The Mel Robbins Podcast - You Asked, I Answered: Don’t Blame Me for Delivering the Hard Truth
Episode Date: September 25, 2023In today’s episode, we are trying something new, and absolutely anything goes. You’ve been flooding my inbox with questions, problems, sticky situations, and big, big dreams and goals. So today, ...because you asked, I am going to show up and deliver the hard truth, the surprising advice, the tricks to get you out of any pickle, and the inspiration that you need to take that next step. Nothing is off the table. So don’t f***ing blame me when I tell you how it is. I’ve got a pile of hundreds and thousands of YOUR questions, and I’m giving you the coaching you need. This might be my favorite episode I ever recorded. We are going to cover:When it’s time to walk away from a friendship (hint: when these 2 things disappear).How it’s about damn time you stop dating for potential.How to use the ‘Let Them Theory’ to protect your energy.ONE tool you need to make decisions without overthinking.What’s keeping you from getting a raise or promotion, and more importantly, what should you do to get it.How to get someone you love to go to therapy (and when it’s time to walk away).Why a mid-life crisis is actually your greatest opportunity. Oh, and we will cover my favorite swear word for the season (I can’t write it here, so you’ll have to listen). You will laugh with me in this episode, and you will also get advice you need to hear. But don’t blame me if it is TMI—you asked for it! Xo, Mel P.S. If any little ones are listening, put those headphones on! In this episode: 1:40: How do you know when to walk away from a friendship?9:00: How do you make decisions without overthinking?10:20: How do women negotiate a fair salary with a boss?11:55: Mel, what were your dreams when you were a girl?14:40: How do you get someone to go to therapy when they need it?25:50: How can you be vulnerable with word vomiting everything?26:30: Mel, what’s your favorite swear word?28:20: You need to hear the advice I give about the BS of a ‘mid-life crisis’.30:50: Betsy’s husband is missing out on life, and she needs help. Want more resources? Go to my podcast page at https://melrobbins.com/podcast. Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Today, we're going to do something a little bit different, and I have a feeling it's going
to become a favorite of yours and mine.
And what are we doing today?
Well, we're going to answer your questions, rapid fire.
See, my team and friends and colleagues here are like, knock knock Mel Robbins. Do you know
how many questions have been backed up in the inbox? We need to take out a storage unit
to store all of the questions that people have from deep, serious, light, funny, personal,
too much information. So here's how we're going to do this. My friend and colleague who you've
heard on this podcast, give it up for Amy McLean. Hi everybody. Okay, Amy has some of the, I don't know,
900 pages of questions that you guys have submitted and they range from advice to curiosities about me.
I have no idea what she's going to ask me. What are we going to call this type of episode?
A little bit of everything.
A little bit of everything with Mel Robbins.
And your burning questions answered maybe.
Yeah, I don't know.
Something.
Exactly.
Okay.
We're going to jump right in.
Anything goes.
Everything's on the table.
And don't fucking blame me because you asked me.
There you go.
All right, okay.
First question is from Jeannie.
And I'm not gonna say anybody's last name
because we're all on a first-nie basis, you're right.
Exactly.
Okay.
Jeannie wants to know, Mel,
when do I know when it's time to walk away
from a friendship?
When you're giving more than you're getting?
And here's the thing, friendships are a give and take.
And I think it's very important when you have a friendship,
that if your friend is going through a hard time,
that you are there for your friend,
that you understand that they are not capable of pouring back
into you the way that you may need them to,
and part of friendship is showing up in hard times. And so when I say that you know when a friendship is no longer worth it, when it's
been a sustained feeling of you not getting back what you're putting in, it's no longer that somebody
is going through postpartum depression or they're going through a
divorce or a breakup or they're recovering from an illness and your role in the friendship in this
moment is to be the strong one, to be the one checking in. It's a situation where it's just sustained.
You're the one always making the effort. You're the one that is always asking about them. You're the one that is always making the plans. You're the
one that is always reaching out and you are not seeing that reciprocated. And the thing
about friendship that we don't think about is not everybody's supposed to be in your
life forever. And I don't know where we all got this idea that you have to be lifelong
friends with everybody. You're not going to be because friendship is about energy
exchange. It's about a vibe. It's about you and this person being in a place in
your lives where you are able to kind of bring out the best in one another.
You're able to support one another. You can laugh together.
And sometimes those friendships are because of circumstance.
It's because of where you live or where you work or who your kids are friends with or who your partner is friends with.
And that's how you came to be.
And I talked about this with my daughter that's how you came to be.
And I talked about this with my daughter a lot
about a relationship that ended,
that sometimes your friendships or your relationships
make a lot of sense when you share a container of college
or a job or being of a certain relationship status
or living in a certain place.
And what you'll find in life is when the container disappears, often time the binds that
kept you in the friendship disappear as well.
And that's normal.
And it means you are meant to pour your energy into other friendships.
And so, you will know when a friendship is no longer worth investing in,
because you have been feeling this way for a while, and you have checked in with said person,
and there is not something devastating or difficult going on with them such that they need your support.
And here's the other thing.
If you have a friend that's been down for a long-ass time and you have been their support
system and over the course of the years, you're not getting anything back or very little
back, it's okay to pull back.
It's okay to spend less energy.
You're not abandoning them entirely, but nobody said that your life had to be
about pouring into other people and expecting nothing in return. You get to spend your time and
energy on relationships that lift you up, that fulfill you, and there's nothing selfish about it.
In fact, I think it is life sustaining when you do that. Absolutely. So you said you could pull back.
What does that look like? Like you don't answer their calls or their texts? Or what do you think that
looks like? For Jeannie. I think that that could look like only reaching out once every two weeks instead
of once a week. It means not answering their texts,
the moment that they text you.
It means not feeling obligated to invite them
to the party that they're throwing.
Like stop and think about,
well, what are you getting in return for your effort?
Because there is a reciprocal nature to friendships.
Friendships are not one way. and what you often find in a relationship
is when you stop putting in the effort,
the relationship completely disappears.
And what you come to realize is,
holy shit, this actually wasn't a friendship.
This was me chasing something,
and this was me thinking that the relationship was something more than what
this person thought it was. And the same is true in romantic relationships, that a lot
of times when you let the person reveal who they really are, you stop chasing them, you
realize, oh, I was just in a relationship with the possibility and the potential of who
this person and what this could be. And the second I stopped living in a fantasy and I started pulling back the chase and I
just started seeing how this person showed up.
I realized, oh, shit.
I've been in a fantasy land in this relationship for a long time pretending that it was something
else.
And that's a painful moment, but I'd rather you do that on your own
that have somebody rip out the rug from underneath you
because you were too scared or too stupid
or too blind by your own fantasy
or chasing or insecurity
that you didn't wake up and drop the reins
and realize you're the one putting in all the effort.
Right. Makes a lot of sense.
And here's the other thing, everybody's busy.
Like I also feel like I've got a hundred people
or more that I think are really awesome
that I never see, that I don't have time to text.
And guess what, they don't have time to text me either.
And I feel like life has gotten so busy
and people move a lot in modern life.
It's not like it was when our parents or grandparents were around, everybody stayed in the
same state or county.
And so I also think you got to upgrade your definition of friendship in general to not
have to mean that you have to be in constant contact with people. Some of my favorite people in the entire fucking world live the furthest away from me.
I almost never see them. We don't text back and forth. We did not raise our kids together.
And yet if they needed me, I would be on a plane.
Every time they call or they text once a year, whatever, I smile. And so,
also don't crypt this friendship thing so tight because I think you have a lot more friends
and you realize you may not be spending time with them. And instead, you're pouring energy
into people who are not giving it back to you. And that's when you got to pull in the
let them theory. Just like stop chasing
everybody, stop pouring into things that don't give you energy back. And then when you
stop doing it and you let the other person show up or not, now you know what you're dealing
with.
Awesome. Love that. Upgrade your friendship expectations. Next question from Natasha and she says, Mel,
how do I make decisions without all of the overthinking
that goes along with it?
I'm going to give you a simple tool.
Use objectification and literally take somebody that you respect
and ask yourself what would so and so do.
Love that. That's it.
That's it.
And here's what you're going to notice.
If you were to say, well, what would Mel Robbins do?
You can borrow confidence.
You can borrow decisiveness from other people.
You know I am a very decisive person.
If you feel a little like, if you know what I would do, here's the way I want you to think about that. That
will like insecurity, like I don't want to do that. That's just fear. That's just fear.
Makes sense. Because you're picking a person that you respect or you're picking a person who has
what you want. And so when you ask yourself, what would so-and-so do? What would the rock do in
this situation? What would my mentor do in this situation?
If you get a little bristle, when you get the answer, that's just your fear.
5, 4, 3, 2, 1.
Boom, go.
I love that.
So pick your person.
Yep.
5, 4, 3, 2, 1.
Boom, boom, go.
And then all the overthinking Natasha out the window.
All right.
Neely says, how do you negotiate a salary as a woman with a male boss?
Oh, you prove what you want. Most of us do not do our homework, and the homework that you're doing
is typically the wrong homework. So typically, what people do when they go in to negotiate some
sort of salary increase is that you do a comparison of the job title in the area that you live,
but that's not necessarily relevant to your employer.
What's more relevant to your employer is you proving to your employer the amount of
things and the contribution that you're making specifically to the bottom line and to the
things that matter. Because if you can walk in armed with all the things that you're making specifically to the bottom line and to the things that matter.
Because if you can walk in armed with all the things that you're doing that impact the
bottom line, with the problems that you've solved, what you've actually shown me is that
you're invaluable.
And what somebody else is paying, somebody else with your title at another company is
completely irrelevant to me as your boss.
Because a lot of bosses feel feel not conflicted, but almost
like, okay, if you want to go make that go work there, show me that you've earned that.
And if you really start to pay attention and keep track of all the contributions you're
making and the problems that you're solving and how that impacts the bottom line, now you're
proving value.
And you might be even worth more than what that
salary analysis shows you. Nice. Awesome. Next question. What were your dreams, Mel, as a young girl?
I really looked up to my dad and he was a doctor and I had a dream of being a doctor and I'm going to
like laugh when I say this, but I thought, okay, I'm going to be a doctor and cure cancer.
That was my dream. Why didn't do that? Okay.
Yeah, you didn't do that. Yeah, no, no, no, not while I'm not planning on it. Yeah. It doesn't
call to me anymore. I think it was more of an admiration than a dream of my own.
Yeah. Because if I were really to dig deep, I think what I really wanted to do was be a performer.
Wow. I think it was the seeing artists on stage, singing and acting and plays and that kind of
stuff really brought me alive. Even if you went into church and there was a sermon that really stirred something in you, that's really, if I dig deep, I wanted to do something like
that, but I didn't know what that meant. So I would just say, I really want to be a doctor.
And all it took was freshman intro to, I think it was either biology or chemistry class, and I'm like, the same
for me.
No, no, thank you.
Right.
So it evolved from being a doctor to a performer.
And then when did you know, like, this is what I want to do with my life?
Oh, not that.
No, I literally, I became a history and a film major, and I got a, they called it a certificate.
I got a certificate in women's studies.
So I was like a double major in American history and filmmaking, and I got a certificate
in women's studies.
And the other big thing that I did is I was a, I was a volunteer crisis intervention
counselor.
I would volunteer a couple of times a month taking calls on a domestic violence hotline.
Wow. times a month taking calls on a domestic violence hotline. Mm.
Wow.
Nice, Mel.
OK, so Trinney says, hey, Mel, no question.
I just wanted to let you know that you're my North Star.
I love you, Mel.
Oh, I love you, Trinney.
All right, I love this.
But we got to take a quick break and hear a word from our sponsors.
And we'll be right back. Hey, it's Mel and I am taking your questions rapid fire today.
Ask me anything.
Just don't bitch at me because you don't like the answer.
All right, Amy.
What's up next?
Okay.
So next question, how do you get people
to go to therapy, but refuse to say that they need it?
So how do you get people to go to therapy
when you know they need it and they refuse?
Well, you can't make anybody do anything,
but you can make it clear what your boundaries are.
If somebody doesn't think they quote need therapy, then the first issue is that they don't understand what therapies for,
because everybody needs therapy in their life.
Now, let me impact that sentence.
You don't need therapy. You need therapy in your
life. What does that mean? Therapy is when you are engaged in a conversation about your life,
in a conversation about your life, about your thoughts,
about your habits, about your hopes and dreams and your relationships and the obstacles
and challenges that you're facing,
that you're in a conversation about those things
intentionally and you're doing it with a person
that is objective, meaning they're not a friend and they're not a family
member.
And the most powerful thing about the relationship is that because they're objective and because
they have some level of training, you're not responsible for their feelings.
So this is the one person in your life.
You don't have to worry about what they think or about what
their feelings are about what you're discussing. You have another human being that is trained to
listen to you and help you untangle the thoughts and the behaviors and the patterns and the things
in your life that you want less of or that are making you unhappy
and to amplify the things that are going well.
And so I look at therapy as a luxury.
I think it's a privilege and I believe it is something that every human being on the
planet deserves.
Just like when you go to an elementary school or middle school or high school and there's
a school counselor.
That is a resource that is there in order to help you be successful.
And that's what I see about therapy.
And so I would start to talk about therapy very differently because when you tell somebody
they need to go to therapy, you're basically saying, you're fucked up and you need to do
something about it.
And so that's confronting. Who wants to go to therapy when you feel like it must're fucked up and you need to do something about it. And so that's confronting.
Who wants to go to therapy when you feel like it must mean something's wrong with you?
So to me, therapy is an incredible gift you give to yourself if you can afford it, if
you have access to it.
That's one thing. Second thing is that if somebody understood that a therapist or the right therapist could
help them achieve goals and be more successful and happy in life, and you frame it around
the change and the opportunity, that's more enticing, isn't it?
Wouldn't you
love to go to talk to somebody if you knew that it would make you feel better? If you knew
it would make you feel more motivated and capable and courageous and confident? Wouldn't
you love to talk to somebody who could help you strategize about how to deal with things
at work, how to diffuse situations with your family, that's what you're doing there.
It's not kind of that caricature that we all have in our minds where you're laying on
a couch, staring at a ceiling, and somebody is taking notes and looking in a different
direction as you blob on and on and on about the sob story that's your life.
That is not what my therapy sessions are like, and that's not what therapy has to be.
And so I think you could frame it differently.
Now, one other thing, you tee it up like that and then you have to use the let them theory
again.
Let them decide whether they're going or not because you can't force somebody, you can't
shame somebody, you can't drag them.
If you're a parent, of course, you have agency over your kids and you should empower your kids to
talk to a therapist if you think it would help, but I'm talking adult to adult.
That said, you got to let them make a decision, but then you've got to let yourself express what you need.
It is 1000% your responsibility to say to somebody.
I'm worried about you.
I'm worried that you have depression.
I can't handle this on my own.
It is killing me to watch you struggle.
And I need you to see a therapist.
And I've found one, and I have made an appointment for you.
It is your call if you're going to go or not.
I've done the work, but I am asking you,
because I am so worried about you,
to go see this person and talk to them
and get some support.
If they say no, now you can express a boundary.
I can't be in this relationship if you're not going to get help for your depression. I
will not stay married to you if you do not get help for your addiction. I will have to end this if you cannot be sober.
And if you refuse to get help, I am very scared that you're not going to be successful.
And I would love for you to be successful.
How you go about it is yours, but if you're not going to address this, then I'm not going
to stay.
And that's on you.
That's not manipulation.
That's clear communication.
See what most of us do is we badger somebody
to go to therapy, right?
And then we get pissed off when they don't go
or they go once and then they bark about the therapist
and then you know what we do, we never express a boundary.
We just build up resentment. And then that resentment builds within us. And we don't express it. It comes out in like
barking and this and that and fighting and no longer having sex with the person and just being
kind of angry and frustrated when this whole thing could have been fixed by you being a clear
communicator. And sometimes a clear communicator means if you don't do X, then I'm not going to be
in this relationship.
That's what a boundary is.
It's a clear line in the sand.
There isn't a lot of gray in this area
because most relationships die on the vine
because of built up resentment.
And the reason why resentment's built up
is because you're not fucking talking
about the things you feel that.
Absolutely. Did I go off track there? I think a lot of people are gonna have
Stern conversations with their partners tonight after hearing that. I love that and you know look you don't have to be like
I'm out of here after 17 years of marriage
Because people don't pivot on a dime, but you can say, I'm worried about this.
I'm giving you three months to deal with it.
I want you to go to therapy.
I've done the research.
Here is the person I am asking that you do.
I did this with Chris.
He was struggling with major depression for,
I mean, it turns out like seven years.
Thank God he had healthy habits,
or the guy probably would have died from it. out like seven years, thank God he had healthy habits or the guy probably
would have died from it.
And my healthy habits, I meant waking up every morning, meditating every morning, going
for a walk in the woods every morning, doing work that made him feel like he was doing
something meaningful, writing in his journal every single day, talking to a therapist, but
he did not want to face a depression diagnosis, and he felt that if he
took medication, it would be weak. And I was concerned that all of the fucking meditating was making
the depression worse because he was isolated. And there is new research out that shows that too much
meditation can make depression worse because you are sitting in your thoughts.
And it was, in my opinion, making it worse for Chris.
I had to finally, after two years of watching him get worse and worse go,
look, here's my boundary, because what you're doing is not working.
You need to go on the medication that the psychopharmacologist and our marriage
counselor have both recommended and you need to take it for a fucking year. And if you
can't do that, this marriage won't work because I can't sit here and watch you get worse.
And have you argue against the thing that the professionals are telling you to do?
And he took the medication.
And do I feel like a one?
No.
I feel like I expressed a boundary.
And that freed me of any resentment and desire to control him.
And it made me feel safe.
And that medication gave him a ladder to climb out of the mental hole.
And after a year, he went off it.
And he's been great.
And in the words of our therapist, the medication got him out of that spiral, which allowed
the therapy we were doing to work.
That makes sense. Makes a lot of sense. I really like dropped a bomb on that answer right there.
So let me take a quick pause. You take a quick pause, collect yourself, and do not go anywhere,
because we've got a pile of your questions coming up and the next one could be yours.
Stay with us.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back.
It's your friend Mal.
I'm here with Amy.
We are going to wrap and fire.
Boom, boom, boom.
Through your questions, we have an avalanche of them and we are swimming upstream.
So Amy, hit me with the next one.
Okay.
Next question from Sean.
Mel, how do you initiate being vulnerable without word vomiting?
So I guess Sean gets a little nervous and then tries to be vulnerable and then just spills
all the beans.
What's really cute about Sean's question is that Sean's trying to control being vulnerable.
And Sean, as a fellow word vometer,
word vomiting is your form of vulnerability.
Awesome.
Okay, here we go from Deanna.
She's asking you, Mel, what's your favorite swear word?
Swear word?
Swear word.
Probably the F-bomb, I would think.
I mean, like as in like just a swear word, that's probably my favorite swear word.
Like your all-time favorite.
That's interesting to say the OG all-time favorite felt the
Nautiest when you're a little kid which meant I had the most excited attachment to it and
but you know I have like kind of
swear word sort of trash
Insults per season you You have one too.
What's your, you've been saying it recently,
I'm a steal from you.
What is your swear insult for the season, Amy McLean?
For the season of fall.
Yes, my swear word is dick back.
Just some really enjoying saying that.
What, I laugh every time you say it
because you do this thing where you do the...
Amy, you need to understand is a stand-up comedian.
Like she does stand-up.
You really do.
You perform stand-up.
I do, yes.
And so sometimes I feel when I'm working with you that you'll be having a conversation
with yourself about something that will happen and you'll go you dickbag and I'm like that is the greatest
insult I like
Do show. I don't know that that's mine right now to show right well
I like sounds French do you guys do show if you say it really fast? It could be a last name
But you really know that it's your your private just frame it swear word for for for autumn. Just for autumn. Yes, for autumn.
Okay.
This listener says,
Mel, you got to get me out of what I feel is a midlife crisis.
What the hell happens after 40?
Help.
Everything happens after 40.
Being older, getting the insecure comparison, confusing 20s out of the way, getting the
ladder climbing status chasing, keeping up with the Joneses 30s out of the way.
When you start sliding into your 40s, you are wiser, you give less shits, you have more experience, you have moved through
relationships, you have fucked up, you have failed, you have succeeded, you have regrets,
you have so much time left. You, I mean, it's the best. I would not go back in time for
fucking anything. You know, everybody says, oh, college, best four years of your life? No, they're not. They're the next four years of your life. I just love being the
Asia I am, which is 54. I actually like my 50s better than my 40s. And so here's the thing. It's not
a midlife crisis. You have a midlife opportunity. You have a midlife frickin' like it's I and I hate calling it a
do-over because you're not doing anything over you're building from
experience like you could pivot from anywhere from here. Think about the
network that you have that you didn't have in your 20s. Think about how much
more you know about life or relationships or any of it than you did in your
30s. Think about how much technology is
advanced and how you could leverage all of that skill set and that wisdom and that bigger network
that you have and all of the failures that you've had and utilize technology if you're willing
to be curious enough to create something. Are you kidding me? We need to have a revolution,
something. Are you kidding me? We need to have a revolution, a wake up moment on this planet that the best years of your life are as you get older. Awesome. I'm not buying into it. Don't buy
into this midlife crisis bullshit. No. And if you're going to have that moment, let it fuel you.
If you're that unhappy with what happened in the first part of your life
and your panic stricken, that you're feeling halfway through this road trip we call life,
fucking do something about it. I'm not going to talk you out of having a mid-life crisis. I'm going
to ask you, all right, so you're a little worried about where you are, where you're fucking do something about it.
Love it.
All right, from Betsy, she says,
how do I get my husband to get hearing aids?
He acts like his deafness is my imagination.
You gotta help Betsy out.
I think Betsy, there's a couple things you could do.
Number one, you could have some fun with it, right?
Yeah, you could.
You could plan a weekend away where you're
going to go do something that you love to do.
Like, for example, my dad wears hearing aids now
and my parents love to go up to the casino in central Michigan
and go gambling, like for an afternoon. That's what they will do on an afternoon. They'll go up to the casino in Central Michigan and go gambling,
like for an afternoon,
that's what they will do on an afternoon.
They'll drive up to the casino,
my mom will play the slots,
my dad will play a couple of hands of blackjack,
they'll go out for a nice lunch, and they come home.
And so you could plan something that is like meant to be like that
and then on the way home,
you're like, oh, and I have another surprise.
And then you pull into an appointment.
And he'll be kicking and screaming, but whatever.
The second thing that you could do
is you could spend an entire day
talking without making a sound.
Like literally just mouth the words. So I'm going to pretend I'm
mouthing the words. And so your mouth is moving. And what he'll do is he'll be
like, what are you saying? And then you're like, I'm talking, you know, like
and and then he'll start to go, I can't hear you. It's kind of like a like a
cruel thing to do, but you're making a point. And it might make him think.
That's sort of a manipulative, funny, like I don't know what your relationship is like.
Sometimes you have to bring humor into these things though, you know.
But here's what I want you to really get. There's a deeper issue that's likely going on.
There's a deeper issue that's likely going on. It's got to be really scary when you start to lose your hearing.
I mean, I am 55, I'm going to be 55 55 and my eyesight is terrible
and it makes me feel frail
and it makes me feel old and it makes me feel vulnerable.
And for, you know, a man of that generation in particular,
admitting that your hearing is going is like admitting
that you're in the final leg of the race called life.
And so there might be fear there,
there might be pride there, there might be,
you know, something he's not even in touch with,
because again, this is a generation of human beings
that we're not taught how to talk about their deeper feelings.
So, I'm making light of it and thinking about how, if you've been married that long,
can you have fun and trick somebody and do it?
How can you make your point?
That this is an issue.
Certainly by not talking out loud and pantomiming your sentences, you're making your point, but I would imagine if you were to say, you know,
are you
nervous or does it make you feel like
weak to admit that you have to do this?
Because I think that's what's actually going on and the the other factor might be, is he the first of his friends?
You know, in your friend group, does everybody else have hearing aids?
Is he the first one?
Like all these things really act like hurdles emotionally inside of us that make us less
than enthusiastic to address things, especially as we age.
It's true.
And it's kind of like the therapy question too,
and that you want to sell it to them,
and be like, hey, I'd love to enjoy these next few years
with you.
And it could be really fun if we went to a movie,
and you weren't asking me what everybody's saying
all the time, right?
Yeah.
No, I think there's, this is a really big point.
And I think about this a lot in relationships
that there's so much that's going on beneath the surface
that we're not connecting with each other on.
And if you don't connect with each other
at the deeper thing, then of course, you're now frustrated with him,
because that's what rises to the surface.
And look, he may be a stubborn asshole
who doesn't want to be told what to do.
And if you say, up, he says down.
If you say left, he says right.
And so you might be dealing with that dynamic.
I don't know, but I suspect it's something
that needs a little compassion, a little humor, and it's an opportunity to connect over things that
make them feel kind of insecure. I think you hit it on the head there, Mel. I
freaking love this. Do you guys love this? I love this. I love hearing from you.
And we're gonna keep on doing this. So keep on submitting your questions and keep
on moving on and moving forward with your
life.
And know that your friend Mel Robbins is always here to give you the kick in the ass, the truth
you didn't want to hear, and the advice that I hope you needed.
Alrighty, I love you.
I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to create a better life.
And that's why I'm here every Monday and every Thursday.
And that's why I'm going to be here again Thursday. And that's why I'm gonna be here again
in a few days to keep cheering for you
because I love you.
Dr. C.
Okay.
All right, do you want me to start this?
Ah.
All right.
Welcome to the Mel Robbins.
Wait, no, that's not what I do.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
Hi. to the Mel Robbins, wait, no, that's not what I do. That's what I do. Ha, ha, ha, wait. No one's here. Oh, do you want to bring him up here? Yellow? Is he not barking anymore?
Yeah. Okay. What's another one? Oh, you want to do it? Yeah, hear me. With my beautiful blouse.
Oh, my God, you're amazing.
That was awesome.
That was a lot of fun.
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 professionals.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.