The Mel Robbins Podcast - 3 Small Decisions That Make You Feel Incredible: Do This Every Morning After Waking Up
Episode Date: March 25, 2024In today’s episode, you’ll learn 3 simple yet profound science-backed strategies that will change your life, and you’ll feel the difference as soon as you start using them.These tiny decisions w...ill instantly boost your energy as soon as you wake up, so that you OWN your mornings and start your day feeling incredible.They will make you healthier, improve your relationships, make you more productive, and strengthen your mindset in just a few minutes per day.If you love the proven hacks featured in today’s episode, then the next one you’ll want to listen to is: 8 Small Habits That Will Change Your Life: The Best Expert Advice I’m Using This YearFor more resources, click here for the podcast episode page.Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s free 29-page workbook to make this your best yearWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s newsletter Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
What if I told you the only thing standing between you and waking up tomorrow and feeling
incredible is just three simple decisions?
I mean, I'm talking about three decisions that are so small, you don't even realize
that you're cruising right by them every single morning.
You're making the same mistakes I used to make.
You're doing the exact opposite of what you should be doing in these three situations
and it's making you feel tired and unproductive and it brings on the afternoon slump, it makes
it harder to fall asleep at night, and it impacts your mood and energy in the morning.
And look, I know exactly why you keep making
these same three mistakes, because I used to make them too.
They're so small, that's why they're easy to miss.
But that means these mistakes are also easy to fix
with three simple decisions that will make you wake up
and feel incredible.
you wake up and feel incredible. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast family.
I am so excited to be talking to you today about three simple decisions that will make
you feel incredible.
And these three decisions are so, so easy to miss, but boy, do they
have a massive impact on your life. And it is easy, isn't it, to underestimate the power
of a decision? If you really stop and think about it, your life is the sum of all the
decisions that you make. And so, I want to acknowledge your decision to listen to a podcast today
that could empower you to start to feel incredible in your life.
I mean, that says a lot about the kind of person that you are.
And in order to set up our conversation about these three simple decisions that
will make you feel incredible, I just want to underscore how important it is that you don't just listen today, but that
you take action and you try what I'm about to teach you.
Because you don't change your life by just thinking about changing it.
You change your life by doing something.
And that's what we're going to talk about today.
The decisions that you make to do something or not.
And so many times in life, you will find yourself stuck in this gap between knowing what you
need to do versus doing it.
Knowing isn't enough.
And I can give you a bazillion examples of this.
You can know what you need to do in order to be healthier.
You know that you need to exercise,
yet you don't make the decision to do it.
You may know that you need to work on your resume
if you'd like to get a new job,
yet you don't make the decision to sit down and work on it.
You may know that you need to call a particular person back.
It's gonna be a difficult conversation.
You think about it all day, but you don't do it.
There's this huge gap between knowing something
and making the decision to do it.
And one of the reasons why it can be really hard
to bridge this gap is because you don't feel motivated.
You don't feel motivated to exercise.
You don't feel motivated to work on your resume. But that's what we're going
to talk about today. We're going to talk about the other reason why you can get stuck in
this gap of knowing what you need to do, but not doing it. And the reason why you can get
so stuck is false confidence. You have this false confidence about what you're capable
of or how your decisions are going to impact you.
And I'm going to give you an example that I know that you are going to relate to.
And then we're going to get down to these three decisions and how false confidence is a part of this.
It happens to me all the time. In fact, false confidence just swooped in and bit me in the rear end last week.
Let me let me tell you how it impacted my decision.
So I was out in Vegas for work,
and I was there because I was giving a speech
for Keller and Williams, the big real estate company.
There were 17,000 people in the audience.
And after the speech and the meet and greet
and all that stuff, my team and I,
we went out and we had a great dinner together.
We were celebrating, we were wrapping up a great week,
and it was an early night.
I love an early night. And so we all kind of piled into the Uber and we were heading
back to the hotel and we were getting back to the hotel. It was only 8.45 PM. I mean,
that's kind of amazing. I'm not one of these people that needs to close down the night
in Vegas. And I also had a plan. I'd been looking forward to going up to my room after
dinner and I was going gonna run a hot bath,
and then I was gonna soak in the tub,
and the hotel that I stay in always gives you
these little packets of salt,
and so I can pour the salt in the tub,
and I can soak in the tub, and it's quiet in my hotel room.
There's no dogs, no family.
I can just relax, and then I could pack up my stuff
beforehand, so then I would climb into bed.
I'd get a good night's sleep,
and then I'd wake up early enough
to be able to get a workout in
and still get out the door for my 6.30 a.m. flight.
I mean, I was so excited.
But as we're heading back to the hotel on the Uber
and we're cranking the tunes
and the group was like rocking on the high
of an incredible week in Vegas
and the great dinner that we had. I just didn't want the day to end.
I mean, do you know how hard it is to say while you're getting out of a newver,
this is great, what a great week, I love you guys, I'm going to give you a hug right now
because I got an early flight and I'm gonna head upstairs."
And you know in the long run, you know that saying goodnight is the best decision.
Why?
Because it's going to make you feel incredible tomorrow morning.
But then someone in the group says, as you're pulling up to the hotel and you're starting
to say goodnight, what? You're not going to bed, are you?
Come on, we're in Vegas.
Hang out a little.
Let's have a nightcap.
You've been in a moment like this a thousand times, haven't you?
Do you stay out a little longer and hang out with your friends?
Or do you call it a night and you get a good night's sleep?
Now sitting here listening to me, you're like, oh, you get a good night's sleep.
No, you don't.
No, you're not.
That's not the decision that you make.
Come on, let's weigh the options here.
You're having a great night.
Do you join your friends and having a drink or smoking
a joint or eating that dessert? Or do you say no, because you've either had enough or
it's just not your thing? That's the decision. And the mistake that you and I make is we
base the decision on how it's going to feel now. Instead of making a decision based on how it impacts you in the long run,
it is so easy to say,
oh, you're right, I'll stay out a little bit longer.
But easy decisions make your life hard.
When you learn how to make a hard decision, life gets easier.
And that was the exact situation I was in last week in Las Vegas.
I could have easily said, you guys go have some fun.
I need to go to bed.
I got an early flight.
I want to go take a bath.
But see, here's what happened.
False confidence comes swooping in.
This is not about motivation.
This is about about motivation.
This is about false confidence.
It swoops right in in that moment
when your emotions are all swirling around
and you literally think that your decision in the moment
will not impact you in the future.
And as I say to my friends, oh, you're right.
I'll just stay out a little bit longer.
What happens?
Oh my God, next thing you know it's freaking midnight. You've talked
about nothing. Your flight hasn't changed. It's leaving at 6 30 in the morning. You still have
to pack. You haven't taken a bath. You're definitely not exercising in the morning anymore. But somehow
when you said, oh sure, I'll just stay out a little bit longer, you had this false confidence
that you could somehow handle it all. that somehow time would freeze for you.
Just you, you awesome human being Mel Robbins, and
that this decision in the moment to just scrap all the plans that you had,
it's not gonna impact me tonight or tomorrow morning.
That somehow Mel, you're the only human being who's not gonna be affected by
staying up too late.
Of course I was affected by this decision.
I didn't take my bath.
I still had to get up at 5 a.m., but this time, not to exercise, I had to pack.
I mean, I was racing around like a lunatic in that hotel room at 5 a.m., trying to get
myself packed up so that I could catch the flight on time.
I didn't feel incredible.
I felt horrible.
I was mad at myself.
I had that feeling that I'm sure you felt before where you're like exhausted and now
you're on the way to the airport and you're like, why the hell did I do that to myself?
I could have felt so different right now.
And there are so many examples of false confidence.
I mean, it's everywhere in life.
And one other thing I want to underscore here
is that it is so easy to see this in other people.
Like the true skill is catching it in yourself,
which I did not do in Vegas last week.
You can see it in other people.
Like for example, we all have a friend who literally,
you cannot understand why they continue to date losers.
People that treat them like garbage.
And your friend will be like, I know, I know, I know he doesn't give me the attention I
deserve.
But he's trying.
He's trying to improve.
And you can spot their false confidence a mile away.
You're like, you're deluding yourself.
You are not a special princess.
You are not going to turn this frog into a prince.
He is not going to magically turn from a person who treats you badly to a person who treats
you well, and you know it, but you are falsely confident.
Boom, you can see it in someone else.
Maybe you spot this false confidence in your boss every time they walk into a meeting.
They're like, so we're going to add this huge project to your workload, and it's due in
a month, and no, I'm not hiring anybody else, but we can get it done.
You're thinking, what planet do you live on?
Like you are diluting yourself with this false confidence.
Or your sister declares, I'm going to lose 30 pounds, but she's not changing her diet
or exercising at all.
I mean, based on the way the world works,
that's not gonna work, but false confidence.
It always convince you that the laws of nature
and science and common sense, well, they don't apply to you.
You can just declare this stuff
and suddenly time shrinks or your body does
or people magically change around you.
That even though it is the wrong decision
or the wrong approach for anyone else on the planet to do it, somehow, somehow it's
gonna work for you. I mean, I do this all the time. I literally say, you know what,
I think I'm gonna clean out my closet over lunch today because I think I can
get it done in 30 minutes. Oh yeah, mm-hmm, now exactly. You know what happens in 30
minutes? I tear everything apart and then I've got a gigantic pile
on the floor of my closet.
False confidence is what created that.
Yeah Mel, you're the exception.
You're the one person that can clean out an entire closet
in 30 minutes flat and get everything hung up,
color coordinated and folded perfectly
like you're at a store at the mall.
Mm-hmm, time stops for you Mel Robbins.
A night of partying won't give you a hangover.
Your metabolism is superhuman.
This is false confidence.
It's when you ignore common sense, the research,
the science, what you know to be true.
And in fact, researchers and psychologists
have a word for this,
because it's such a well-established cognitive bias.
It's called the over confidence effect.
It's like this magic potion that we drink where you delude yourself into thinking, oh,
you know, if I were giving somebody else advice, I would tell them to go to bed at 845 so they
can catch their flight and exercise and take a bath and get a good night's sleep.
But if I am in the situation, I can make a decision and those same rules do not apply to me
and they will not affect me.
And I'm explaining this concept of false confidence
because it's killing your mornings.
I'm serious about this.
False confidence is showing up in three places
every single morning.
And it's very sneaky, by the way.
Very, very sneaky how this false confidence
is showing up in derailing your mornings.
And when I put a spotlight
on these three sneaky moments every morning,
you're gonna get it immediately.
And once you see it, this is the cool part,
it empowers you to make a different decision
starting tomorrow morning.
Make a decision that is based in science and research
and evidence and common sense,
decisions that will make you feel incredible.
And every single morning that you wake up,
these same three decisions, it's gonna be there.
And you know what else is gonna be there?
False confidence.
You have to make these decisions every single morning because what you decide to do every
morning in these three, very simple, very sneaky moments.
The decisions that you make either create an upward spiral or a downward one.
And after our conversation today, you get to decide because you're going to know the consequences
of each one of these decisions. We're going to go deep into the research after we unpack all three
decisions, but let me just highlight what's available to you and why these three simple
decisions make you feel incredible. Because based on the research,
these three simple decisions improve your mood,
they make you feel more in control,
they give you more energy and focus, helps your gut health,
it'll lower your stress and anxiety and depression,
it supports you in getting a better night's sleep
at the end of the day, and it helps you wake up
and feel more energized and present and boost your mood. How freaking cool is that? And so here's what we're
gonna do. I'm gonna set up each one of these three decisions kind of the same
way that I set up the scenario earlier, you know, where your friends are wanting
you to stay out later, where I want to put you right at the scene because I
want you to really stop and consider these moments and the decision that you have to do something
or not.
These are not life and death decisions.
You're an adult.
You get to choose just like you get to choose whether you stay out or whether you make a
decision to go up and take care of yourself.
And on your face, it may seem kind of obvious, but do me a favor and don't dismiss the power of what you're about to learn simply
because these decisions are super simple and these three moments every morning just pass
you by right now. I want you to really understand the depth and the implications of each one
of these three decisions, whether it's a positive implication or the negative implication.
Because I think it's a mistake to not make these decisions.
Because when you really allow yourself to consider
and discern what I'm saying,
I know it's going to motivate and inspire you
to try this in your life.
I don't want you to just listen to this. I want you to do something because that's how you in your life. I don't want you to just listen to this.
I want you to do something
because that's how you change your life.
And here's something I need to do.
I need to take a quick break
so we can hear a word from our sponsors.
I love our sponsors because they allow me
to bring this to you at zero cost.
So take a listen and make the decision to stay
because I'm gonna be waiting for you after this short break
and we're gonna jump right into these three simple decisions
when we return.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon.
I'll see you soon. I'll see you soon. I'll see you soon. I'll see you soon. I'll see you soon. I'll see you for that. You and I are talking about the three simple decisions that you need to make that are going
to help you feel amazing.
The first decision that you need to make is what you decide to do when the alarm rings
every morning.
Let me put you at the scene.
Imagine someone who is lying in bed, okay?
You can just picture them in their bed.
The alarm rings.
And it rings an hour before they need to get up
and get out of bed.
Because this person, person A, loves,
loves to hit the snooze button.
Their routine when the alarm rings is hit the snooze,
drift back to sleep.
Let the alarm ring again, hit the snooze,
drift back to sleep.
Hit the alarm again, drift back to sleep.
And they do this literally until they have no choice
but to drag themselves out of bed.
They're rotting away in bed for an hour every morning.
That is person A. Then I want you to imagine person B. When the alarm rings,
you see them go, oh, they don't want to get out of bed. But they throw off the
sheets, they roll out of bed, they stand up, they walk toward the bathroom
and they start their day.
Now I want you to just stop and think for a minute and think about this moment.
Which one is the better decision?
If you think about decision A, to hit the snooze alarm over and over and over again,
versus person B, the person who just makes the decision,
even though I feel like to just roll out of bed and start the day, which person would you
hire?
Which person would you want to date?
Which person do you wish you were?
If you had $1,000 and you could place a bet on which person was going to have
a better day, who would you put your money on?
I mean, from a common sense standpoint and a logic standpoint, you know that making the
decision to get out of bed is the harder decision in the morning, but it makes your life easier
and better in the long run.
And this is the thing about a decision, you can see it objectively.
But false confidence skews your decision making.
Because let's you and I climb into bed right now, okay?
Let's climb into bed and let's really experience how false confidence makes person A do what
they're doing.
I used to do this.
I literally used to be like, okay, well, if I have to get out of bed by seven o'clock,
then I'm going to set the alarm at six.
That way I've got about four or five snoozes in me so that I can slowly sort of coax myself
awake because I'm not a morning person and I don't really like to get out of bed.
And so if I just sort of like coax myself out of bed,
then by the time I've hit the snooze button four or five times,
and then I really have to get out of bed at seven, like I got no choice,
then I'll be ready to get out of bed.
When you're that kind of person, when you set the alarm an hour earlier
than you need to wake up because you know you are so bad at waking up
that you've got to hit the snooze button that many times.
Are you making your life easier?
No.
Think about what it feels like to be in that bed with me right now.
Because every time that alarm rings
and then you hit the snooze button
and then you drift off to sleep again
and then the alarm goes off,
you have to go through that whole process of, oh my God, awake, and then the resistance, and then the alarm goes off. You have to go through that whole process of,
oh my God, awake, and then the resistance,
and then the hitting, the snooze,
and then the falling back asleep,
and only falling back asleep for nine minutes,
and then the alarm goes off again,
and then, oh my God, here we are in this,
and yet, and yet, we're in that bed, right?
And the alarm goes off.
And here's the false confidence.
That false confidence is in the bed with you
and it's basically luring you into making a stupid decision. Because somehow as you're
laying in bed and you know that hitting the snooze button four times and rotting away
in that bed for an hour, that it is not magically setting you up for success.
Of course, you know it's impacting your mood
and your productivity and your sense of control
and it makes you feel terrible.
But false confidence kicks in and you literally believe
that this is the best way for you to get up,
that this is the great idea.
Oh, you know, starting the day with a decision to
procrastinate, getting out of bed, that's a good idea. I wouldn't recommend it to a
friend or to my sibling. I wouldn't want to hire somebody or date somebody who
starts their day like this, but for me, my false confidence is telling me that this does not impact me.
And I say this because this used to be me.
I used to be person A.
Not only did I not feel motivated to get out of bed,
I deluded myself into thinking that this wasn't a big deal.
Eh.
It's a huge deal.
The decision that you make when the alarm rings every morning is a huge deal. The decision that you make
when the alarm rings every morning is a huge deal.
Let me explain shocking research to you.
Laying in bed increases anxiety and depression five fold
compared to pushing yourself out of bed when the alarm rings.
This is research based.
So if anxiety and depression is what's keeping you in bed longer in the morning like it used
to keep me in bed longer in the morning, you better pay attention to this.
This will change your life.
Laying in bed, rotting in bed, hitting the snooze alarm, it is making your anxiety
and depression worse. This comes from research at the University of South Carolina. They
conducted this study that was published in the Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders.
And here's what I love about this study. They used all kinds of tools to measure what was
happening. This isn't just a study where they limited the research to asking people how they felt.
Yeah, they asked them how they felt,
but they actually had all this tech
to determine what was going on in people's bodies,
from sleep trackers to physical monitors to questionnaires
to heart and rate blood pressure tracking to blood work,
all of which was tracking what was happening.
And in this study, here's what they did.
They forced one group of people to lay in bed longer
than they usually did. And then another group of people to lay in bed longer than they usually did, and then
another group of people to get right out of bed when the alarm rang.
Here's what they found.
For the people who laid in bed longer, depression and anxiety went up five-fold compared to
the group that got out of bed when the alarm rang.
Inflammation, which was measured by blood work, went up two-fold for the people who
laid in bed.
So that false confidence that's saying,
oh, well, laying here, it actually makes me feel good.
I really need to lay here.
This is what my false confidence lied and told me.
It's affecting your mental health and your wellbeing, period.
Making the decision to get out of bed when the alarm rings
improves your mental health, it improves your well-being,
it has such a positive impact,
it actually lowers inflammation.
And let me hit you with another piece of research.
If you're somebody that's a chronic snoozer,
research shows that you waste four work weeks a year
by snoozing.
Uh-huh.
This comes from a study that was done by researchers at the University of Notre Dame.
It was published in the prestigious Sleep Journal from Oxford University Press.
And this study, it is the jackpot of snoozing information.
It is the biggest study ever done on snoozing.
They had people in the study wear wearable technology for
over a year. And there's so much to unpack from this study that I'm going to do an entirely
separate episode on the topic of rotting in bed and snoozing because this is a thing and
I really want to dig deep into the research. But for the purposes of the decision I want
you to make starting tomorrow, the decision to wake up when the alarm rings and get out of bed, I want to share one key finding.
The average time that people spend snoozing before they get themselves out of bed is 26.93
minutes.
That's 27 minutes.
That totals 164 hours a year.
That's more than four work weeks of time.
This is proving my point that an easy decision in the moment, which is to stay in bed or
hit the snooze button, makes your life hard.
But a hard decision to get out of bed when the alarm rings makes your life easier.
What would you do if you got the equivalent of a month off of work?
What would you do with that time?
Because that time is available to you if you change your decision tomorrow morning.
By simply getting out of bed when the alarm rings, you get four weeks of time back over
the course of the year.
So do not let your false confidence win.
When that alarm rings tomorrow morning, make the hard decision.
Why?
Because you know the impact that it has.
It will give you so much time back.
It reduces stress and anxiety and depression.
It reduces inflammation in your body.
It makes you feel more focused.
It makes you feel more productive and in control.
And look, this is simple, but it's not easy,
which is why I am hammering this first decision.
And I wanna underscore something.
False confidence, it's not only a real thing,
it is so damn sneaky.
It even sneaks up on me
and I'm the one teaching you about this.
Let me tell you what happened to me this morning.
I woke up and it is our daughter Sawyer's
25th birthday today.
And I knew we were gonna be recording this episode.
And so I got up really early today because I wanted to be awake before she got up,
and I wanted to surprise her with, like,
having, like, a big birthday playlist playing, you know,
when she came down the stairs,
because we stayed up late last night,
and we assembled this huge balloon arch,
and we had all these decorations downstairs
that she was going to walk down to.
And so my alarm goes off.
I immediately get out of bed,
I walk into the bathroom, I turn off my alarm
because my phone is never near the bed.
And so I immediately went to my phone, you know,
and I looked on the Find a Person app,
and I was like, oh my God, she's out in the woods
about two miles away with my husband, Chris.
I could see that they had gone for a big hike in the morning
and you wanna know what?
Boom, false confidence slides right in.
Ooh, Mel, you've got time.
You don't have to be up this early.
You could go back to sleep.
It was like a siren calling me to the sea.
And I found myself hypnotized by this false confidence
as I'm like, ooh, yeah, she's already seen the decorations.
I have time.
I could climb into that bed and I could open up
my Spotify app and I could start to put together a birthday song playlist
because I have time and I would rather be in my bed right now.
And so I put a hand on the top of the bed and I pull back the sheets and I go climb into the bed and I start to put my feet in
and then all of a sudden I'm like, what are you doing?
What are you doing?
You are not person A,
you are not going to sit here and rot in this bed.
You are person B, you made a decision to get up,
get out of here, false confidence, shut up, go away.
And let me tell you something,
I hopped out of that bed and thank God I did. Because after I hopped out of the bed,
I walked into the kitchen and all of a sudden
my phone updated and I saw the tracker and oh my God,
she was halfway up the driveway.
Thank God I didn't get back in bed
because I would have missed the moment.
I had just enough time to cue up Katy Perry's birthday song
and have it blasting so that when she walked into the room
after the walk, I was like, ready, game on, let's go.
And I'm telling you this why.
I'm telling you this because you're not a robot
and neither am I.
False confidence is a cognitive bias.
It is hardwired in your brain and it is so sneaky.
Oh my God.
It is always going to be there around the alarm.
It will always be there.
I want you to expect it because this is the power of a decision.
You override false confidence with the decision that you make to get up when the alarm rings.
I want you to be person B,
because I want your life to be easier,
and hard decisions in the moment
make your life easier in the long run,
and hard decisions in the morning when the alarm rings
makes you feel incredible for the rest of the day.
And boy, oh boy, do I wish I knew this decades ago, because I rotted my life away in a dorm
room and during law school and in my 20s and my 30s and part of my 40s because I did not
know this information.
So please, please, please take time to share this with the people that you love.
All right.
Stay where you are, okay?
Because coming up next, decision number two.
It's all about what you look at first thing in the morning.
I cannot wait to tell you what it is.
But first, I want to give our advertisers some love
because they support this show,
and I'll be waiting for you after a short break.
So stay with me. Welcome back.
It's your friend Mel.
I'm so glad you are still with me.
We have covered decision number one of the three simple decisions that you need to make
to feel incredible.
And that decision, get up when the alarm rings, do not rot in bed, do not hit the snooze,
grab those four extra weeks of time, feel good, feel in control.
I know you're like, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, I'm on it,
I'm trying it, let's go to number two.
All right, decision number two,
natural light before artificial light.
I'm gonna say it again, natural light
before artificial light.
What does that mean?
I'm glad you asked.
That means as soon as you get out of bed,
when the alarm rings, do not stare at your phone.
Instead, get outside as soon as possible
and get exposure to natural light
before you saturate yourself with the artificial light
and the crap on social media that's on your phone.
And let's start with the common sense reason
why this matters, and then we're gonna jump
into the deeper science.
So let's go back to person A and person B.
Remember person A, that's our snoozer,
that's our bedrotter, that's our person
that is wasting four hours a week
just hitting the snooze button,
that's the person that's making this major mistake.
And person B, the person who doesn't feel like it, but 54321 gets out of bed when the
alarm rings.
In this scenario, I want you to get natural light before artificial light, okay?
Let's talk about person A and person B. Person A, based on the research, is 89% of the human beings on this planet.
Within 10 minutes of waking up, you are staring at your phone.
And so I want you to just visualize this, okay?
I want you to imagine somebody who's finally gotten out of bed, this is person A, and as
you watch them, what do they have in their hand?
They have their phone.
And what are they doing with their phone?
Oh, they are just staring at their phone.
Their neck is cranked down.
They might even be laying in bed looking at their phone.
They're drinking their coffee looking at their phone.
They're walking around and brushing their teeth
looking at their phone.
They're staring at their phone.
They're watching the lives of influencers and celebrities.
They're replying to emails to their boss
while they're in their underwear.
They're brushing their teeth as they're checking
on the headlines in the news, that's person A.
Now person B, notice what they're doing.
They've gotten up when the alarm rings,
they've turned off the alarm on their phone,
and they've either set their phone down
and walked out of the room, or they've put it
in their pocket and they've done something interesting.
They walked outside.
And you see person B sitting on the porch.
They're listening to the birds or maybe you see them taking a short walk around the block.
They're getting natural light exposure, not saturation from their phone.
They're just present in the moment.
And let's go back to logic and common sense.
Who's making the better decision?
Person A, who's mainlining artificial light and social media?
Or person B, who's taking a moment
to get natural light exposure
and to be outside for a minute? Which person would you hire?
Which person would you want to date?
Which person do you wish you were?
If you had to place a thousand dollar bet on who is going to have a better day, who's
going to feel better,
where would you put your money?
Obviously, it's person B, you're a smart cookie.
Common sense tells both of us
that the person who gets exposure to natural light
is way better off than the person
who just saturated their brain with artificial light
and all of the garbage that is on their phone.
See, person B is making a decision that is empowering.
Person B is making a decision that puts them in control.
And person B is also making a decision that has extraordinary benefits for your mental health,
for your physical health, for brain functioning.
It helps you sleep better at night.
And look, I know I'm being harsh around person A.
You wanna know why?
Because I have been person A.
For most of my life, I've been person A.
And the thing about that's crazy about this habit, right?
And this decision that you make in the morning to look at your phone first thing, it is literally the thing about that's crazy about this habit, right, and this decision
that you make in the morning to look at your phone first thing, it is literally the first
thing that you're looking at, is that you know it's not good for you. And if you are
one of the many small business owners or entrepreneurs who listen to this podcast, I know you're
person A because your business is your phone. Or if you're a high schooler or a college
student or a graduate student, I also know that you're Person A because you have grown up literally in a world
where the phone has been in your hand
and it is your relationships.
And I get it, it used to be me too.
But I wanna come back to the power of your decisions.
This is a moment that has a huge impact on how you feel and on your life and on your brain every single morning,
and you're in control of this decision.
And so I'm not just going to appeal to logic and common sense here with you,
because this decision to not look at my phone and instead to make it a priority every
single morning to get outside and get exposure to natural light for just a
minute or two, that's all that it takes, instead of saturating myself with
artificial light and artificial information and artificial emergencies
and priorities. This has been a game-changer. It has made me more
successful, more productive, happier.
It makes me feel like I am in control, which is why it makes me feel incredible.
And it's going to make you feel incredible, too. And there's two reasons why.
The first one is your attention.
When you make the decision every morning to get natural light exposure, instead of saturating your brain with all of this artificial
information that is on your phone, you maintain control of your attention.
Just stop and think about this.
If you look at your phone, what's on your phone?
It's things that influencers want you to buy. It's the lifestyles of celebrity
It's headlines that news organizations want you to pay attention to and to get upset about it is emails and emergencies from work that are not
Important at this very moment the second that you look at your phone all of that artificial
Information goes to the front of the line in your brain
You just gave away without even thinking about it, the most important commodity that you have,
which is your attention.
I want you to make a decision to own your attention.
And the way that you do that is you prioritize natural light
and you do not have your phone on you.
Because when you step outside
and you awaken your five senses,
even if you're just standing on the porch,
even if you just walk around the block,
even if you just stick your head out a window
for crying out loud, your senses come alive.
You have a chance to take a breath.
You warm into the day.
It boosts your mood.
It allows you to think for a second
and get present about what matters to you.
You're putting yourself first by making the decision to not saturate yourself with artificial
light and artificial information that doesn't matter.
If you are so tired of never having time for yourself or always coming last or feeling
like you wake up into an emergency or that you're always putting out fires, this one
decision will change your life because it is a major mistake to begin your day by saturating
yourself with artificial life and artificial information because you have just lost the
battle for attention with that singular mistake.
That's reason number one, that this changed my life and it makes me feel incredible.
Reason number two has to do with the science around circadian rhythms.
We've had multiple experts on the Mel Robbins podcast talk about how getting natural light
exposure first thing in the morning signals to your internal clock, your circadian rhythm,
that it is time to wake up, which also signals when you go to sleep. No kidding.
Getting natural light exposure first thing in the morning helps you sleep
better at night because it is part of you stimulating the circadian rhythm in your brain.
That is why this is such an powerful, powerful decision
that will make you feel incredible.
And sure enough, I told you that our daughter
was out taking a walk with Chris this morning, my husband.
My husband, Chris, and I take a walk
almost every single morning.
I was not with them this morning
because I was planning a little surprise.
But when I saw them, I said,
so how do you feel after taking the walk?
And sure enough, she reported exactly what the research says.
When you get outside and you expose yourself to natural light and you start your day without
the artificial light and the artificial information, you allow yourself to get present, what do
you feel?
You're going to be in a better mood.
You're going to be more present.
You're going to feel more in control. You're going to be more energized. You're going to get present. What do you feel? You're gonna be in a better mood. You're gonna be more present. You're gonna feel more in control.
You're gonna be more energized.
You're gonna be calm.
You're gonna be clearer about your priorities.
You're gonna feel like you've put yourself first.
And that's exactly what the research says you will feel.
Which is why when you make the decision
each and every morning to step into the natural light,
you will feel incredible.
And that brings me to the third decision.
I want you to pour yourself a glass of water
before you pour yourself a cup of coffee or tea.
Let me explain this.
What's the very first thing you drink in the morning?
It's most likely a big cup of coffee or some tea.
And the first thing that you drink in the morning,
this is a very important decision.
Just consider the word we use
for the first meal of the day.
It's breakfast.
You're breaking the fast, break fast.
In other words, the food that you're eating
breaks the fast from overnight when you were sleeping.
I want you to extend that same thinking to the first thing that you drink every morning,
because you're probably making the same mistake that I did.
Instead of drinking something that helps you, that makes you feel incredible, that helps
you focus, you're probably making the mistake that I used to make.
And that is the very first thing that I used to drink every single morning was a giant
cup of coffee, usually with artificial sweeteners and a creamer.
I mean, the more it tasted like candy, woo-hoo, the faster I drank that puppy.
And then, you know, I had the audacity to stand there after I would have a big cup of
coffee on an empty stomach and break out into a sweat.
My anxiety would spike and then I'd start to get the shakes.
And if I were going to an exercise class and I'd feel like throwing up and I'd always be
running to the bathroom and I had the audacity of being like, oh, I wonder what's wrong with
me.
Oh, do you think it could have been that gigantic cup of Java lava that you just shoved into your stomach
and spiked your anxiety mal?
I mean, give me a break.
And this is where false confidence comes in.
You know that army crawling your way to the coffee maker
and slamming down a big cup of coffee because you're tired,
it's not good for you.
But somehow you convince yourself that you need it,
that you're tired, that you can't wake up
without your coffee.
How many times have you said, oh, I'm really sorry.
I haven't had my coffee yet,
that's why I'm not thinking straight.
I used to say that for years.
In fact, I wore it like a badge of honor.
I lived for my first cup of coffee, and then my second,
and then around two or three, I needed my third.
And this is where the decision comes in,
and the research that supports it
that will change your life.
I want you to pour a glass of water and drink it
before you pour a cup of coffee or tea.
And there's a bazillion reasons why.
Number one, caffeine on an empty stomach spikes your cortisol levels, and that will make your
anxiety and your stress worse.
And I am sure that it is not helping your gut health.
But the second reason, and this is really the game changer. The second reason is you think that caffeine helps you wake up.
Believe it or not, caffeine, first thing in the morning, makes you feel more tired not awake.
And I want to share some groundbreaking research that has changed my decision.
I pour water and I drink water before I pour coffee.
It makes me feel incredible.
I cannot believe the impact of this.
Dr. Amy Shaw first explained this
on the Mel Robbins podcast.
Yes, I still drink coffee, but I have made the decision
to pour water and drink it first. And have made the decision to pour water and drink it first,
and I make the decision to not have coffee
until about 90 minutes after I wake up.
And here's the crazy thing.
Not only am I more awake and alert and my mood is better
and I don't have anxiety now that I do this,
I never experience the afternoon slump.
And I used to be so predictable,
2 p.m. need some coffee.
I don't feel that anymore.
This is research that you need to understand that will change your decision and will have
you pour water and drink water before you have a cup of coffee.
And it is research around something called adenosine.
Adenosine is basically a chemical in your body that signals to your brain that you're
really sleepy.
So when you have a lot of adenosine, you feel sleepy.
And during the day, adenosine starts to build up in your body, and it reaches the highest
levels right before you go to bed.
Okay?
And there's a reason why adenosine is building up all day, and the reason why is because
the adenosine kind of signals that it's time to go to bed and you're feeling really sleepy,
you know?
And as you're sleeping, that adenosine level, it starts to reduce in your body.
Why?
Because you're sleeping.
You don't need the adenosine anymore because you're actually falling asleep.
But here's the thing.
When you wake up in the morning,
you still have a little bit of adenosine in your system,
according to the research.
That's why when you wake up,
it's one of the reasons why you still feel kind of groggy.
It's the adenosine.
And based on the research,
it takes about an hour or two after you wake up
for the adenosine to truly leave your brain and
to drop down to like zero, okay?
Here's where the caffeine comes in.
And this is really important because it's based on research.
Again, Dr. Amy Shaw, who appeared on the podcast, shared this with you and me.
The moment you have caffeine, caffeine binds to the ends of the neuroreceptors
in your brain and it prevents the adenosine
from truly flushing out of your system.
Basically, caffeine, first thing in the morning,
traps adenosine in your brain.
And so when you have caffeine
and you trap this sleepy chemical in your brain, you're okay for about
an hour or two, and then what happens?
The caffeine wears off.
What happens to the adenosine that's in your brain?
It now is in your system, which is why you feel a little bit of a slump and you need
another cup of coffee.
So the caffeine isn't making you feel awake.
The caffeine is blocking the adenosine from leaving your brain, which is why you're constantly chasing more caffeine
It's freaking unbelievable. And so here is the advice based on neuroscience and medical research. It's so incredible
delay caffeine
For an hour or two every morning
When you delay caffeine for an hour or two after you wake up, you give your body a chance
to flush the adenosine from your system
so that when you have the caffeine an hour or two
after waking up, it's gone.
It can bind to the neuroreceptors in your brain, no problem.
And here's what happened for me, this is so cool.
When I started pouring a cup of water and drinking it,
number one, I was worried about doing this.
Because when I tell you I was addicted to coffee,
like it was part of my identity,
it was part of my morning routine.
Like I was like, I am not giving up caffeine.
I don't know what the hell that's for,
but I'm not doing that.
I didn't think I could do this.
I had a cup of water and the glass of water
fills you up a little bit.
It's way better for your gut.
Kind of helps you wake up a little bit.
It's way better for when you're exercising,
if you exercise first thing in the morning like I do.
And then I started to notice literally within three days,
I went from a person
who drank three or four lattes a day or cups of coffee
and always battled an afternoon slump every single day
to being a person who has a cup of coffee
around 10 o'clock in the morning,
half the time I don't even finish it,
and I never crave another one,
and I never have an afternoon slump.
It's like magic, only it's not because it's science.
And here's the problem.
As you're nodding along,
guess who is going to be there tomorrow morning?
When you wake up,
and you go outside,
and you get your natural light exposure and then you go
straight to the coffee maker.
Your false confidence is going to be going, oh, come on now.
You did the other two things.
You do not need to do this one.
You are not a morning person woman.
You have got to have your cup of coffee.
You cannot jump on that Zoom meeting at work or drive those kids to school or say hello
to your partner.
You cannot do this without the caffeine, that adenosine sleepy stuff, that does not apply to you.
Your brain is not like anybody else's brain.
Your brain does not work like that.
Your brain needs caffeine.
I don't know about that adenosine thing, that sleepy stuff thing that Mel Robbins is talking
about, but that does not apply to you.
You are going to tank if you just, I'm not kidding, tell that false confidence to take
their caffeine addiction somewhere else.
You my friend are going to use the science.
You are going to make a different decision.
You're going to try this for three mornings.
Pour a cup of water before you pour a cup of coffee or tea.
Drink your water and delay the caffeine intake for at least an hour and see what happens.
Because if you make the easy decision and you do what you always do and you let your
false confidence convince you that you're the only human being on the planet that this
doesn't apply to, you're actually creating that afternoon slump.
Do not do that to yourself.
Make the harder decision. Pour the water before the coffee and you make
your life easier. Because you're using science to make your brain work better,
to boost your focus, to take care of your gut, to lower your anxiety and to take
control and that will make you feel incredible. That's the three simple decisions.
Get up when the alarm rings.
Get natural light exposure before you saturate yourself
with artificial light and artificial information.
And drink water first thing in the morning
before you pour your coffee.
These three decisions will make you feel incredible.
And you know what else will make you feel incredible?
Sharing this with everyone you know,
empowering other people.
I wish I had known this in my 20s.
Heck, I wish I knew this in my 30s and my early 40s.
Sharing this research with our kids,
it's made a huge difference in their lives.
Sharing this research with my team
has made a huge difference in their lives. And one research with my team has made a huge difference in their lives.
And one more thing, in case no one else tells you today,
I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you
and I believe in you and I believe in your ability
to create a better life and to make better decisions.
In fact, these three decisions will make you feel incredible
and you deserve that.
All right, I'll talk to you in a few days.
I got a little itchy on my nose.
Hold on.
I've got...
Can you get me a...
I need something because I've got like fur on my face that is itching the hell out of me.
Okay. Oh my lord. I literally have like a fuzzball somewhere. It was on my upper lip.
I don't know what happened there. I don't know what happened there.
I don't know what that was.
There's like nothing in there.
But like, you know, like when you get like a little...
But what makes person A...
Is that Chris on the tractor?
Yeah, what is what is everybody doing right now at my house?
It's at the other windows.
Let's make sure he's not gonna start. Can you get
Tom we need like a half an hour. Awesome!
Oh and one more thing and no this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice
of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.