The School of Greatness - 887 The 5 Second Rule To Change Your Life with Mel Robbins
Episode Date: December 11, 2019OUR THOUGHTS ARE DREAM KILLERS. The bigger the dream, the more fear you’re going to have. But to grow, you have to take on new challenges. It’s a real catch-22. I’m very curious about fear and s...elf-doubt. In fact, I’m writing a book about it. In this new year, I want to challenge you to change the way you think about the things that scare you. I want you to start embracing difficult situations and stop letting yourself get in your way. Once you do, nothing will stop you. So how can we harness our thoughts so they start to work for us and not against us? On today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I’m re-sharing a previous episode about facing fears with the creator of the “Five Second Rule:” Mel Robbins. Mel Robbins is the most booked female speaker on the planet with a 7 figure speaking business. Oh yeah, she’s also a bestselling author, a former criminal defense attorney, a CNN commentator, happily married for 20 years, and a mom of 3 kids. But what I really fell in love with about Mel was her passion, energy, straight-talking truth, and beautiful vulnerability. I’m pumped to re-share Mel’s incredible wisdom about how she overcame procrastination, fear, and low self-confidence after a devastating career blow and financial hardship. Get ready to laugh, cry, and learn how to master your thoughts to create extraordinary results on Episode 887. Some Questions I Ask: Once you mastered your thoughts, did you have no more fear? (13:30) When did you discover the 5 Second Rule? (16:34) What area of your life has the 5 Second Rule had the biggest impact? (38:22) Is there any area of your life that you still lack confidence in? (41:54) In This Episode You Will Learn: The definition of habits (the good and bad side of them) (7:19) Why it’s so important to control your thoughts versus your feelings (11:56) What anxiety really is (15:45) How we make decisions (26:05) The neuroscience behind why the 5 Second Rule works (30:39) How to use the 5 Second Rule in business negotiations (37:45) What successful people do in their minds to keep moving ahead no matter how they feel (40:07) Plus much more… If you enjoyed this episode, check out the video, show notes, and more at www.lewishowes.com/887 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes
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This is episode number 887 with international best-selling author Mel Robbins.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
You have the power to control your thoughts and your actions.
Your thoughts don't have the power to control you.
And I want you to let that sink in for a moment.
Sometimes our thoughts can feel like they control us,
but you have the opportunity at every moment to switch that.
And we're going to talk about how to do that in this episode.
I'm so excited.
I got to see my good friend Mel Robbins recently
on the set of her talk show in New York City,
The Mel Robbins Show.
And it's incredible what she's built over the years.
If you don't know who she is,
she is the most booked female speaker in the world,
international best-selling author,
and host of the daytime talk show, The Mel Robbins Show.
She's the creator and host
of three number one audio books on Audible
and the co-founder and CEO of 143 Studios,
a digital media company that produces content in partnership with Fortune 500 brands.
And she broke self-publishing records with her massive hit, The 5 Second Rule.
And it was named the number one audiobook in the world
and the fifth most read book of the year on Amazon.
That's crazy numbers, guys, insanity.
And her social media platform inspires more than 60 million people every month.
And her TEDx talk is one of the most popular of all time
with more than 18 million views.
She's just a genuine, warm, caring, loving human being.
And I'm so excited to bring you this episode.
I did this interview with her a while
back and it's not on the current stream. And I wanted to bring it back because it's so powerful
and it's life-changing. This will literally change your life. And in this interview,
we talk about why it's so important to control your thoughts versus your actions.
Again, thoughts are everything. The knowledge action gap that keeps many people
from achieving their goals.
We're talking about breaking down the five-second rule
and how to use it in negotiations.
The powerful way successful people continue moving forward
regardless of their feelings and challenges
and where true confidence comes from.
This is gonna be so powerful for you
at the end of the year,
starting a new year and a new decade.
Let's freaking dive into this.
I'm so pumped.
And make sure to support Mel Robbins.
Go follow her on social media.
Tag a friend, text a friend to listen to this episode,
lewishouse.com slash 887.
And let's stay connected over on social media because this could literally change your life if you apply the information we're about to dive into. Again, without further
ado, let's dive into this powerful transformational interview with the one and only Mel Robbins.
Mel Robbins, good to see you. Thank you so much for being here.
Oh, can I hold a camera?
I'm very excited.
Oh, my God.
This is the first time I've had a Bill Belichick headset on.
I feel like I'm going to be calling plays, people.
Here we go.
You are.
Mel's got a book called The Five Second Rule, and it's out right now.
It's about how to transform your life, work, and confidence with everyday courage.
And you used to be a, are you still our CNN analyst? Are you used to it?
I am. Yeah. But I don't cover politics. So it has not been a busy year for me. I do more ethics and
relationships and business. And so when there's breaking news that impacts human behavior or
business, that's when they'll call me. Got it. Okay. Now, were you always an on-air personality, talent analyst, or what were you doing?
No, I have had a crazy career.
Tell me about it.
Crazy. Okay. So I grew up in Western Michigan. I went east to college and law school,
and the first job I got out of school was as a public defender in Manhattan.
Okay.
I did violent felony criminal defense work for the city of New York for four years,
and I would probably still be doing it, except for the fact that my husband got into business
school in Boston. And so we moved up to Boston, and I was not actually licensed to practice in
Massachusetts, so I went to work for a large law firm and almost immediately wanted to kill myself.
Wow.
Not like truly, and we'll talk about
the implications of the five second rule and how beneficial it is not only for productivity and
for confidence, but also for mental health stuff. But hated it. And luckily this was 99 in Boston
when the startup scene was exploding and you could sneeze and get a job. And I networked like crazy and
ended up getting a job in a really cool technology company and spent four years doing tech.
Public defender at the tech company.
Yes. And well, one of the things about getting a law degree, and I'm not actually telling you to,
because I think unless you really want to practice law,
it's a mother load of debt. And there is a absolute glutton of attorneys out there and
the job market is really difficult. And the other thing they don't tell you about law school right
now is that you may be an incredible attorney, but unless you know how to do business development,
your career is not going to do what you want it to do.
So you need to bring in business, right? You need to network. You need to build. You can't
just sit there and expect it to come to you, right?
That was the old model.
Right.
That was the old model.
Now you got to go out and get clients.
Correct. Correct.
Cultivate them, get them on retainers.
Even if you work for a large firm.
Yeah.
Because you're not, if you're on the partner track, you're actually not of value unless
you're generating income. And so they don't tell you that in law school. But so anyway,
the law degree though,
and because it's a degree about learning how to think and learning about how to take mountains
of complex information and distill it down into one key takeaway and to the most important elements
of something, that's what law school trains you to do. And so what's fascinating is that when you
look at my career, whether it was being in high tech or it was then going on to do a bunch of executive coaching, launching and selling companies and then having a syndicated radio show, being on CNN and what I do now as an author, as a speaker, as somebody like you that is out helping people figure out how to launch businesses and change your life.
It's about taking all of the incredible information that's out in the world and distilling it down
into the key takeaways that make sense and that are also actionable. And so, interestingly,
when I look back on my career, even though I've made all these career changes,
When I look back on my career, even though I've made all these career changes, there are still fundamental skills that I developed early on that are the reason why I've become very successful in these other arenas. And that's one other thing to remember is that the cool thing about the world today, and you talk about this too, is that all the information that you need is right at your fingertips. How all you need to do is watch the show and you will get the secrets to creating
the life that you want and being able to make that pivot so that you can let your passion
direct you into a business that really helps you create the life that you want. So the information
is there, the guide guidance is there. But the information is there, the guidance is there.
But the thing that's so difficult for most of us
is how, when you're alone and you turn off this show,
do you push through the excuses, the habits, the fears,
and the actual physical constraints that you have
in your life right now so that you can make the pivot?
And so I often say that I am not a what speaker or a why speaker,
I'm a how. And that there's already incredible information about what you can do and why you
should do it. And I find that the place that I get stuck is, okay, well, that's great. And I do a lot
of thinking, but how do I get out of here and make it happen? Our thoughts are our biggest killers of our dreams.
Totally.
They're the biggest killers or our biggest cheerleaders.
And if we don't know how to really, I guess,
I don't know, not manipulate them,
but to really hone in on them,
then we can have a messed up life.
And I've gone through many years of self-destruction
growing up just because I didn't know
how to manage the thoughts. I didn't know how to manage the thoughts.
I didn't know how to, I was never educated on it really,
on how to not control it, but I don't know, what is it?
What is it?
What is it?
Yeah, not control it, but what is the word I'm looking for?
Well, see, I talk about it this way.
So I like to simplify things because it makes it easier for me.
I'm almost 50 for crying out loud.
There's only so much that you can remember when you get to be,
you know, when he's 33, that's a whole different ball game. But I think about
your brain as being in two modes, two modes to your brain that you need to know about. There's
autopilot. We've all experienced that. You know, you drive to work and get there and you're like,
who drove the car? Oh my God. Like, I don't even remember driving the car here. Well, you did,
Lewis, you drove the car. But the thing is, is that you were in the mode of your brain that's called autopilot. Well, what is autopilot? Autopilot is the interior part of your brain. You'll hear neuroscientists and psychologists talk about the basal ganglia. Very important thing to understand is that there's a part of your brain that its entire job is basically to execute your habits. Habits, big fancy word, means something very
simple. Behaviors that you repeat without even thinking about it. When you pull your pants on
in the morning, I guarantee you, you either put your left or your right leg in first. And you
have to stop and think about which one it is, don't you? But not when you're putting your pants
on. Because that behavior is what researchers call a habit loop. It gets encoded as a closed
loop system right here. Now, the problem for most of us is that half of the day we're on autopilot.
And that's not me making a guess. That's what researchers that study habits and study psychology
say. That half of your day, you're basically kind of checked out and you're on autopilot. And when you're checked out and you're on autopilot, any behavior pattern
that you repeat can take over. And guess what are behavior patterns that we repeat? Thinking
patterns. So self-doubt, worry, procrastination, overthinking, analysis paralysis, fear, those are all thinking patterns
that are habits. One of the most important things that I want people to understand is that you're
actually not a worrier. You have a habit of worrying. Big difference. You're not a procrastinator.
You have a habit of procrastinating. Big difference. And when you understand that any behavior pattern, whether it is a thinking pattern, like you doubt yourself all the time, or you get trapped upstairs noodling everything and you can never get started, or whether it's a behavior pattern like you drink too much, or you snap at your kids, or you micromanage your team.
or you snap at your kids or you micromanage your team. Every one of those behavior patterns and thinking patterns can actually be interrupted and replaced using science. Now let's talk about the
second part of the brain. Drive. That's this puppy right here. This is what you want. This is your
prefrontal cortex. Drive is the mode where you're in charge of your thoughts. Okay. It's where you're in charge of your thoughts, okay? It's where you are fully awake, you are present,
and you are driving your thoughts and actions.
When you're doing that, your prefrontal cortex is active.
The prefrontal cortex is the part of the brain
that you need in order to learn new behavior,
in order to do something difficult,
in order to do something uncertain,
in order to do strategic thinking. So I to do something uncertain, in order to do strategic
thinking. So I'm going to give you an example. So I'm a righty. If I were to try to write with
my left hand, like Lewis is going to torture me and tie my hand behind my back and make me do
this, I could do it. It would look like I was writing with my foot. And if Lewis came up to
me and said, hey, Mel, you want some bulletproof coffee? I'd be like, Lewis, I'm trying to concentrate. I can't do this. My prefrontal cortex would be el fuego because it is
firing on all cylinders to communicate to my hand new behavior. So the thing that's cool about that
is that you can use a simple trick. The moment you feel yourself hesitate,
the moment you've got one of those moments
where you know that you need to,
this is that moment that Lewis talks to you about
where you've got to step outside of your comfort zone
and you've got to lean into your passion
and you've got to really take some risks
and you've got to feel the fear
and you've got to do it anyway,
that's the moment where you just woke up
and now you've got a decision to make.
Are you going to drift back into the habits
or are you going to awaken your prefrontal cortex and drive forward and focus and do something new? And so the
work that I've been doing and speaking about is all about the five second rule, which is a trick
that I invented by mistake that helps you manually switch, no joke, your brain. It turns off and
interrupts the part of the brain that is
where all your habits and your behavior patterns are encoded. And it awakens your prefrontal cortex,
which in five seconds flat allows your brain to help you change. And so anyway, I was rambling
on and on because you went on this thing about how your patterns can be destructive and nobody
teaches us. And that's absolutely right. And what I want everybody to get out of this
conversation between us is that you cannot control how you feel. You cannot control what triggers
you. And the fact that you may rise up with anger, you may rise up with self-doubt, you may have
anxiety, fill your body, but you can always control what you think and how you behave. And we spend way too
much time trying to focus on manipulating how we feel about things and not enough time practicing
the skills of controlling your behavior and your thoughts. Because if you can control your behavior
and your thoughts and the way you feel will be different. 100%. And a lot of us are sitting around waiting to feel ready, waiting to feel courageous, waiting to feel confident, waiting for the right time.
And that's not ever coming.
Ever.
Ever.
You're not going to change your life up here.
You only change it through action.
perfection so to me i you know i i i did this this you know interview with you with your friend tom and we talked about how motivation is garbage and this somebody memed it went crazy and so
the point that i was trying to make is this is that yeah motivation is great if you feel like
if you feel motivated but it's garbage and it's it's it's it's a losing bet to wait to feel ready. Because your body's not designed that way
and neither is your brain.
And so I want everybody to understand
that first of all,
you can't control the things that trigger you
and the fact that you're going to feel afraid
and you're going to feel doubt
and you're going to feel uncertain.
But you can always interrupt that feeling
and take control in the moment
and actually shift what you're thinking
and shift how you behave. Yeah. And you know, the bigger the dream, the more fear you're going to have, you
know, even if you feel like you've conquered the fear of something in order to grow, you've got to
take on some new challenge and there's going to be uncertainty. There's going to be some stress or
there's going to be some worry or there's going to be some ego checking and there's going to be
some identity crisis. So there's always going to be this fear that could arise. Always. Always. I mean, did you, do you feel like once you'd mastered this,
that you have no more fear? Me? Yeah. No, the fear still comes, but I have 100% control of what I
think and do. So one of the things that, that is important for, for me to, um, to, to put on the
table is that a lot of times, um, you know, people look at your, where you are now.
And so they'll see me on television or they'll see that Ted talk, or maybe you'll be in an
audience of 20,000 people in the American airline center. And I'm on stage. You're like, wow,
that chick must've just been more incompetent. I hate her. The fact is, that's not at all how I was. When I was 19, I started having crazy panic
attacks. And they got so bad that I took medication and medication was a godsend for me. I took Zoloft
for two decades. When I had our first daughter, who is now 17 years old, the postpartum depression
was so bad that they put me on Ativan,
which turns you into a zombie. And I could not be left alone with her. So when it comes to
self-doubt and to how we can torture ourselves with our thoughts, boy, have I lived that nightmare.
And as I started to use the five-second rule, which we're going to get into,
and everything about my life changed, because when people first learned the rule, what you're going to learn, what you're
going to start doing is you're going to start using the rule to push yourself to do things
that are annoying. You're going to push yourself to get up on time. You're going to push yourself
to work on your business plan. You're going to push yourself to make calls that are scary. You're
going to push yourself to get to the gym. You're going to push yourself to speak up more at work.
You're going to push yourself to put the booze down. Behavioral, behavioral, behavioral. And then you're going to start
to actually use it to change the thinking patterns that are self-sabotaging. So I,
four years ago, wondered as I started to see myself go from facing bankruptcy to building,
you know, close to an eight-figure biggest. What happened for me is I started to
say, okay, this is a really cool little trick to bring out the most powerful side of you.
But can I use this to actually cure myself of anxiety? And the answer is yes, you can.
And four years ago, I went off Zoloft and I started using the five second rule,
which I'm going to explain in one second to interrupt the patterns of worry and self-doubt, which by the way, anxiety is nothing
more than the habit of worrying spiraling out of control and body feelings triggering now the habit
of obsessive worrying that turns into anxiety and then kind of escalates to panic. I started using
the five second rule to interrupt my thoughts every time I would feel that kind of worry kick in. And because the prefrontal cortex
is awakened when you use it, your mind is now ready to take on a totally different thought.
It's a very different strategy than just trying to switch the channel on what you're thinking,
because you're actually inserting the step that nobody talks about, which is switching the gears
in your mind so that your mind can actually take and believe the thinking. Yeah. Interesting. Yeah. So the five second rule.
Wait, first off, when did you discover the five second rule?
Okay. So 2009.
That's when you first tried it or discovered it or?
Oh, it's a total horror show mistake. Yes. So 2009, I was unemployed and feeling like-
You were unemployed?
How?
Well, okay.
Too much charisma, too much passion.
Yeah, because everything's working right now.
That's why.
I'm not like this when things are not working.
Ask my husband of 22 years.
Well, what had happened is I had had all these career changes and i got into the
media business again by mistake i had a coaching business and inc magazine was writing an article
about coaches and they featured me in it and cnbc called got it and that led to me doing some stuff
with cnbc and um i spent a year still coaching people and then doing some stuff for CNBC.
And then Fox called.
And they were interested in having me host a television show.
Now, you've got to understand, I'm from North Muskegon, Michigan.
I mean, the media business, Fox, LA.
The closest thing I had ever seen to a celebrity, Lewis, was the Muskegon Lumberjacks, the farm team.
Right?
Right.
For the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Yeah, the AA team.
Yeah, my dad was the hometown doc for the hockey team there.
Right, right, right.
So I thought, wow, my life's about to change.
I'm about to be a celebrity.
Wow, we're going to solve all, this is amazing, you know?
So I was originally going to be hosting a show for Fox where we were making over
small businesses. Yeah, pretty cool, right? We show up, we do extreme home makeover for the
office. Everybody's happy. We all know that doesn't solve business problems, but it makes
for a nice television show. By the time I get to LA, they've changed the format. It's now called
Someone's Gotta Go. And I'm going to be firing people on national television from real jobs.
Wow.
Uh-huh.
That sounds fun.
Horrible.
Oh, my gosh.
Plus, we haven't told the offices that this is what we're doing.
Oh, my gosh.
So you show up in Act One, and you've got everybody all like this because they think they're going to get new IKEA furniture and a paint job.
And this is going to be the best thing in the world for their small business.
Now, meanwhile, I'm a fourth-generation small business owner.
So that's like my people.
their small business. Now, meanwhile, I'm a fourth generation small business owner. So that's like my people. Grew up at a kitchen table with farmers and my mom at a retail store and my
other grandparents were bakers. And so when it comes to like the heart and soul and what's so
important when you launch your own business and how personal it is, I mean, this was like
gut-wrenching. So I show up, the first act, you kick out the owner of the company who then freaks
out, then all the employees freak out. Act number two, we announce that somebody's getting fired,
and then that's the bad news. The good news is that I'm not picking. We're going to have you
vote somebody out. So it's survivor in an office place. Oh my goodness. That sucks.
When I learn all this, I have a panic attack, even though I'm on Zoloft, and I call the guy that got me the gig and say, you've got to get me out of this.
Like, this is the worst thing that's ever happened to me.
And he said, well, I'm sorry, but they've already cast the entire show and you're out there for five weeks and you don't have a choice.
They're going to sue you.
And I said, then fine, get me some Xanax because I don't think I can get through this thing.
Like, this is awful.
Luckily, we taped two episodes and legal tabled it.
But here was the problem.
I was attached to the show.
And I only got paid if the show was shooting.
And being an entrepreneur, I also kind of put all my energy into this, shut down the coaching thing.
Really thought that it also kind of negotiated a deal that was a sort of a back-end deal thinking
I'm a you know entrepreneur always thinking about gotta have a piece of the action yes
yeah that was a dumb move and I was in a contract for a year while they figured out what to do
so you couldn't do another show yeah so you know I just felt like I had made a huge mistake and I felt really embarrassed. And I didn't know at the age of 41 what I should be doing with my life. And while it's neat that I had jumped careers so many times, I started to feel like somebody that actually wasn't successful at all because I didn't have a career track. I had a bunch of jumps from one thing to another. Now, looking back, it makes perfect sense, but standing in the middle of the mess, it just felt like everything was caving in. Probably just like
when you were sleeping on your couch, feeling injured and like everything I thought that was
about to happen isn't happening now. Meanwhile, my husband had opened up a restaurant business.
It had been his dream. He worked in high tech and came home one day after getting laid off and said,
I'm never going to get on a plane and do a PowerPoint presentation for a company I don't care about or own. And I said, great, what's your plan? And he said, I'm never going to get on a plane and do a PowerPoint presentation for a company.
I don't care about her own. And I said, great, what's your plan? And he said,
I'm going to open a pizza restaurant. And I looked at him and I said,
was there a trust fund that was part of this marriage that I was unaware of?
Because I'm not quite sure how we're going to pay.
Just where you get the money.
Yeah, exactly.
If someone died, you got an insurance policy? Yes. And he said no. And I then said the most famous lines of our 22-year marriage, Lewis.
I looked at him and I said, listen, buddy.
Inspiration is for strangers.
You get your ass back to that job and you pay the mortgage and you forget the stream.
You're not going to do this.
Wow.
Well, because change is scary.
Yeah.
So we fought and he won.
And the first one was a real home run.
He opened a pizza store.
Oh, he did.
Yeah, 40 seats right outside of Boston, Massachusetts.
He and his best friend.
And they won best of Boston.
It was incredible.
What do you do when everything's-
They make money though.
They did on the first one.
So what do you do when everything's working?
Let's go all chips in.
Let's put in the home equity line.
Let's put in the kids' college one. Let's go all chips in. Let's put in the home equity line. Let's put in the kids' college savings.
Let's get friends and family.
And because you're so excited, you think it's going to work.
So you go big, big, big.
Well, the second one did not work at all.
And it did not work at all so badly that when it was finally closed, it was close to an $800,000 loss.
And it meant our entire home equity line,
kids' college savings, everything went right down with it. That was right when I lost the Fox show.
So I'm unemployed. The liens start hitting the house. The phone starts ringing all the time,
and it's collections calls. So you unplug the phone. That was just me out. Well, you just
unplug the phone. I mean, that's how you deal with that.
But I remember two things from that period of my life
that were really painful.
And one was having to call the town
and tell them that we could not afford the $175
for our sixth grader to play soccer.
So we needed to pull her out.
And I remember there being times
because I was so afraid to look at the checking
account that I would stand at the grocery store and items would scan and I could just feel that
wave of anxiety rising, thinking, I don't think the check card's going to go through. And so I
would stand there. I always had an excuse and it was to look at the person and go, oh, that's
strange. It just worked at the gas station. Oh my gosh. Because
I, what would have been more empowering is to probably say, oh, well, I guess I don't have the
money for this. Let's take this, this, and this. And just kind of like the easiest thing to do is
to tell the truth. But I was so filled with shame. So I started to develop this habit of hitting the
snooze button because what would happen is the alarm would go off in the morning. And the first
thing I would think about is all the problems that we had and how awfully things had gone off the
tracks. You didn't want to deal with them. No. And I, and I also didn't know, I didn't know,
I didn't think I could. And this goes back to the feelings. Like you think that you need to feel confident or
courageous in order to get started. You don't. You actually just have to start. And that's the
riddle of life. That lying in bed, hoping that you wake up some morning motivated to change.
That's not the answer. You actually have to learn how to push yourself. You have to learn how to
leverage the power of your decisions. And you've got to learn how to push yourself. You have to learn how to leverage the power of your decisions
and you've got to learn how to take action
when you don't feel like it.
Because every morning when I woke up,
I did not feel confident.
I felt like a loser.
I felt like the world's worst parent.
I felt like I had failed at every single turn.
I did not know if Chris and I could pull out of the spiral.
I did not know if we were going to go out of the spiral. I did not know if we were
going to go bankrupt and lose the house and move from our community. I did not know if our marriage
would survive. I knew I wanted it to. And see, this is the knowledge action gap. You can know
what you want. You can know what you should be doing, but how do you make yourself do it when
the feelings and the motivation isn't there? When all you got is fear.
And so every night I would lie in bed and I would say to myself, all right, that's it,
Mel.
Tomorrow, it's the new you.
Tomorrow, you're going to wake up and be motivated.
You're going to get up.
You're going to exercise like everybody says you should.
You're going to meditate.
You're going to get those kids on the bus. You're going to screw Fox. You're going to look for a job.
You're going to cold call Cox Media and you're going to, you're going to do auditions. Come on,
girl, let's go. Let's go. Let's go. You're going to take a cold shower. You know, here we go.
And I meant it when I was saying it, maybe it was the alcohol that was talking, but,
but then I would wake up and I didn't feel any of those things. So I would hit the snooze and I would
hit the snooze. Now, why was I hitting the snooze when I knew it wasn't the right decision? I'm
going to tell you why. And this is something that I was blown away by when I discovered it.
You don't make decisions with your goals. You don't make decisions with your prefrontal cortex.
You don't make decisions with logic. Do you know how we make decisions? I didn't invent
this. A neuroscientist by the name of Damasio, who does his research in Brazil, who gave an
incredible TED talk and wrote about this forever and ever and ever. We make decisions of feelings.
95% of our decisions are made by how you feel in the moment. And that is the problem. You need to
take control of the moment and leverage the
power of your decisions and make them up here. Because when I was lying in bed, I wasn't saying
to myself, I should get up because that's going to help me start my day right. I was saying,
do I feel like getting up? No, you don't. No. Do you feel like making that cold call? No, you don't. We make decisions based on our feelings and that is robbing you of joy and opportunity. And it is blinding you from the fact that all, how you change your life is one five second decision at a time, one push at a time.
feel motivated and you may never feel confident. You may never feel courageous and that's okay,
but you can still push yourself forward. What happens over time is as you start to see yourself becoming the person that takes action, that you start to see yourself becoming the kind of person
that speaks, even though your voice is shaking, you're the kind of person that, that, that has a
bias toward moving instead of a bias toward thinking, guess what happens? You build
the skill of confidence and courage. And so what happened for me is I was stuck, Louis. I mean,
I was so stuck. I mean, we were heading straight for divorce. We were heading for bankruptcy.
I knew I wanted to change things. And so one night I see this commercial. This is the stupidest story on the planet, but this is what happened.
I see this commercial.
And, you know, again, I also was drinking too much.
I mean, I probably had a couple of Manhattans in me.
That's my drink.
I'm from the Midwest, just like you.
All right.
A little Manhattan there.
A little bourbon.
And there was a rocket ship launching.
On a commercial.
Yeah.
And I had this instinct, this innovation, this disruptive idea, right?
Oh my God, Mel, that's the answer.
Tomorrow morning, you're going to launch your ass out of bed like a rocket ship.
You're going to move so fast, you can't even think about your problems.
Dumb, right?
Totally dumb.
Seems like this is the dumbest idea I've ever heard.
I cannot believe I have this chick on my podcast.
I understand it.
You got to get moving first.
Yes.
That's the thing.
You just got to wake up at 6 a.m. or wherever it is and go into the gym.
And when you're in the gym, you're going to start moving the first weight.
Yes.
And then you'll start moving the second weight.
People use the five-second rule at the gym because you know how much time people waste
at the gym standing around thinking about the next thing?
Probably 70% of the time.
Five, four, three, two, one.
So the next morning the alarm goes off and nothing had changed in my life.
I woke up to the lean on the house, the fighting with Chris, the unemployment, the lack of confidence, the lack of courage, like the whole thing.
But I did something I had never done before.
I went five, four, three, two, one, just like NASA.
I actually counted.
And then I stood up and I was like, what the hell just happened?
What?
That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
The next morning I used it again.
I worked the next morning.
I used it again.
I worked.
And then I started to notice something.
And this is, this is one of those things.
So we have a, we have an 11 year old son who has dyslexia. And when they finally diagnosed
him, it was as if, of course it was as if like, how could we have possibly missed this? Are we
the worst parents in the world? I mean, the kid can barely write. He can't cut his food. He doesn't
read like no wonder he doesn't do team sports. It was right under our nose. And what I'm about
to tell you is right under everybody's nose.
There's a five-second window between the instincts, the shoulds, the urges, the inner wisdom,
the things that can change your life if you listen to it. Got a five-second window from the moment you feel that instinct to move. And if you don't, your brain is actually designed to kill it. Five seconds is
all you have. The second you hesitate, it's action. You feel yourself hesitating. That is a moment of
huge power because what's happened is you've just started to pull back from something that you need
to lean into. And if you count backwards, five, four, three, two, one, and this is the neuroscience
behind why this stupid little trick works. Counting is an action. Counting backwards requires focus. It's also not a habit for you yet.
So when you feel yourself hesitate, you're triggering your mind that something's up.
Like Lewis didn't hesitate when he pulled on his pants. He didn't hesitate when he's drinking his
coffee. He didn't hesitate when he walked out the door to the gym, but now he's hesitating to make
that call. Your mind now goes into a cognitive bias called the spotlight effect.
It magnifies whatever it was that you hesitated doing.
The moment.
The moment.
Yeah.
Like all of a sudden you're like, I don't feel like it.
Like I don't, I don't know.
Maybe I'll do it later.
And your mind is doing it because your mind's trying to protect you.
Hesitation signals a red flag to your mind that
something's up. Just that small hesitation. It's a habit that we all have. Should you hesitate if
you're getting a tattoo? Yes. Should you hesitate if you're gambling? Yes. Should you hesitate if
you are signing a legal document? Yes. You need your prefrontal cortex for those things. You need
to interrupt it, make a decision. Should you hesitate on making a phone call? No. Should you
hesitate on speaking up in a meeting? No. Should you hesitate on making a phone call? No. Should you hesitate on speaking
up in a meeting? No. Should you hesitate when you feel yourself starting to procrastinate
and you know you got work that you should get done? No, you shouldn't hesitate at all.
Should you hesitate in saying the thing that you really feel in your heart? No,
you shouldn't. Should you hesitate and edit yourself when you're talking? No,
you shouldn't. But we've all trained ourselves to. So it's actually this habit of hesitating. You start catching yourself. It's a huge moment of power because you have a
decision to make and you got to make it in the next five seconds. Are you going to go on autopilot
and get trapped in your mind? Or are you going to five, four, three, two, one, and awaken your
prefrontal cortex and drive forward? So I started to use this rule as I noticed that every day, all day long, I had these moments of inner wisdom where I would know that I needed to pick up the phone and stop isolating myself.
I would know that I needed to call a bunch of media companies and start auditioning for radio show hosting gigs.
I knew that I should get out of bed on time.
I knew I should stop myself before I snapped a Chris,
right? Self-monitor. I knew I should not feel, let the frustration be the things that was driving me.
And so I started to use the rule all day long. Whenever I felt this, I should do this,
five, four, three, two, one, and I would make myself do it. And slowly, five seconds at a time, my entire life started to change. And my husband used it in his business, and he and his business partner dove in.
They went on to open seven more restaurants.
I went on to launch and sell two businesses and get recruited by CNN and join their team.
I had a syndicated radio show that ended up winning the Gracie Award, which is kind of the female media awards for the number one talk show in the country.
And I never intended to tell anybody about the five-second rule. First of all, because it's
stupid. I mean, come on, count backwards. That's the dumbest thing ever.
That's stupid to me, though. Anything that works, works for me.
That's true.
You know what I mean? I'll take any stupid thing.
That's true. But I also was like, how do you start talking about something
like that, right? So I was asked to give a TED Talk like six years ago. And TED, six years ago,
not the brand that it was today. They weren't even putting the talks online yet. Really? Yeah.
The TEDx talks were not online yet. And so that was the first speech I'd ever given in my life.
If you want to see what somebody looks like having a panic attack for 21 minutes straight,
watch that speech. I was backstage and it was like one PhD after another going out there. I'm like,
what the hell have I gotten myself into? This is the dumbest thing. And so at the very end,
I wasn't even planning on talking about it. I say, oh, by the way, there's this thing I do.
That's it. I don't even explain it. And you know why I didn't explain it, Lewis? I didn't know why it worked. So you didn't have the science, the research.
Zero. Zero. And then something crazy happened. They put that talk online a year later and people
started to write. We've heard from more than 100,000 people in 90 countries that have written
to us that are using the rule in ways big and small to change their lives,
to change their marriages, to change their thinking patterns, to grow their businesses.
We know of 11 people that have stopped themselves from killing themselves.
In the moment, there's a gentleman that we talk about in the book and you can see his social
media posts in London. He was a veteran and he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and he boarded a ferry with the intention of jumping overboard. And he got to the railing and he was standing
there and his inner wisdom kicked in. And this is another thing I want everybody watching to
understand. I don't care what you're facing or how low you get. Your inner wisdom is always there.
It is.
And the thing is, is that we often don't listen to it.
And so he's standing there intending to kill himself
and that inner wisdom kicks in
and he remembers the five second rule
and he goes five, four, three, two, one
and he turns and physically moves away from the railing
and finds the first person working on the ferry and tells him that he's suicidal.
Saved his life.
He saved his life because he listened to the inner wisdom.
And this is the other thing I love about this rule.
It's not something to think about.
It's a tool to use.
So the part of the problem with a lot of the advice that I've found for me personally
is that a lot of advice is that I've found for me personally is that a lot of
advice is all about kind of doing mental battle. And if I go upstairs, I'm behind enemy lines and
I tend to get hijacked. So I love this tool because five, four, three, two, one interrupts
those patterns. It actually prompts the part of the brain that I need in order to change.
And it makes changing easier
because I've now got my mind working for me instead of against me. And it gets me out of my
head. And so I'm super excited to share this rule with people because I now know not only that it's
working, just not for me, it's working for people around the world.
And in the book, it took me three years to write it. It's all the science behind the rule. It's
got more than 150 social media posts in it. So you see stories from around the world of people
using it to end procrastination, to build confidence, to deepen their relationships,
to launch businesses, to explode the sales. Why does it help with sales?
I'll tell you why.
Because you can't sell by thinking.
Selling is about action.
We have groups from companies around the world, sales teams,
that put 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 up on the wall.
I'm sure they hate me.
That's cool.
Yes, because cold calling, it's a momentum thing.
If you stop and think, the dialing is not happening when you're thinking.
Yeah.
If you're thinking about all those no's you've been getting, you're not going to want to do it again because it doesn't feel good.
Yes.
And if you're in the middle of a negotiation or you're in the middle of a really difficult conversation, and again, remember what we said earlier?
You cannot control your feelings that rise up, but you can always control how you think and what you do.
but you can always control how you think and what you do. So if you're in the middle of a difficult conversation and you feel those feelings come up that normally trigger you
to start editing yourself or to censor yourself or to silence yourself or to think sabotaging
thoughts and like a business negotiation, five, four, three, two, one, awaken the prefrontal
cortex, get back in the game. How has this rule helped you the most in what area of your life with your marriage, your business and being more productive
and not having to take drugs when you're worried so much or on stage? What's the area where you're
like, wow, this has really had the biggest impact? And I'm sure all of it, but. Well,
the most important thing in my life is my marriage. So my relationship with Chris is like the thing that brings me the greatest joy.
I mean, I'll just start crying thinking about it.
How many years have you been married?
20 years.
We've been together for 22 years.
Wow.
Three kids, 17, 16, 11.
It has given me mastery over myself.
Like I get so choked up just thinking about this. Like I used to feel out of control and this rule allows me to be the best version of me and to interrupt
like all the garbage that can trigger you, um, to behave in a way that's inconsistent with your values and your
dreams. And so that has been the single greatest gift. That and also, you know, I think the other
thing that's super cool is that it is a tool that certainly prompts you to act, but it is also a
tool that helps you tune in to your inner wisdom. Like you're not only going to start
waking up, you'll be so in tune with those signals that come from your instincts, not emotional,
not instinctual, like instinctual, that you get a direct line to your inner voice. You get a direct
line. You know, all those people, one of the things that's always, that's always struck me.
So if you,
if you list all the people
that you admire,
right?
Yeah,
Richard Branson,
Oprah Winfrey,
Bill Gates,
like everybody's got
kind of the same,
yeah,
well,
whatever.
Lewis,
for sure.
If you list all those people,
Jay-Z,
like everybody,
everybody that you admire is doing the exact same thing.
They actually listen to their inner wisdom.
They have figured out how to tune out the critic up here and trust the instincts.
And, you know, I have this saying about confidence that I've only recently kind of stumbled into as I've been digging into more research around the science
of confidence and the skill of confidence. Because a lot of people think that confidence
is a personality trait. It's not. It's actually a skill that you build through action.
And a lot of people think confidence is a state of belief. It can be, but that's not where it begins.
And so I say that confidence is the willingness to try. That's all that it is. Knowing that you may succeed or survive, but you'll still try. And to me, all those people that we admire most, that's what they're doing. They have the ability to tune into those instincts that are true for them.
Because the fact is there's only one you. That's it. And you matter because there's only one you
and there's only ever going to be one you. And your instincts and your experiences and your
inner wisdom is a gift to the world. And every time that you tune it out because of the habit of
hesitating or the habit of self-doubt or the habit of worrying or the habit of overthinking,
you are robbing the world of that gift that you have to give to everybody. And you can use this
simple, stupid, silly tool to train yourself to not only hear it, but also to develop the skill of courage to act on it.
Powerful. And is there any area of your life where you feel like you lack courage still?
You know, I'll admit it's kind of easy. I think we all kind of go through those moments where
you feel like you're behind. And I think social media is both an incredible tool,
and it can also be one of those triggers that makes you feel like, look at how many followers this guy has.
I'm like, I'm so tiny compared to this guy right here.
Like it's easy to use technology and social media not for inspiration but actually as a way to bash yourself that you're not doing what other
people are doing. Yes. And so I think that I, I use the rule a lot for patients. I noticed that
my insecurity rises up because right now, you know, look, I did a ridiculous number of speeches
last year. I travel way too much. I don't want my life to look like that. It's a champagne problem. I get it. But I also have three kids in a marriage that I love,
and I really feel depleted when I'm not with them. And so I'm practicing patience as I make
an intentional pivot in the kind of business that I'm running so that I have more of a life that I want as well. So that's one area.
You know, I don't feel insecure as much as, you know, you know the term deliberate practice,
right? And you know the five-hour rule where- Deliberate practice, is that from the talent code?
Well, the deliberate practice is actually a psychological principle.
I think it was in a book called The Talent Code, but yeah.
Oh yeah? Okay. Well, it's a psychological principle. And you know the 10,000-hour rule.
I mean, deliberate practice is a sport.
So deliberate practice is this idea that, yeah, you could do 10,000 hours at anything and become an expert at it.
But the way to do it faster is to do deliberate practice, which means you're practicing with the intention of improving.
And there's a feedback loop.
You do 2,000 hours as opposed to 10,000.
Correct. Like, for example, if as opposed to 10,000. Correct.
Like for example,
if you want to become an expert at guitar,
learn scales,
don't just sit there for 10,000 hours and play the same song.
If you learn scales,
you get the finger dexterity and the muscle memory and the neural pathway
development.
Yes.
I saw your guitar over there.
I saw your guitar.
You know,
I always wanted to play guitar,
but instead I forced my three children to learn.
That's good.
You just enjoy it.
You just watch them. My brother's a, you know, the number I forced my three children to learn. That's good. You just enjoy it and just watch them.
My brother's the number one jazz violinist in the world.
What?
Yeah.
And so I grew up watching the most incredible-
Now, is he built like you, too?
He used to be even more jacked.
They used to call him the Incredible Hulk of violin because he was just like-
Wow.
Snap the thing in half?
Yeah.
He would.
He would slam it like Jimi Hendrix style.
But now he's leaned up a bunch, actually.
And so he's incredible.
So I used to just be awestruck by his gifts.
And it was unbelievable, his skill.
And so I learned guitar.
I taught myself when I was 18 just because I was like,
I have to know something in terms of music.
I can barely.
I'm like a hack, but you know, at least I could do something. So, yeah. So I'm, I'm kind of in this mode of,
of improving myself and I'll give you one more thing that I'm working on. So I kind of think
about my life and my work in three buckets. So we got this bucket here, we got this bucket and we
got this bucket. And so when you think about your business or you think about your passion or you
think about work, I think about, okay, what do I need to do in terms of how much time and what actions do I need to take in order to develop the skills
so that I can perform the work? So there's the deliberate practice that goes into practicing
your skill and your competency mastery so that when it comes time to actually deliver the work,
whether that's selling or standing on a stage
or writing a book or talking to people
or selling real estate or whatever it is
that may be your passion, deliver.
This is the one I neglected last year.
This bucket is,
what are you doing to personally develop yourself
so that you are the most capable, fulfilled, and satisfied human being. So that when you show up
to do your competency and your skills and the delivery, that you as the human being
are able to do that. And so I've been spending a lot more time consuming content, reading books,
a lot more time consuming content, reading books, watching your incredible show and learning from other people. And I think that one of the traps that we entrepreneurs get into is we, I was
feeling last year anyway, like I was on a treadmill and when I wasn't looking, somebody was coming by
and turning up the speed. And I was only in this alley. And increasing the hills.
Yes. And if you're my age, you need like a diaper when somebody does that. You're on a treadmill
and a leash to keep you attached to it. Exactly. So I've been focusing a lot on this and it's been
interesting because you and I were talking earlier too about you going to India and some of the stuff that you learned in terms of the different states to be in. And I
use one where I pay attention to where I'm feeling depleted versus where I'm energized.
And here's the thing. You can be doing things that are really hard that energize you. You can
be doing things that are really scary that energize you.
The same is true with things that deplete you.
There are things in your life that are really easy for you.
There are people that you hang out with, by the way,
that you've been hanging out with for years, but they deplete you.
And so I've been starting to become more deliberate about how I distance myself from things that deplete me
and how I spend more time and energy
either doing or pushing myself to do those things that actually energize me. And this gets back to
your message around passion, right? And that, you know, the, the art and the skill of building a
life that is guided by the things that you're passionate about. So what is something that
you're worried about or, or feeling insecure about, or that like is the next the things that you're passionate about. So what is something that you're worried about
or feeling insecure about
or that is the next big thing for you?
I know you got a big book launch coming.
Yeah, that's one thing.
I mean, I'm talking about a topic on masculinity.
Actually, before-
Where are you going?
Are you gonna do something with my-
I'll mention that.
But here's the thing also I wanted to add.
If this is mastering the skills
and this is working on it or executing it,
just to emphasize this,
I was great at these two things as well my entire life
and I would achieve all my goals
by executing the work on the skills.
But I never had the fulfillment
and I was always lacking the inner peace
or the inner, I don't know, it was just never enough.
And so I never filled this up.
I always went back to mastering more skills and taking more action and mastering skills and just feeling like it was never enough.
I hear you.
Because I never filled up this cup.
Right.
And once I started to, you know, about four years ago, opening up about a lot of the different traumas that I went through as a child.
And just like growing up, you know, being sexually abused by a man that I didn't know,
my brother being in prison, you know, parents getting divorced, like almost every kid.
It was, and being bullied, you know, just everything and being dyslexic and being in
the bottom of my grade and all these things growing up all through school, not being able
to read and write.
I never filled this up.
And so I was just so driven to prove people wrong, learn the skills, master something and
show people that they're wrong about me. And it was just never enough. It was just this endless
cycle of like never enough, no matter how big, how much money I made was never enough until I
started to work on this cup and this bucket and then everything shifted. So it's important that
we do that as much as these two. Yes. And I know sometimes that message falls flat when you're committed to providing that kind
of content for people and you can get focused on creating it and not actually being somebody
that is consuming enough of it.
And so that's a huge change that I made.
Funny enough, on the male side, one of the biggest shifts that happened in my marriage with Chris
is we had always been kind of even-steven partners,
both with the parenting and with the finances
and supporting one another,
except for that phase where I was a real bitch
and I was like saying,
you cannot follow your dreams.
That was all fear talking.
One of the coolest things that's happened for us
is that as my speaking career took off organically
and the world basically said, lady, you need to teach the world this message and we don't care how much you're going to kick and scream about it.
We're going to keep putting you on stages and the phone's going to keep ringing and we need to know, people need to know about this.
My husband had always, like you, youngest of three boys.
Dad was crazy successful, wasn't around because he traveled all the time. Chris had always had this thing in his mind that he hoped that they would grow the
restaurant business and he would have this big kind of liquidity event. And then he could take
off four years and teach and be with our kids. And it just so turned out that it didn't work
out that way in the restaurant business, but my career went like this.
And so subsequently, we wouldn't be able to have the marriage or the family
if Chris weren't running Point at Home.
Right.
And what's so cool.
Someone's got to be there.
Well, yeah, but what's so cool is for an entire year, he beat himself up about it.
Uh-huh.
And then he got sober.
He went to a yoga intensive training.
He's now a certified yoga instructor. He has a tractor. He runs the booster club for our high school sports. He created a tri something in our marriage where he's just not driven
in terms of the financial piece or the, you know, in the way that I am. And part of the conflict
in our relationship for a long time was me putting those societal demands on him,
him feeling the obligation. And so the thing that's also been really cool is that when you
start to discover the courage to speak what's true for you, it's amazing how things shake out
and fall into place. And it gives other people the courage to explore and figure out what's
true for them. Because the fact is, he is a way better, way better parent than I am,
a way better, way better parent than I am, especially for the ages that our kids are.
And it's, and you know, I have this saying where I feel like every phase of your life requires a different you. And the phase that I'm in right now and the kind of parent that I am
is, will be totally different when our daughter heads off to college next year.
Different phase of my life is going to require a different phase of me. And so it's been
so killer to see us step into this different phase where he is so happy and self-expressed.
And I was reminded of it because you talked about this project and I want to hear more about it,
about what you're working on, because he's now launching this tiny little retreat for guys. He's a big Knowles guy, so they're going off into the mountains and really exploring.
Success is one thing. What does it actually mean to be satisfied with your life on your own terms
and who you are? And so he's in this really cool inquiry about what does satisfaction with your life really look like when you take full responsibility for what truly matters to you.
Powerful.
Yeah.
Yeah, fulfillment.
I mean, we can all learn how to be successful, but if we can't be fulfilled, then it's a failure.
Success is a failure without fulfillment. So yeah, the book I'm talking about is called The Mask of Masculinity.
And it's tapping into really what it means to be a man and redefining the new man as
opposed to what society has put on us.
Like beyond you guys wearing skinny jeans?
Exactly.
Yes, exactly.
Yes.
So I'm excited about it.
I guess I'm a little nervous.
Has it been confronting?
Yeah, I mean, because in every chapter, I break down myself and all the mistakes I've made as a man.
Now, are you in a relationship?
I am, yeah.
You are?
How long have you been?
About three years, yeah.
Okay.
With a break in between, but yeah.
With the same person?
Yes.
Okay.
So it's been a lot of growth for me.
A lot of scary, uncomfortable conversations,
fears that I've 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 right into it
and addressed it.
And I'm still figuring it out.
I don't have all the answers still.
I think the reason I love doing this show
is because I interview and connect
with the most inspiring people in the world
who I want to learn from
and see how I can be better
in the areas that they're strong in.
So for me, it's a selfish reason doing this show
to take on so much great information and say,
oh, how can I apply that to my life?
And how can I share that with the world?
It's amazing.
And one of the things that you said to me when we first started is,
what do you want to get out of this?
And I talked about how I just want to spread the idea
that you can change your life in five seconds.
And I want to spread the idea that you can't control how you feel, but you can always choose how you think and what you do. And one of the things that's so cool is that, you know, you and I are both outcome thinkers. So we think about the outcome that we want, and then we figure out how am I going to get there. And when you go through life like that, it gives you so much mastery over how you're going to behave because
you're thinking about the things that you want to cause. Right. Yeah, it's powerful. I want to wrap
it up for the few final questions because I think you got to leave here soon. So this one is called
the three truths. And if it was the last day for you many years from now and you've achieved
everything you want. Or if the plane crashes today.
You've achieved everything you want.
And it does, it does.
I mean, what am I going to do?
Nothing you can do about it.
That's right.
And you've written all the books on the world that you want to, the courses, the speeches,
everything you've done.
You've spoken to the world.
But for whatever reason, all you have is a pen and a piece of paper to write down three
final truths.
And they have nothing else to be reminded of you or remember you from.
Are you trying to make me cry?
No.
Do you do this?
Oh, my Lord.
Every episode we talk about this.
So all your books are erased.
All your videos are gone.
The TED Talks with hundreds of millions of views are gone.
You have a piece of paper and a pen.
Three final truths that you would share with the world.
And this is all they have to remember you by.
What would that be?
It would be that there's only one you
and there will only ever be one you.
So make sure that you listen to what your heart is saying
and always do that.
I would say you can change your life in five seconds
and the moment that you feel the instinct to act,
count five, four, three, two, one, then go.
Awesome. I love it.
That's a great answer.
I want to make sure everyone gets this book,
This Is Gonna Change Your Life, a five-second rule.
Make sure to go grab it right now.
Get it on Amazon. Get it on Barnes & Noble.
Go to your local bookstore. It's everywhere. Go get it. And send a message to Mel on Twitter or
Instagram or Facebook. Is it the same handle everywhere? Yeah, it's basically Mel Robbins.
We use the hashtag five-second rule. And one cool thing I want you to know,
it's 15 bucks right now on Amazon. And I'm so proud because we're number one new release in four categories. Congrats. Amazing. Thank you. And
more importantly, it's changing lives around the world. We taped 31 crazy, awesome mentoring
sessions. And on the back page of this book, there's a little URL right here where you get
them for free. Awesome. Cool. Yeah. So you get these videos that we shot at the house that are awesome about my
Jedi mind tricks that I use and parenting and relationships and overwhelm and
all that stuff.
Mel Robbins.com slash 31 sessions and check out Mel Robbins.com to get more
information.
I'm excited.
Uh,
we'll link everything up in the show notes before I ask the final question.
I want to acknowledge you for a moment,
Mel,
for your incredible gift and contribution to this world.
You are a unique, lovely inspiration.
And I'm dead serious.
I didn't know who you were before about three weeks ago.
And I reached out to you.
And I was just like, I'm really curious about learning more about you and connecting with
you.
And I'm so glad that I did because you are making a massive impact.
So I'm so grateful we've connected.
I'm so glad my
audience gets to watch this and hear about you and make sure you guys follow her because she's
a game changer. So thank you for being here. Yes. Thank you. I appreciate it.
All right. Right back at you. So listen, I've been stalking you for more than two years.
And so I feel like a little bit of a fangirl walking in to tape this. And the thing that
really jumps out to me is just, you are a guy that is all about abundance and passion.
And the thing that is so rare in this world is people that open up their hearts and their influence to help everybody around you.
And so I just love your heart.
I love your soul.
And I love the generosity of spirit that you have for the world.
And it has been such a privilege and such a fricking fangirl moment to be here with
Louis. Oh my God. And wear the headset and get to share this with your audience. Truly. So
anything I can do to help you, you, you put me on speed dial, brother.
I will. I will. I have one final question. Please.
What's your definition of greatness? Of greatness? Hearing your truth and speaking it,
no matter how your voice shakes.
Ooh, this was so juicy, my friend. I hope you enjoyed this episode. If you did,
let me know over on social media. Tag me and tag Mel Robbins.
Share this with a friend.
Text your girlfriends, your guy friends, your kids, your parents.
I don't care.
Text someone you think this will inspire, lewishouse.com slash 887,
and tell them to share with you what they learned about this episode as well.
You can also text me.
Be a part of my texting community where I'm sending out micro messages,
audio inspirational messages every week at 614-350-3960. You can text me right now the word podcast at 614-350-3960 to be a part of my weekly texting community where I'm sending out audio
inspirational messages. If you want me to be your coach every week
and inspire with thoughtful ideas and motivational tips,
then text me right now, 614-350-3960.
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truly keeps you connected. Again, lewishouse.com slash Sony. If you enjoyed this episode, it's your
first time here, please leave us a review over on Apple Podcasts. We've got over 6,000 five-star
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We'd love to get more of them
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to more people like yourself.
Again, your thoughts don't control you.
You control your thoughts.
Don't allow the ideas in your head
to rule your actions in your life.
You can make a change.
You can make a choice to shift those ideas
and start thinking about something else.
It may not seem easy in the moment
when negative ideas continue to come up in your mind,
but I'm telling you with practice,
with the five second rule,
with continual habits,
you can break that shift in your thoughts
and start thinking in a different way.
And I'm telling you, my friend,
you deserve to think differently because different thoughts create different results in your life. And that's
what this is all about. Finishing the year strong, starting a new decade with incredible wisdom and
power to transform your life. I hope you enjoyed this episode. And as always, I love you so very
much. You know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. Outro Music