The Mel Robbins Podcast - 8 Habits That Will Change Your Life: The Expert Advice You Need This Year
Episode Date: December 30, 2024In this episode, you’re getting the best of the best of The Mel Robbins Podcast.This year, Mel released 115 episodes of the podcast, and featured 43 experts who shared their transformative insights ...on health, relationships, mindset, and more. Together, this adds up to thousands of takeaways.Because your time is valuable, Mel is giving you a gift today:She and her team crunched the data, reviewed hundreds of hours of content, analyzed listener feedback, and pinpointed the moments you shared, replayed, and wrote about—the moments that changed your life.The result? The 8 most impactful moments of the entire year.So in this episode, Mel is teeing up these moments to you one at a time, playing for you the best takeaways of the year.You’ll hear 8 small pieces of expert advice that are packed with science, stories, and actionable strategies that will help you take action and make change, starting today.What should you listen to next? You’ll love the full podcast episodes with each of the experts featured today:Dr. Tara Swart: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeDr. Aditi Nerurkar: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeDr. Mary Claire Haver: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeDr. Wendy Suzuki: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeDr. Chris Palmer: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeSarah Jakes Roberts: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeDr. Robert Waldinger: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeDr. Zach Bush: Spotify | Apple | YouTubeMel also created an episode of HER favorite moments of this year, which you can listen to here.For more resources, including links to the studies mentioned in the episode, click here for the podcast episode page.Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s new book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to ad-free new episodes Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
This year, we had 43 amazing experts that appeared on the Mel Robbins Podcast, and some
of them were so incredible, they actually appeared a couple times.
And I started to wonder, who were the favorites for you and your fellow listeners around the
world?
I mean, I'm talking the best of the best.
So I decided to figure it out.
What episodes did you share the most?
What did you comment on?
What specific moments did you watch over and over again on YouTube?
Well, I've crunched the data.
I've reviewed hundreds of hours of our podcast from this year.
And today I'm so thrilled because I have the best of the best of the best from this past
year on the Mel Robbins podcast.
We've got takeaways.
We've got science back advice, laughter, tears, and you're going to want to listen all the
way to the end.
And here's why.
I've got the most moving moments from the Mel Robbins podcast waiting for you.
And it wouldn't be the year end best of episode
without me compiling the very best bloopers of the year too.
All right, let's do this.
Hey, it's your friend Mel
and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so fired up that you're here today. I mean, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so fired up that you're
here today. I mean, it's always an honor to be able to spend time together. But today, especially,
you want to know why? Because I'm going to hand the mic over to you. This episode today, it's all
about your favorite moments and your fellow listeners' favorite moments for the Mel Robbins
podcast from over the past year. And if you're brand new, I want to welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast from over the past year. And if you're brand new,
I want to welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. This is the perfect episode for you to
listen to as your very first episode, because you're going to get a sampling of the kind of
experts that we talk to on this podcast every single week, and you're going to love it.
And the fact is, I get hundreds of messages and emails and comments from you about episodes that hit home all year long. The
ones that made you stop in your tracks, the ones that made you replay a clip
over and over, the ones that you kept sending to someone that you love. And so
first of all it was so fun to just dig in and crunch the data and compile this
episode. In fact if you're watching on YouTube,
I'm gonna hold up this piece of paper,
I'm gonna describe it to you.
My team assembled, you know when you were in high school
and they did the end of the year superlatives
where it's like the best this and the best that,
the best the other thing or the worst this?
I won teacher's pet, by the way.
That was my superlative, which means I guess I'm a suck up. Well, we actually, my team gathered this amazing collage of all
of the experts that are featured today. So I kind of feel like it's the Mel Robbins,
the yearbook that we're going to be covering today. And we've spent hours reviewing these
standout moments. We've looked at YouTube, these moments that you just would pause, go back, rewatch.
We've looked at the episodes that you shared,
that you commented on, that you wrote in about.
We noticed which experts you were like,
could you have them come back?
And here's what I want to say.
You and I, we are in for such a treat.
And I'm excited because I know what you're about to hear.
And even just compiling this,
I was reminded of the experts that really changed a lot
about our approach to relationships.
There were episodes that helped you conquer your fears,
stories that made you laugh, cry,
or just feel like you're not alone.
And so today we have compiled it all for you
and we're diving into the greatest moments, the moments
that left the biggest impression on this extraordinary global community.
And whether you've been riding with me since the beginning of this podcast two years ago,
or you are tuning in for the first time, oh my gosh, did you pick a winner?
Because you're about to hear the moments that you said made the biggest
impact in your life and in the lives of the people that you love.
And one more thing I want to say before we jump in, because we've got a lot to cover
today, you and I, is that like every single episode that we do, if you look at the notes
of the episode, you're going to find links to every single one of the podcasts that we
are discussing today.
So you're not going gonna miss a thing. And in fact, if you're brand new,
this is like a playlist that is the best of the best.
So it's the perfect place for you to start
and you can find all those links in the show notes.
Alrighty, so I wanted to start with one of the most viral
clips of the entire year.
What does that mean?
It means this is one of the moments
from the podcast this year that you shared
more than any other moment.
And the jury has decided, cases closed.
You loved Dr. Tara Swert.
She is an incredible MD, PhD, and neuroscientist.
She's a professor at MIT,
and she flew all the way from London
to be in our Boston studios,
to be with you.
You loved absolutely everything that she shared in this episode about how to apply neuroscience
and the scientific findings in her research around the brain functioning to your life.
But holy cow, did you love everything that she shared about stress and she shared so
much with us that I'm gonna break
this down step by step so you really get it.
I mean, this was a moment that went so viral
that when you watch the podcast on YouTube,
you would literally stop and go backward
and play it over and over.
And you shared this episode over and over.
And so the first thing that you're gonna hear
is something I had never heard before.
And that is the impact that stress has, get this, on your belly fat.
And so what you're about to hear is you're about to hear Dr. Tara talk about stress and
the evolutionary background of the function of stress.
And then we're going to get into this shocking finding that the more stressed out you are,
the more that your body creates belly fat.
Check this out.
So cortisol is known as the stress hormone and it absolutely correlates with emotions such as fear,
anger, disgust, shame and sadness. Cortisol isn't all bad, you know, we need it to wake
up in the morning, we need it to have an adaptive stress response to, you know,
a car driving too fast on the street that we're trying to cross. So as long as it stays within that range, that's fine. But when something
super stressful happens, like the saber-tooth tiger, you know, that we spoke about earlier,
the cortisol levels spike, and that enables us to run away, to warn our tribe, and it should go back to normal levels quite quickly.
In the modern day, as I mentioned earlier, we're so overwhelmed with information,
there are so many psychological threats to our safety that it's, most people unfortunately,
the levels are high and they're either at the higher end or higher. And that's pretty constant, whereas they should be, you know,
kind of undulating through between that range.
When that happens, because cortisol is carried in the
blood supply around the body and it crosses the blood brain
barrier, there are receptors in the brain that monitor the
levels of cortisol in a way to sense threat in our environment.
When those levels are high,
most of the time or all the time, or higher than the higher end of the threshold, the brain immediately thinks, I'm about to die, what is the biggest threat to my survival? And in some ways,
because it's from so long ago, we're wired in such a cave person way,
the first threat that the brain will consider is starvation.
Even though that's for most of us, thank goodness, not the biggest threat to our survival,
in fact quite the opposite.
So to try to protect us from dying of starvation,
one of the things that cortisol does is lay down extra fat in the
abdominal fat cells so that if we are unable to hunt or gather for some time, we can digest
that fat and stay alive until a food source becomes available.
Wait, so are you saying that stress is causing belly fat?
Yeah.
It's not just causing fat, it's specifically causing belly fat.
So, you may not have changed your shape in the rest of your body,
but if you're noticing that your belt has become tighter,
that's a sign that you could have chronic cortisol.
And the other thing is that it's fat that's particularly stubborn.
So, if you do notice that the belt is tighter
and you think, okay, I definitely need to move a bit more or eat a bit less,
and you actually start doing one or both of those things,
but the belly fat doesn't change
because the cortisol is driving the fat there,
regardless of your behavior in the physical world.
And that's all initiated in the brain
because the brain is picking up
on higher levels of cortisol.
Did you hear that? I mean, that was the first time I had ever heard And that's all initiated in the brain because the brain is picking up on higher levels of cortisol. Yeah.
Did you hear that?
I mean, that was the first time I had ever heard the connection between stress and belly
fat.
But it makes so much sense, doesn't it?
And so the next thing I was curious about is I asked her, okay, well, how do high levels
of stress impact the functioning of the brain?
And check out what she had to say.
So, I'm going to do brain and body, if that's okay.
Yeah.
So, think of this cortisol as a corrosive agent
that's literally flowing through your entire brain and body.
So, in the body, it starts to erode your immunity.
So, you might notice more colds and flus more often,
or ones that last for weeks and weeks. I mean, I certainly remember
during the financial crisis when I worked with a lot of banks and hedge funds, people saying,
you know, I've had this cold for four, six, eight weeks, but everybody has it. And I had to say to
them, do you hear what you're saying that it's not normal to have a cold for six weeks. And this is cortisol. And at the extreme end of that,
people were dropping dead of heart attacks on trading floors. So, you know, lowering your
immunity and corroding your body that much can cause everything from colds and flus to heart
attacks and cancers. In the brain, what happens is what I call low power mode, like on your phone.
What happens is what I call low power mode, like on your phone. So once those receptors know there's an imminent threat to our survival,
think of the highest functions of the brain.
Thinking creatively, thinking flexibly, solving complex problems,
overriding our biases, regulating our emotions.
How are those going to serve us now that we're just trying to survive physically? We don't need those things.
Don't send any blood supply to those higher functions.
Bring it right down to get up in the morning, go and sit at your desk, look like you're
doing your job even if you actually can't really do it.
This is the reason that presenteeism costs businesses more than double what absenteeism
does.
In that low-power mode, it would be better to stay at home for two days and recover and
then come back to work and actually function and work with your team.
Because stress impairs the higher functioning of the brain.
It just moves the blood supply away from it because you're not going to give up your precious
resources for functions like that.
And just to put that into context for you, Mel,
the brain is a tiny organ.
It's a tiny percentage of your whole body,
like maybe two or 3%,
but it uses up 20 to 30% of the breakdown products
of what you eat.
Wow. Yeah.
That's how hard it's working.
It's using up 20% of what you ate that day when you're asleep.
It's using up 25% of what you eat when you're working, managing, leading, running your family,
you know, just thinking like right now we're probably both using 25%.
But if you're stressed, it's using 30%.
It's so fascinating, isn't it? And one of the things that I read about in her work is that she has found that stress is contagious.
And this is a really important concept to understand so you can protect yourself from other people's stress
and you don't catch it because now we know the impact of it.
And what you're going to hear her talk about is some research regarding what happens among silverback gorillas. How stress travels in and among silverback
gorillas and how the exact same thing is happening to you and me. Check this out.
So the silverback gorillas' stress levels affect the other gorillas more than
gorillas of the same status. And so it happens in business and so it happens
in the home. The leader, in quote marks, of the entity, their stress levels will impact other
people more than the other way around or people of equal status. So, you know, the highly stressed
boss is an example. The highly stressed parent.
Interesting.
Well, it makes sense because if you think about it,
whether it's in the example of the silverback,
or you take a family system, or you take a work system,
that if the person in charge of your paycheck is stressed out,
that their stress is a direct threat to your financial survival.
And that's why it triggers you like that.
And so that makes a lot of sense that stress would be contagious
and affect everybody around you.
So if stress is contagious, how do you protect yourself from other people's stuff?
Well, I think the answer to that is both how do you reduce your own stress if
you're the stress person and how do you protect yourself from other people's stress. It's
mostly through mindfulness activities, so activities that connect the brain and the
body because, like I said, the glands in the brain are talking to the adrenal glands and
creating this stress situation. So the way to decrease their activity is through activities like meditation,
yoga, time in nature, journaling, gratitude, all of those things that
reduce levels of cortisol, move your autonomic nervous system, which is a
nervous system in your body rather than your brain, from system, which is a nervous system in your body rather than your brain from
sympathetic, which is fright flight fight to parasympathetic, which is rest and recover and
You know lower your heartbeat lower your blood pressure
So simply lowering your own stress insulates you from other people's stress
Yes, but with both versions of it whether it's your own or, addressing the root cause is important because what you don't want to be doing is just continually shielding
yourself from something that's not changing.
This is so important and I don't know about you, I just love the way she explains things
when I hear adrenal glands and I hear the functioning of the brain.
It makes me feel more motivated to want to put up that personal,
almost like a force field.
Like that's what you're doing, because you don't want to catch your boss's stress.
You don't want your spouse or your kids or your roommate's stress to impact you and it
shouldn't.
And you want to know another thing that is super effective, at least it has been for
me, is saying let them.
The let them theory is another force field
that you can create because you can see
that somebody else's stress, your bosses,
let's just take that situation,
or maybe your professor and they're gonna grade your exams,
their stress, it feels threatening, but it doesn't have to.
And Dr. Tara taught you that it's contagious
and you have to protect yourself from it.
So just say, let them, let them be stressed and I'm going to put the force field up.
And one of the reason why I love this is because she's not just giving you an explanation,
she's also handing you a solution.
And when you not only understand what's going on inside your body or inside someone else's,
you can see it coming. And it amplifies the
reason why simple things like meditation or taking a walk outside or simply taking a deep breath
or reminding yourself, let them. Their stress is theirs. Doesn't have to be mine.
That's why this is such a game changer. And that's why I think you loved that moment
on the podcast as much as I did,
because it not only made you smarter,
it equipped you with what you needed to do.
And I love that.
And while we're on the topic of stress,
that brings me to our next all-star from this past year,
and that is Dr. Aditi Nurikar.
Now, you loved her, I love her.
I feel like she's one of those people
that you just wanna listen to
because you feel like she really gets it.
Now she's been on the show twice this past year.
I am definitely gonna have her back in 2025
because I can't get enough.
And let me share some of her background with you.
Dr. Aditi is a Harvard trained medical doctor
and a renowned authority in stress management
and public health.
She's a lecturer at Harvard Medical School,
and previously she was the director
of an integrative medicine program
at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital
that specialized in evidence-based
stress management techniques,
and was one of the largest stress management clinics
in the world.
Now, every time you listen to Dr. Aditi,
you're gonna feel like you got both a warm hug
and a brain upgrade.
Now, in her first appearance this year,
she brought the goods.
I mean, I'm talking groundbreaking research,
simple exercises you could use,
mind-blowing realizations that made you really rethink
how you handle stress.
And in this next clip that you're about to hear,
she tees up and destroys one of the biggest myths
around how you should live your life and be successful
right out of the gate.
So let's take a listen.
One of the biggest myths is that you are meant
to be functioning at a high capacity without any need for rest or recovery.
That productivity is linear. The more you do, the more you can accomplish, and then the more you do,
the more you can accomplish. It's just supposed to be this like thing that this feedback loop
that's supposed to continue on and on and on. That's a myth. A break is not just a nice-to-have
That's a myth. A break is not just a nice-to-have luxury. Your brain and your body need a break.
It is a biological necessity for your brain and body to rest and recover.
Human productivity is not linear. It functions on a curve.
Think of a bell-shaped curve.
The left of the curve, when you don't have a lot of stress,
you're not very motivated, you're not very productive.
Think about the right side of the curve. don't have a lot of stress, you're not very motivated, you're not very productive.
Think about the right side of the curve.
So much stress.
You are keyed up.
Many of us are living on this right side of the curve, right?
There is a sweet spot of human productivity right in the middle.
It's just right stress.
I call it the Goldilocks Principle.
And it's this idea of we all are to that right of that bell-shaped curve.
We are anxious, we have so much stress, we're not productive, we can't focus, it's hard
to get things done.
So the science suggests that moving back, how do you get to that center spot, the sweet
spot of human productivity, is to scale back.
But you can't scale back.
That's not realistic because we have real constraints. We have constraints on our time.
We have obligations with work and parenting.
Instead, you have to honor your breaks.
How do you scale back?
How do you apply this science to your everyday life?
You honor your breaks.
How do you do that?
When you are taking a break during the day,
what do most of us do?
We mindlessly scroll.
We've already talked about what happens with scrolling.
This isn't a benign thing that you are doing.
You are actively influencing your brain and your body
for more stress, right?
I wanna make sure that you heard the last line
that she said, because this is super important.
I mean, I'm guilty of scrolling,
you're guilty of scrolling when you just wanna zone out.
But what Dr. Aditi just said is that when you and I are scrolling,
you're actively influencing your brain and body for more stress,
which means by scrolling,
you're creating more stress for yourself.
It's like you're priming your brain and your body to feel more stress.
When she said that,
I know you had the same reaction,
which is why would I want
to create more stress for myself?
And the reason why this is important is because if you understand the implications of picking
up your phone, because we mindlessly do it, maybe you're going to feel more motivated
to not do it.
And so I asked Dr. Aditi, okay, if mindlessly scrolling on your phone creates more stress
and it's priming my body
and brain to feel more stressed, what the heck should I be doing instead of scrolling?
And I want you to take a listen very closely because Dr. Aditi is about to walk you through
an extraordinarily simple technique that she created.
And she's going to explain how she created it as a very stressed out medical school resident, but this is the exact same
technique she prescribes when she is working with patients in her clinical practice. And again,
this is one of the most renowned and respected doctors in stress on the planet. And this is the
method she's using with her patients. Try some heart centered breathing.
Take a little walk outside, do some stretches, touch your toes, stand up, twist.
Do something where you're connecting your breath to your movement, tap into your mind body connection, practice stop, breathe, be.
It's a three second exercise and it can help.
What is that?
The stop, breathe, be method.
It's the instructions are in the name.
It's a three second exercise.
So you stop, you breathe and you be. So you the instructions are in the name. It's a three second exercise. So you stop,
you breathe, and you be. So you ground your feet on the floor. I learned the Stop Breathe B Method.
It was the first technique I learned to reset my mind-body connection when I was in the throes
of stress as a stressed medical resident. I was working 80 hours a week. I was seeing 30 to 40 patients a day. And I brought the stop, breathe, be method into my life
when I would knock on the door of the patient room
before I would enter.
It was my doorknob moment.
So as I turned the doorknob, I would say to myself,
often under my breath, in a crowded place,
stop, breathe, be.
And then I would enter.
And I would do that incrementally,
over and over and over
again, 30, 40 times a day.
Over time, I could just do it anywhere.
In fact, before we started speaking,
I was so excited because I was having a total
fangirl moment, still am.
It's been a long time of my amygdala going off,
but no, just kidding.
I was having a fangirl moment, I'm not kidding about that.
And I did stop, breathe, be.
In fact, the entire time that we've been speaking, I've been very aware of my feet on the floor,
my posture in the chair, and how I am breathing because that is important to manage and modulate
your stress response.
You can practice stop, breathe, be during mundane, everyday moments of your life.
So I did it with the doorknob.
You can do it between Zoom meetings. Stop, breathe, be.
It's a little mini reset.
Small, micro, reset, three seconds. You can practice it when you're brushing your teeth.
I have practiced it in the morning when you're getting lunches ready for school, getting
everything ready. I do it always at the doorknob before I'm about to go into the garage to
do school bus drop off. Stop, breathe, be. And I think, oh my God, we forgot the project.
Did you bring your hat?
Oh, we need to get this, we need to get that.
It's just the reset that you need.
And the reason the stop, breathe, be method works so well
is because anxiety and anxious thoughts
are a future focused emotion.
It is about what if, what if this happens?
What if that happens?
What if I fail?
What if I can't do well? What if, what if, what if? What if this happens? What if that happens? What if I fail? What if I can't do well? What if, what if, what if? And stop, breathe, be gets you out of what if thinking and gets you back into what is.
Amazing.
Stop, breathe, be. I mean, what could be more simple?
But it really is powerful. And I'm gonna tell you, ever since Dr. Aditi taught you and me that I've
been using it and you can use it anytime you want.
You just feel yourself start spiraling, you feel the stress kick in, you feel yourself
getting nervous.
I always just put my hand on my heart.
It's almost like I signal myself, okay, we're going to do this and I stop.
I take a breath in and I just be there in the moment.
Now I have used this when I'm driving the car.
I've used this before I grab my wallet to pay for something.
If I feel myself getting nervous about something, I use it as I grab the handle of the fridge,
because oftentimes I'm like going to the fridge because I'm kind of stressed.
Stop, breathe, be.
You can be at your laptop. You can have just finished a video conference call or a Zoom
meeting and it was a little stressful and now you're like, oh my God. So before you
close the laptop, just stop, breathe, be. You can do it anywhere. And what I love about this technique from Dr. Aditi, and I said this earlier, this is the
exact same technique that she is giving and teaching to her patients. She prescribes this
as a Harvard medical doctor running one of the largest stress management clinics in the world.
And it works because it creates a micro moment of peace in your life. A moment where you can take control, where you can hit that reset.
And since we're talking about taking breaks, this feels like the perfect time to hit the pause button
and give our amazing sponsors a chance to share a few words with you.
But don't go anywhere, because after we take this short break, I'm going to be waiting for you.
And we have the single most popular topic of the entire year.
And about seven more amazing experts waiting for you after a short break.
Stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins.
I'm so glad you're here with me because we
are covering your favorite moments from the podcast of the entire year. Now, if you had
asked me, Mel, what do you think the most popular topic of the year is going to be of
the entire Mel Robbins podcast? I probably would have said something like, I don't know,
motivation, relationships. I would not have thought it was menopause, and here's why.
The listeners of the Mel Robbins podcast are all ages,
all over the world.
And so I wouldn't have thought that it would have been
a topic that impacts women of a certain age.
But the fact is you have a mom, you have older sisters,
you have people in your life that are going through this,
maybe it's your wife.
And so this became our most popular episode, not only because the topic is relevant to
people in your life, but because the expert was absolutely extraordinary.
Who am I talking about?
I'm talking about the one and only Dr. Mary Claire Haver.
Now, Dr. Haver is a board certified OB-GYN and a menopause expert.
She's also a two-time New York Times bestselling author.
She specializes in women's health
and is a certified menopause practitioner.
She's also the bestselling author of the brand new book,
The New Menopause, which is packed with all these
accessible insights into navigating this journey.
Every single day, 6,000 women in the United States alone enter menopause.
And menopause for a lot of us is a phase that you dread.
And Dr. Haver, she helps you move from dreading it to feeling empowered.
And let me tell you something.
After this conversation, I'm sure either you or the people that you forwarded this to
felt the exact same thing.
Holy cow, why didn't anybody ever tell me this?
I found the off switch for my hot flashes.
I unlocked the door to better sleep.
I started feeling like I loved my body again.
Why?
Because of all the things that Dr. Haver explained
in plain English.
She's saying, no, no, no, no, no,
this is not a time where you're put out to pasture.
This is a time where you gotta kick it up into high gear because you can thrive.
Her groundbreaking approach insists that no one should be suffering through this
phase of your life because you're going to spend a third of your life in menopause.
This episode sparked not just a movement for women navigating menopause, but also
for people who love and support them.
navigating menopause, but also for people who love and support them. There were so many important moments in this conversation that this would be a very good
one to listen to the whole thing if you hadn't heard it and certainly send the link to everybody
that you love that is approaching menopause or in menopause.
But I selected this moment because it's the most comprehensive tactical advice, which is what we all want
to hear, right?
And what you're going to hear Dr. Haver cover is she's going to cover the top three things
that she recommends to her patients that they need to be eating.
She's going to talk to you about the specific type of exercise that you need to be doing
if you're in menopause.
She's going to give you tips about getting a better night's sleep.
And she's got a very, very important warning about your phone and about alcohol, which
is something you need to hear.
And she's going to kick all of this information off by talking about the three things she
recommends that every woman in menopause needs to be eating.
Check this out.
If I had my top three things I would recommend to everyone.
Fiber.
Track your fiber for a couple of weeks.
Get a nutrition tracker. See where you're at. Fiber. Track your fiber for a couple of weeks. Get a nutrition tracker.
See where you're at. Fiber does so much in our bodies. Number one, feeds the gut microbiome.
That's its food. So that's the prebiotic.
Give me an example of what fiber is.
Legumes, berry, legumes, beans. So it's a class of beans. Peanuts are actually legumes as well.
Typically really high in fiber.
Okay.
Berries, really high in fiber.
Seeds and nuts, really high in fiber.
Those are kind of avocado or, you know, that's my go-to to make sure I'm like getting my
fiber goal.
Okay.
Also has healthy fats and other vitamins and minerals and nutrients.
Mag, magnesium.
And this confuses me because I'm not quite sure what type of magnesium to take.
Oh, great question.
Your glycinate, your tarates, your citrates, and altherinates are good because they are
readily absorbed into the bloodstream.
So now we have nice magnesium levels in our blood.
There's also benefit.
Some of them are better than others about crossing that blood-brain barrier.
So the brain protects itself.
There's a membrane around the brain
that it doesn't have this 100% free flow
of nutrients back and forth.
It's really selective about what it lets in.
So Mag-L-Therinate, which Magteen or Neuromag
are the brand names, has been studied
in SSRI-resistant depression.
So, antideressive, you know,
resistant depression in patients,
they've added in this, it seemed to be helpful.
And my patients, you know, followers,
it's so helpful for sleep, anxiety.
So I'm often recommending that one at night.
And what was that one?
Magnesium L3N8.
Okay, so you're saying fiber's number one,
magnesium is number two.
How do you get magnesium naturally?
So pumpkin seeds, spinach, leafy greens are rich in MAG generally.
I have a lot of lists on my website where we list all this stuff.
Great.
We will link to all this.
And what's the third thing?
So I'm always looking at omega-3 fatty acids.
Omegas are usually found in fatty fish, also in flax.
One of my favorite ways, I'll do this little
yogurt and I'll have flax, hemp, and chia seeds. So I'm just hitting all my
antioxidants, my anti-inflammatory, my fiber all in one. So omega-3s, if you
can't get a good source of that, that's a very reasonable thing to supplement
every day. One of the richest sources of that is going to be your salmon, your
mackerel, your tuna, your fatty fish, your cold water fish. And then I check a vitamin D level on every woman
who'll let me stick a needle in her.
80% of my patients, not just low, I mean deficient.
And there's a million reasons for this.
We don't absorb it very well
because our gut health declines.
We're protecting our skin from the sun,
which is another place.
And we're not really creating it in our skin
as fast as we used to.
So, and vitamin D is a hormone that has a million processes
in the body, so I'm like, let's start here
and get those vitamin D levels up,
because you're just not working as efficiently
as you could.
So, again, about 70, 80% of my patients have an unexplained,
no changes in diet or exercise,
rise in cholesterol, absolutely secondary to estrogen deficiency.
And again, rushing to put her on a statin will make her cholesterol go down, but it's
not going to decrease her risk of cardiovascular disease.
And women who are on HRT have higher HDLs and lower LDLs than women who are not when
you compare the
two groups. So just being menopausal is an independent risk factor for an
unhealthy cholesterol profile. So what kind of exercise is critical? I grew up
in the 80s and I was the cardio queen. I did so many step aerobics classes. I
taught them. It would make your head spin. I did not. I can actually see that. I did not.
I would take a step aerobics class with you.
It, I did, all of my exercise was to be thin.
Yep.
And to maintain a certain body shape that was part of my social currency.
Mm-hmm.
And if I could go back and talk to my, what I tell my children all the time,
we need to move our bodies to be strong, not skinny.
And that we are chipping away this constant caloric
restriction and all this cardio is chipping away
at our bone and muscle strength, which we are going
to desperately need as we age, especially if you're
built like me.
And I didn't pick up weights until I was well into my 40s.
And there's never too late.
Anybody listening at any age can start weight training.
And you should.
So I think that getting people to let go of this notion that thin is the way to be and that
you're way better off having a little more curves and a lot more muscle is going to serve
you in these menopausal years so much better than just being skinny.
And if you're having a hard time sleeping, what do you recommend? Right. So we have to look at why you're having a hard time. Progesterone goes a long way to helping us sleep.
And so estrogen leads to hot flashes and night sweats, which are completely sleep disruptive.
I mean, even with hormone therapy, I still have a thermometer leg that I have to throw out. A thermometer leg. I was just talking to a friend this morning. She's like, oh, well,
I just stick my leg out and the fan hits it. And that's how I cool myself down.
Yeah. And then just throw it back in, throw it out, throw it back in. So I'm like, okay,
let's get you on semestrogen.
Okay.
You know, and so say she's had a hysterectomy and she doesn't have to have progesterone.
Progesterone's an option.
So I'm like, you know, people sleep deeper
it as an anti-anxiolytic effect.
What does that word mean?
So anti-anxiety.
Anti-anxiolytic effect?
Anti, yeah, sorry.
Wow, that's a big one.
Anti-anxiety effect.
Okay.
So if your sleep disruption is also
you're having racing thoughts at night,
you can shut that brain off.
Yes, this is my daughter.
Progesterone is beautiful for these women,
especially in perimenopause,
when we're skipping ovulations
and we're not given that monthly surge of progesterone.
Is this an option for somebody
who's even before perimenopause?
Perimenopause, you could, yeah.
Yeah, you can safely take progesterone every day,
even if you're premenopausal.
Wow, okay. It can be really helpful. Wow, all right. So estrogen take progesterone every day, even if you're premenopausal. Wow. It can be really helpful.
Wow. All right.
So estrogen, progesterone, but also sleep hygiene.
We can't negate the fact that we're on our phones too much at night, blue light,
not setting up an environment for good sleep, a snoring partner, especially some of, you know,
and all the things we need to do to set ourselves up for success for sleep.
And then when you sprinkle in the hormone changes, it's a disaster for some women.
And that's really something I zero in on with my patients.
What do we need to know about alcohol?
I don't know any woman who's in her menopausal journey who is processing alcohol the way
she used to.
The tolerance seems to be going down.
I'm excited to see some more research come out about this.
But in my world, like I have to go in my personal experience, if I'm choosing to have a drink,
I am choosing not to sleep.
I'm going to be up at 3, 2 32, 3 31, whatever it is.
And it is like a bomb going off, even one glass.
And I have to make that choice.
I can't drink like I used to.
Thank God, you know, those college days. And I have to make that choice. I can't drink like I used to, thank God.
You know, those college days.
Most of the women in my practice
and on social media are commenting.
Every time I talk about it, they're like,
yep, gave it up.
That's not worth it.
And that's just the tip of the iceberg
in terms of the amount of information
that Dr. Haver shared with all of us.
And so I really encourage you to check that one out.
And one of the things that she mentioned is brain fog.
And that brings me to our next all-star from this past year.
And I'm talking about none other than Dr. Wendy Suzuki.
Now, Dr. Suzuki is a world renowned neuroscientist
and it was crazy.
She brought a real human brain to our studios in Boston.
It was an unbelievable experience to have her in the studio and to hold a brain and to see a brain.
I mean, it weighs more than you think and it makes you think very differently about your brain.
Now, Dr. Suzuki is the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at New York University,
and she's done all of this groundbreaking research in areas of memory and brain plasticity.
And you loved that episode because it covered
the simple things that you can do every single day
to improve your learning, your focus,
memory, and your brain power.
And what was so cool about her,
and probably one of the reasons why you loved her so much,
it certainly is why I loved her so much, is that she made neuroscience not only easy to understand,
but she put so much heart into it. She just loves the brain, but she somehow makes this
very nerdy and intellectual topic human. And of course, she had specific advice about things
that you can do every day to support your brain health,
and you can check them all out if you listen to the episode,
which is linked in the show notes.
But the one moment that you really loved
was one that related to her father.
Dr. Suzuki told this just absolutely moving story
about the fact that her father was starting
to suffer from
dementia. And because she's a neuroscientist, she actually was recognizing all the signs.
And every single time she saw him, there was something that she really wanted to do
that she had never done. What was it? She wanted to tell her father that she loved him
She wanted to tell her father that she loved him before it was too late. And so she told this beautiful story about the very first time that she told her father
that she loved him and helped him create a new memory even though he was now struggling
with dementia, but how this one thing changed her entire family dynamic as well.
And I'm going gonna warn you,
you're probably gonna wanna get out the tissues
because I'm gonna let Dr. Wendy Suzuki tell you the story.
My father, very smart guy, he was an engineer.
And one day he drove back from the 7-Eleven,
that's only about eight blocks from our house.
He would go there to get his afternoon cup of coffee.
And he told my mom that he had a hard time finding his way back home.
That's the spatial memory that's so dependent on the hippocampus.
And as a hippocampal expert, when my mother told me that, I knew immediately there was
a problem with his hippocampus.
That is the structure that is first affected in dementia,
including Alzheimer's dementia. And that is what he ended up being diagnosed with. I wish
I could say, so therefore I had him immediately on an exercise plan. He was in his early 80s,
maybe late 70s when that happened. I can't remember exactly his age. He was a little bit wobbly on his
feet. He did like going for a walk. So he would he would go
do that. But there was a little bit of danger, as we all know,
with older people, there's, you know, a little risk taking,
again, going back to social interaction, the more time that
I could spend with him, the more time that we can get him together with family where he came alive and he could think and talk about, you
know, all the memories that he had is a great way to go.
As Japanese Americans, I'm third generation Japanese American, my parents are second generation
Japanese Americans, other Japanese Americans out there will know, we don't say I love you to each other, not because we don't love each other. It's just that you don't
have to say that. It's just not part of our culture. But when my father had this dementia
diagnosis, gosh, you know what? I want to start saying it. But it's very awkward. When
you're an adult child and you've never said, I love you to
your parents as an adult.
Do you just like blurt it out?
It's like, what should I do?
I had a long, you know, internal conversation about this and I realized that I should ask
permission like, let's talk about it.
And I didn't want to say, because you have dementia, I want to say I love you.
I was like, let's keep it light.
Let's just ask.
But I wanted to do it for my mom and my dad.
And I would call every Sunday.
And when I called, my mom would always answer the phone and I would tell her about the week
and then she would hand the phone to my dad and I'd tell him all the same stories.
And then that's how the conversation went.
But this Sunday, I decided I'm going to ask, you know, whether
we can start saying, I love you for the first time in our whole adult lives. So it started
out normally. And at some point in the middle, I said, you know, mom, we, I realized we never
say I love you. At the end of these conversations, what do you think about saying I love you?
Silence, silence on the other end of the phone.
What is she asking me?
She's never asked me that before.
And of course I was just terrified that she would say no, because she might.
I mean, she may not be comfortable.
I didn't know.
I'd never asked her that question before.
But after what seemed like hours, it was just a few seconds, she
said, I think that's a great idea. I said, Oh, okay, great. And so we kind of finished
up our conversation. And then both of us realized at the same time, I think that we had nothing
more to say to each other. And we both knew that we had both agreed to say this thing.
I kind of describe it as you know it felt like two lions kind of
circling each other. What's what's going to happen? Who goes first?
And you know it was my ask so I said
okay I love you and uh she said I love you.
And she said, I love you too, in our very Disney voices so we can get through it.
And so I had the conversation with my dad and it was a little less awkward with him
because I knew my mom said yes and I knew my dad would say yes.
And so we agreed with my dad. We said, I love you, hung up the phone and burst
into tears because I had kind of changed the whole family dynamic of generations of not
saying I love you. And that was the tipping point in my family kind of history from not
saying I love you to saying I love you. But the reason why I started telling the story
is that the following week I called back again and my I love you with my mother was significantly
less awkward. But my father said, I love you first.
And he remembered after a whole week,
he was in the middle of dementia.
He didn't remember anything,
but he remembered that we had agreed to say, I love you.
And he said it first.
And because I'm a neuroscientist that studies memory,
I know why. And it's because
emotional resonance makes hippocampal dependent memories stick. And his hippocampus was not
working well. But the emotional resonance of his adult daughter asking for the very
first time to say, I love you, it formed a new memory in my dad. And that was obviously something that I'll always remember
because the last time I spoke to him,
we also said, I love you.
Oh my gosh.
You know, especially for those of you
that have somebody in your life that you love
that is struggling with memory issues
or dementia or Alzheimer, I mean, what an unbelievably moving story. I am so proud of
Dr. Suzuki and I'm so grateful that she shared that story with us, right? Because it's a beautiful
reminder of something that Dr. Suzuki had said earlier. And that is that the brain is a mind-blowingly complex,
ridiculously brilliant, and let's be real, magical thing.
And what you learn with Dr. Suzuki is that you can change it.
So if you're listening to this right now
and you're feeling stuck in a family dynamic
that's driving you nuts,
or you wish you were the kind of family
that said, I love you, you need to hear this.
You can change this.
It only takes one person to start shifting things and that one person could be you.
Now we have four more extraordinary experts that made the all-star list.
And the person that you're about to meet next is somebody
that is revolutionizing the way that we're treating mental health issues. His name is Dr. Chris
Palmer. I waited to get him on the Mel Robbins podcast for months because I knew he would make
you look at the way you need to think about mental health in an entirely new way.
And his research and what he's been doing
at McLean Hospital, which is Harvard's hospital
dedicated to mental health
where he's been practicing for 30 years
is shaking up the mental health community around the globe.
And he has this incredible down to earth way
to explain this unbelievable research.
And you shared this over and over.
You rewatched this episode on YouTube over and over.
And you wrote to us about how the simple things that Dr. Palmer shared with you have actually
helped people that you love who are struggling with depression, schizophrenia,
all kinds of mental health issues. Now, he has so much to share with you. We actually did two
episodes with him that here's what we're going to do. We're going to hit the pause button so that
we can give our amazing sponsors a chance to share a few words with you. I also want to give
you a chance to share this best of episode with people that you love.
And when we come back, you're going to meet Dr. Palmer and you're going to learn more
about his brain energy theory.
And he's going to teach you simple interventions that have a significant positive impact on
issues like anxiety, depression, and so much more.
You do not want to miss this.
You cannot afford to miss this.
And Dr. Palmer's not the only one.
We got three more experts after him.
So don't go anywhere.
There is so much more to cover,
and I'm going to be waiting for you after a short break.
Stay with me.
Now we have four more extraordinary experts.
Now we have four more extraordinary experts.
Now we have four more extraordinary experts.
And the first up is Dr. Palmer.
And the first up is Dr. Palmer.
And the first up is Dr. Palmer.
And the first up is Dr. Palmer. And the first up is Dr. Palmer. And the first up is Dr. Palmer. And the first up is Dr. Palmer. And the first up is Dr. Chris Palmer.
Dr. Chris Palmer is a gift to the world.
He's a professor at Harvard Medical School.
He spent almost the last 30 years at the number one psychiatric hospital in the United States
and that is Harvard's teaching hospital, McLean Hospital.
It's right here in Boston, near our studios,
here in downtown Boston.
Based on Dr. Palmer's extensive clinical experience,
he's on a mission to change the way that mental health
is understood, discussed, and treated.
Dr. Palmer has created something called
the brain energy theory, and he's revolutionizing
the way that medical professionals think about mental illness, what it is, what causes it,
and more importantly, how to treat it.
If you haven't heard the entire episode, I encourage you to check this episode out and
share it with anybody in your life who is struggling with mental health issues.
Dr. Palmer's wait list is three years long
to be able to get in to see him,
and this is like having a private appointment.
In short, Dr. Palmer says that mental health issues
like anxiety and depression, bipolar, schizophrenia,
they happen when your brain's energy system,
which is your metabolism, isn't working right.
Just like your heart can have problems if you eat badly, your brain can have issues too.
I mean, it makes sense, doesn't it?
Of course it does.
And the good news?
Dr. Palmer says that you can use modifications to your diet, to your exercise routine, to your lifestyle,
to significantly improve your mental health.
What does that mean?
Well, it means the exact same things that help your heart
and other organs in your body,
help you fix the problems in your brain too,
which will help you improve your brain's energy
and improve your overall mental health.
And that brings me to one of your most favorite moments
of the entire year, the one that you shared more
than just about anything else with friends and family
that you watched over and over on YouTube.
And that is Dr. Palmer's specific protocol
for treating someone who is dealing with any kind
of mental health issue or any mental illness.
I find his theory fascinating and his work revolutionary.
And so during our conversation, I asked him,
Dr. Palmer, I realize you're not treating me
or anybody that's listening,
but is it possible for you to just give us
a broad stroke recommendation
that any single person could follow for 21 days
if they're struggling with mental health issues or a mental illness.
And this is what he had to say.
For people who are suffering from mild to moderate disorders,
their safety is not in danger.
They have not been suicidal.
They haven't tried to hurt themselves or anyone else.
They're not hallucinating or delusional.
If I had to
give generic advice, what's the highest bang for the buck? I would say try a
ketogenic diet for three months and then we'll see how it goes. We actually
have a tremendous amount of science on the ketogenic diet. Most people know the keto diet as a fad diet, a weight loss diet, a dangerous diet.
So unbeknownst to most people, the ketogenic diet was developed over 100 years ago by a
physician for one and only one purpose.
It was not weight loss.
It was to actually stop seizures.
The ketogenic diet is now an evidence-based treatment.
We have lots of randomized controlled trials.
We have gold standard meta-analyses in the medical literature proving that this is effective.
It is reputable, it is legitimate.
The ketogenic diet is an evidence-based treatment for treatment-resistant epilepsy.
And what that means is that if somebody has seizures and medications don't stop their
seizures or even brain surgery doesn't stop their seizures, the ketogenic diet can often work in a way
that medications and even brain surgery may not have worked for those people.
So we have decades of research looking at the ketogenic diet trying to figure out how
on earth does this diet stop seizures when our great pills didn't?
Like what is going on here? And so we know that the
ketogenic diet is changing, is having profound effects on the brain function.
It's changing neurotransmitters. It changes gene expression. It decreases brain
inflammation and body inflammation as well. It, central to my thesis, it
actually improves mitochondrial function, which in a nutshell
means it's improving metabolism and in particular brain metabolism.
And so one of the great things about the ketogenic diet, like when it's used for epilepsy, is
that people don't have to do it for life.
Most often people only need to do it for like two to five years.
That actually, quote unquote—
That sounds like a long time, honestly.
Two to five years of a particular—
But what is it?
Because you guys say keto this, keto that, ketocytosis, or whatever the hell the words are.
What is the keto?
Like, what am I eating?
Walk me through a day of being on the keto diet.
So the keto diet in a nutshell is very low in carbohydrates,
moderate in protein, and high in fat. So I would recommend getting some information on a well
formulated ketogenic diet. So you want to do it right. So what you would eat if you were doing a ketogenic diet, again, I want
to even set the stage. There are vegan versions of a ketogenic diet, vegetarian versions,
omnivore versions where you're eating both animal-sourced and plant-sourced foods, and
even carnivore versions of this diet where all you're eating is meat and eggs and stuff like that.
Okay. So this is very inclusive, everybody. But let's just say you and I are going to breakfast, lunch, and dinner today.
What are we ordering?
So what I might eat if I were eating a ketogenic diet, I am an omnivore.
I eat both animal-sourced and plant-sourced foods.
I would wake up and I might have eggs and bacon or sausage or some kind of meat.
Let's go.
Sounds like Sunday brunch, Dr. Palmer.
I might add extra butter.
If I need more fat, I might add extra butter to the eggs.
So some people might look at me making my eggs thinking, why are you putting all that
butter in your scrambled eggs?
And I would say, because I need the extra fat. For lunch, I would probably,
for lunch and dinner, similar meals, I would probably have a protein source. So that could be
steak, chicken, salmon, poultry. And I would have low carb vegetables. So that could include broccoli, spinach, any kind of lettuces,
cauliflower, cucumbers, pickles, things like that.
I would take my pick.
When I prepared those vegetables, I would put extra sources of fat on those vegetables. So I would put olive oil and plain vinegar.
So that might be my kind of serving.
I might emphasize nuts and avocados because those are very high in fat and typically thought
of as healthy sources of fat.
So how long would you suggest that somebody, if they're going to start with the ketogenic
diet, how long should you try it?
And what would you look out for, Dr. Palmer, to know that it's actually impacting you in
a positive way?
So, I would recommend getting some information on a well-formulated ketogenic diet.
You want to include enough healthy types of foods.
People sometimes need extra electrolytes like sodium, potassium, magnesium when they get
started on the diet.
And nonetheless, there's this thing called the keto adaptation phase or keto flu.
So the first week or two in particular can be very rough.
I'm just going to let people know.
People can feel weak, hungry, hangry, dizzy, irritable, other things.
Really?
Why?
Because they're basically withdrawing from sugar or carbohydrates.
More importantly, their body is trying to do this shift from burning primarily on carbohydrates
to running on a combination of carbohydrates and fats as fuel sources.
And for some people that can be an easier transition, for others it can be a more difficult
transition.
So, let's just say you get the keto flu.
We're now on the other side of the keto flu.
We're starting to perk up.
What are you going to feel and how do you know if it's working?
So, the first thing that most people will start to feel is an antidepressant effect.
And so they will start to notice that they just feel lighter, they have a little more
energy, their brain starts working a little better. Some people might notice that their sleep
is feeling more restorative. So if there's somebody who usually has to use an alarm,
push the snooze button several times, they might start to notice that it's easier to wake up in
the morning. They get going faster than normal. For people using this for mental health, it's usually not a lifelong diet.
What?
A lot of people will do it for one to five years.
They actually reinvigorate their metabolism or most importantly, what that means to me
is that they're improving their mitochondrial health.
And that actually can then persist so that you've actually done some healing work on
your body and so that if you go back to a whole foods, still a healthy diet.
I'm not encouraging people to go back to a junk food diet with a lot of processed foods.
But if they go, if they start adding back carbohydrates, even complex carbohydrates,
whole grains or potatoes and other things, they may do extraordinarily well.
And again, I want to be clear.
I don't necessarily recommend the ketogenic diet for everyone. Not everybody needs it. Some people can just get rid of the junk food and the
processed foods. Some people can just get rid of the extra sugar in their diet and do
spectacularly well. So they might do well on a paleo diet or whole 30 or a vegetarian or vegan whole food plant-based diet.
There are lots of options.
Okay, great.
So eating healthy.
What's the next step in your brain energy protocol?
Try to exercise a little more than you're currently doing.
Is that all I have to do?
Like if I'm doing zero, are you talking one day of resistance training is enough or would
you want to see me out three days? If you're doing zero, are you talking one day of resistance training is enough? Or do you, would you want to see me out three days?
Like what?
If you're doing zero, do anything.
So if you did one day of resistance training a week, but you did most of your
major muscle groups and you did it to the point of failure, that would be more than
enough.
I love it.
But you've got to go to failure.
If you're only going to work out once a week, you've got to go to failure. If you're only going to work
out once a week, you've got to go to failure. We need to build those muscles, which means
you're not just going to lift it a couple of times and say, oh, I'm tired. You're going
to go until you can't go anymore. Just one set, but you're going to go until you can't
go anymore. But it could be just taking a walk after dinner every night.
If you can do it every night, it doesn't have to be a long walk.
It could be a 10-minute walk, whatever.
Just get out of the house.
Get away from a screen.
Walk around the block.
The third thing, I want you to prioritize sleep.
How much do I need?
You need at least seven or eight hours.
The ideal way to know if you're getting adequate sleep is, are you able to get out of bed reasonably
okay?
Or are you pushing the snooze button?
Are you exhausted?
Are you dragging yourself out of bed?
If you're dragging yourself out of bed,
you're not getting enough sleep.
You should be able to wake up and get out of bed
and it should not be torture.
If it's torture, you're not getting enough sleep.
Go to bed earlier, turn off the television,
the computer, whatever, go to bed.
Try to get more sleep.
Reduce your use of harmful substances.
That means alcohol.
If you're really struggling with a mental health condition, give me three months off
alcohol.
I'm not asking for a lifetime.
I'm not asking for forever.
Three months off alcohol because we're trying to give your
brain a chance. If you were a professional athlete training for a marathon, your coach would tell
you no alcohol, none, zero, zero tolerance. Guess what else? No marijuana, no CBD, no smoking, no vaping. None. Period.
End of story.
Don't argue.
Don't talk back.
Just don't do it.
Don't do those things.
Why?
Because they're all negatively impacting your brain metabolism.
Your brain metabolism is begging for help.
We see it in the symptoms that you're exhibiting.
We want to give you a fighting chance.
You can introduce these things again in the future when you're healthy.
When you're healthier and more resilient and you can tolerate a drink every now and then, great.
But for now, while we're trying to help you heal and recover,
we're going to give your brain a fighting chance.
I just love him. I just love him.
I absolutely love him.
And I know that anybody in your life that's struggling is going to love him too because
you can just tell he's so earnest.
He's on this mission and he believes in your ability to heal.
He believes in your brain's ability to get better.
And after sitting down with him for two episodes, I 1000%
believe in his brain energy theory. And I also love how he breaks things down in
a way that makes it doable. Didn't you love it when he said if you're doing zero
exercise, just walking around the block counts? Yes, that's a win. And don't
forget his advice on sleep. If getting out of bed feels like torture, it's time
to get your butt to bed earlier. Don't
you love a doctor's like, get your butt to bed? I love that. Plus cutting out alcohol and other
substances for three months just to give your brain and your mental wellness a fighting chance.
Of course, that's advice you need to hear and I need to hear and the people that you love need
to hear. And what I love about these episodes, honestly, in these conversations is that you and I can
tell the people that we love this stuff till we're blue in the face.
But when they hear it from the world's leading medical doctor at Harvard, perhaps they'll
actually do it.
Because it's only in the doing it that it's going to make a difference.
And that brings me to another of our remarkable all-stars from this past year, and that is Sarah
Jakes Roberts. She's a pastor, a philanthropist, an international best-selling
author. Her latest book was an instant New York Times bestseller. She's like, I
don't know, she's like a messenger for your soul. And I have not stopped thinking
about the time that I've spent with her. Her words just rang over and over and over again in your mind, in my mind.
And what Sarah's about to say is something that will shift the way that you or that someone
that you love thinks about who you are, about your past, about what's possible. She's talking about embracing every single part of who you are,
the wins, the mistakes, the moments that you wish you could erase, learning to love yourself because
of them, not in spite of them. Because if you've ever felt trapped by a single moment in your life,
if you've ever felt like you've been labeled or cast aside or you've beaten yourself up
for a mistake that you've made, this moment is for you.
Because Sarah is going to show you how to stop punishing yourself and instead step boldly
into the fullness of who you are.
And you better believe me, this is the kind of message that stays with you for a lifetime. Instead of seeking a sense of belonging, a sense of okayness from other people, maybe I can just embrace myself.
If I could find a way to be okay with myself, then I can wrap sit with myself until I no longer cringed.
I had to sit with myself until I no longer felt shame.
I had to sit with myself until I could experience compassion where I once felt
guilt and from that place of compassion, I learned to love who I am and like,
yes, this is my story and no, it may not be perfect,
but I'm gonna stick beside me.
Every single one of us has stuff that we've done
in the past, things that we have done to ourselves
or other people, mistakes that we think that we've made.
How do you begin the process of sitting with yourself?
How do you learn how to forgive yourself?
It starts with intention.
I sat with myself.
I will say those 10 years I was sitting with myself,
but I was sitting with myself punishing myself.
How could you be so stupid?
You made the biggest mistake.
No one's ever going to want you.
Sometimes we are sitting with ourselves, but how we are sitting with ourselves is why we
can't heal.
You can't want to heal and punish yourself at the same time.
To repeat the words that other people have spoken over you that were negative, having
it replay in your mind over and over again, why you sit
with yourself will never bring you to a place of healing.
Sitting with yourself with the pursuit of compassion, with the pursuit of love and acceptance,
that is when we start sitting with ourself and experience some discomfort and some, you
know, dysregulation because sitting with myself and trying to be compassionate requires me
to stretch, to love myself
In a way that I don't think it's possible and as long as you don't think it's possible to sit with yourself and love yourself
Every facet of who you are. It doesn't matter who you love. It doesn't matter what you achieve
Until you can really sit with yourself. None of those things are going to make you feel better either
But it is the greatest absolute greatest gift that you can give yourself to allow love
to flood the place where you once felt an emptiness.
I really want to highlight a particular sentence that she said that I think is one of the most
important sentences that I heard the entire year.
You cannot heal while you're still punishing yourself.
I mean, is that not just one of the most profound truths
you've ever heard?
And how often do you sit with yourself
just replaying the same harsh critical thoughts?
You know, you think you're just reflecting,
but the reality is you're just repeating the pain
over and over and over again.
And what Sarah is reminding you of is that true healing, it doesn't come from self-punishment.
It comes from self-acceptance, from self-compassion.
Learning how to sit with yourself as uncomfortable as it may be, I mean, it not only takes courage,
but it's an act of love.
Choosing to say, yes, I've made some mistakes.
Yes, I have flaws, but I'm going to sit here and I'm going to love myself anyway.
And here's the real magic.
When you embrace who you are, imperfections and all, and you stop seeking validation from
other people, you'll realize you don't need the validation
because you've actually learned how to give it to yourself.
I mean, that's the gift that Sarah Jakes just gave you.
It's not just healing, it's freedom.
And so take a moment today to sit with yourself.
And if you were inspired by that, get down to the notes
and spend an hour with me and Sarah Jakes Roberts, because she will lift you up and you deserve that.
And if there's someone in your life that is really just beating
themselves up and they can't see the gifts that they have to offer,
then share that episode with them too, because Sarah was just
getting started with that clip.
There's a lot more that she had to say.
So take a listen.
with that clip. There's a lot more that she had to say. So take a listen.
And we don't do ourselves any favors by committing to punishing ourselves over and over again for what we did, for what we allowed to happen. This is what we say though. We say to ourselves,
I'm going to keep this from happening again by constantly living with it right in
front of me.
And if I can live with it right in front of me, if I can beat myself up, if I can punish
myself, then I will keep this from happening again.
I will prepare myself for further rejection from other people if I constantly remember
how unworthy I am, how little value I possess.
And so in many ways, we think this is me protecting myself by constantly keeping it in front of
my face.
But if we're honest, we do long for an existence where we want to believe that I am not just
this one moment, but we will never be more than that one moment if we constantly replay
that moment in our head.
And so to invite into our atmosphere, what other moments do I want to have?
What other things do I want to define me?
I spent so long not wanting to be defined as a teen mom, instead of saying I will be
defined as being a teen mom, but also I'm going to be an incredible person,
but also I'm going to love myself, but also I'm going to dream and I'm going to be an author and
a teen mom. I'm not trying to disconnect from who I was. I'm trying to bring all of who I am into
the fullness of where I am. I'm this and that. I'm like, I am all of these things. And I thought
that because I was this one thing, I had no permission to be anything else
So yeah, the truth is yeah, I'm a teen mom. Yes. I've gone through divorce
I've got a laundry list of things that I never wanted to be that I've had to step boldly in and in addition to that
I'm on the Mel Robbins podcast
You know what I mean millions of people tune into you every single week.
All of those things are true.
All of these things are true.
And I don't want to be all of my achievements.
Gosh, can you imagine what that would be?
The pressure and the arrogance connected to that.
I want to be this beautiful mixture, this beautiful tapestry
of a girl on a journey and a woman owning her power.
And I can live in all of that.
I can do all of that.
Oh my God.
I just love her so much.
I love how she looks at life.
I love how she looks at herself
and just the journey that we're all on.
I mean, such a powerful reminder, right?
You're not defined by a single moment
or a single mistake or your achievements.
And you do that, don't you?
You think if you can just keep your failures
front and center, you can protect yourself
and you won't let it happen again.
But the truth is by doing that,
you trap yourself in that moment.
What Sarah gave you as a gift,
she gave you the freedom to say, but also,
yeah, you've made mistakes, but also you're growing.
Yeah, you've been through tough times, but also you're stepping into your power.
You're not just one chapter of your life, you're the whole book.
And that's what makes us so beautiful.
It's permission to embrace all of who you are, the wins, the losses, the messiness,
the magic, because you are so much more than that one moment.
The year we've spent together on the Mel Robbins podcast, learning from all these experts,
was more than one moment too.
But that brings me to the last two experts and moments on the podcast that you picked.
You want to know what they're about?
They're about regrets.
I think you love them because they were
really poignant. And that's what made them among the highest ranking episodes. It's what made them
the things that you kept sharing with people that you loved, that you wrote in about. You even talked
about these in the reviews that you left. I mean, it was overwhelming how moved you were
that you left, I mean, it was overwhelming how moved you were by what these two experts had to say to you about what's actually important in life and what's not. They gave you perspective
in an instant. And the first one comes from the extraordinary Dr. Robert Waldinger. Now,
when he came onto the show, I have to say that it may be one of the most important
conversations that you could listen to, because everything that he shared is so incredibly
true.
Dr. Waldinger is a psychiatrist, he's a Zen Buddhist, he is also a professor at Harvard
Medical School, and he happens to be the director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development.
Now, the Harvard Study of Adult Development is an 86-year-long study that is the single longest study that's ever been done on happiness,
relationships, and the human experience. And Dr. Waldinger came to our studios in Boston to talk about all the findings from this study and what research says it means to live a good life.
Now he covered so much information
and there was so much amazing life-changing advice
that you absolutely loved.
But there was one moment in particular
that you listened to over and over again. And it's this.
I asked Dr. Waldinger, if you look at all the research
from this 86-year-long study,
what did the participants in the study say
at the end of their life?
When they reflected back, what were their biggest regrets
and what were the biggest lessons?
And listen to what Dr. Waldinger shared.
The biggest regrets, two categories.
One was, I wish I hadn't spent so much time at work.
I wish I had spent more time with people I cared about.
Almost the number one regret.
And then the other regret, and this came more from women than from men, was I wish I hadn't worried so much about what other people thought.
And so those are the two big regrets. The things that people were proudest of were not their achievements, and many people had achieved a lot. It was people. It was, I was a good mentor.
I was a good partner.
I was a good parent.
I was a good boss.
You know, it was always about the relationships.
Even among people who had won huge prizes or gotten big accolades, that's not what they
named when they were looking back on their
life.
You know, when you hear them say it, you know it's true. And you and I need these reminders
because it's so easy to get sucked up in work and all the stressful things going on that
you forget that at the end of the day, it's about the people in your life. That's what
actually matters. I know after hearing this research and hearing Dr. Waldinger explain it just so matter of
factly, it certainly made me prioritize my relationships both with my adult kids and
my parents and the friends that I need to make more of an effort to see.
And I know it did the same for you because you shared this moment over and over and over
again.
And you know, I was curious, particularly about that point
that he said, that women felt that they wasted too much
of their lives worrying about what other people think,
that that's one of the biggest regrets.
And so I asked him, well, do you have advice
for how to stop doing that?
And this is what Dr. Waldinger had to say.
Well, it's realizing that, first of all,
most of that's not going to matter when we're dead,
right? But what will matter, am I treating people well? That will matter and people will
remember it even after we're gone. It's not what people think, but it's what I do. So one of the
sayings I like a lot is 20 years from now, the only people who will remember whether
you worked late are your children. And so if you think about it, so much of what we
worry about, like, is my boss going to like me? Are people going to think I'm a good this
or that? It's not going to matter down the road, but whether I was a good ethical person, that's
going to matter a lot.
We matter and our behavior matters, but it's not necessarily other people's opinions about
whether my curtains were the right shade of blue on the windows.
You know, he's such a kind way of calling us out, doesn't he?
You know, like when he said that line about the only person that's going to remember that
you worked late is your kids, like that was like a oof.
He's right.
You know, you're losing sleep over whether or not people are impressed by what you're
wearing or you've got enough followers or your home looks like an Instagram before and
after post.
Nobody cares. The truth is none of
that stuff is going to matter when you're gone. What's going to matter? The
way you treat people. The kind of person you are. Whether or not you showed up
when it mattered for the people who love you. And 20 years from now your
co-workers aren't going to remember the emails you sent at midnight, but your
kids? Well they'll remember. They'll remember that you're always stressed out or
they'll remember that you were there for them. So the big wake-up call there,
stop putting so much weight on what other people think. One other thing that is going to help you,
the let them theory. Let them think whatever they want. Let them think whatever they want about your
curtains or your outfit or what you're doing for a living or the fact that you can't work this weekend because you're spending the time with
your kids.
Just focus on what matters to you.
Your character, your kindness, how you make other people feel.
Because what I've found in life is that when you are proud of who you are, you don't actually
care what other people think.
And that's what's going to, is how you show up.
That's what people are gonna carry with them
long after you're gone, who you were for them.
And that's something that you can take control of right now.
And that leads us to our next moment with Dr. Zach Bush.
So Dr. Bush is a triple board certified physician in internal medicine,
endocrinology, and hospice care. From his groundbreaking work in gut health, to his
advocacy in farming, to his profound experiences guiding people through the end of their lives,
Dr. Zach brings wisdom that can help you live a more meaningful and authentic life.
brings wisdom that can help you live a more meaningful and authentic life. And on the episode that you just absolutely loved and shared with everybody that you know,
Dr. Zach was here to teach you all of these lessons that he's learned from being with
people as they were experiencing the final moments of their life.
And so these are lessons that he learned as a hospice doctor
that you can use right now to stop performing
and to start embracing who you are
and to truly allow yourself to live your life.
And so I asked Dr. Zach,
after all the work that you've done in hospice
and being with people as they leave this lifetime,
what are the
things that you see people regret that can help you and me live a better life? And this
is what he had to say.
Yeah, the number one regret is I was performing the whole time. I never was actually being
me and I was afraid to be me. I didn't even know what it would feel like to be me. But
right now, as I'm dying, as that veil thins, I feel myself and I'm a beautiful being.
I am whole.
And so really, the regret is, wow, if I'd just known I was whole the whole time and
hadn't had to do all the performance, every being is whole and there's no need for a performance.
Whatever happened in your life, it looked like a good life, looked like a bad life,
that's the beauty of near-death experiences, you suddenly realize it was all perfect.
Like the whole thing was perfect.
It was exactly what I needed to learn the things I learned, to become the one I became
and ultimately to realize I was whole the entire time.
Any perception of incompleteness was incorrect.
And so I hope that one of you falls deeply in love with your state as a being that is
whole at every step of life.
You are the most beautiful thing.
You are the entire divine expression of your soul.
And that's where the near-death experience is a gift, is if you can actually feel what
it feels like to be whole.
It's not something to be achieved.
You've always been whole.
You were whole at the beginning.
You will still be whole at the end of your life journey.
If there's only a perception that you are incomplete right now,
you are the most beautiful thing.
Just take a moment and let his word soak in.
Particularly these last two experts
and these moments where Dr. Zach Bush and Dr. Waldinger
are sharing these profound lessons that they've
learned from being with people who are at the end of their lives.
And here's what I'm taking away from all this advice, that you've got to stop waiting
for the right time or the perfect moment or for work to slow down or for someone else's
approval to fully live your life.
You have everything that you need right now. Drop the act. Embrace who you are.
Drink the cup of coffee and allow yourself to enjoy it. Heck, sit down and drink it.
Instead of racing to the next thing, stop, breathe, be.
Laugh with your kids, call your friends,
spend time with your parents while you can,
treat every day like the gift that it is.
Because as every one of your favorite experts
have told you today, when you strip away all the noise,
when you stop allowing everyone to stress you out,
when you truly just embrace yourself
for everything that you are, the flaws, the amazing things,
you just show more compassion,
what's left when you strip it all away,
that's what really matters.
Being fully alive and fully yourself.
I want to thank you for being here with me,
whether you've been here all year or you're just listening for the first time.
These moments really impacted me and I know they impacted you.
So thank you for sharing these episodes.
Thank you for replaying these moments.
Thank you for writing in and telling me how much you got
out of these conversations and so many more.
And we're just getting started.
This year's been incredible.
Next year, gonna be even better.
And in case no one else tells you,
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 everything that you heard in the episode today is the exact formula to do that.
From your brain to your mental health to your overall physical health to truly the things
that matter.
Stop being so hard on yourself and embrace who you are
and allow yourself to live your life and truly enjoy it.
Alrighty, I'll be waiting for you in the very next episode.
Cranking it down.
Awesome, thank you.
All right, here we go. Fabulous. I love that. Okay. That's fantastic.
You're right. I call it neuroadrenaline because I can't say the nephoreffering word.
Neuroepinephrine. Yes, I can't say that. What is... I'll wait till you do it. I'll take
some water too. Let me hit my lips too too. Uh huh. We could say that.
Little snarky.
Good?
Okay, great.
God, I do need some lunch.
You guys need lunch, too.
You haven't eaten either.
All right, better?
Good.
We're in the pocket now?
Okay, great.
Okay.
Hold on.
Let me try that one more time.
But it's good, right?
You are...
I can't believe you just did that. Awesome. But it's good, right?
You are awesome.
I feel like I'm levitating.
Okay.
And endrokinol.
How the fuck do I say it?
And endrokinol.
And endocrinology.
Do you go outside and land or a tree every day? Regularly.
I think near death has a branding problem.
I think we need to come up with a different word for it.
Rebirth.
Rebirth.
There you go.
I'm going to have a rebirth experience.
All right.
Ready?
Awesome.
To bring you our first ever...
Wait.
Hold on a second.
Is a root cause.
What? Okay. What?
Okay.
What?
Okay.
Um, hold on a second.
Oh!
No problem.
No problem.
No problem.
No problem.
You're freaking fantastic. Time for lunch. No problem, no problem. No problem.
You're fricking fantastic. Time for lunch.
Can you explain nighttime revet,
what's it called?
Revenge.
Okay.
I promise you this information,
Jesus, okay, hold on, go back up.
And was the medical director of Harvard's
Beth Israel Dink it Jesus Christ
I can't I think I need to take a breath stand up. Oh my lord
Dr. Aditi, Narukha. Oh god. I said it wrong. Noor car. Did I do it? Noor car your car? Okay
So I'm like neuro a neuro. I've been practicing. I'm right neuro car Wow. I kind of did that well. Yes. Okay
Wow, I kind of did that well. Yes, okay.
I never curse.
I just, that was like my favorite line of the entire conversation so far.
Okay, keep going.
I never curse.
The only reason I'm cursing is because you curse.
It's like you're giving me permission to curse.
The second kind of happiness.
Sorry.
Bless you.
My allergies are coming everybody.
Sorry. Go ahead. Bless you. My allergies are coming everybody, sorry.
Go ahead.
Bless you.
And I just would be curious to know,
do we have a, is that like a, are they gone?
What's that?
Construction.
There was a lot in that.
I know, that's why I had to write the book.
I was like, this is, this feels worthy of unpacking.
I don't, writing 60,000 words is, you know, it's-
Oh, I'm in the middle of writing my next book.
I need a nap. I'm praying for you. Cause it's not like, I'm in the middle of writing my next book. I need a nap.
I'm praying for you.
Cause it's not like you just write.
Can you please double down on the prayer?
I don't think you're praying hard enough.
I would get on a plane for you.
I will feed you.
As long as I get a blanket and a nap.
Girl, I will give you the best blanket you've ever had.
It'll be down on have feathers in it.
You'll be spitting feathers out of your mouth.
Ho!
have feathers in it, you'll be spitting feathers out of your mouth. 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.