What the heck am I doing here in the middle of Michigan?
What is going on?
This is not what I thought was gonna happen.
And she's gonna have this long time where it feels like she's not making progress,
or she's not gonna break through, and she's not making progress or she's not going to break through
and she's not going to understand where is this all leading?
But it's always leading somewhere, isn't it?
And that's the hero's journey.
And the same is true for you, to trust that it's leading you somewhere, to trust that
when you answer the call, you will be rewarded at some point.
That's the midpoint.
If you're sitting there holding yourself back
and you're telling yourself it's too late,
or my life is so busy,
I couldn't possibly fit in this thing that I wanna do,
you're wrong.
You're absolutely wrong.
You can go to grad school.
You can move across country.
You can start that business.
You do have the time and you can move across country, you can start that business, you do have the time,
and you can fit it in.
And I want to share a personal story with you.
My husband, Chris, for example, he was in this stage for a long time.
When we first got married, he decided that he wanted to get his MBA.
He answered the call.
He crossed the threshold.
And then the midpoint? Holy smokes.
Do you know he earned his MBA from Babson by taking one class at a time? It took the man
seven years to complete his degree. Do you know how many times he thought about quitting?
He would come home from class at night after working all day and be like,
I am literally twice as old as everybody in the class.
In fact, it took so long that all three of our children
were born while he was in the MBA program.
He thought about giving up all the time.
This stage, the midpoint, this is a slog.
And you wanna know what?
We all face it.
It's part of the hero's journey.
You know, I'm in the middle of a slog right now.
I am writing a book.
I am so excited about the book.
I answered the call. I crossed the threshold.
I've been putting pen to paper.
I'm also not done with the manuscript. And
I am spending every single weekend, all weekend and every single evening just slogging away.
In fact, this past week, I sat in a chair for three days straight. I could not write
a single word. I felt like I was at that point in The Lord of the Rings
where Frodo is at that weird, disgusting pond
at the base of Modor, or Modor, or however the hell you say,
that scary mountain that he's going toward.
Just, ugh, it's not working.
Why am I here?
This is the part of the writing and releasing of a book.
It's not sexy.
I don't feel like a hero.
I feel like quitting.
This is the midpoint, and I'm experiencing
everything that heroes experience in the movies that we love for literally 50% of the movie.
The ups, the downs, the questioning of your ability, the unexpected challenges.
And here's what the midpoint does. It requires something of you.
Here's what the midpoint does. It requires something of you.
It requires you to keep showing up,
to keep digging deeper and deeper and deeper within yourself,
to keep surprising yourself, and to keep going.
It would be so easy to quit. But don't you dare.
The movie would be over.
The journey would be done.
I mean it is called the hero's journey, not the hero's finish line.
So you're not finished.
In fact, you're never finished.
I mean that's the point of your life, right?
And that's my big message to you right now.
You are not finished.
You have so much more strength and resilience and ability
that you haven't even tapped into yet.
And you won't unless you keep going.
Because as you keep facing these challenges in your life,
in this midpoint, yeah, you'll have lots of little wins,
but it's through facing the challenges
that you discover what you're meant to discover
about yourself, whether it's Luke defeating the Empire
or Frodo destroying the ring and saving the world,
or you finishing the manuscript, or getting your masters,
or settling into that new stage of life and creating it
to be extraordinary. You'll figure it out. I mean every single movie that you love
ends with the hero of the movie figuring it out. So let me stop and ask you, what
did they actually figure out? What did Luke figure out? What did Frodo figure out? What did Milan
figure out? If you look back at your own life and you think about the most challenging things
that you have ever faced and lived through, what did you figure out? You figured out who you are and what you're capable of.
And you may not think you're changing the world when you go back to school or when you
pack up your stuff and leave your job and move across country and back in with your
parents.
You may not think you're changing the world when you answer the call for adventure that's calling to you, but what you are doing is
changing yourself. See, the hero at the end of the story always comes home, home
to themselves. And what's interesting, when you go back home to where you began, if you've ever experienced
this of going back to your childhood home, what's so fascinating, if you've ever gone
back to your childhood home, isn't it interesting how small it feels?
The reason why it feels so small is because you realize when you go back that you've outgrown it.
That when you left, you changed.
You grew.
You learned something about yourself.
That life tested you.
That you discovered something by facing this challenge, by answering the call, and you
surprised yourself with your ability to face new things in a new place that you never thought you'd be capable of doing. So whenever you come
back to where you came from, you will be confronted with the fact that it stayed
the same, but you haven't. And maybe what you're recognizing as you listen to this
is that there have been many, many heroes' journeys that you've already
learned from in your life.
When you left home for college,
when you discovered your strength after a relationship ended,
when you overcame a health challenge,
or handled an unexpected setback or layoff,
you pushed through grief and learned how to live with it.
You moved to a new place and found a new community.
Or maybe you look back and you see that you're a totally different person today because of
the habits and the changes that you committed to and started over a year ago.
And look, you and I might not be fighting the empire or truly saving the world, but
every single day when you wake up,
you're facing your own battles.
You're in the trenches, you're doing the work,
you're in the midpoint of some journey that you're on,
and you are stronger and braver
and more resilient than you know.
That's what makes you the hero in your own life.
So if you're sitting there feeling like,
yeah, things are a little ordinary.
I am a little bored.
Or maybe you're realizing that tension isn't tension at all.
It's telling you something bigger,
and you need to stop ignoring it.
You need to see it for what it is.
It's a call to adventure,
and it's time for you to answer the call
and begin the journey.
And I can promise you this,
you already got me as your ally.
I may not be as good looking as Gandalf,
but I'm gonna be there right by your side
on your hero's journey.
And in case no one else tells you,
let me be the one to tell you.
I love you, and I believe in you,
and I believe in your ability to create a better life.
And when you commit to doing that,
you not only discover the hero inside yourself,
but you create a better world.
I'll talk to you in a few days.
Today, I'm going to... hold on a second.
That was good.
Let me go.
He was living on the desert planet Tatooine.
Is that how you say it?
Tatooine?
You only know what you know based on the life that you're living.
Same with me.
Oh, and the dogs that are barking.
I might not be as good looking as Gandalf. Ha ha ha ha.
But I'll be there by your side.
Ha ha ha ha.
Okay, you ready?
Ha.
I'm so into this.
Ha ha ha ha.
Excellent.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended
as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other
qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.