The Rich Roll Podcast - Mel Robbins On Why Confidence Is A Habit

Episode Date: September 27, 2021

People ask me all day long for the secret ingredient to success and a comfortable way through personal transformation. My enduring answer: there is none. I believe in the individual potential for pos...itive transformation. I’m also a self-help skeptic who greets most #lifehacks with profound hesitancy. There is a line between snake oil and efficacy—and that line is crossed more often than not. So if you struggle with self-confidence, making life changes, finding your purpose, or if the general vernacular that encircles self-improvement—words like motivation, inspiration, and passion—leave you more deflated than empowered, I feel you. Today’s guest, the queen of grounded, science-backed personal development is here today to help us sort things out. Meet the singular, multi-talented hyphenate Mel Robbins. A former lawyer turned CNN legal analyst, turned mega-bestselling author and talk show host, Mel is a powerhouse and one of the most widely booked public speakers in the world. Her work includes the global phenomenon The 5 Second Rule, four #1 bestselling audiobooks, the #1 podcast on Audible, and her videos have over a billion cumulative views, including her TEDx Talk  How to stop screwing yourself over—which has racked up over 27 million views alone. The official occasion for this conversation is Mel’s brand new book, The High Five Habit—a must-read primer on how to make believing in yourself a habit so that you operate more empowered and with greater confidence. However, this conversation is about so much more, packed with practical, life-altering, science and experience-based wisdom you (and myself included) need to hear. Nobody loves making a real difference in people’s lives more than Mel. Her energy is infectious. Her authenticity and earnestness is palpable. Everyone at the studio fell in love with her—and I know you will too. To read more click here. You can also watch listen to our exchange on YouTube. And as always, the podcast streams wild and free on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. My hope is that Mel’s message will do for you what it has for me—remind you to celebrate the small wins, cultivate that bias for action, and get out of your own damn way of creating the life of your dreams. Peace + Plants, Rich

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The second that you're in a situation where you're procrastinating or you're thinking negative thoughts, it's your subconscious that's in charge of you. And so in order to change, you have to interrupt subconscious patterns. You see, the five-second rule isn't just some dumb counting backwards thing. It is a form of metacognition that interrupts the pattern stored in your subconscious brain. Counting backwards requires you to focus, which flips on your prefrontal cortex. It gives you a moment of control over what you think and do next. That's the genius of it because it is simple, you remember it, and it immediately interrupts the negative and suicidal ideations that torture people.
Starting point is 00:00:45 And speaking of suicide, we know of 111 people who have stopped themselves from taking their lives by 54321 asking for help. So I am here to tell you, I want you to try it. I want you to share it with people because interrupting the patterns of thought and behavior that are holding you back and pushing yourself to take action
Starting point is 00:01:08 or to think something different, it is the only way you are gonna change. And this is a tool that's gonna help you bridge that gap. And if you program your mind correctly, and if you're clear about what you wanna create, your mind will help you get what you want. The Rich Roll Podcast. Hey everybody, welcome to the podcast.
Starting point is 00:01:49 If, if, if, if, if you struggle with things like self-confidence, finally making those life changes you know you need, if you struggle with finding your purpose, or if just the vernacular around self-improvement, words like motivation, inspiration, and passion leave you more confused and deflated than empowered, you are in the right place, my friends, because today's guest, the queen of grounded science-backed personal development, my friend, Mel Robbins is here today to sort you out. Chances are, if you're at all online, you already know this woman. She's like everywhere. But if her name doesn't ring a bell, Mel is a former lawyer turned CNN legal analyst,
Starting point is 00:02:32 turned tons of other jobs, turned mega bestselling author, talk show host, and one of the most widely booked public speakers in the world. Her work includes the global phenomenon, the five second rule. Her podcast in Audible is number one on that platform. And her videos all told have over a billion views, including not the least of which is her TEDx talk, which is called how to stop screwing yourself over, which is one
Starting point is 00:02:59 of the most popular TED talks of all time with over 27 million views. Mel is an absolute powerhouse and it's all coming up in a few, but first. We're brought to you today by recovery.com. I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment, an experience that I had that quite literally saved my life. And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones find treatment. And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of care, especially because, unfortunately, not all treatment resources
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Starting point is 00:04:17 including substance use disorders, depression, anxiety, eating disorders, gambling addictions, and more. depression, anxiety, eating disorders, gambling addictions, and more. Navigating their site is simple. Search by insurance coverage, location, treatment type, you name it. Plus, you can read reviews from former patients to help you decide. Whether you're a busy exec, a parent of a struggling teen, or battling addiction yourself, I feel you. I empathize with you.
Starting point is 00:04:44 I really do. And they have treatment options for you. Life in recovery is wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey. When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery. To find the best treatment option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com. We're brought to you today by recovery.com. I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment and experience that I had that quite literally saved my life. And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones
Starting point is 00:05:31 find treatment. And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of care, especially because, unfortunately, not all treatment resources adhere to ethical practices. It's a real problem. A problem I'm now happy and proud to share has been solved by the people at recovery.com, who created an online support portal designed to guide, to support, and empower you to find the ideal level of care tailored to your personal needs. They've partnered with the best global behavioral health providers to cover the full spectrum of behavioral health disorders, including substance use disorders, depression, anxiety, eating disorders, gambling
Starting point is 00:06:18 addictions, and more. Navigating their site is simple. Search by insurance coverage, location, treatment type, you name it. Plus, you can read reviews from former patients to help you decide. Whether you're a busy exec, a parent of a struggling teen, or battling addiction yourself, I feel you. I empathize with you. I really do. And they have treatment options for you. Life in recovery is wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey. When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery. To find the best treatment option for you
Starting point is 00:06:59 or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com. Again, go to recovery.com. Okay, Mel, Mel Robbins. So the official occasion for this conversation is Mel's brand new book. It's called The High Five Habit, which you should all pick up. It's basically a toolbox for how to make believing in yourself a habit
Starting point is 00:07:24 so that you operate more empowered and with greater confidence. But this conversation is about so much more. It's just packed with practical life-altering science and experience-based wisdom and tools that you and myself included really need to hear. Nobody, and I mean that. Nobody loves making a real difference in people's lives more than Mel. I adore this woman, and I'm pretty sure you're gonna fall in love with her as well.
Starting point is 00:07:53 So let's cultivate that bias for action, shall we? And do the thing. This is me and the wonderful Mel Robbins. It's good to have you here, delighted to be in your presence. This has been a long time coming. And I was trying to remember the last time I saw you, and I'm pretty sure we were talking about this
Starting point is 00:08:16 for the podcast. I'm pretty sure the last time I saw you was on the set of your television show, literally like maybe a week or two before everything locked down and the pandemic. I think days, Rich. I think so, right? Days.
Starting point is 00:08:32 Because your show ended very abruptly shortly thereafter as a result of that. Yeah. Wow. They found, I'll never forget it. So it had always been a lifelong dream of mine growing up watching Donahue and Oprah Winfrey. I grew up in the Midwest and I'd come home from school and they'd be on television.
Starting point is 00:08:51 It always been a dream of mine to host my own daytime talk show. So when the opportunity presented itself, when I was 50 years old, I jumped at it. It was not the right fit for me at all. In what way? You seem pretty at home. On a television set?
Starting point is 00:09:08 Yeah. Well, I'm at home kind of creating something and working with a big group of creative people. And I love helping people and I love live coaching. That is really something that it just brings me alive. What I didn't like is ever since I've been an entrepreneur. So for the last eight years, 10 years, as I've been kind of recreating myself and building my career,
Starting point is 00:09:34 I've been in control for better or worse of everything that I do. When I signed on with Sony Pictures Television to do a daytime syndicated talk show, I was profoundly fucking naive about just how much was out of my control. And also Rich, how much I fucking hate being out of control in terms of not having the final say in what I'm doing.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Well, if anything, it confronted you with that, I don't wanna say character defect, that predisposition, right? That you had to work through. I mean, it's a machine. There were so many people there. It's crazy. I mean, it was a sight to behold just knowing you
Starting point is 00:10:14 and then being there and being like, wow, like this is an operation. Well, here's what I learned about myself. So I personally believe that absolutely everything that is happening to you is preparing you for something that's coming. And if you look back in this moment, Rich, I know that you can look at all the moments in your life
Starting point is 00:10:37 and you can see how those dots connect you to this moment. There was a lesson, there was an experience, there was a person, there was something, even in the worst moments, and I know you, sleeping on that mattress, you know, at the worst moments of your life in that apartment, when you were still practicing law and barely hanging on. There was something that you learned from that experience
Starting point is 00:11:01 that you probably still use at this moment in your life, correct? 100%. Yeah, I mean, I have all kinds of things I wanna say about that, but before I do that, I'm gonna put on my Mel Robbins glasses. They're not black, they're like brown, but they're the closest that I have.
Starting point is 00:11:17 So they are great looking on you. Yeah, it is, I think part of that also, we're around the same age. When you get to a certain age, you're able to cast your gaze backwards and see how everything kind of conspired to create the person that you are today. And it all makes perfect sense through the rear view mirror.
Starting point is 00:11:36 And what's interesting is that although our journeys are very different in many ways, there's so much overlap in the variety of experiences that have brought us to this place. I mean, law school, being a lawyer, being an unhappy lawyer, a whole financial dismantling, being the parent of young adults and et cetera,
Starting point is 00:11:56 and all of that, that comes together. But when I look back on my life, yes, all these different things that I did that seemed to not be related to each other or didn't really appear to have any kind of stickiness to anything that I do now, of course, they all inform. It was this perfect soup that has allowed me to be able to kind of do what I do now.
Starting point is 00:12:22 And it's certainly the case in your story. Yeah, and I think life is not really meant to be able to kind of do what I do now. And it's certainly the case in your story. Yeah, and you know, I think life is not really meant to be enjoyed. It's a school. How dare you? What do you mean, how dare you? Not meant to be enjoyed. Well, you can enjoy it.
Starting point is 00:12:37 Yeah. But life is school. Mm-hmm. And it's there to teach you something. And maybe it took me 50 years to figure this out and to be able to look backwards and see how the dots connect. But I think the real secret is to be able to stand
Starting point is 00:12:53 in the moment today and have faith that this is yet another dot that is leading you somewhere that you're meant to go. And that attitude is what got me through, first of all, this past year, which has been one of the worst years of my life. I can't talk about most of it because the attorneys would start calling.
Starting point is 00:13:15 Or my kids might hear some of it and they can't know. But the talk show, for example, when I went into it, this is what I said to myself, I've got an opportunity to go after something I've dreamt about since I was a kid. And I know it's not about a show. I know that this is an experience that is preparing me for something else.
Starting point is 00:13:36 And having that sort of, this is a dot on the trajectory and the map of my life allows me to detach from the outcome. Because let's face it, the show was not a success. I got fired from my dream job. It did not get renewed for season two, which means it was a failure, but I don't relate to it that way because I know that it was in my life
Starting point is 00:14:02 to give me an experience. And the experience taught me this. I am a horrible CEO. I am terrible at running a company. I am amazing if I can have an organization around me that allows me to show up and do what I do best. I left that talk show having been fired from my dream job, realizing I was in the wrong seat in the bus in my business
Starting point is 00:14:29 and that I had to change absolutely everything if I wanted to be happy, if I wanted to work in a way that was effective, and if I wanted to really reach the goals that I have. Did you have that awareness in the moment or is that in retrospect that you're able to develop that? I had that experience as I was hosting the talk show because it was the first time
Starting point is 00:14:51 that I was surrounded by expertise. I have built my business in spite of myself. And you took your executive producer with you, right? In the wake of that. Yes, and you know what's interesting? She's a genius. She is the Mindy Borman, absolutely amazing human being. And what she learned stepping into digital
Starting point is 00:15:13 is that she was in the wrong place. She kept saying, I feel like a whale in a swimming pool. I feel like a whale in a swimming pool. You see, I loved having 131 people around me and having a very specific narrow role in the making of something. She realized stepping into a team of 10 people that she needs a big team to work in.
Starting point is 00:15:35 What I realized from the experience is I need a team of experts around me. Right, and prior to that, you were building your social media empire and becoming this lauded public speaker and writing all of these books and doing it with a team of people, but also in a manner in which it was not sustainable
Starting point is 00:15:54 because of your control issues and trying to manage all these people, which is not a skillset, I think you would admit speaks to your strengths. And the lesson, I guess is what I'm saying from the talk show was, oh, I need to surround myself with people who are better at these respective roles than I am
Starting point is 00:16:12 and have somebody who's in charge of managing them for me. So I can do my thing. Yes, and somebody strong enough to just smack me across the face when I'm stepping out of my lane and stepping into every other lane. Sure. But then the pandemic comes, slaps you in the face and then you're just at home with nothing to do and nowhere to go. Yeah. So, you know, we haven't gotten into this yet, but I have had a lifelong history with
Starting point is 00:16:39 anxiety. I was a worrier as a kid, homesick at every camp that I ever went to. In fact, when we went to sixth grade camp at my little public high school, go away for like five days, I was so disassociated and freaked out so badly that I lied to the camp and told them that my grandmother, there had been some sort of family emergency. First, I get them to let me use the camp phone
Starting point is 00:17:07 so I can call my parents. Then I hang up and tell them that there's been a terrible tragedy in the family and that my grandmother has fallen gravely ill, convincing my parents to show up. And then when my parents show up and my friends ask me, why are you leaving early? I lie to them and tell them, you know,
Starting point is 00:17:27 that there's been this emergency and that I have to go. When in fact, my panic and anxiety drove me to great lengths to get out of that situation. And so when I say I struggled with anxiety, I mean, I was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder when I was 22 years old in law school. That should have been a hint that I didn't like law school, right?
Starting point is 00:17:49 But I went on Zoloft and I took it for two and a half decades and I only came off it when I discovered the five second rule and started using it to change my physical habits and then my mental habits. I stopped taking Zoloft when I was 45 and hadn't been on it for, I don't know how old, 52, seven years now.
Starting point is 00:18:11 But when the pandemic hit and I was suddenly off airplanes and I was no longer racing around from a speech or wherever, and I had to sit and be with myself, that came roaring back in. Yeah, terrifying. And what I realized is I never understood how dysregulated my nervous system was. And it was having to be still that made me realize
Starting point is 00:18:42 that I literally will dart to target or run to a coffee shop or make a phone call or swipe through social media as a way to distract myself from having to just be. Even though you have a husband who's a Buddhist and an avid meditator. Well, his Buddhism and meditation does not smooth out my dysregulated nervous system. You're not absorbing that by osmosis.
Starting point is 00:19:08 No, it's the reason why we're still married. He would have divorced my ass a long time ago if he wasn't meditating and Buddhist, because he wouldn't be able to deal with me. My favorite story about your anxiety is in the new book, which we're gonna talk about, the high five habit. And it's the story of you getting the job with the Michigan AG and being assigned
Starting point is 00:19:30 to write this paper on recidivism and just not doing it at all. And then the day that you're called into his office, just not showing up and completely ghosting him. Yes. Yes, it's true. Like when I think back to what a train wreck of a human being I was, I cannot believe I made it
Starting point is 00:19:49 through college and law school and basically was upright for as long as I was. The story that Rich is talking about is at this point, I was not diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder. I was just a person who was a complete fuck up. I was drinking too much, trying to regulate my nervous system. I hated law school.
Starting point is 00:20:13 So I go home for the first year summer. What did you do your first year of law school for? I worked for a nonprofit in San Francisco. Did you know when you were in law school that you didn't wanna be a lawyer? 100%. Yes, and I think so many people get into this position too, whether you're in a relationship or a job or a major
Starting point is 00:20:36 or a neighborhood or whatever, where you know you're in the wrong place. But there's so much inertia behind it. And the idea of stepping out of it is so fraught and terrifying that it's easier to just keep going. I mean, I would say I actually enjoyed being in an academic environment and I needed, I was coming out of living in New York City
Starting point is 00:20:54 where I was just a wild man. And I needed some of that structure because I knew what to do every day. And I was capable in that regard. So I actually didn't mind like going to class and the kind of, you know, sort of social environment that it provided, but I had no interest in being a lawyer. I didn't even know what that meant.
Starting point is 00:21:13 Even when I graduated from law school, I still didn't know what being a lawyer meant. It doesn't really teach you that part. Well, I guess, because there's so many things that you can do being a lawyer. Yeah. But so back to the summer, I'm living back home in Western Michigan.
Starting point is 00:21:26 I grew up in Muskegon, Michigan, and I'm driving 50 miles a day each way to go to the attorney general's office in Grand Rapids, Michigan. And at the very beginning of the summer, the AG selects me to do a massive research paper about recidivism rates in the state of Michigan. Basically he wants, at the end of the summer, it gets worse.
Starting point is 00:21:46 He wants to make a massive speech about how he has been responsible for lowering recidivism rates, which basically means the rate of re-entry to jail, re-arrest and re-entry for those of you that are not criminal defense attorneys or studied this thing. I had no idea how to do a project like this.
Starting point is 00:22:03 I also didn't know at the time that I was dyslexic or ADHD. Like law school was a nightmare for me, all the reading and the writing. And so I would literally drive there. I would be terrified to walk into work knowing I had this big assignment. Everybody else had little things to do. So I would sit and I would procrastinate all day,
Starting point is 00:22:23 do nothing, like literally not even crack open a book. I didn't even open up LexisNexis. I did nothing. And this went on for three months. I would drive there five days a week. I would do nothing all day. I'd go to lunch with the other interns. I'd then sit around. I'd do nothing all day. I didn't even have social media or the internet to like just blow off the time. I was literally doing nothing. And then he called me in, you're right.
Starting point is 00:22:50 I'll never forget it. I don't remember a lot of that summer, but I do remember being called in. And I remember my cheeks being bright red and my armpits were sweating like crazy. And I was wearing a suit that my mother had probably bought me at JC Penney's. And he stood there and said, how is it coming?
Starting point is 00:23:05 You know, this speech that I need to give is coming up. I'd love to see what you're working on. And I literally blustered. I was like, oh, oh, well, yeah, there's tons of data to go through. And the research departments were really helpful. Yeah, yeah, okay, I'm gonna get it to you. I know I'm going back to school next week.
Starting point is 00:23:19 I promise you it'll be done. I walked out his door. I didn't even stop by my office to turn the lights off. I went straight out to the parking lot. I jumped in my parents' car and I drove right back to Muskegon, Michigan. And I never went back. Nothing.
Starting point is 00:23:38 Nothing. It's unbelievable that you're such a capable human being when I hear that story. It is unbelievable. If I can change from somebody that is literally riddled with anxiety and just completely on edge all the time to a person who is, I think I'm tremendously self-aware,
Starting point is 00:23:57 both the internal self-awareness and external self-awareness and change my habits in the way that I think and really heal my nervous system, you can too. Yeah, so this happened before you were technically diagnosed and you went on to have success. You were in legal aid, you were a public defender, you become this analyst for CNN. Oh, that was later.
Starting point is 00:24:25 That was later. I mean, at what point- I have the craziest story. You start like reckoning with all of that. Well, let's take it back. Like talk me through this journey because as you mentioned, you haven't been on a lot of podcasts. You haven't been on this podcast before.
Starting point is 00:24:38 And I think the kind of origin story here is super important and impactful in terms of like contextualizing everything that you're doing now. So after law school, so I'm now on Zoloft, thank God, but after law, which helped me tremendously, it was life-saving. It literally, for me, what it did is it just turned down
Starting point is 00:25:00 the volume of the negativity in my head. I mean, I understand a tremendous amount now about anxiety and panic attacks and worry. And there's a really significant connection between worry, anxiety, and panic. I believe all anxiety begins with worrying. That your negative thought loop starts going. This is the baby.
Starting point is 00:25:21 So when you start to worry about something, the thoughts start to spin, right? And as your thoughts start to spin, your body and your nervous system take notice. Anxiety is simply when worrying starts to get lodged in your body, your body goes on edge. You guys talk about it all the time, parasympathetic versus sympathetic nervous system,
Starting point is 00:25:43 but it begins with a worry. Then your body gets agitated. And when your body gets agitated, I understand the science behind all this now, thankfully, and your stomach starts to feel gurgly. We make the mistake then of letting the worries pick up. Oh shit, my stomach's on edge. That must mean that something bad is gonna happen.
Starting point is 00:26:00 And that only ticks up the anxiety in your body. And at some point point this gets so pronounced that your body goes, that's it, I'm getting her out of here, panic attack time. And so when you start to attack the worry loop, that's how you can slow down the anxiety. But I didn't know any of that back in the day. So I was a legal aid attorney.
Starting point is 00:26:24 And then my husband, I did that for four years. And then my husband got into business school and we moved up to Boston. And the only job I could get was with a large law firm. And so I worked there for a year. I hated it, Rich. I hated it. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:26:40 I went from being in a courtroom five days a week to sitting in a suit in an office writing briefs. Like again, like this was like penance for the attorney general stunt that I pulled. And luckily I got pregnant. And when I was pregnant with our first daughter, who's now 22, so this is 22 years ago, 2000, 1999. When our daughter was born,
Starting point is 00:27:02 I had severe postpartum depression. And when I finally came out of it and I was allowed to be with the baby, like I had to be supervised, it was that scary. And when I came out of it, I turned to Chris at one point and said, I can't go back to law, that law firm. I do not wanna be a lawyer anymore. And for me, he said, how do you know?
Starting point is 00:27:26 And I said, I don't ever wanna answer the question, what do you do with I'm a lawyer. And Chris, he wasn't a Buddhist then, but he was very calm, very grounded, thank God. He looked at me and said, that's great. You realize we've just bought a house and you can't be with the baby full time. She's gonna be in daycare.
Starting point is 00:27:50 I've done the numbers and you can do whatever the fuck you want, but you have to make $60,000 a year. Right. And you have four weeks to figure it out. Cause that was when I had to go back to the law firm. And so I'll tell you, when you have a problem defined like that,
Starting point is 00:28:06 what do you want? I'll tell you what I wanted. I wanted a job in the next four weeks that paid me $60,000 a year. If you can define what you want, you can make it happen. I networked like my life depended upon it. And I ended up the night before Rich, I was supposed to go back to that law firm.
Starting point is 00:28:23 I have a habit of ghosting people. Let's just put that out on the table. So the night before I was supposed to go back to that law firm. I have a habit of ghosting people. Let's just put that out on the table. I gather. So the night before I was supposed to go back to, this story is so cringy. I don't write about this in the book. Wait till you hear this. The night before I'm supposed to go back,
Starting point is 00:28:35 I get an offer for $55,000. Chris and I are like, okay, we'll make it work. The next day I go in to my first day back at the law firm where I've been out on paid maternity leave to walk in the door and quit. And when I walk in, they are hosting a surprise baby shower for me. Your head must've just lit up with all those thoughts
Starting point is 00:29:03 of I should have ghosted them. I shouldn't have just never gone back. Oh my God. So we have the shower, you know, they have like breakfast for everybody and presents. And then I have to walk into my boss's office and tell her the news. And she was so shocked.
Starting point is 00:29:27 Like, have you ever had that experience where you're talking to somebody and as you're talking, you realize they are managing their facial expression because they don't know what to do. Right. So that was really fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:41 But it kind of flipped for me because as I went around and said goodbye to people, there was one partner who stood up as I was talking and walked past me and closed the door behind me. And I thought, oh my God, what's about to happen? And he sat back down and said, I hate it here too. If that startup company is hiring,
Starting point is 00:30:00 could you give them my name? Oh my God. So I thought, okay, I'm gonna be okay. No more bait stamping. No more bait stamping. So I go to this little tech startup called, at the time it was called Emode. And it was founded by this super, super smart guy,
Starting point is 00:30:18 James Currier. And I was like the fifth person in the door. And I was handed a job in 1991 as the director of content. And it was my introduction to digital marketing. And I spent, gosh, a year or two there. And then I went to another digital kind of marketing platform for creative services and ended up getting fired from that job,
Starting point is 00:30:39 which I should have because I did not know what I was doing. They hired me. I was able to talk myself into a great job. And then clearly within four months I had not know what I was doing. They hired me. I was able to talk myself into a great job. And then clearly within four months had no clue what I was doing. And then I went to another one and in a lower level
Starting point is 00:30:53 and kept working. And that's when I started going, I'm not really happy. I don't really know what I wanna do. I've done the lawyer thing. Now I'm like in digital marketing, what the heck? The first.com bomb happened and there weren't a lot of jobs. And so I hired a life coach
Starting point is 00:31:09 and the life coach that I hired was teaching a course at the Sloan Business School on life design. And I started working with her. And the piece of the story that I left out is that in 1994, my husband and I started doing all these life improvement courses with a company called Landmark Education in New York City. And so I had like six years of Landmark courses
Starting point is 00:31:36 under my belt. And I had had a ton of training in just ontology, which is the study of being. I had had a lot of training as a coach. I had been trained to lead courses for them, but I'd never really done anything coaching wise and life coaching really wasn't a thing. And so I hired this person to help me figure out
Starting point is 00:32:00 what to do with my own life. And a couple of sessions in this person goes, you should be coaching people. I'm like coaching people. I'm like coaching people? What does that look like? And so it took me about six months of training. And finally I was ready to start a life coaching business.
Starting point is 00:32:14 And that's what I did. I didn't know that about you. Yeah. Yeah, that's interesting. And at some point you started doing radio, right? Okay, that's a whole nother story. I literally- I'm seeing like the little beads, you know, along the string that are all adding up to, you know,
Starting point is 00:32:30 the Mel Robbins of today. Okay, so here's what happened. So this would have been, I get so lost in the timeline of my life because you know what I feel like? I feel like, do you remember that Looney Tunes cartoon where is it Daffy Duck wanders into a construction site on sleeping medication? I've told this story before.
Starting point is 00:32:50 No, it's, I think it's Sweet Pea. Who the hell is Sweet Pea? The little baby in Popeye. Oh, is that what it is? Yeah, and Sweet Pea kind of crawls onto a construction site and onto an I-beam. And then the crane lifts the I-beam up and the baby is like crawling onto an I-beam. And then the crane lifts the I-beam up and the baby is like crawling along the I-beam.
Starting point is 00:33:08 And right when the baby's gonna fall to its imminent death, the other I-beam swings around and it crawls onto the next one. That's my life. And my life is exactly like that as well. That is my life. Like, as you're hearing this, like me tell the story of my career,
Starting point is 00:33:21 which is somewhat embarrassing, it's a testament to resilience though. I literally fail over and over and over again. I lose my way a million times before I find myself. And even when I find myself, I eventually feel lost again and go looking for myself again, constantly seeking, constantly growing, constantly failing. And so I start this life coaching business. I love it. It goes incredibly, incredibly well. This would have been like 2002 to like 2000,
Starting point is 00:33:55 I don't know, I'm guessing here, six maybe. And what ends up happening is a friend of mine emails me, forwards an email to me. And when you look at the chain of the forward, what you see at the bottom is there's somebody at Inc Magazine looking to write an article about life coaches. And I immediately scan the thing and it's a month old.
Starting point is 00:34:21 The deadline is passed. I have none of the credentials they're looking for. I have none of the types of clients they're looking for. And I start to go like we always do down the list of reasons why I should not respond. Like we're always arguing against ourselves, always holding ourselves back. And I immediately say, wait a minute, wait a minute,
Starting point is 00:34:42 wait a minute, what would somebody who's more successful than me do? And I'm like, they'd fucking apply. So I take a sip of wine. I start typing like crazy. And I just free form this hilarious response back a month late with none of the credentials. She writes back the next day and says, I was about to turn the article in.
Starting point is 00:35:01 What if I come to Boston next week and trail you? So she comes, she follows me around for a day. She ends up publishing an article and I'm like, oh yes. Cause oh, that's right. Cause the article released in 2005. I can't believe how old I am, 2005. My God, that's like 16 years ago. But it seems like yesterday.
Starting point is 00:35:22 And I'm pregnant with our son and our third child. And I'm like, this is gonna be amazing. The timing of this article is fabulous. This article is gonna print rich and I am gonna have an avalanche of clients. It's gonna be awesome. The article prints fucking crickets, not a single client, not a single inbound email,
Starting point is 00:35:43 nada, nothing, nothing. So I forget about it. I'm out to dinner one night. My phone's ringing. It's a New York number. Like who the heck is calling me from New York? I pick up the phone and is this Mel Robbins? Yeah, this is Mel Robbins.
Starting point is 00:35:59 Hey, this is Mary Duffy from CNBC. I'm like, oh, hi, Mary Duffy. How are you? Having no idea who she is. She's like, oh, hi, Mary Duffy, how are you? Having no idea who she is. She's like, well, I saw the article in Inc Magazine and we'd like to fly you down and talk to you. So literally a week later, I find myself on a plane down to New York,
Starting point is 00:36:16 drive over to New Jersey, walk into the offices. I sit down and I'm in a meeting with the executives at CNBC and they're in a development meeting. Oh my God, coaching is hot. We think you're amazing. We wanna do a show. We wanna stick it between Kramer
Starting point is 00:36:31 and Donny Deutsch was on at the time, the big idea. And we'd like you to do da, da, da, da, da. I walk out of there with a fricking development deal. Oh my God. To do- That really is like a sweet pea thing. Yes, to do a talk show, to do like a call-in advice show
Starting point is 00:36:46 for the money audience on non-money topics in between Kramer and Donnie Deutsch. So they decided that, by the way, that never happened. Okay, not the story, but the show. So in the meantime, they are like, we should put you on Donnie's show all the time to start to seed you to our audience. So I'm now being brought down to New York once a week to appear on the big idea, Donnie Deutsch's show as like a panelist. And I am just kind of doing my thing. Meanwhile, something else is
Starting point is 00:37:19 happening. There is a show that is being cast by Fox called, it was a business makeover show where they were going to do something like the Gordon Ramsay show with kitchens, right? They wanted to do that with small businesses. Now, mind you, this show has been played out now a million times, but I'm talking 2007 here and 2008. This is the time zone that this was happening in. And so I'm now starting to feel
Starting point is 00:37:47 like, holy cow, like my fricking gravy train is coming in. I'm not only like in development at CNBC, which means jack shit, by the way, I am now, Oh, I don't even know about this yet. So, so I am, um, so the show's in development and the executives at Fox are talking to Donnie Deutsch about hosting the show. I know nothing about it, Rich. I'm just happily life coaching and I am happily appearing on the big idea thinking I am a big shit, which I am not.
Starting point is 00:38:18 All of a sudden, my agent calls me and says, because I didn't even have an agent. I had to get one because I didn't know how to negotiate the contract because I was a criminal lawyer, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. This guy that represented me called me and said, you're never gonna believe this.
Starting point is 00:38:32 I said, what? He said, there is a guy who runs all of non-scripted, meaning reality programming at Fox. It's responsible for American Idol, the whole deal. And they wanna talk to you about hosting a reality show for Fox. That's a business makeover show. I'm like, you're kidding me. And he said, no, they want you on a plane
Starting point is 00:38:52 tonight out of Austin. I'm like, you're kidding me. So I pack up, I go to the, oh, this is a hilarious story, you ready? Brace yourself. So I pack up, I go to Logan, it's 2007. I'm terrified of flying. I'm wearing sneakers, sweats pants, a sweatshirt.
Starting point is 00:39:17 I have a roll-on suitcase that has the single best suit I own and a pair of high heels in it because you have to dress the part. Like interviewing is all about walking in as the person. I have my makeup in there, I'm ready to go. The meeting is at 8.30 in the morning in LA. I get on this plane and I am sitting in my seat, breathing through my breathing exercises,
Starting point is 00:39:42 because I had not invented the five second rule yet. As I'm having a panic attack and all of a sudden it dawns on me, I've left my suitcase at the Starbucks in the airport. Oh no. I have the interview of my life tomorrow morning. Right, by the time you land in LA, you can't go to the store.
Starting point is 00:40:07 It's midnight. Yeah, you're toast. Yeah, so I get up early, I go to the front desk of the hotel they've put me in, the nicest hotel I've ever been in. I feel already like the world's biggest fraud. I don't belong here. I am in pit stained t-shirt and dirty sweats.
Starting point is 00:40:30 My hair is greasy as hell because I have literally been sweating all night thinking about what I'm gonna do. And I said, is there anything open? Do you have anything in lost and found that I can borrow? I don't even wanna steal it. I just need to wear it. Nothing, nothing, nothing.
Starting point is 00:40:44 He's like, oh, actually there is a target that is on your way to the place that you're going to go that opens at eight. So the car service picks me up. I tell him to beeline it to target. I ran through that target like I was in one of those shopping spree game shows. Black pants, black shirt, black eye heels,
Starting point is 00:41:05 dry shampoo, running, running, running, you know, like a little like thing, like the foundation thing, running, running, running, running, run out, I change in the backseat of the car, you know, all this, I snap across the heels because the heels are connected, you know what I mean? And I get out of the car and I realize I have grabbed a size or 10 heels and I wear a size eight.
Starting point is 00:41:25 So I'm now in like three inch high flip-flops that are going as I'm walking. And I shuffle my way down the thing and I walk into the meeting and I land the role. And this should have been the last time I ever did television because I have been screwed all three times I did TV, except for CNN.
Starting point is 00:41:47 So what happened? Did that show never transpired? Thankfully it never aired because this is what happened. When I landed the role, the role was to basically do extreme office makeover. You take a struggling business and you get to have the extraordinary job of making over the whole thing.
Starting point is 00:42:06 Everything from training employees to the whole physical space itself. Remember the extreme home makeover and they'd like, you know, kind of move the bus. And so that was the show concept. Four months later, when we were ready to tape the show, they had brought on some big names in reality and them all 51 minds and the show had completely changed.
Starting point is 00:42:28 And it was now a show called someone's gotta go. And I was told that I would be firing people from real jobs on national TV on a reality show. Wow. Yeah. And I- Welcome to Hollywood. Well, it's not what I signed up for
Starting point is 00:42:47 and I love helping people. And so I remember calling my husband sobbing from the hotel room and calling my agent sobbing, I can't do this, I'm quitting. And he's like, I don't think you understand what you've gotten yourself into. There's a crew of 150 people, there's Fox and two massive production companies.
Starting point is 00:43:11 They have already cast the entire season, Mel. And it's an unbelievable opportunity. I mean, essentially you were- If you like that kind of thing. Back in Boston coaching however many people and nobody calling you after that article came out. But I was happy. Like I think that that's the thing
Starting point is 00:43:27 is that we chase the next bigger thing. And look, all these experiences are amazing. But what was immediately apparent when this train left the station is this is not a train I wanted to be on. And so we shot the first two episodes and it was, you know, I mean, the people were lovely, but it was a horrible experience.
Starting point is 00:43:50 It was the typical reality show. They put you in a bubble, they take everybody's phones, they take the television sets out of the rooms that people are staying in. And again, this was 2007. This is not like when everybody's watching Love Island and we all know what the reality show thing is. And these were people that had signed up
Starting point is 00:44:10 thinking they were getting a make-over. So the people who had signed up for the show, the business owners were actually told that somebody was getting fired in the opening scene because they wanted to capture the authentic reaction. That's awful. Uh-huh. And if you're a person that for me,
Starting point is 00:44:26 it was never about doing this for show. I thought that I was on a show that was gonna help businesses. And look, I realized that a lot of times you gotta fire people to help your business. But that's not at all what I wanted to do. And we were teetering on a recession. And at the same time, my husband's restaurant business
Starting point is 00:44:43 was starting to face some real challenges as restaurant businesses often do. And so the thought of actually going in and pushing a small business owner over the edge on national television was gut wrenching. We shot two episodes. I don't know how I made it through it. And then luckily again, the I-beam comes over
Starting point is 00:45:03 and as I'm falling, I'm caught. The legal department at Fox said, the recession is coming on, this is the wrong show at the wrong time. And this is tabled. And so instead of airing it on January 6th on my husband's 40th birthday with American Idol as the lead in.
Starting point is 00:45:21 Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. Holy shit. I dodged that, but then got handed. Life would have been very different if that show aired for you, I think. I think my career would have been over. You think?
Starting point is 00:45:38 I do. Well, I, you know, look, I mean, everybody can, Well, the timing saved you. Remake themselves over and over and over again. You would have been vilified. Vilified, and I didn't believe in what I was doing. And you would have to kind of wear the mantle of the evil person who delivers the hatchet.
Starting point is 00:45:55 Yeah, like I wasn't, if you're not vested in it, you can't defend it. And if I believe in what I'm doing, I will fight anybody to the death over it. But I didn I believe in what I'm doing, I will fight anybody to the death over it. But I didn't believe in what I was doing. That's why it was the kiss of death. I didn't realize you had all these television experiences prior.
Starting point is 00:46:14 So I'm not even done. Yeah. So what happens next is I go, oh, thank God. And then the agent lawyer person calls me and says, well, I have some bad news. And I said, what's that? And they said, the executives at Fox want this to air and you're locked under contract.
Starting point is 00:46:35 So you can't do anything for the next year. And I thought I was all smart because I negotiated a deal where I had more of a backend and I only got paid as the episodes aired. So I found myself unemployed. And I felt like such a idiot that I didn't even have the confidence to go back to coaching people.
Starting point is 00:46:57 And it was at this point that my husband's second and third restaurant started to fail. The liens hit the house and I was 41 years old, a former lawyer turned digital marketing failure who became a happy and successful life coach who then got too big for her britches and stepped into television, got handed one kind of experience after another.
Starting point is 00:47:23 And now I'm 41 years old and I have no idea what to do with my life or what I should do. And I feel like a complete failure. And at the same time, my husband's restaurants, which we've secured with our house and our life savings and our kids' college funds are going under. We're $800,000 in debt. I'm unemployed.
Starting point is 00:47:49 And it was certainly at that moment, the worst moment in my life. So this is like 2008. Yeah, lousy year for a lot of people. Housing crisis. Not a good year for us either. Yeah, it was brutal. And that's a phase that was pretty protracted, right? You guys really went through it.
Starting point is 00:48:13 And the more I learn about, you know, what went down for you, it's kind of amazing to me. I mean, we can talk about all the entrepreneurial success, et cetera, but more importantly, that your marriage survived this because you guys were at loggerheads. Oh, yeah. Big time. Big time, because it's a lot easier to be angry
Starting point is 00:48:38 than to be afraid. And so when the shit hit the fan in my life, even though I had made a ridiculous number of mistakes, many of which I've been talking about with you, I reacted to this crisis in my life and my marriage and in our finances, like a lot of high functioning adults by screaming at my husband and drinking myself into the ground.
Starting point is 00:49:02 Like any respectful person would do. Why? Right. It was a low moment. Look, I think that you know when you hit rock bottom. You'll know when you hit rock bottom because you finally hit something solid within yourself. And what happened for me is I spent eight,
Starting point is 00:49:21 six months screaming at Chris and drinking like crazy. And it was a terrible period in our lives. Our kids even remember it. This is the part that sucks. They remember coming downstairs in the morning and I'm still asleep in the chair in the living room. They remember Chris being angry all the time. They remember sort of the standoff.
Starting point is 00:49:42 Like it's one thing to be roommates with your partner. It's another thing to be in a standoff, which Chris and I were. And, you know, it wasn't Chris's fault. This is the restaurant business. I mean, this is the risk of entrepreneurship. It's not like he went into business and was like, let's just fuck this up and go a million dollars.
Starting point is 00:50:00 That's not at all what happened. You know, you pick locations and some are great and some suck. And if you do that at the second location, you're gonna be in trouble with your business model. And what happened for Chris, and we're still unpacking this to this day, is that he, as the business started to fail,
Starting point is 00:50:19 started to marry that with his own identity and think that he was a failure. You talk about that in the new book and his self-identification with that failure being very personal, whereas his investors didn't see it that way. They realized this is a calculated risk. And you in turn,
Starting point is 00:50:38 seeing Chris through the lens of that failure, such that no matter what he did, whether he's mowing the lawn or taking the kids to the park or coaching a sports team was all indications of that failure as opposed to contributing to the family welfare. Right, I mean, it took a number of years. I mean, basically what ended up happening is,
Starting point is 00:51:03 as the liens were hitting the house and the bankruptcy letters were arriving and Chris was scrambling with his business partner to pull the business out of the wreckage, which by the way, they ultimately did and ended up selling off the units, not for great success, but they certainly did not provide the return on the investment that they had hoped,
Starting point is 00:51:25 but they mitigated a tremendous amount of loss and risk. And the thing that I think a lot about is that, you know, Chris's business partner has a way more optimistic what I call high five attitude. And he was able to separate his identity from what had happened in the business. And for whatever reason, Chris just couldn't. And so he left the business in 2014
Starting point is 00:51:49 and just really, really, it's been a long process for him to separate who he is from what happened in that business. So here you are, it's 2008, you're 800- I feel like I'm having a hot flash. 800 grand. Oh my God. Don't ghost me. Are you gonna get up and just leave?
Starting point is 00:52:09 Just walk out on me? I'm getting hot. Somebody bring me a fan. Come on. Okay, okay, here we go. It's all the lights. 800 grand in debt. Yes.
Starting point is 00:52:17 Now in retrospect, being this person who embodies self-empowerment, it's very easy and almost cavalier to say, things like this happen for a reason. They're happening for you, not to you. Julie would call it your divine moment, right? But when you're in that, it's like, you can't hear that. You don't wanna hear that.
Starting point is 00:52:40 You're like, fuck off. You don't understand my pain. I need a solution now. Yes, I agree. Look, when you like, here's the thing about mindset. A mindset will not change the shitty situation you're in. A positive mindset changes you, which changes your ability to deal with the shitty situation
Starting point is 00:53:01 that you're in. Well, this goes to so many of the things that you talk about and a subject matter that I love and the neuroscience proves this out, this idea of developing a bias towards action. You know, in AA, we call it mood follows action. The idea being that we're all victims of some level of analysis paralysis,
Starting point is 00:53:20 and we're waiting until we feel like doing something, or we are blessed with the spark of inspiration. But in truth, the only way to shift out of any of these kinds of scenarios is to take an action first, right? As hard as that is. And the emotions, the perceptions, all of that follows action, not the other way around.
Starting point is 00:53:45 100% true. So how I discovered this in my life is during this horrible period in life. So 2008, every morning I would wake up and I would immediately start spinning the negative thoughts. We're fucked, I hate my husband, how did we end up here? I can't believe I did that stupid ass show.
Starting point is 00:54:06 I've made so many mistakes. I should just flush my life. You know, the last 40 years down the toilet, you know, I'm so embarrassed. I'm the world's worst mother. I'd stare at the ceiling. I was like a human pot roast marinating in fear. And then of course the anxiety would wave up my body
Starting point is 00:54:21 and pin me down to that bed and I'd hit the snooze button. And I would hit the snooze button. And I would hit the snooze button four or five times a morning. By the time I woke up, the kids had missed the bus. So we got three kids under the age of 10. Chris was long gone because he's a very smart man. And he did not wanna be in the house when I was awake. And he was trying to fix the situation that they were in.
Starting point is 00:54:39 And I would literally scream at the kids, get them in the car. And from there the day was just horrible. And then every night I would do the same thing. I'd say, that's it. Tomorrow morning, it's gotta be the new me. Everybody that struggles with addiction does this exact same thing.
Starting point is 00:54:53 Tomorrow I'm not drinking, that's it. I'm done with this. And then the next morning, it's the same fucking pattern of negative crap that you're doing to yourself. And this is exactly what you talk about all the time. It's not the what you need about all the time. It's not the what you need to do, it's how. How do you make yourself do the things that feel hard or scary or
Starting point is 00:55:11 don't seem like they're going to work because you're resigned and you're stuck in your patterns? That was me. I knew I needed to get out of bed. I knew I needed to stop drinking. I knew I needed to look for a job. I knew this wasn't Chris's fault and I needed to stop screaming at him all the time, but I wasn't doing any of those things. I didn't know how. And so this was the moment I created the five second rule. And again, this is another I-beam or T-beam or whatever the hell beam it's called.
Starting point is 00:55:37 I'm sitting in front of the television and I am watching TV, the kids are in bed and I'm drinking bourbon and I'm probably on like my fourth Manhattan and I'm having my nightly pep talk and I'm going, that's it tomorrow morning, it's the new me, I gotta wake up, I gotta do this, I gotta do the other thing.
Starting point is 00:55:53 And all of a sudden Rich, honest to goodness, I see a rocket ship launch at the end of a commercial. And I go, that's it, tomorrow morning, I'm launching myself out of bed like a rocket. And that was the beginning of the five-second rule. What's so interesting about that are these, you talk about like hitting your bottom and this is a bottom for sure.
Starting point is 00:56:16 But in that kind of reckoning where the pain of your current circumstance exceeds the fear of doing something different, no matter how small that difference is, there's like a crack in the universe, like a little opening, right? Where you have just the slightest bit of willingness that you didn't have the day before.
Starting point is 00:56:37 And even the tiniest action, whether it's picking up the phone to make a call or counting back down from five, when you look back now, it's like, I did a couple little things that changed my life forever. This incident, you know, obviously changed your life forever. And it's kind of amazing in a beautiful mystical way how that occurs.
Starting point is 00:56:57 I think it occurs when you're ready. Wasn't yours a phone call? Yeah, I had a couple in my life. I mean, when I, you know, when I got sober, I hit a certain bottom and that was, you know, that was a phone call? Yeah, I had a couple in my life. I mean, when I got sober, I hit a certain bottom and that was a phone call to say, I'm ready, like, let's go to rehab. I had it again at 40 on a staircase, realizing I needed rehab for life or lifestyle.
Starting point is 00:57:19 But I look at those events as great blessings and things to be really revered. And when I talk about it, I'm always quick to remind people that I think we're all blessed with those moments in various shapes and forms, but we do have to be ready. And we also have to be aware
Starting point is 00:57:36 because when they're visited upon us, if we're not paying attention, they can quickly pass like sliding doors, right? And I often think how many other incidents like this have I allowed to slip by where if I had been more aware and present and perhaps in a position to be ready to receive them, my life could have changed in other ways that, you know, in some parallel universe,
Starting point is 00:58:00 I'd be living a different life. Well, let me tell you my intention for this conversation. That you listening to us have this podcast be that crack that lets some light in and becomes a sliding door that you might just see, oh, wow, maybe if that phone call I'm avoiding or counting backwards, five, four, three, two, one, or high-fiving myself in the mirror,
Starting point is 00:58:25 even though I don't think I deserve it. And I think it's stupid and I'm a failure. And why is this gonna help that you try it? Because I think that any, you can trace back again, back to our dots analogy. Any change in trajectory was just a moment. And for me, that moment was when the alarm went off, I just counted backwards like NASA launches a rocket,
Starting point is 00:58:50 five, four, three, two, one, and I stood up. And do you know what my first reaction to it was? This is fucking stupid. Correct. Resignation. Yeah. It was immediately like, okay, so you can get out of bed. So fucking what?
Starting point is 00:59:07 You're $800,000 in debt, Mel. How is this gonna help? And thankfully I thought, well, what the hell do I have to lose? Why not just for one day, anytime Mel, you know what you should do, but you don't feel like it. Or anytime your emotions start to hijack you or anytime you feel afraid or anxious or whatever,
Starting point is 00:59:28 why don't you just count backwards and see what happens? And that's what I did. And I haven't looked back. I think the power of it, cause it is like on some level, it really is fucking stupid. And when I first saw you on Facebook or whatever, before I knew you and I was like, who is this?
Starting point is 00:59:46 What is this? You can say the word, I don't care. I can take a break. I was like, come on, you know, this is a bunch of bullshit, right? Now I've gotten to know you, I adore you, I love you. I think you're brilliant and talented in so many ways, but it took me a minute to get my head around this thing.
Starting point is 01:00:03 But I think where I'm at now with it is that there's a certain genius in the simplicity and the low hanging fruit nature of it. Like I had to pick up a phone and make a very difficult phone call. That phone weighs a thousand pounds. That's a leap, right? But to say, well, I can count down from five to one, right?
Starting point is 01:00:30 I could do that at least. Like it's creating permission and a welcome mat and something that's so accessible for anybody, no matter how much pain they're in or whatever circumstances they might find themselves in. So whether it's counting down from five to one or giving yourself a high five in the mirror, it may seem like childish or silly,
Starting point is 01:00:52 but in truth, there's a neurochemical thing that takes place that sets in motion a chain of events that allow you to take that initial action. And that then puts you in a position to take further actions. And that's where the cascading effect happens and lives change. Well, you said it earlier.
Starting point is 01:01:12 So let me hit you with the science. Because the fact is I used it in secret for three years to five, four, three, two, one, pick up that phone that weighed a thousand pounds. And part of the genius of this is that when you start counting backwards, you've already committed to taking action. So the counting itself moves you from a bias towards thinking toward a bias toward action. And the more you repeat it, the more you break the pattern of thinking and you program in a pattern of taking small actions. It creates agile moves and agile
Starting point is 01:01:42 mindset. So that's one thing. The second thing that's crazy cool about this is that the reason why it's so fucking hard to change is because you talk about changing with the prefrontal cortex. You're conscious when you sit in your therapist chair or you're listening to me and Rich, and you're using this sort of strategic part of your brain. The second that you're in a situation where you're procrastinating or you're using this sort of strategic part of your brain. The second that you're in a situation where you're procrastinating or you're thinking negative thoughts, it's your subconscious that's in charge of you.
Starting point is 01:02:12 And so in order to change, you have to interrupt subconscious patterns. You see the five second rule isn't just some dumb counting backwards thing. It is a form of metacognition that interrupts the pattern stored in your subconscious brain. Counting backwards requires you to focus,
Starting point is 01:02:30 which flips on your prefrontal cortex. It gives you a moment of control over what you think and do next. That's the genius of it. And the reason why I'm so fucking passionate about this is not only because kids can use it and senior citizens can use it. You don't have to have any kind of education
Starting point is 01:02:48 or speak any kind of language. It works for anybody that uses it is because I am now standing with millions of people that have tried it. And we have pediatricians around the world that are using it to help kids interrupt thoughts that trigger anxiety, veterans organizations that are using 54321
Starting point is 01:03:07 to help reprogram responses to triggers. We had an entire wing of a Pennsylvania psychiatric inpatient nursing unit show up at the talk show to tell me that of all of the tools that they give people that have an inpatient commit, the single most positive and effective tool is the five second rule, because it is simple. You remember it and it immediately interrupts
Starting point is 01:03:33 the negative and suicidal ideations that torture people. And speaking of suicide, we know of 111 people who have stopped themselves from taking their lives by five, four, three, two, one, asking for help. So I am here to tell you, I don't give a fuck how stupid you think this is. I want you to try it. I want you to share it with people
Starting point is 01:03:55 because interrupting the patterns of thought and behavior that are holding you back and pushing yourself to take action or to think something different, it is the only way you're gonna change. And this is a tool that's gonna help you bridge that gap. Boom. I know. We just found the clip.
Starting point is 01:04:14 We could pull that clip. Whatever you want. Throw it up. Who would have thought? I didn't intend to do any of this. You're on the I-beam crawling from one thing to the next. Still. What's so funny is that you end up doing
Starting point is 01:04:24 this TEDx talk, right? And it was just sort of- Well, you know, that was a whole thing too. Like I didn't apply. How did that happen? Oh, you're gonna die when you hear this, you ready? So TEDx wasn't even a thing. This was like one of the first TEDx conferences.
Starting point is 01:04:38 So it's TEDx San Francisco. Hello, San Francisco, TEDx. And a friend of a friend of a friend is the person curating it. And they're looking for somebody that can talk about career change. Hello, Mel Robbins. Hi everybody, how are you?
Starting point is 01:04:56 The chameleon of careers. 50 careers. Yeah, 50 careers. And she's a talker. Now I had never given a formal speech on a stage. You know, people think just because you're a lawyer, somehow you're a public speaker, not true. In fact, there are a lot of people that practice law
Starting point is 01:05:10 that are introverted. I don't happen to be one of them, but I'd never given a speech. And so I get this email from this person asking if I'd be interested in giving a talk about career change for this thing called TEDx. They were offering two tickets to San Francisco and they were also gonna put us up in the St. Regis,
Starting point is 01:05:32 a hotel that was the nicest hotel I've ever stayed in. At this point, we still have $800,000 liens on our house and kids under the age of 14 were like, yes, a free vacation. So despite my fears of giving a speech, we go. There was very little training and I got on that stage and I literally had like a 21 minute long panic attack. If you look closely, you will see the chest rash
Starting point is 01:05:58 start to appear at about minute one. I'm darting all over the stage like a freak. Oh my God, blinding light. At one point I jump off it. That was not like planned. I just was trying to escape. And at the very end, Rich, I forgot how to end it. I wasn't supposed to talk about the five second rule
Starting point is 01:06:18 because at that point I still thought it was so dumb. Like, how am I gonna possibly explain? I didn't know any of the science. I'd been using it for three years. I knew it worked. And I look out there, I forget how I'm supposed to end this thing. And I go, oh, oh, wait, okay.
Starting point is 01:06:32 This is the last part, sorry. So one more thing that you can use. I call it the five second rule. I call it the five second rule. The moment you've got an instinct to act, you gotta move within five seconds or else your brain will kill it. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 01:06:44 I think I was so disassociated at that point. I even gave out my email address. So I leave. Did they edit it out? Because there's like 28 million views of this thing at this point. I know. So a year goes by, I literally leave.
Starting point is 01:06:59 The first thing I said to Chris backstage is, I'm never giving a speech again. That is the worst experience of my life. He's like, that was, it wasn't that bad. Don't worry. Like there's, you know, like there are only 500 people out there. A year goes by Rich, a year. And then somebody puts it all online. I don't even know it's online. Another year goes by and now it's got like a million views. And it's at this point I'm starting, I get my first email like, hey, I saw that thing you did for TEDx. I'm like, were you there? And they're like, no, it's online. I'm like, it's
Starting point is 01:07:28 online? I had no idea. So for a year, people asked me to come speak at their events. I didn't know normal people got paid. I thought you had to be a bestselling author like Rich Roll. I thought you had to have a podcast like Rich Roll. I thought you had to like be somebody like Rich Roll. I did not know that normal human beings, especially those of us that fall off I-beams or A-beams or whatever they're called as part of our success strategy got paid to do this. So I just happily speak for free at seven different events that year.
Starting point is 01:07:56 So now we're probably talking what, 2013? And somebody comes up to me and says, another, is it an A-beam or an I-beam? I-beam, I think. I-beam, okay. So another I-beam moment. She walks up to me and goes, oh my gosh, can I ask you a question?
Starting point is 01:08:12 I was a speaker at the event too, you were so great. I'm like, yeah, absolutely. And she said, did you get your check yet? And I said, check? You got paid for that? And she looked at me with horror and goes, you didn't. I just assumed you did. And I thought, I am a complete moron.
Starting point is 01:08:32 Like I didn't even occur to me to ask to get paid. And so I made myself this promise. This is genius. If you have no idea how to break into an industry, this is how you price yourself. I said, the next time somebody calls, this is what you're gonna do. You're gonna count backwards, five, four, three, two, one.
Starting point is 01:08:49 And you're gonna say, yes, I'm available. What's your budget? And then you're gonna count backwards, five, four, three, two, one, because it's really effective at putting yourself in pause and say, normally I'm double. I love that. I love the what's your budget
Starting point is 01:09:05 because you always want them to put the number out first and then you know what you're dealing with. And see at this point in my career, I was so just grateful and desperate. That's a terrible combination to be grateful and desperate. So grateful that anybody would hire me and so desperate for the money because dude, we still had liens on our house.
Starting point is 01:09:26 We were barely making the ends meet. In 2014, Chris was just leaving the restaurant business. He hadn't been paid in six months. So how do you go from having a panic attack on the TED stage, TEDx stage, to being this crazy in-demand speaker? I mean, first on a pure kind of like trajectory, but also on a skill level,
Starting point is 01:09:48 like how did you learn how to do it? Because for people that haven't seen Mel do her thing, I mean, you're masterful at this. I mean, nobody can command a stage the way that you do. And I was watching some of your stuff online earlier today, having my own panic attack because I gotta get on a plane tomorrow and go give two speeches out of town.
Starting point is 01:10:09 And I haven't done this in like two and a half years. And I think even on my best days, I'm like a B minus at this and I really wanna get good. And I've been trying to figure it out myself. And I realized there's so much to learn and so many things I don't know about how to do this. Well, I feel like I'm capable of it, but I've lacked like the guidance from other people
Starting point is 01:10:31 that kind of helped me figure it out. This is something I'm a genius at. And I had to get through tremendous fear to discover that I'm a genius at it. And so I want you listening to us to know that there is something that you are meant to be doing and it is your fear and your negative story and sort of the pain of going from being out of shape at something to getting into shape in something that is keeping you from tapping deep within you into that thing that you're meant to do. And what I'm meant to do is not be on stages.
Starting point is 01:11:09 I'm meant to move people. And what I mean by that is everything that I do has the intention to either move you into action or move your state of thinking or your state of emotion or emotional state. And so what happened for me is first of all, I was talking about something that I deeply believe in because as that TEDx talk started to gain momentum,
Starting point is 01:11:35 people started to write to me from around the world. I was literally spending three or four hours a night, Rich, writing emails back. Okay, well you can use it for procrastination like this. And then I started getting tons of questions about anxiety. So I would start picking up the phone or emailing experts to understand how to answer these questions. And I finally was, I became so masterful about the topic
Starting point is 01:11:58 and so passionate about it, not because of my experience, but because this stupid thing was working for people around the world. And now I had some of the leading experts in neuroscience and habit research and anxiety and pediatric medicine and oncology validating why it worked. And so now I'm like, oh, I need to tell people about this. And it was because of the impact it was making
Starting point is 01:12:25 in other real people's lives that emboldened me that I gotta get my ass on that stage and I gotta figure out, because here's the problem, right? I have the world's stupidest topic to talk about. Dumb. I am literally gonna get in a stadium in front of 25,000 people and for an hour. And tell them to count back from five.
Starting point is 01:12:48 And say, you could change your life in five seconds. Who the fuck is going to do that? I better show up and be so entertaining and so moving and so convincing and so just irrefutable that you not only believe me, you're fucking bawling at the end of that speech because you realize, holy fuck, I have missed so many five second moments. I have given up on myself. I have doubted myself.
Starting point is 01:13:16 I fucking hold myself back. I can't do this to myself anymore because it is true, Rich. Your whole life comes down to these five second windows, these moments of hesitation, these moments of opportunities where you either step forward, lean in, speak up, or you fucking lean back and you hold yourself back. Your marriage, your finances, your expertise, your business, it all comes down to how and who and what you do in this five second window. And I am here to tell you,
Starting point is 01:13:47 if you learn how to manage your response, what you think and what you do within this five second window, you can do or be anything. But most of us stop and hesitate and then the habit of doubting ourselves takes over. The habit of saying, I don't deserve that. The habit of you pulling away from what you want.
Starting point is 01:14:10 That is why I'm so passionate. And so in terms of how to be masterful at public speaking, start with the audience. What do you want them to feel? What do you want them to feel when you're done talking? Empowered. Yeah. Inspired.
Starting point is 01:14:33 Yeah. I want them to feel a sense of agency over their lives. I want them to feel like there's a path that is ready to unfold for them. And I wanna give them tools to begin that process. I would pick one tool. And I- See this is the thing that you're so good at.
Starting point is 01:14:55 I mean, for all of the things that you talk about, I think under appreciated or under discussed is this incredible skill that you have to communicate complex ideas clearly by distilling them down into very kind of, simplistic's the wrong word, but like elemental things. I like simplistic. Dude, I'm not a celebrity person at all.
Starting point is 01:15:19 I'm not a mass media person at all. I like the average person. The average person has a ton of shit going on and a lot that they're shouldering. It's why I wanted to do daytime talk because the person that's still watching daytime talk has very few resources and has been left behind by most media. But I love real people And you can only reach real people when you're having real conversations and you're discussing real problems.
Starting point is 01:15:49 And simplistic solutions are what work for complicated problems. Life's complicated enough, my God. If you can remember the tool, you'll fucking use it. Which brings us to the high five. Oh, this is even dumber than the five second rule. Staying on the theme of fives, right? How can I extend this thing?
Starting point is 01:16:12 Well, we should point out, so you end up writing this book, the five second rule that like blows up. Oh, that's an IB moment though. The book launch failed, dude. No, it didn't. Yes, it did. The story of the five second rule book, you guys.
Starting point is 01:16:26 So I self-published that book. Okay. Cause I just thought, okay, I want to own what I do because I'm a control freak. I want to own what I do. And I really care about this message and nobody's going to tell this the way that I want to tell it. So I self-published the book. I study all the bestselling authors to figure out how do you get on the lists? Because if you get on the list, then, you know, mass media will lists? Because if you get on the list, then mass media will pay attention and more people will get the book, whatever. No one told you that if you self-publish,
Starting point is 01:16:51 the lists are out the window? No. So I literally self-publish the book, not knowing. You will not make a single list. And not realizing there won't be a single bookstore that carry the book. So I put all my effort into marketing for this big book launch.
Starting point is 01:17:07 We're gonna sell as many books as possible so I can get on the list. And here's what happens. I do everything you're supposed to do. I have a puny ass newsletter list at that point, like 8,000 people or whatever. I am on like one podcast. I'm doing a couple speeches.
Starting point is 01:17:26 And on the day the book goes on sale, I pour all the energy at getting people to buy an Amazon. Within two hours, everybody's writing saying it's out of stock. And I'm thinking there's no way 20,000 books are out of stock. No way. I like, I don't have that many people
Starting point is 01:17:40 on the newsletter list. And my aunt Sally only bought four of them. So like, you know, there's no way there's 20,000. And this is what I know now. If Amazon has a product that is unknown and they get an unexpected surge, that's pretty consistent, they turn off inventory. Oh, I didn't know that.
Starting point is 01:17:59 Yes. Because they just assume it's fraud. Correct. And they also wanna make sure they can check with inventory to make sure the supply is okay before they say it's being shipped. So for the first- Deadly. Two weeks of my book launch,
Starting point is 01:18:14 as I am now exhausting everything that I've worked for six months to try to do, all the traffic that I'm sending to Amazon is going to a page that says out of stock. I am literally crying every day. Meanwhile, Tony Robbins has launched a book the same day. So every fucking where I go, his face is everywhere. He's in the front of every bookstore.
Starting point is 01:18:34 He's in every airport. I'm like, dear universe, why? I get asked every time I speak, are you Tony Robbins' wife? Because my last name is Robbins. I'm like, no, I'm Christopher Robbins' wife, which is actually my husband's name, is Robbins. I'm like, no, I'm Christopher Robbins' wife, which is actually my husband's name, Christopher Robbins. I literally thought, what have I done? Why me?
Starting point is 01:18:51 Why am I the bad news bears? Why do I always have to sneak in the back door? Why does nothing ever work out for me? Why do all these other people get to have it easy? Why are they all friends? Why do they support? Like, why, why, why, why, why, why? So I am literally licking my wounds thinking
Starting point is 01:19:06 that this is the worst thing that's ever happened. Meanwhile, I have completely forgotten that I also self-published the audio book. When people went, I didn't know this was happening, but about four weeks later, when I have just chalked up the book as a total failure, I get an email from Audible that says, "'Your monthly report is due."
Starting point is 01:19:28 And I literally fall out of my chair. It was six figures. Wow. So it just directed everybody to get the audio book. And this was at an inflection point for audio books. Audio books hadn't quite tipped over into being as mainstream as they are now, but that was a huge- 2017.
Starting point is 01:19:45 That was like right around the time where it started to become a thing. And Audible is owned by Amazon. So everything that happens on Audible impacts the Amazon algorithm. So all of a sudden the five second rule shot up. It was the number one audio book of the year in 2017. It was the number six most read book of the year on Amazon.
Starting point is 01:20:06 It has been translated into 36 languages in four years flat. It has sold millions of copies. And here's the most important thing I want you to hear. It has never made a bestsellers list. Right, it's so crazy how that works. But here's the thing I want you to understand. Your dreams have a purpose. I have always dreamt of being a New York Times bestselling author. Never have been. But here's the thing I want you to understand. Your dreams have a purpose.
Starting point is 01:20:26 I have always dreamt of being a New York Times bestselling author. Never have been. That dream has a purpose. And the purpose of that dream is to pull me through my bullshit and my fears and my anxiety and my sense of unworthiness to make me work for something.
Starting point is 01:20:39 But those dreams are not necessarily to be fulfilled. They are a vehicle that gets you moving. There is something so much better in store for you than that dream. There's something bigger. Because what happened to me is by not making that dream, I've learned an entirely new business model. I mean, I have a huge partnership with Audible now.
Starting point is 01:21:02 Right, you've done a ton of stuff with Audible. You're one of their leading partners in the whole sort of listening space altogether. Yep, I never would have known that. Had I achieved my dream of being a New York Times bestselling author, if I had had a successful traditional book launch, I never would be where I am right now.
Starting point is 01:21:20 Yeah, there's no way. No way. It would have satisfied your ego temporarily for the two weeks or whatever that it was on the list. And then after that, all the rest, first of all, you wouldn't have sold that many audio books because the book would have been available. And you definitely would not have made the cake
Starting point is 01:21:37 that would have all gone to the publisher, which is insane because I'm sure you just printed money off of the audio book. So self-publishing looking pretty good now. Oh, extraordinarily. Yeah, unbelievable. But so here's the other thing that that taught me. It's what gave me that sort of high five attitude,
Starting point is 01:21:54 this mantra. And the mantra, because as I was schlepping through airports and the book is out of stock and Tony Robbins' face is everywhere and I'm thinking I'm the world's biggest failure. I kept saying this to myself on repeat. There is no way, Mel, if you've worked this hard that you will not be rewarded.
Starting point is 01:22:13 You have to believe that this moment is preparing you for something amazing that hasn't happened yet. Keep going. You have to believe that this moment is preparing you for something amazing that hasn't happened yet. Keep going. You have to believe that this moment is preparing you for something amazing that hasn't happened yet. Keep going. And so I repeated that over and over and over and over and over again,
Starting point is 01:22:34 as I wanted to throw in the towel, as I would start to bash myself, as I would start to feel sorry for myself and be like, no, there's just no way I'm gonna believe that something amazing isn't gonna happen. I've worked too hard. Something amazing that hasn't happened is coming. And when you get yourself into that mindset,
Starting point is 01:22:53 it creates a sense of resilience and momentum and resolve that you need in order to keep going when the shit hits the fan or when you feel disappointed or when life is beating you down. And that was the other gift of that moment is developing a little tool to flip my mindset when I wanted to start to feel sorry for myself. Throw the timeline out,
Starting point is 01:23:19 divorce yourself from expectations, double down on that belief and maintain your like adherence to just moving forward and action. Yeah. So much easier to say than to do. That's why I focus on tools because we all know what to do.
Starting point is 01:23:38 It's the how. Yeah, I think when we start to talk about the self, the quote unquote, like self-help or self-improvement space, you start to hear words like, you know, motivation and inspiration and how do I find my purpose? And we need to be living with passion. And I just think for the most part,
Starting point is 01:24:02 it does more harm than good in the sense that it confuses people. And I think it makes people feel bad about where they are in the moment, because it often lacks any kind of practicality. Like it's sort of a measuring tool, like, oh, I don't have passion or I don't know what my purpose is. Like I must not have self worth.
Starting point is 01:24:25 All these other people seem all fired up and excited. And here I am little me over here. And I'm like, you become a shrinking flower. And so I think the vernacular around it, like I want you, I'm saying this because I want you to help me make sense of it for the person who's listening or watching, who is in that place, who's struggling with the idea of how to move forward
Starting point is 01:24:47 and how to make sense of the idea of self-empowerment and self-improvement. Yeah, so that brings us to the high five habit, which is gonna sound so stupid. More stupid. You know, this is my brand I've come to realize. I know, yeah. If it sounds stupid and it's backed by science,
Starting point is 01:25:09 it's something Mel Robbins wants to talk about. So the high five habit is for all of us, but particularly if you're somebody that feels stuck or you're easily tripped up or brought down by jealousy or guilt or procrastination or beating yourself up or comparison. And you know, honestly, if you're breathing, that's you. Who isn't?
Starting point is 01:25:33 Yeah. This is an idea that once I unpack it for you, you're gonna literally go, holy shit. In a good way? Yes. All right, lay it on me. So we all know that we need to love ourselves, right? How do you do that?
Starting point is 01:25:57 I don't know. What is the action that you take? Yeah, we all know we're supposed to accept ourselves. We all know we're supposed to have self-esteem and self-worth and self-validation and self-confidence. How do you build it? And the other thing is that we also are looking outside ourselves for confirmation, validation,
Starting point is 01:26:22 affirmation of those things. And so how do you relocate the source of your self-confidence, self-esteem, self-worth, self-validation within yourself so that you're in control of it? Big idea, right? So let me tell you the story about how I discovered this, because it was not like a,
Starting point is 01:26:41 oh, how do I have another high five moment? I get fired from my talk show and I am essentially fired from my dream job. I then start having speech after speech, after speech, after speech cancel. Then Houghton Mifflin cancels my contract for my next book and asks for me to return money that I've long spent. Why'd they cancel it? Because- Just because of pandemic related-
Starting point is 01:27:09 There are two reasons. First of all, they were laying off 45% of the staff, but more importantly, let me take responsibility. I was a year late on delivering a manuscript. Okay, let's be honest. I fucked up yet again. I ghosted my publisher and they fired my ass, as they should.
Starting point is 01:27:23 It's a long play to ghost your publisher, right? I'm gonna spend your money and then ghost you. But I found myself again in this like familiar place having sort of echoes back to a decade ago of, oh my God, are we in financial free fall again? Like, is this ride over? Kids come home. I mean, you did like a hundred speeches in a year
Starting point is 01:27:47 or prior to that or prior to the show. And then took a pay cut to do the show. Yep. And look, I've been saving money. I've been very smart about money now that I've made it. We've paid back all of our debt, something we're both really, really proud of. And at the same time, when the shit hits a fan in your life,
Starting point is 01:28:05 your old things will get triggered. And what got triggered for me is I'm about to lose it all again. Meanwhile, just like everybody else on the planet, your kids come home and it's both a blessing and a horror show to have your children in a state of distress as the world is in distress. And I just started to feel overwhelmed.
Starting point is 01:28:22 And there was this one morning where I walked into the bathroom and I was standing in my underwear, brushing my teeth in front of the mirror. And I looked up at the mirror and my first thought was, ugh. I noticed that my jowls were starting to look like saddlebags on a pack horse at the Grand Canyon. And I had like these crazy lines by my eyes
Starting point is 01:28:52 and my neck was really like kind of saggy and one boob was hanging lower than the other. And my gray hair was coming in. And as soon as I started kind of critiquing my thoughts or my looks and appearance, then my mind Rich started going, fuck, I didn't get that email back to that person. And I got that presentation I need to do.
Starting point is 01:29:15 And my God, did that speech just cancel again? What the fuck am I gonna do? And I looked down and the dog needs to be walked. And then I think I got a Zoom call in nine minutes. Like I gotta get my shit together. And before I knew it, my whole mood was low. I felt overwhelmed. I had taken myself down mentally.
Starting point is 01:29:32 I just wanted somebody to walk in and be like, Mel, it's gonna be okay. Like you got this girl, like it's lift your head up. You can handle this. I don't know what came over me, Rich. This is pathetic. But standing there in my underwear, in front of my bathroom sink,
Starting point is 01:29:51 I raised my hand and high-fived my reflection. And I cracked a smile, because it's so fucking corny. I even thought of that guy, Stuart Smiley, from the SNL skits. Remember that I'm nice, I'm kind, people like me. Went on with my day. That was it.
Starting point is 01:30:11 Snapped a photo though. No, not that one. Not that one. Not the first time. And then I kept doing it. I did it probably for a week or two. And here's the weird thing about it. I started when I woke up after doing this high five,
Starting point is 01:30:26 your own reflection in the mirror thing, I actually started to feel like I was looking forward to it. And here's why, you know, I've spent a lifetime just like you standing in front of the mirror. And what I realize now is that when I'm standing in front of a mirror, I'm either critiquing or picking myself apart, or I'm ignoring myself. And when you start to high five your own reflection,
Starting point is 01:30:50 it starts to build a partnership within you with yourself. When you walk into the bathroom and you see your reflection and you've been greeting it, it's like seeing another person. It's the strangest thing. You start to realize how often you fucking ignore or destroy yourself when you see yourself or beat yourself up.
Starting point is 01:31:11 And here's what's also crazy. You have a lifetime, and this is where the science gets wacky, and I'm gonna hit you with so much science because this stuff is so cool. You have a lifetime positive association with high-fiving other people. Sure.
Starting point is 01:31:28 As a runner, as a racer, you have gotten so many high fives, Rich, what does a high five say to you when somebody gives you one? You feel seen, you feel appreciated, you feel energized by it. And it's an exchange of energy. It's not the same, and you talk about this in the book,
Starting point is 01:31:46 it's not the same as like self-talk because there's a participation involved in it. There's like a communion aspect to it. Yeah, and if you think about it, you're so good at celebrating, seeing and cheering for other people in your life. You plan birthday parties, you reach out to people when you're worried about them,
Starting point is 01:32:06 you help out colleagues, you cheer for your favorite sports teams, you high five people like Rich as they're running races past you, you buy people's merchandise, you do all kinds of stuff for other people, but nobody's taught you how to do it for yourself. In fact, the reason why it feels fucking weird
Starting point is 01:32:24 to high five your own reflection is because you've been taught to do the opposite. Why is the default to just beat ourselves down like that? I mean, it is crazy. We would never treat anyone else in our lives, especially the people we care about, the way that we treat ourselves in terms of the self-talk or the narrative or the critique
Starting point is 01:32:43 or the kind of harshness with which we, you know, judge our appearances, our behavior, the way we think back on things that we said the other day and just are horrified by our own selves. And it's, I don't know if it's everybody, but it's most people. Except for Buddhists. I mean, I think that they're like,
Starting point is 01:33:04 like if you're a big practicing Buddhist, that's a monk. Right. That's like just kind of- Why can't the default be the good things though? Well, I- Why is it wired that way? You know why? There's cognitive bias.
Starting point is 01:33:15 There's a bias towards negativity. And it's a protection mechanism that's a default from evolution. That if you remember the bad shit, you're more likely to spot it when it happens in the future. So you can avoid it. And here's where I think it begins.
Starting point is 01:33:27 I believe my theory is that it begins two places. Either you, or that could be both actually, you either learned the pattern of beating yourself up because you had parents or caregivers that were hard on themselves or hard on you. And so as a child, you absorb that pattern and you now repeat it and you don't even realize it. So those moments you're like, oh my God,
Starting point is 01:33:49 I sound just like my dad or my mom. That is an example of a pattern that you've absorbed. So particularly for women, we've watched our mothers be critical about their appearance. We've watched our mothers ignore and criticize themselves in the mirror. And so we learn that from our caregivers.
Starting point is 01:34:06 So that's one place. The second place that we learn it is when the drive in your life becomes fitting in. Fitting into groups in elementary, middle, high school, college, your neighborhood, that feels safe when you fit in. When you feel like you don't belong, you immediately go into a protection mechanism.
Starting point is 01:34:27 And I believe a lot of the negative self-talk is a sorting hat type of mentality that we do to ourselves going, I can't be with those people. I can't be with those people. It's safe to be with those people. And you start to see yourself and the world around you as places where you belong and places where you don't.
Starting point is 01:34:44 And part of the criticism as fucked up as it sounds that we engage in all the time is don't be too big, don't be too loud, don't show yourself too much, don't have blue hair, don't do this, other people won't like you. It starts as a way to protect yourself from being rejected. But the truth is you develop a habit of fucking rejecting yourself.
Starting point is 01:35:05 Right, meanwhile, you're further divorcing yourself from who you truly are because you're not giving yourself permission to be yourself. That gets sublimated in favor of fitting in and accommodating other people and acclimating your behavior around what will be approved of. Yes, so for me, I have clearly a lifetime of beating myself up and tearing myself down
Starting point is 01:35:32 and regretting decisions that I made and in the middle of stumbling through life, instead of being like, it's gonna be okay, it's gonna be okay, being like, you're really fucked up now, Mel. How does that help? How does criticizing and being hard on yourself help? You know, what's interesting is I even think of somebody
Starting point is 01:35:48 like David Goggins, right? Everybody looks at him and can't hurt me. Tough, tough, tough, tough, mentally tough. His single biggest mindset trick is the cookie jar. It's reaching into your mind to find a positive thing that's worth fighting through the bullshit for. It still comes down to encouragement and support and something positive.
Starting point is 01:36:09 And so to me, the coolest thing about the high five is this. First of all, I am demanding that you try it, especially if you think it's stupid as hell. I want you to stand in front of the mirror, number one, because research out of Harvard says taking a moment of reflection with yourself in the morning and setting an intention changes your productivity, it changes your neurochemistry, it changes how you show up for the day, it changes everything.
Starting point is 01:36:36 That's number one. Number two, you have a lifetime of looking at yourself in the mirror and seeing what you hate. I want to change that. When you raise your hand and high five your own reflection, because you have been raising your hand and high fiving other people for your entire life, it is already programmed into your subconscious. All of that shit that's positive, I believe in you, we got this, come on, shake it off. Let's get going.
Starting point is 01:37:03 Here we go. I see you, I hear you, I celebrate you. All that stuff you've been doing for other people, when you raise that hand, the subconscious part of your brain kicks in and it overrides all of the negative stuff you think. You cannot stand in front of that mirror, Rich, and go, God, I look fat and high five yourself.
Starting point is 01:37:20 It's impossible. Your brain can't do it. Right. You also can't think about work emails. You also can't think about work emails. You also can't think about what's stressing you out. And here's the thing that I also love about it. So this is a field of study called neurobics. You're marrying physical movement with a change in thought.
Starting point is 01:37:38 The other thing that I- It's like neurology aerobics. It is. Basically. It's exactly what it is. I found that part of the book fascinating. Yeah, I mean, I think, look, you're taking this very simple action that we all associate with positive things.
Starting point is 01:37:51 It's backed up by, you know, the neurochemistry with this mirror work, which has a tradition in psychology, in the field of like cultivating self-love. It's not like the idea of looking in the mirror and doing the Stuart Smalley thing. Like there's science and research behind this to cultivate appreciation for the self.
Starting point is 01:38:14 Yes, and so there's even more here. So the other stuff that's super cool about this is that we've all bought into this lie that somehow beating yourself up and tough love and being hard on yourself is motivating. Wrong. All the research shows that it is demotivating. If you're somebody that's stuck,
Starting point is 01:38:32 if you're somebody that has regrets, if you're somebody that is tired of where you are, if you feel like you just, why can't I change? Beating yourself up is making it worse. You have to learn how to cheer for yourself where you are. Because if you're not, you will never find the motivation to change. So they did this study with kids
Starting point is 01:38:57 where they broke kids into three different groups, okay? And they gave the kids very challenging problems. And they wanted to know what was going to be the thing that researchers could do to motivate and inspire kids to work through a challenging problem. And what is gonna be the most effective thing that we could do to give somebody that boost that you need to really face something that's hard.
Starting point is 01:39:21 So group number one got the old fixed mindset praise where it's like, hey, you're super smart, Rich. Hey, Rich, you're really good looking in those glasses and I bet they help you make you focus on this problem. Keep going, buddy. The second group got the fixed mindset praise, which is, hey, Rich, you're really, really working hard. Rich, that perseverance is amazing, keep going.
Starting point is 01:39:40 The third group, they got a simple high five. No words, just a high five. The group with the simple high five outperformed the other two group and then some. That's so crazy. Why? Why? I'll tell you why. A high five is fulfilling your fundamental emotional needs. It's not about the problem.
Starting point is 01:40:03 When you high five somebody, including yourself, you are affirming that somebody exists. You are saying, I see you, and you're celebrating with them. You know how those things go viral all year long of teachers standing outside their classroom doing individual handshakes with kids? It's the same thing.
Starting point is 01:40:24 Every one of those kids is being seen as an individual and celebrated. There's also that study of the NBA teams, right? Where they basically looked at how many high fives all the teams were doling out. Backslaps, fist bumps, yeah, touching. And the teams that were giving out how many high fives all the teams were doling out. Backslaps, fist bumps, yeah, touching. And the teams that were giving out the most high fives were the highest performing teams.
Starting point is 01:40:51 Yes, and the teams- That's crazy. The teams that had the least amount of contact like that, of fist bumps and high fives and back taps, performed the worst. Why? Because you're building trust with whomever you're high fiving.
Starting point is 01:41:04 You see, when you stand in front of the mirror and instead of going, God, my jowls look like saddlebags and I'm fucked today because my to-do list is so long and I shouldn't have had that. That sets your mind and your day on a certain course. When you walk into the bathroom and you habit stack this simple high five, along with brushing your teeth,
Starting point is 01:41:25 you are starting your day by fulfilling your most important needs. You see yourself, you affirm yourself, you celebrate yourself. And for those of you that feel stuck, part of your problem is you are withholding that shit from yourself until you get to the number of the scale, until you get that job, until you do the thing you're supposed to do. And what you are doing is backwards. You need support, celebration, and acknowledgement now in order to hit that number on the scale. You see, most of us believe we're not worthy of celebration
Starting point is 01:42:00 until we achieve something. And I'm here to tell you, if you start celebrating, supporting yourself as you are every single day, it will become a part of who you are, which empowers and equips you to face the shitty things. And more importantly, empowers and equips you to do the things that scare you that you need to do. Yeah, I mean, it's, you know,
Starting point is 01:42:24 I'm somebody who always, you know, rooted validation or associated love with achievement. If I achieve enough, you know, then I will be worthy of that love. And the idea of self-love is so foreign to me. The practice of cultivating that in a manner that's divorced from whether I'm doing anything worthy of it or not feels so strange, but it is true.
Starting point is 01:42:49 We are in an epidemic of lack of self-love, right? And there's a discomfort with like, it doesn't feel like I need to earn the right to even practice that for myself. Yes, well, let's go back to my husband, Chris. So Chris is an extraordinary human being. We're gonna celebrate our 25th wedding anniversary, gosh, in just a couple of days.
Starting point is 01:43:12 And I have watched, I've had a front row seat to watching somebody who I think is the most incredible human being on the planet, the world's best dad, an incredible provider, destroy himself because of one failure, a dumb restaurant business. He would tell you that for years, he could not look himself in the eye in the mirror
Starting point is 01:43:39 and see somebody that was worth celebrating because he was convinced that that failure made him a failure. And it wasn't, and he found, you know, his path through meditation, through yoga, he through therapy, he has started a men's retreat called soul degree, but it is also now, and oh, and through loving kindness meditation,
Starting point is 01:44:03 but he has been practicing the high five. And what he first said is it was almost impossible to do it because I still in some part of me feel like I'm supposed to have earned it or it's supposed to come from somebody else. It doesn't feel comfortable giving it to myself. And to me, that's honest. I think that's what most people feel,
Starting point is 01:44:30 but it's also fucking sad. Like imagine if somebody that you loved or one of your kids felt that way about themselves. Yeah. I mean, you have people in your life that aren't perfect, that fuck up all the time, that are struggling, and you still believe they're worthy of celebration and worthy of support,
Starting point is 01:44:51 but we can't see it within ourselves. And so I'm on a mission to get people to understand that it's only through small habits of support, celebration, and love that you will achieve the happiness, the peace, the healing, the success, the fulfillment that you're seeking. You can't withhold that shit from yourself. And if you think about it,
Starting point is 01:45:17 I mean, the journey towards loving yourself, could there be a more valid, important thing for you to do because the ripple effects of that journey, you know, find their way into every single thing that you do. Well, that's what I say that this book is about. It's about improving the most important relationship that you have in the world.
Starting point is 01:45:39 And it's the one that you have with yourself. Yeah, I mean, the high five in the mirror is like a Trojan horse. Totally. To getting deeper into the idea of figuring out how to with yourself. Yeah, I mean, the high five in the mirror is like a Trojan horse. Totally. To getting deeper into the idea of figuring out how to love yourself. Yes. And to me, loving yourself is about fulfilling
Starting point is 01:45:57 your most essential needs for yourself. That's what it's about. It's knowing how to soothe your nervous system when you're scared. It's about encouraging and supporting yourself. It's about recognizing when guilt and jealousy and insecurity and people pleasing start taking you mentally down
Starting point is 01:46:19 and knowing how to flip yourself back into a state of empowering and encouraging yourself, no matter what. That's what this book is about. Yeah. I know you're all about the simple practical tools, but I have to tell you that my favorite part of the book Yeah, oh God. is, you know, you take kind of a left turn
Starting point is 01:46:41 in the later chapters of this book and you go down this metaphysical rabbit hole, which I found to be like, I love that stuff. So the story of the painting at the mill, the Vermont painting and the journey there, like I just thought that was really beautiful. Yeah, and I'm also interested in like, it feels like I know why you put it in the book,
Starting point is 01:47:06 but it also feels like tonally a little bit different from everything else in the book. But I see this as, you know, when I think of your husband and I think of you and there's a ying and a yang there, I see you moving more into, you know, Christopher Robin's land with this story, right? Well- A little bit. Yeah, and I guess here's why.
Starting point is 01:47:26 There's levels to fulfillment and to discovering what's meant for you. And the first level is clearing away the surface level bullshit that is dragging you down. The bias towards thinking, the negative thoughts, the habits of comparison and jealousy and people pleasing and all that stuff. And then there's another layer. And the second layer is something that the folks
Starting point is 01:47:59 that follow me, because what happened is I, after about a week or so, I just put up a photo of myself, a really kind of not so attractive one online on my story. And immediately people from all walks of life and ages and stuff started- Once again, you're creating a movement. Yeah, and I'm like, okay, there's something here. And so then I dug in and did a research project
Starting point is 01:48:20 for almost a year trying to figure out why something so simple is universally working. And one of the things that people started to report back made me super sad. And it's what my husband was struggling with after the restaurant failed. And that is that there's this deep sense for so many people that they are unworthy of love, like at your core for simply existing, that you're not worthy of love unless you're doing something that's worthy of love. And there were so many people that wrote to us
Starting point is 01:48:58 as we were kind of researching this saying, I'm sitting here trying to raise my hand and I'm just crying because I'm realizing how often in my life I have not cheered for myself. I have not truly supported myself. I have not even wanted to look in the mirror. I'm so disgusted by myself. Stories about whether it was failure or abuse or trauma
Starting point is 01:49:22 that somehow that experience has just scarred me in a way that makes me unworthy of being lovable. And so, you know, when people, sorry, you know, a woman writing about how she's had dysmorphia for 20 years and like couldn't look at herself in the mirror. And her writing and saying, after just doing this for five days,
Starting point is 01:49:53 she can look at herself in the mirror and actually smile. And just story after story after story of real people like you and me who are so disconnected from themselves and from their worth that just standing for a moment with themselves in the mirror and doing something that's affirming is bringing up so much stuff.
Starting point is 01:50:26 And we have a daughter that really is struggling right now with her health and her wage, really unhappy. And it's, we've all had the experience of having somebody that we love who's deeply in pain. And you can do everything in the world. You can say positive things, you can offer up support, but the truth is the only person that can help you is you. And to know that there are so many people
Starting point is 01:50:58 that stare at themselves in the mirror and are disgusted or judgmental, and that this small shift changes something profound. I mean, it's just extraordinary. And that's where it begins. And so I kind of lost my train of thought. No, I mean, just the idea that there are so many people who can't even look in the mirror and say something nice to themselves.
Starting point is 01:51:31 I think that's a lot of people, a lot of people. Everything changes when you start doing it. And it has this massive snowball effect because when you feel seen and you feel slightly empowered, you might just make a different choice at lunch. You might show up differently at work. You might express your boundary this afternoon. You might go out for that run
Starting point is 01:51:59 because you feel a little bit more empowered and emboldened. And so, you know, we talked earlier about this sort of crack that can happen and a little light comes in. And there is no doubt in my mind that this is hitting at a much deeper level for people. And so when you can wipe away that second level and start to treat yourself as if you're worthy. You see all these things that
Starting point is 01:52:27 we're seeking outside of ourselves, self-worth, self-esteem, self-confidence, self-love. We're looking all around at likes and followers and the number in your bank account and the number on the scale and the car you drive. All those things begin by giving them to yourself. And so when you start to do that, you know, I spoke earlier about how this is creating a partnership within you. When you start to give those things that you desperately need,
Starting point is 01:53:02 something else magical happens. You start to have the ability to turn down the noise around you, which only turns up the signals within you and the voice within you. The criticism is so loud. When you can turn that down, you hear something else. What you start to hear is your hopes, your dreams, the things you're drawn toward, your curiosity, those things that you're not giving yourself permission to lean into because you don't think you're worthy. Fuck, you won't even look at yourself in the mirror. So how the hell are you gonna listen to your intuition?
Starting point is 01:53:40 And that's what this reading story is about. Your intuition is gonna lead you astray until you're able to reckon with all of that stuff so that you can get at the purity of what your soul is actually trying to communicate with you. And that's what that painting story is about. It's about what happens when you are able
Starting point is 01:53:57 to just give yourself permission to want the things that you want. And unless you believe that you're worthy, unless that you practice love, you're never gonna think that you deserve the things that you want. Right, so tell the story. Okay, so I'm probably gonna sob hysterically.
Starting point is 01:54:19 I'll shorten it, I'll shorten it. So the bottom line is that, so in 1990, I was a senior in college at Dartmouth and my parents came to visit from Western Michigan. And we went to this place called Simon Pierce, which is a famous glass blowing mill. And as we walked into the restaurant, I had an experience that you may be able to relate to.
Starting point is 01:54:42 And that is I walked in and I immediately saw this painting hanging on the wall. And it was about the size of a door, only horizontal. And it was a Vermont landscape. And I was drawn into it immediately. Like I was no longer in that restaurant. I was standing in that field. I could feel that breeze. I'd never ever had an experience like that with a painting.
Starting point is 01:55:03 Have you ever had an experience like that with art? No, I mean, not like that. Not like that. I mean, yeah, my sense was that this is very atypical for you. Very. So I kind of lost it. The restaurant was quiet and then I leaned back
Starting point is 01:55:19 and suddenly kind of back in the moment, I'm like, I'm gonna own this painting someday. It just, that was what was right there. And I looked at the price and it said like $3,000, I'm like, I'm gonna own this painting someday. It just, that was what was right there. And I looked at the price and it said like $3,000. I'm like, not today. And I went back and I sat down and that was it. But the painting never left my mind. You see, there's something called the Zeiginarch effect.
Starting point is 01:55:36 I always say it wrong, but it's like, there's a checklist in your brain that when you have a moment where you're like, this is important, your brain puts it on a checklist. Yeah, there's like a notch. Yes, a notch happens. And now your brain as part of the filter in the brain is always gonna be kind of scanning the subconscious
Starting point is 01:55:56 to let anything into your mind related to that incident. It can be positive by the way, like with the painting, or this is how trauma happens too. Like you have this high intensity emotional experience that notches something in your brain and now your brain kicks in to remember. So bottom line is, I always thought about that painting. Years go by.
Starting point is 01:56:20 Whenever somebody would say Vermont, I'd think of the painting. I don't know why, I can't explain it. Never wanted a painting before, was not an art student. It's going to law school. It's not like you're out collecting art. No, no, no, no. And so I, you know, fast forward the story 10 years
Starting point is 01:56:35 and my, Chris and I are engaged and we're gonna go up to Vermont to see the leaves. And immediately I'm like, we gotta go to Simon Pierce. I gotta show you the painting. So we pull up to the to see the leaves. And immediately I'm like, we gotta go to Simon Pierce. I gotta show you the painting. So we pull up to the mill and we walk in and right in front there is boom, a painting by the same artist, Gail Shepherd. And I'm like, oh my God, it's here.
Starting point is 01:56:53 And we race all around the place and it's gone. And the funny thing was, and this is the way your brain works, Chris was more disappointed than I was. I literally turned to him and said, it's okay, dude. Like it'd be weird if we're still here after 10 years. I'm gonna track this thing down. I actually said to him, you know what's gonna happen, Chris?
Starting point is 01:57:12 I'm gonna be able to buy this like 40 years from now. It's gonna be hanging in the corporate lobby of some fucking building. And I'm gonna have to track down the owner and pay like quadruple the money they paid. But I'm gonna own this damn thing. You have a mission now though. I have a mission, yes.
Starting point is 01:57:29 So a couple of years pass and it's my birthday. I think I was turning 30 and Chris says, Chris gets a couple of people to give money. And he said, I could buy anything I wanted with it. So I had what, 500 bucks. Now I'm pregnant at the time with our first kid. I should have bought a crib or stools, but for whatever reason, the Zygunarch effect takes over. And I'm like the painting.
Starting point is 01:57:46 So I call the mill and I get this guy on the phone. I'm like, I wanna buy a kale shepherd piece. And I said, could you send me Polaroids? And he's like, sure. And I tell him the budget and he goes, I'll send you Polaroids of some of her smaller things. She's like blowing up in the meantime, right? Yeah, she's a very, very successful
Starting point is 01:58:07 Vermont landscape artist. And so I say to him, by the way, there's this one painting. And I describe the painting I'd seen over 10 years ago. And he said, well, that was way before my time, but I bet Gail will know. And I'm like, Gail, you know Gail? He's like, of course I know Gail.
Starting point is 01:58:28 She like lives in down the road. Here's her number. So for two days, I paced around the apartment with 500 bucks in my pocket, driving Chris crazy. Cause I felt like, what am I gonna say to her? And I must be a weirdo. I've been stalking this lady. I've been thinking about her for 10 years. I can't afford a painting.
Starting point is 01:58:43 You know, who am I to buy a painting? Like what the hell? So finally, Chris is like, would you fucking call her? I'm gonna call her, you're driving me crazy. So I call her and I start talking a mile a minute and she was amazing. And then I said, by the way, there is this one painting. And I go and I explain this painting.
Starting point is 01:59:02 There's a stand of poplar trees down the center and a big mountain scape behind it and this beautiful blue Vermont sky and geese flying in formation overhead. And I could hear her thinking on the other end of the line. And she said, you know, Mel, I've done so many large scale paintings over the years. I'd hate to mistake the one you're talking about.
Starting point is 01:59:25 But I'll tell you what, what if my husband and I meet you and Chris at the mill at Simon Pierce and we'll walk all around and have lunch and I'll tell you the stories behind every painting. And if you don't see what you like there, I'll take you back to my studio, which is a couple of miles down the river.
Starting point is 01:59:41 And you can look at everything I'm working on. And if you don't see anything you like there, then you can go through all my slides and see if you can find that painting that you saw 10 years ago. And I said, deal. So a month passes, we go up to the mill. I walk in, we meet each other.
Starting point is 01:59:55 She's amazing. She's like twice our age, just incredibly cool lady. She's walking around as we're walking around looking at these paintings, Rich, I've got, I'm like eight months pregnant. I'm realizing these are 10 times the amount of money that I have. I can't afford this.
Starting point is 02:00:13 Like I don't have this kind of money. And I'm getting like more and more into that imposter syndrome. What am I doing mode? Oh my God, I'm so embarrassed. I'm meeting somebody I idolize. I don't deserve to be here. Right, wasting her time
Starting point is 02:00:28 because she thinks she's gonna get a payday out of this. Correct. We sit down and she goes, now that you're sitting down, I have something to tell you. She said, there's only been two times in my career as an artist that I've done two studies of the same piece. And your painting is one of them.
Starting point is 02:00:52 It's one of a pair. She knew all along. She knew all along. She was playing games with you about not knowing which painting. Yeah, and she said, the sister piece to the one that you saw all those years ago is sitting in my studio right now,
Starting point is 02:01:08 where it's been for the past 11 years. I start sobbing, everybody's like totally emotional. Her husband's like, you should have seen her when she was on the phone with you, it was like she saw a ghost. So we get in the car and we drive to the mill. And when we walk in there in the center of this massive kind of barn studio space
Starting point is 02:01:29 is an easel with a painting taped up with painter's tape on it. And it was the sister to my painting. There were slight differences, not as much movement in the grass, but it was one of the most extraordinary experiences of my life. It was as if time suspended.
Starting point is 02:01:49 And I was standing before that painting in 1990, saying it would be mine. And there I was 11 years later, standing in front of it. And then I realized, oh my God, I can't fucking afford this. And Chris walks over and he's like, what's wrong? And I'm like, just promise me someday, like promise me that I don't need a jewelry. I don't need a car.
Starting point is 02:02:13 Like, just promise me you will buy me this thing. And he kind of leans over and goes, hey, Gail, how much for the big one? And she said, Mel can have it for 500 bucks. Cause clearly when I was making it 11 years ago, I was making it for her. Yeah. And so it hangs in my kitchen.
Starting point is 02:02:36 It's on the back of the book. This is the galley though, right? So wait, is it in the- I think so, yeah. Yeah. And it's a reminder every day that your mind is designed to help you get what you want. I never stopped believing that I could make it happen.
Starting point is 02:02:55 And when you tell your mind what's important to you, there is extraordinary science that proves that your mind has a live and ever changing filter, a live network that changes how it views the world, what it lets in, what it blocks out. And if you program your mind correctly, and if you're clear about what you wanna create,
Starting point is 02:03:21 your mind will help you get what you want. It's such a beautiful story, but I also think it's more than that because there's this quantum metaphysical piece to it because it's not just you with that notch and the Zeigarnik effect, it's also Gail. And the intention that she put into that painting and whatever was going on with her deep down this knowingness that it was meant for you.
Starting point is 02:03:51 And it took however long it took for those eye beams to swing and sync up so that that union could take place. Correct. But what I make of this, and I'm interested in hearing a little bit more, hearing what you think, but like there's just more going on. Yes, always. Than we're able to perceive.
Starting point is 02:04:10 And I find great comfort in that, especially when I'm stuck or when I'm in a place where I can't see the way forward. It helps remind me that this difficult situation is happening for me and not to me. And I've mentioned this a couple of times. This is another example of that.
Starting point is 02:04:33 This is another form of high-fiving your mindset. And that is saying to yourself, there's something amazing that's coming. Like as long as you stay in this mindset, I'll just keep my head down. I'll keep focused on what I want. I'll keep chipping away at it because something amazing is going to happen. This is preparing me for something. All those years, I never gave up believing that it was possible. If you divorce the timeline from something, you can always make a case that it's possible. And when you stay in that frame of mind,
Starting point is 02:05:11 it changes how you show up. And it also changes the filter in your brain. It's why every time somebody said Vermont or why whenever I picked up a heavy glass that was hand-blown, my mind immediately brought the painting from the back of my mind to the front of my mind. Your mind is designed to show you and help you and to keep things front and center if you are managing all of the basics. Now, if I had believed I was unworthy or undeserving or whatever,
Starting point is 02:05:48 which I did in other areas of my life for sure, but for whatever reason, this painting, I kept an open mind and I never, ever, ever thought I didn't deserve it or wasn't worthy of it. Because the second you go there, your mind's like, oh, it's not important anymore. Yeah, it would have been lost. A million things would have happened
Starting point is 02:06:07 before even the opportunity to call Gail, which you never would have made that call because you wouldn't have felt worthy and you would have felt like you were wasting her time. So I think the power is in this idea that when you lodge into your brain a certain possibility and you hold onto it, you create a frequency and a state of being that allows the possibility
Starting point is 02:06:32 to exist for it to happen. Short of that, it's not happening, right? And it's not that, it's not like toxic positivity where it's like, well, I believe it's gonna happen, so it's gonna happen. You're putting yourself in a position for the outcome. Yes. To go favorably for you. Yes.
Starting point is 02:06:47 And I think- On somebody else's timeline. I mean, this took 20 years or whatever, right? Yeah, it was like 11 years. Yeah, whatever. Yeah, and I think that even bigger is all of the, not my research, but research by people way smarter than me on how this reticular activity system in your brain is designed to bring in information or block it out.
Starting point is 02:07:12 And so just like there's a default, a negativity bias, a confirmation bias, you can actively make sure that your filter, this live network, that's like a hairnet on your brain deciding what comes in, what goes out. There's only four things that come in and out of your brain, your name, any threat, any sign that your partner is interested in sex with you
Starting point is 02:07:35 or somebody else, because everybody's had that, who are you looking at? I get the sense of that. And four, whatever your brain believes is important to you. And four, whatever your brain believes is important to you. That fourth one is where the treasure is. Because when you get intentional about what's important to you, your reticular activity system is already paying,
Starting point is 02:07:56 always paying attention. I'll give you an example. You've shopped for a car, right? And the second you're like, oh, I wanna get the new Bronco. You see them everywhere. Right. Everywhere, you know why? You told your brain that's important to me.
Starting point is 02:08:10 So your brain's like, okay, block out the Hondas, let in the Broncos. Yeah, you use the red Acura example in the book and then this idea of seeing hearts everywhere. Yes, so this is another little sticky tool that sounds super stupid, but this is the key to kind of experimenting in an interesting way with just how quickly
Starting point is 02:08:31 you can change the filter of your brain. Starting tomorrow, after you high five yourself in the mirror, I want you to play a little game. Look for a naturally occurring heart shape. Could be a rock, could be the shape in a cappuccino, could be a stain in the floor of your garage. It could be anything. And what you're doing is you're telling your mind,
Starting point is 02:08:50 I wanna see a heart shape and your mind will literally start to filter the world for it. And when you see it, this is how you can amplify the exercise in terms of changing the network and patterns in your mind. Just take a moment and be like, oh my God, I found it. Like kind of like let that, oh my God, I found it.
Starting point is 02:09:08 Like kind of like let that, oh, scavenger hunt, I win the universe put this here for me effect happen. And what will start to happen, cause you'll see it all over my story is you'll start to see hearts everywhere. And the reason why I want you to start with this heart game is because you won't do anything I'm telling you to do until I can prove to you that it actually you to do until I can prove to you that it actually works.
Starting point is 02:09:26 And when I can prove to you either through the car example or through this heart rock example, that you can in real time change what your brain shows you that you normally walk by, you will start to realize that you can use that to your advantage. If you start to treat yourself every morning in a way that shows your brain that I love myself,
Starting point is 02:09:47 I support myself, I encourage myself, I put myself first, your brain will start to show you other examples of that throughout the day. Because right now the opposite is happening. Right, you just find examples of why you're a piece of shit or unworthy or- Yeah, like for example, my daughter was like, you know, beating herself up. And if she looks in the mirror and trashes herself,
Starting point is 02:10:11 if she misses the dentist appointment, she goes, see, I can't do anything right. I missed the dentist appointment too. I don't have that story about myself because I've been practicing the high five habit. And so I missed the dentist appointment. I'm like, oh, shoot, I need to get better at planning. I'll call them and apologize and reschedule.
Starting point is 02:10:28 I don't take it to the, I'm a shitty person level. Right. It seems like tiny little things like, oh, the dentist appointment missed or whatever. But those associations, when you string them out over the course of even a single day, imagine what the experience is, the difference in your daily experience.
Starting point is 02:10:49 I mean, when you talk about like sliding doors, that leads to so many unforeseeable outcomes that you can't predict. And if you do that every day for a year, what does your life look like? What are some of the decisions that you're gonna make or not make based upon practicing like a profound level of self-love?
Starting point is 02:11:11 I think that that's why it's so hard to change. It's the aggregate effect of all those small little negative thoughts that keep you feeling like why even bother? Well, on some level we're addicted to those thought patterns. They are doing something for us in a perverted way. They're providing a sense of comfort.
Starting point is 02:11:33 I actually don't think that we're addicted to them at all. You don't think so? No, I have a much more kind of clinical opinion about it. I think our brains love patterns, that's it. And we- Just give it a different pattern. Yeah, we've made the it a different pattern. Yeah. We've made the mistake of making our patterns personal.
Starting point is 02:11:49 They're not, they're just a pattern. You've had a pattern of thinking this stupid shit for a long time. And if it's not working for you, you have to break the pattern because patterns repeat. But addiction in the strictest definition, meaning you just keep doing the same stupid shit over and over again, even though you're getting bad outcomes.
Starting point is 02:12:07 Got it, in that definition, then yes, I agree with you. I wanna say one other thing, if we have time, I don't know even where we are with time. We're gonna end this shortly, but go for it. This was a really profound piece of research that we stumbled into from Dr. Judy Willis, leading neuroscientist and big researcher that we talked to in this book.
Starting point is 02:12:31 And it was something that I had never fully understood. And so one of the high five habits is what I call giving your heart a high five. And this in many ways, I think is just as profound as high-fiving your reflection and just the depth of research that goes into explaining why it has such a profound impact in terms of how you relate to yourself. But high-fiving your heart is putting your hands kind of right on your heart, one on top of the other and saying, I'm okay, I'm safe, I'm loved. And I started doing this when the pandemic hit
Starting point is 02:13:10 and I started to wake up to a wave of anxiety. And one of the things that we learned in writing this book is that the first thing that you need to be able to do before your brain can even engage in new patterns of thinking is to settle your nervous system. So, you know, we wrote a bunch about the vagus nerve, but when you put your hands over your heart,
Starting point is 02:13:36 first thing in the morning and give your heart a high five and say, I'm okay, I'm safe, I'm loved. First of all, it's true. Cause if you can say those words, you're okay, I'm safe, I'm loved. First of all, it's true. Because if you can say those words, you're okay, you're safe, you're loved. But secondly, it tones what's called the vagus nerve, which I know you talk about on the show that is the secret to switching between your parasympathetic
Starting point is 02:13:58 and your sympathetic nervous system. So if you're somebody like me, who has lived your life on edge, if you grew up in a chaotic household, if you've experienced trauma, if you constantly feel like you're waiting for the other shoe to drop, if you wake up and the first thought is,
Starting point is 02:14:14 I've done something wrong, someone's mad at me. I want you to try this other high five habit by high fiving your heart. You can say it 15 times if you have to, I'm okay, I'm safe, I'm loved. It will soothe your nervous system and settle it because you cannot have new thoughts or learn new behavior if your nervous system is on edge or on hyper alert.
Starting point is 02:14:39 And it makes sense. If somebody were to run in here and like suddenly, like come in here with a gun and rob you, would you be able to do a math problem at the same time? No, and if you're jittery or anxious, try reading a book. You're not gonna be able to really comprehend anything that you're reading. Correct, and so this is one of these other things
Starting point is 02:15:01 that builds, you learning how to soothe yourself, you learning how to calm a weary nervous system so that you are able to receive the benefits of being able to raise your hand in the mirror. You know, we have, I don't name her in the book, but there's a person in this book that we write about that is using these tools in a domestic violence shelter. And one of the things that I love about learning how to fulfill your deepest emotional needs for yourself is that even when, and these are her words, not mine, she wrote and said,
Starting point is 02:15:39 Mel, here I am in a situation where I have nothing. I am starting over for real, but these tools are reminding me that situation where I have nothing. I am starting over for real, but these tools are reminding me that at least I have myself. Beautiful. I think that's a good place to end it. I could talk to you forever. I know. We have to five, four, three, two, one
Starting point is 02:15:58 in order to just end the podcast. Yes, we do. I adore you. I love you. You're so powerful. And I think, you know, such a service to humanity with everything that you do. And I just, I love the conversation. So thank you for being here today.
Starting point is 02:16:15 Thanks. I appreciate it. The new book is the High Five Habit, available everywhere when we publish this podcast. There's a picture of Mel in the back, in front of the painting. That's right. That we told the story about. Everybody go pick it up.
Starting point is 02:16:31 It's on Audible also, right? As an audio book. And also you've got this high five challenge thing. Oh yeah, join me and Rich, the high five challenge. It's a five day, totally free to do the challenge. I'm getting 5 million people to wake up five mornings in a row and- Just 5 million. Yeah, just 5 million and start their day
Starting point is 02:16:51 by high-fiving themselves in the mirror. And every day there's video pep talk, deeper dive into things like self-confidence or self-esteem. And what's really cool is it's powered by something called Growth Day. And that allows you to be part of a community of people. You can upload photos,
Starting point is 02:17:10 get cheered on by lots of other people, but more importantly, you won't be alone standing in your bathroom in your underwear doing this cheesy thing. You'll have me supporting you and millions of other people. So come to the High Five Challenge. Yeah, so where did they go to highfivechallenge.com? Yep, you can, or Rich is gonna provide a link.
Starting point is 02:17:27 And if you end up joining Growth Day, you might get a kickback to Rich and support the podcast. Some kind of affiliate thing. All right, well, you can go to highfivechallenge.com if you wanna support the podcast. It looks like there's some kind of, I don't know, swing back my way. If you do that, I'll put that link up in-
Starting point is 02:17:42 But only if they end up staying with the app. The challenge is free. The challenge is free. The challenge is free. Awesome, and don't be a stranger. Come back and do this with me again sometimes. Anytime, you ask. 54321, I'll be there. High five, baby.
Starting point is 02:17:55 Thank you, 54321, peace. High five. That's it for today. Thank you for listening. I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation. To learn more about today's guest, including links and resources related to everything discussed today, visit the episode page at richroll.com
Starting point is 02:18:25 where you can find the entire podcast archive as well as podcast merch, my books, Finding Ultra, Voicing Change in the Plant Power Way, as well as the Plant Power Meal Planner at meals.richroll.com. If you'd like to support the podcast, the easiest and most impactful thing you can do is to subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, on Spotify, and on YouTube and leave a review and or comment. Supporting the sponsors who support the show is also important and appreciated.
Starting point is 02:19:00 And sharing the show or your favorite episode with friends or on social media is, of course, awesome and very helpful. And finally, for podcast updates, special offers on books, the meal planner, and other subjects, please subscribe to our newsletter, which you can find on the footer of any page at richroll.com. Today's show was produced and engineered by Jason Camiolo with additional audio engineering by Kale Curtis. The video edition of the podcast was created by Blake Curtis with assistance by our creative director, Dan Drake. Portraits by Davy Greenberg and Grayson Wilder. Graphic and social media assets
Starting point is 02:19:37 courtesy of Jessica Miranda, Daniel Solis, Dan Drake, and AJ Akpodiete. Thank you, Georgia Whaley for copywriting and website management. And of course, our theme music was created by Tyler Pyatt, Trapper Pyatt, and Harry Mathis. Appreciate the love, love the support. See you back here soon.
Starting point is 02:19:58 Peace. Plants. Namaste. Thank you very much.

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