The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Get Unstuck: Do This to Create the Future You Want
Episode Date: July 11, 2024Today’s episode is a roadmap for reaching your potential.  If you are feeling stuck in a rut, behind in life, or just a little bored by your life, this episode is for you. There are a few simple ...steps you can take to quickly get unstuck – and it’s easier than you think.Dr. Adam Alter, one of the top psychology experts and professors in the world, is joining Mel on the podcast today to help you uncover the extraordinary potential that is laying dormant inside of you. Dr. Alter is a New York Times bestselling author, a renowned researcher, and a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business. Whether you’re trying to level up an already successful life, have a breakthrough on a creative project, or you need a reset in every aspect of your life, you’ll love the 3 steps that Dr. Alter is sharing with you today. For more resources, including links to Adam’s book, website, and social media, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode with Dr. Adam Alter, you’ll love listening to his first appearance on the Mel Robbins Podcast: 6 Simple Science-Backed Hacks That Will Make Your Life BetterIf you want more tactical tips to get unstuck, you’ll also love Mel’s interview with Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar: How to Build the Life You Want: Timeless Wisdom for More Happiness & PurposeConnect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeGo deeper with Mel’s free video course, Make It HappenFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
You know, every once in a while, you need someone to roll on up beside you, tap you
on the shoulder, and remind you that there is so much untapped potential inside of you.
You know, I don't think you even realize what you're capable of. And so I'm gonna start off by dedicating this episode to you
and to the potential that is lying dormant inside of you.
Because that's gonna end today.
We're gonna tap into that potential.
And look, if you're already at a point in your life,
you're like, I have achieved so much success, Mel.
I surprised myself.
That's how I feel about myself.
Guess what?
This conversation
still gonna ignite a breakthrough because regardless of what you've accomplished
You have not reached what you're capable of yet Neither have I or if you're listening right now and you're like, oh, I feel blah
Unmotivated and unproductive boy have I been there so many times in my life
I have been so sick of my excuses, but I had no idea
what to do about it. Here's the thing. After today, you are going to know what to do about
it because you already know that you have this extraordinary potential. That's why you're
frustrated. The issue is that you don't know how to unleash it. Well, that's going to change
today because one of the world's most respected researchers
and professors at NYU is in the house today.
And you will leave this conversation
with a three-step roadmap that makes leveling up your life
easier than you think.
Hey, it's your friend Mel.
I cannot wait to jump into this conversation because you're going to learn how to have
a breakthrough based on research.
And I'm talking a breakthrough on all different kinds of levels.
So whether you're trying to have a breakthrough because you want to level up an already successful
life or maybe you need a breakthrough on a creative project.
You're just sick of the writer's block, or you just need a breakthrough in every aspect of your life
because it's like, oh, you feel blah or unmotivated or unproductive.
Well, guess what? Class is in session.
You're going to love learning from NYU's Professor Adam Alter.
So let me tell you a little bit about
the professor of your potential.
He is a renowned researcher and professor
at NYU's Stern School of Business
and the Robert Stansky Teaching Excellence Faculty Fellow.
He received his PhD in psychology
from Princeton University,
where he also completed two fellowships.
He is the author of three New York Times bestsellers,
including the one that we are going to unpack today.
That one's called The Anatomy of a Breakthrough.
I cannot wait for you to get the roadmap
to unleashing your full potential.
And one of the best ways, by the way,
that you can not only tap into your potential,
but also support the people that you love,
is by sharing this roadmap
and Dr. Alter's research and this episode with them too. And I'm sure when we're talking about
feeling a little stuck or tapping into your potential, it's probably somebody who comes
to mind right now where you're like, you know, you need to step it up by, you know, you're capable
a little bit more. How about you let Professor Alter remind them that you are capable of so much more.
And it's time to follow his research-backed three-step plan to level up your life.
Alrighty, please help me welcome the incredible Dr. Adam Alter to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you for having me.
I'm ready to have a breakthrough.
Good.
I'm ready to help you have a breakthrough.
Okay, great.
So you've just spent all this time researching the anatomy of a breakthrough. Good. I'm ready to help you have a breakthrough. Okay, great. So you've
just spent all this time researching the anatomy of a breakthrough. And so there's actually a whole
process that you can break down for us? Yeah. So, you know, I think the problem with being stuck is
it feels very personal, it feels very uncomfortable, and it feels like it's a bit of a mess. Right. And
that's the way people describe it when they have it, when they feel it. But the whole point of this book was to say,
there is a roadmap and if you follow the steps,
you will get unstuck.
It's just that most of us don't know what those steps are.
That's what the book is designed to do.
Oh.
Where the hell have you been my whole life?
Crying out loud.
I want you to start before we get to the roadmap,
talking directly to the person who is listening to this.
And they're either listening for themselves
because they're going through this moment in life
where they're like, eh, or just kind of blah,
or they're feeling stuck, or they're listening,
and someone in their life that they love is really stuck.
What can they expect to learn from you today and how might their life change based on really learning this research about the anatomy of a breakthrough?
Yeah, so the first thing to understand is that getting stuck and being stuck is universal.
It's part of what it is to be human.
And that's liberating for a lot of people, because it feels like this very personal affront.
You don't recognize how many other people around you are stuck.
But it turns out we're all stuck in some respect.
That's the first thing to understand.
The second thing to understand is that there are actually things you can
do systematically one after another to get unstuck.
It may feel like a mess, it's complicated,
it's hard to understand how you can get through it.
But in many, many cases,
there is a path through and I'm going to try to share some ideas about how we can get from being stuck to in many, many cases, there is a path through, and I'm gonna try to share some ideas
about how we can get from being stuck
to making progress, to hitting breakthroughs.
So, Dr. Alta, let's talk about
what the word stuck even means.
So when we throw that word around,
I feel stuck, I am stuck, I'm stuck in life,
I'm stuck in this job, as a researcher,
what do you want us to think about
when we hear the word stuck
or what it actually means or feels like?
Yeah, I think there are two kinds of stuck.
There's the one kind where you say,
I wanna be at point Z and I'm in point A
and I need to figure out the path from A to Z
that's as short as possible.
And the destination is obvious, right?
I've got a goal, there's something specific I need to reach.
It might be a job related goal.
Might be a relationship, whatever it is.
Might be like, I want to get my nursing degree
or it might be, I'm sick of being single.
So that's when you have a goal
and you feel though a little overwhelmed.
Why would you be stuck if you know what you want?
Because you haven't been able to get from A to even B
on the way to Z. So that's the one. I think that often is easier to solve. Why would you be stuck if you know what you want? Because you haven't been able to get from A to even B. Oh.
Maybe on the way to Z.
So that's the one.
I think that often is easier to solve.
There's the other kind of stuck that's just like blah.
Yes.
I don't know what I'm supposed to be doing.
Things just feel kind of dull and gray
and I don't know where I'm supposed,
it might be your career or a relationship, a friendship.
Life just feels like it's kind of been leached
of all the things that make it really rich
and interesting.
And that's a very sort of diffuse kind of stuckness where it's not attached to one specific
thing.
And that's incredibly common.
So those are very different.
One is I can't complete this goal.
The other is I don't even know which way to turn to create the next goal.
And so they're a little bit different, but those both exist.
And I'm going to talk about what
I think best interventions are. There are listeners to this podcast in 194 countries. And if I had to
boil down the kind of universal sentiment on the looking for help or needing inspiration and guidance,
on the looking for help or needing inspiration and guidance, the complaint of feeling a loss of direction
is, I think, one of the biggest things that people struggle with.
I think that's right.
It's an incredibly common response that I've had to this book
and to talking about these issues,
that the way life is structured for us today,
there is a lot of emptiness.
And a lot of what we spend our time doing
does not build on the other moments we spend,
so that we're building towards something
that feels meaningful, that is substantial.
And I think a lot of people feel that there's an emptiness
to what we're doing a lot of the time.
So is that what we're basically saying if we say we're stuck,
that we don't have anything meaningful going on?
Yeah, I've been running the survey
on thousands of people around the world,
asking them exactly these questions.
What does it mean to you to be stuck?
And are you stuck?
First thing I'll say is everyone says yes, I am stuck in at least one respect.
And then they can articulate it very quickly.
They can write to me in the response what they're stuck with
and what's affecting them.
A lot of them, it's very narrow.
You know, I've been trying to learn this piece on the piano for the last six years,
and I can't do it, and it frustrates me every day.
And then for other people, it's much broader.
It's like, my whole life is one big sticking point.
Like, I don't even know where I'm going.
And each day goes by, and I'm like,
how was this day building on the day that came before?
It's a sort of meaninglessness to life.
Yeah, which is so overwhelming,
which only makes you feel more lost.
Are there particular areas in your research that come up over and over in people's lives
where they tend to get stuck?
A lot of it is creativity-based.
So I think it's hard to be creative.
You know, you're asking a lot of a human being when you say,
come up with something new or have a good idea.
And we all assume that that's something
we should be able to do
and our work often requires that of us.
And so for a lot of people, it's in that domain.
For a lot of other people, it's not work-based,
it's about relationships, it's about being stuck
in a situation where you have to deal with someone
you don't wanna deal with
or you don't know how to extract yourself from a situation.
And then for other people, it's the broadest kind,
which is exactly as we've described this.
I don't even know why I'm stuck.
I just know that I feel like things aren't
the way they should be.
And Dr. Alter, I take it that based on the research,
this is something that you're gonna experience
over and over and over again
during the course of being alive.
Yeah, a huge part of it is accepting the discomfort
that comes from being stuck.
And recognizing that this is universal,
that everyone is in this position at some point,
often many points of their lives.
There's this incredible research talking about
how often these things come up for us,
these major changes in our lives
that make everyone feel stuck.
Bruce Feiler has done some research
looking at what he calls lifequakes.
Lifequakes are these huge major life events
that affect all of us,
and we're almost always blindsided by them,
and they're very often not things
we wanna happen in our lives.
Like what?
Like change in a marital status, a divorce,
the death of a loved one, illnesses, things like that.
They come up, they happen to us,
and they are universal.
It's part of being a human being.
Some of these are really good things, by the way,
but they still force you to change what you're doing.
Like what's a good one?
A good one might be like a job promotion, or you move to really good things, by the way, but they still force you to change what you're doing. Like, what's a good one?
A good one might be like a job promotion or you move to a new town or a new state or a
new country and you're excited about it. Maybe a marriage is a good one. Having a child could
be obviously a huge positive, but also brings complications and change and you've got to
figure those out. So you can be stuck by a good change too. So if your broad philosophy of life is
there will be ups and downs
and there will be times that are tough,
then when those times happen,
you don't spend time saying, why me?
I can't believe this has happened.
You know, there's a whole lot of sort of rumination
that goes on if you are surprised
by the fact that you're in this position.
But if broadly speaking, you recognize
that this is what it means to be human,
you're just a couple of steps ahead.
So it liberates you to start acting and to start making the next steps you need to make But if broadly speaking you recognize that this is what it means to be human, you're just a couple of steps ahead.
So it liberates you to start acting and to start making the next steps you need to make
to get through that part of life in that moment.
I love that.
You know, it does make me wonder though, Adam, the thing that I've noticed about people in
my life or when I've been really stuck is that it becomes part of my identity.
And I argue to stay where I am.
And so I would love to have you speak directly
to somebody who may be really needing a breakthrough
when it comes to relationships.
Or a breakthrough when it comes to their career
or their health.
And if you're in your own head and the echo chamber and you're like, but it's hard, but
I've dated all these people, but my all my bosses are jerks.
And you kind of have that story, right?
What would how do you get started in terms of like to even just get over yourself and
the way you're standing in your own way?
Yeah, this is a really interesting paradox that when you are stuck, the thing you most
want is kind of freedom.
I just wanna move, I wanna like get unstuck.
Yes.
It turns out that constraining yourself
and having very prescribed steps is really useful.
So one process I use with people and with companies as well
is a process called a friction audit.
And a friction audit is a big part of the book.
Friction audit?
Friction audit.
What the heck is that?
A friction audit, you know, when you audit, if you're an auditor and you go into the books
of a company to audit the books, you're basically like saying, does this all make sense?
Let me pour through each line of the books and make sure I understand it all.
And a friction audit is an attempt to find the friction.
So what is it that's slowing me down?
What is it that's not making me move forward or that's stopping me from moving forward?
There are three steps to a friction audit.
The first one is to figure out where the friction is.
And that takes a bit of doing sometimes.
And even asking the question is a first very important step because when you feel like
you've just described, my boss is a jerk, things just aren't working for me, you're
not being thoughtful about it.
You just feel things.
It feels bad.
So the friction audit, basically the process says,
figure out what the biggest sticking points are.
They could be, you know, every day,
there's a part of the day that I look forward to least,
makes my life least happy.
It's the biggest, you know, downward force on my wellbeing.
That's a friction point.
Or I'm trying to get from A to Z in my career
and I know that I can never
get past C because C in that step, that particular step is a major friction point that I can
never get past.
It might be a particular boss I have to deal with.
It might be an aspect of my job that I can't kind of refine and improve, whatever it is.
If you do that process of introspecting and finding the friction point, you are much better
positioned to make forward motion because the next step is intervention.
Is there a way that I can either weed out that friction point altogether or sand it
down, smooth it down?
What that means is for a lot of people, it means spending a bit of time, energy, and
sometimes money and saying, this thing is such a big problem for me, it's such a thorn
that I need a way to eradicate it, to remove it.
And I'm going to throw resources at this problem, whatever resources I have.
And so it depends on the context, but if you intervene and you remove that friction point,
then you're much better placed to move forward.
And the third stage is confirmation, is just making sure that you've actually done a good job.
I can share a personal story.
So I was crazy stuck,
probably, oh God,
2019, super, super, super stuck.
And things were going fine.
Like on the outside, my life looked great.
Married, long time kids.
Like I finally had gotten to a point
where we were making the money and it paid off our bills
and we can live our life.
And I was happy in the work that I was doing,
but not.
And I felt guilty that I felt stuck.
Like I almost had this shame about the fact
that I had a house, I almost had this this shame about the fact that I had a house,
I had a marriage intact, I had my health, and yet I felt empty. And a dear friend of mine,
Peter Sheehan, who I'm realizing just friction audited me, we were, I don't even remember where
we were, but I was griping to him. And he's been a huge mentor and very close friend of mine,
and he is a renowned business strategist.
And he said, take out a piece of paper.
And I said, okay, what the hell is this gonna do?
Because of course, when you're stuck, you're kind of a jerk
because you're in your emotion, right?
And you don't know how to get out of that stage one
in your emotion.
And he said, I want you to write down
absolutely everything about your life
that creates friction.
That was his exact word.
And so I was like, what do you mean by friction?
And he said that you just feel all this resistance
and negative emotion to you.
You resent it.
You're annoyed by it.
You're frustrated.
It's hard.
And so I took out this piece of paper at him
and it was like just vomiting on the page.
I hate packing on a Sunday.
I hate being away.
I hate, and just the word hate, hate, hate, hate.
I hate how much I miss my kids when I'm traveling.
I hate how much I'm working.
I hate like a...
It was just like, and the second that somebody
gave me permission to write it down in that language,
it just flooded out of me.
It was as if the emotion of stuckness had a place to go.
And once it was on a piece of paper,
he basically was like,
everything on that list is now a project.
You either need to remove it from your life and work, or you need to hire somebody or
find somebody to do it, or you need to figure out how to do it without complaining about
it.
And that right there is the roadmap, Mel, because all those things that are causing
friction are what are keeping you stuck, but you're not doing anything about it.
And so then it became the next side of the page.
And you say, oh, these are things I can move.
These are things I can't.
So I got to change my attitude about it.
You accept it.
You recognize there's not that much you can do,
but you've put a label on it and you've said,
you know what, some things just suck
and packing on a Sunday is just how it is.
I've got to pack on a Sunday, whatever.
That stuff is all just there and it's in a box
and not everything in life is gonna be wonderful
and I'm okay with that.
I will say as well that when we think about
how to improve life, you described a whole lot of positives.
You had a lot of good things in your life
as you were going through this process.
We often think that the way to make life better
is to do more good things.
Throw in more fun stuff.
I think there's some truth to that. More good things is only better. I think the real bang
for your buck in life, if you want to make life better, is to take the lows, the friction
points, the things that are hard and bad, and smooth them out or raise them up if you
can. I think that's where we should spend our time and attention.
Why?
Because that's where, if you have a lot of good things, but you have a lot of things
that are bad that drag you down, they do a much worse job of dragging you down than the
good things can do dragging you up.
We are often as good as the worst stuff that's going on.
And so if you feel like your life is a series of friction points, but you also on paper
have all these other good things, the best thing you can do is not add more good things.
It's to take your time and attention
and deal with those friction points.
And often your money and other resources that you have.
So that's what I would counsel people to generally do
is focus on bringing the lows up a little bit
rather than always focusing on the next flashy vacation,
the next expensive thing that I'm gonna buy.
Those things will help a little bit,
but they're never gonna help as much as lifting up the lows
so that they're not quite as low.
You know, again, a personal story,
I have been shocked by how much of an impact therapy
with my husband, like, so we were going through
just a really terrible time,
probably four and a half years ago,
and we went into counseling and holy cow,
it was like a creeper digging up the dead bodies everywhere,
kind of awful painful thing.
But on the other side of it,
I had no idea how incredible the relationship could be.
And it wouldn't have been
had we not hit that really painful moment of feeling stuck
and just in a standoff.
But it is hard to take that step to face the friction.
I guess that's what we did.
We went and sat with a therapist
and did a friction audit on each other and on the marriage.
And it was awful.
But, but the dividends that it pays on your life
when you go through something like that,
it just creates tremendous meaning.
So do you think part of the issue with the reason why
it's so easy to get stuck is that life just kind of
is the same thing over and over again?
I think that's part of it.
I think the other thing about being stuck,
you just described it, is that when something
is a friction point, the natural instinct
is to turn away from it.
Yes.
It's to say, I'm gonna focus on something else.
Right.
If you're having difficulties in your relationship,
the natural thing is to say,
well, let's just give it a bit of distance.
I got to do some other stuff.
You figure out other areas of your life
that are more appealing,
you throw your attention and time there.
And that's a mistake.
Cause those friction points, they kind of nag at you,
they become traps.
And unless you figure them out and actually deal with them,
you're not gonna be able to raise them up
and they can end up being problems for decades.
And so I think that's a large part of it
is that there's a kind of sameness and a repetition to life.
And the repetition comes from ignoring those little things
that are niggling, that are sort of pulling at your ankle,
saying, hey, do you wanna look at me?
And you're like, no, I don't wanna do that.
There are some other things I'd rather do instead
that are more fun and more appealing.
And that's why a friction audit is so useful
because it forces you to pay attention to what's not working,
which we generally as humans don't have the instinct to do.
No, in fact, we not only don't have the instinct
to take a sober look at what's not working,
we have the instinct to turn away from it.
Yeah, exactly.
So, was there anything in the research
about particular periods in life or ages
where you tend to get more stuck?
Yeah, so I have some research with a colleague of mine,
Hal Hirschfield at UCLA, where we,
I was 29 and I felt like I was about to be 30.
This was a number of years ago now. I'm much older than that now, I was 29 and I felt like I was about to be 30.
This was a number of years ago now. I'm much older than that now,
but at the time I was 29, about to be 30,
and I felt like I had to do something
just to kind of show myself that I was still
just as vibrant as I'd been when I was younger and so on.
So did you feel stuck?
I felt stuck in various ways, I felt stuck.
How so?
Like put me at the scene.
I wanna meet the 29-year-old Adam.
You're not where you are yet.
You don't have, like, international bestselling books, like all this renowned research.
Tell me who Adam, at the age of 29, stuck with.
I had just finished grad school.
I was just starting a new career.
I wasn't sure if I wanted to be in the United States still.
I was missing people in Australia.
I was single.
I felt kind of lonely and unmoored in New York City.
I didn't really know if I had a place there yet.
And I just felt globally more blah than anything.
Like things were going well on paper,
but I just wasn't sure where I was headed.
And I wanted to do something that kind of showed me
that I had drive and that everything was working well.
So I signed up to run a marathon, my first marathon,
my only marathon.
And I did this at 29. And Hal and I were talking about run a marathon, my first marathon, my only marathon. And I did this at 29.
And Hal and I were talking about this and saying, we were thinking about the idea that
the way we count using the Space 10 system, the decade, just we count in tens.
Oh, okay.
So the way we count using tens, we think of decades as meaningful, right?
So turning 30, 40, 50, 60 is a big deal in our culture.
Yes. There's no inherent reason why 39 to 40
should be different from 35 to 36.
But it does feel different.
And because of that, we wanted to investigate
whether every 10 years when your age ends in a nine
and you're thinking about a new decade,
does that push you to think more deeply about your life?
And that's what we found.
So what you find is there's a little spike
in questioning the meaning of life
around the nine ending ages.
It's like a little end of decade crisis.
And you see some interesting things happen
on the back of that.
So one of them is more people are likely to sign up
for marathons the way I did.
At the age of ending a nine?
At nine ending ages.
Like 29, 39, 49, 59?
Yeah, they're more likely to be interested
in things like reading books on aging.
You see a little bit of a, people are more likely to buy those kinds of books.
They become more focused on aging.
You also see some negative things.
If they have a crisis, when they have that questioning of meaning, you see a rise in
extramarital affairs.
So if you look at the data, there's a rise with nine ending ages for those kinds of affairs,
and you even see a small rise in the suicide rate.
So there are profound things that happen
at the end of the decade for people,
and this is a time when we tend to have
these little moments of questioning
and when we feel quite stuck.
Thank you for breaking this down.
I want to hit the pause button real quick.
We got to take a quick break,
hear a word from our sponsors.
While we do, someone in your life has untapped potential.
Maybe they feel a little stuck. You know that they need a breakthrough. While we do, someone in your life has untapped potential,
maybe they feel a little stuck,
you know that they need a breakthrough.
Please let the professor of potential, Dr. Alter,
inspire and empower them with all this information.
And after you take a listen to our sponsors
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["Spring Day"]
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins.
You and I are here with NYU's Dr. Adam Alter.
All right, Dr. Alter, I got another question.
How can you use this research to your advantage?
So you're kind of cruising into the 29th, 19th, 49th,
69th birthday, how do you use this to your advantage?
Yeah, so there are a few things you can do.
One thing is to say that there's something very arbitrary
about picking those years.
You know, you could be 34, you could be 44,
you could be 54, 64, and say, this is when I want to do this little audit process. I don't have to ask myself whether
my life's meaningful only once every 10 years. And actually doing it more often is better
for you than doing it once every 10 years and having this huge, you know, event where
it feels overwhelming. Right. So do this often. Just ask yourself maybe once a year, maybe
it's your birthday, maybe you don't want to do that on your birthday, you want to do it
on a different day.
I think it's the perfect day.
It is, that's what I do, but other people might not wanna,
you know, have their birthday be about this process,
but do it once a year.
But hold on a second, I wanna push back on that.
Please. Because the single best thing
that you could do as a gift to yourself
is to pull out a blank piece of paper and go,
where is there friction in my life?
Because what I know based on Adam's research
is that if I were to turn my attention to the friction
in my life and make it a project,
to either remove it, smooth it out,
or face the stuff that I do not want to face
that I know is in the back of my mind,
and it bugs me, but it's gonna bite me
in the rear end someday.
If you did this, because here's the thing,
I'm thinking about this list that I did with Pete,
I do it every year. my business my life very different
right now than it was even like six months ago and so I think this is like
the greatest thing you could do for yourself is to wake up to where those
places in your life where there's like it's almost like stuck is this signal
and this flag from your internal like like, navigation GPS going, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
Yeah. Turn toward this.
Yeah. I mean, you could do it on your birthday. Absolutely.
I think for some people, it's kind of overwhelming moment. And so they don't want to do it on their birthday if they prefer not to.
But I'm totally fine with it being on a birthday.
The one thing about doing it consistently every year is the list should change.
If you're doing a good job of intervening, then that's a moment of confirmation when
you can say, hey, look, there were these things that two or three years ago I was writing
down, I kind of fixed them.
I figured out a way past them.
That is incredibly reaffirming.
It's the opposite of feeling stuck.
It's feeling that you've got forward motion.
So there's great value in doing that more regularly. The other thing is, if it does happen naturally when you're 39, 49, 59, that's okay.
The research suggests that to make meaning and to deal with these moments in a way that's
productive, you can do a few things.
One is to set yourself a goal, which is why running a marathon or an ultra or a try or
whatever, that's a good goal because it's an extended goal.
It's very defined. It has steps that get it's an extended goal. It's very defined.
It has steps that get you closer to the goal.
That's very reaffirming.
It's also about connecting with people.
So one way we get meaning in our lives
is to feel a sense of community,
to feel a deep sense of connection with other people.
And so if you can do that,
if you can make sure that you reach out to all your friends
that you've been meaning to reach out to,
that will also be very productive on those times
when you're questioning the meaning of life.
Okay, so Doc, I'm gonna play the role
of the stuck family member.
And I have been in a string of jobs that just blew,
and I've been through a breakup,
blue and I've been through a breakup and my life is boring and it's kind of how I feel. How the hell is running a marathon or setting a goal going to change my life?
So the thing itself is not, that's not the issue.
It's not that you run a marathon and suddenly you're going to become a person who makes
all their money and spends all their time running. That's not what issue. It's not that you've run a marathon and suddenly you're gonna become a person who makes all their money and spends all their time running.
That's not what it's about.
It's about demonstrating to yourself
through the way you're behaving,
certain things about who you are,
that your life has a kind of purpose
and that you're the kind of person
who can seize an opportunity to approach a goal
and to reach a goal and to succeed.
There's something tremendously valuable about signaling that,
especially when you feel globally stuck. So it doesn't actually matter what the goal is. and to reach a goal and to succeed. There's something tremendously valuable about signaling that,
especially when you feel globally stuck.
So it doesn't actually matter what the goal is.
It's not the goal for goal's sake.
It's the fact that you are moving towards something
that says, I have achieved, I have done this thing.
So that's what the value of, say, a marathon is.
It's not for everyone, but for some people,
it's very useful.
It was very good for me.
It did make me feel much better about where I was.
What are some examples of things that you found
in your research that people would pick as a goal
to signal something else?
Like that I'm moving forward,
I'm not gonna be defined by this stuckness.
Like the fact that I can say I'm going back to school
or I'm losing weight, I'm like whatever.
Like if I'm playing the disgruntled family member,
because I think you feel so stuck
that there's so much resistance to even first,
the belief that it's going to change.
And also resistance to moving yourself
in a different direction.
I mean, you're up against inertia.
We're talking physics here.
So do you have examples of other goals
that you've seen in your research
or just even in the interviews that you've done for the book
that really have helped people?
Yeah, and these things, because it's not about the thing itself,
it's just what it signals, they're kind of like palate cleansers
that get you ready to do the thing that actually needs to be done.
So, for a lot of people, that's a very valuable step.
The things are often one of three types.
There are athletic pursuits,
so something like running a marathon,
running a tri, whatever it is,
and that has the benefit of often getting you moving,
which has its own benefits that are separate from all of this.
Second kind is intellectual.
I want to learn a language, I want to learn a new skill,
I want to learn to code.
It doesn't matter what it is,
but it's something that's important to you.
It can be directly relevant to your job.
So it might actually push you forward,
but it could just be like,
I don't know how to do crosswords.
I want to get to the point where I can do
the Saturday crossword in the New York Times.
And then you do that, whatever.
And then the third kind is creativity based.
I want to paint a picture.
I want to create a piece of music.
I want to create a film.
I want to take photos. It doesn't matter what it is, but I want to get better at of music, I want to create a film, I want to take photos.
It doesn't matter what it is, but I want to get better at a particular skill that matters to me.
All of those are very valuable in showing you that you can have forward motion, that you can make
movements towards a goal. It doesn't matter, everyone has their own preference about which
one works, but they all seem to work pretty well. I can give you a bunch of examples from my family. So my husband Chris has completed
that online fitness challenge 75 hard four times now.
My daughter's done it twice.
Both times they committed to doing it,
simply to shake up their life and tap into their potential.
Here's another one.
So just yesterday, my husband got up at six o'clock
in the morning to go to a national park service
website so he could reserve a campsite for six months from now to the date.
And believe it or not, by the time he logged on to the website at 6 o'clock in the morning,
his top two choices were already reserved. He got his third choice for a campsite up at the
national park so that our family can climb Mount Katahdin. Now, here's what's cool about that.
We're not doing it yet. It's just something that we have put out into the future.
We made it a goal over the holidays that our family wanted to do that this
year as a family. And Chris marked his calendar four months ago that this was the date he needed
to log on. Yesterday he logged on at six o'clock in the morning. He got the campsite. These are all
small steps forward towards something out in the future that is deeply meaningful to us,
towards something out in the future that is deeply meaningful to us that really
keeps you feeling like you're tapping into the bigger potential of your life. Yeah, and I want to see if I can't
Really make sure that for you as you're listening whether you're listening for yourself or
Somebody that loves you who's a pain in your ear and sent you this episode because they think that you're stuck and they want to see you moving in the right direction and happy and vibrant and
no more friction in your life. I want to make sure that you really get the power of what
he is telling you. Because I think when you are stuck in your life, it's like being lost.
And when you're lost and your GPS is not connected, you get that spinning sensation where it's like,
waiting to reconnect, waiting to reconnect,
so you don't know where to go.
And so I think about the goal, listening keenly to you,
as if you sang, I'm gonna climb a Katahdin in Maine,
or Mount Kilimanjaro, that's my goal,
or I am going to learn how to play the piano
and I'm going to even dare my friends
and bet money that I'm gonna play
at the local coffee shop in a year.
Or I'm going to learn Spanish
or I am going to learn more about AI
and get this skill for work.
Like when you do that, it's as if that internal GPS
reconnects and all of a sudden you have put a destination
point out in the future, which the destination
doesn't freaking matter.
What matters is that that destination signals
it's time to stop spinning, move in the direction,
start getting in shape to go up Katahdin,
register your rear end for the AI
class, take up the painting course. When you start moving toward it, it's like the road
trip to a new you has begun. And it's that sort of new direction piece that must be changing
something. Is that why this works?
Exactly, yeah. And so as you go through a friction order, you list all the points of
friction. The other thing to list is what are all the things in my life I'd like to be able to do
that I can't do now?
That's what you start picking from when you do this because it signals not just that you're
getting friction out of the way, which is really external to you.
It's like saying this thing is outside of me.
I want to move it away and move forward motion.
This is something much more personal.
I'm the kind of person who can take on a goal and achieve it.
Whatever the goal is, it's something that's on my bucket list.
And when you do that, then you are prepared to move forward
with the thing that perhaps really matters to you in that moment.
That makes so much sense.
Thank you. Thank you for explaining that.
And this feels like a great time to hit the pause button
so you can hear a word from our amazing sponsors.
And while we do, would you please share this episode with somebody in your life who needs
this information?
They need to be reminded of that potential that is inside them.
This will give them the breakthrough.
And when we come back, Dr. Alter is going to be sharing specific tools that you can
use to get unstuck.
You're going to love it, love it, love it.
We'll be waiting for you after short breaks,
so stay with us.
We'll be waiting for you after short breaks,
so stay with us.
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins.
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins.
Thank you for sharing this with people in your life
who need to be reminded of their potential.
You and I are here getting inspired and learning
from NYU's amazing Dr. Adam Alter.
So Dr. Adam Alter.
So Dr. Alter, you know, what's also fascinating about this research is it confirms something
that I have certainly felt when I've been stuck in my life or my marriage or my job or with my body and my health
is that you feel like a victim.
Yeah. And the act of setting a goal
and then starting to work toward it,
it proves that you're not a victim.
Why is it so critical to have something meaningful
that you're working on in your life?
It's exactly as you've described
because we spend a lot of time asking ourselves,
what kind of person am I?
And it's very disempowering to be stuck, right?
You feel like you are not the best version of you.
Whether it's a particular stuckness,
I'm trying to do this very narrow goal and I can't do it.
Whether it's I just feel kind of blah
and I'm not making forward progress.
Either way, you're not looking at yourself in that moment
saying, I'm an efficacious
person who can get stuff done.
You know, it doesn't feel good.
What does efficacious mean?
I make things happen.
Got it.
Okay.
I have efficacy.
I can make things, the outcomes that matter to me happen.
That's not how you feel in that moment.
You feel kind of disempowered and powerless and not very good.
And so the thing about creating a goal that's maybe meaningful to you, it's on a bucket
list and succeeding is that it tells you
that you are actually someone who can get stuff done.
It counteracts and contradicts that feeling of helplessness.
And once you know that about yourself,
you are in a much better position to try something,
tackle something that's really big and meaningful,
that's maybe been a sticking point sometimes
for months or years,
rather than being in a position where you're like,
oh, I feel terrible.
Now I'm going to just try this thing that's really overwhelming.
You're not in the best position to do that in that moment of powerlessness.
You know, I have this interesting question that I want to ask you, and I don't know if
you researched this, but given that so many of us are going to share this episode with
somebody that we love.
Yeah.
When you're the person that's stuck and it feels like everyone around you is trying
to change you or pressure you to change
or help you get out of that rut,
is your own almost like fear to admitting that they're right
also a big barrier?
Like I'm thinking about like if you have somebody
in your family that's drinking too much,
or that has really let their health or their weight go,
and admitting that it's a goal to deal with this
also means admitting that other people are right.
Did you see any of that sort of social pressure aspect
to why people also stay stuck?
Yeah, so I really firmly believe
that you can't make people care about a goal or an outcome.
You can't say to someone, you're stuck
and you have to care about getting unstuck.
That's really got to come from the person.
You can guide them there,
you can show them why it's important.
You can have them introspect about it
to the point where they say, you know what,
I'm now seeing the light.
I understand why it's so important to do this,
but you can't bully people into saying this thing
that's sticking me is a problem
and I need to do something about it.
So I think the best thing you can do as a loved one,
as a friend, as a family member is to make it,
without being judgmental, is to make it as clear as possible
why this thing matters and kind of gently guide this person
along in that direction, show them that it matters
and have them answer some questions about it.
That's the best thing you can do is ask questions.
Do you want this thing to change?
Do you think it could be better?
The friction audit is a great example of this
because it means it's not about them.
It's not confronting.
You just say, hey, this is not about you,
but tell me all the things
that are kind of annoying to you right now.
Like what's a friction point?
And by pouring out all of those things onto the page,
you then have something you can latch onto
and at least say, hey, this seems like it's an issue for you,
let's work on it together.
Rather than telling them, here's your problem,
we're gonna fix it together,
which often leads people to push back.
You do a lot of work with companies.
So how does this work apply
if you feel like you're on a team and the team's stuck?
Yeah. So, I mean, that's originally where I started doing this work was with companies.
It wasn't with individuals, but it was the same idea that companies,
either in the way they interact with customers or internally in their operations, have sticking points.
You know, every company, no matter whether it's big or small, even more if it's big,
will have this series of bottlenecks and sticking points and red tape and bureaucracy they need to deal with.
And so this is an attempt to figure out where those points are.
It's also when you're dealing with customers, a lot of my work is on consumer behavior
and human judgment and decision-making.
Humans don't like stuff that's hard.
And if you are losing people in a sort of funnel in your interactions with them, in
a sales funnel,
moving towards making a particular sale,
all of those points where you lose them,
you can almost always put it down to friction.
Like you're asking them to do an extra thing,
an extra click on a website, go to an extra page,
make a phone call, make a text, send an email.
And so I work a lot with companies to say,
let's figure out where those friction points are
and see if we can track what sort of effect it has and email. And so I work a lot with companies to say, let's figure out where those friction points are
and see if we can track what sort of effect it has
when we remove those from the process.
Can you speak directly to somebody who feels stuck,
they wanna change jobs,
they wanna put themselves out there again after a breakup,
they wanna really go after their financial security,
but they're scared.
Like they're scared that if they, they won't find the job.
They're scared that they're going to just meet somebody else that breaks their heart.
Could you just talk a little bit about what the research says about why it's so important to do it anyway?
Yeah, so the one thing we haven't really talked about is the third section of the book, which is habit.
It's actually doing something, it's acting. The single best thing you can do if you
feel stuck is to take a minimally viable action. In other words, the smallest possible action that
moves you in the right direction. Try to think of what that tiny little action would be. It might be,
if you're in a job you don't like, it might be just learning what the alternatives are,
making a list of alternative job options, alternative industries you might want to work in, maybe go even to the point of making a list of
specific companies that are your goal companies. And then you can go through the sort of pros and
cons exercise of figuring out what are the strengths and weaknesses of each one. But even
that small act, doing something, moving in the right direction is enough to signal that you've
got forward progress. And then you can do the bigger stuff later on.
But getting the ball rolling is the biggest trick.
It's doing the small things so that you're not static.
You're actually moving in the right direction.
Why is that important?
It's important in part because you're signaling to yourself that you are the kind of person
again who can move.
The same issue comes up again.
But also because moving from zero to any action is really, really important in getting
the big action to happen. You have to do that step anyway, and once you start doing it, you're more
likely to do more. There's this classic story of Jeff Tweedy, the front man of the band Wilco,
who talks about how when he's trying to come up with creative ideas, it's incredibly difficult.
And so what he does is this minimally viable action.
He says to himself, when I wake up in the morning
and I don't wanna be creative,
he writes books and he writes music.
Sometimes he doesn't wanna do either one.
He says to himself, I'm gonna spend 10 minutes
coming up with the worst sentences I can,
writing the worst, most boring music I can,
because what he's doing is he's lowering the bar
all the way to the ground and saying,
I'm going to be non-judgmental. I just need to do something.
And that has two effects. One thing is, again, it gets the ball rolling.
And so when he's trying to do good riding, it's more likely to happen.
But the other thing it does is it sometimes means that the things that you think are not good in those moments
actually turn out to be better than you think. They actually are more important than you think.
And that process of being non-judgmental and just letting little things happen
and not saying it has to be perfect is a very useful way of moving forward.
I love this 10 minute rule.
And I also love assume it's going to be the worst because you've lowered the bar.
Do you have other quick examples?
Because I know the person listening is gonna be like,
okay, so what's an example in a job?
What's an example with a relationship?
What is the minimal viable action that you could take
just to get somebody thinking?
Because based on the research, without doing this,
you're gonna stay stuck.
This is step three.
Yeah, exactly.
So this is the thing is,
is the smallest action is the good one.
One thing I really like that I find very valuable, and this is what got me unstuck when I was
doing a degree I didn't want to do was experimentation.
Figure out the list of options and then start working through them.
Compare them to each other.
You will never know what is the right option if you don't know what the set looks like
and you haven't tasted a little bit of each one.
So set up that array and then spend a week on each one and line it up and do that.
And maybe that itself won't get you moving forward much, but it will teach you what you do like and
what you don't like, what does work and what doesn't work. And that's a great minimally viable
action is to say, I'm going to treat at least this part of my life like a long experiment.
And then once I figure out the best thing for then I can be single minded and focused on
exploiting that one opportunity, that one thing.
That's all I'm gonna do.
But you can't make forward motion
until you know what that thing is.
Okay, I wanna make sure I translate that
cause that was genius.
So basically, let's just say your goal
is to start working out.
And if you take on the mindset of being curious
and don't turn it into I'm getting six pack abs
and I'm exercising seven days a week.
Create a experiment of curiosity.
I'm gonna spend the next month figuring out
what kind of works out, so I even like.
And I'm only gonna spend 10 minutes every other day.
I'm gonna try jump roping, I'm gonna try Pilates,
I'm gonna try a HIIT class.
And if you turn it into an experiment,
this is no longer about getting it right,
it's about getting yourself moving. Yeah, and you know that when you do an experiment, this is no longer about getting it right, it's about getting yourself moving.
Yeah.
And you know that when you do an experiment,
some conditions are gonna be bad.
Some things will be better than others.
And that's good.
You've learned what does work and what doesn't work.
And actually you appreciate what works more
when you've seen and tasted what doesn't.
And I'll give you an example.
This podcast is something that I thought about
for probably seven years,
and it haunted me.
You want to talk about stuck and feeling like you're not tapping into your potential, there's
this thing you want to do and you're not doing it, you're not doing it.
I was fully in that mode of the emotion around it, the excuses around it, and it really made
me miserable.
And it also showed up, by the way, when I did that friction list. And so
if I think back, it probably would have been three or more years ago, I made one of those
friction lists, which I do all the time now, and right on it was, I haven't started the
podcast yet. So the fact that it showed up on the list meant to me that this was an area
of my life, an area
of potential that I needed to do something about. And I didn't start the podcast that
day. I made a decision that I was going to start working on it. In your words, I turned
it into an experiment. And, you know, it's interesting to point out, I think it's really
important for you as you listen and are a fan of this podcast to know that I didn't
even really, quote, do anything for a year.
I would wake up every day and I would take 15 minutes
of action a day.
And the first day the action was I made a decision
I was gonna launch a podcast in a year or two.
The next day, I simply made a list of podcasts
I was gonna listen to.
That's it.
The next day, I listened to a podcast for a little bit of time. The next day, I listened to a podcast
for a little bit of time.
The next day, I did a Google search
and I learned about the kind of equipment
that people use for podcasts.
And it just went on and on and on.
For an entire year, I would say that I was so busy
almost doing a research project and becoming a student
of the thing that I was interested in.
Before I even did any of the actual steps of, I guess,
recording an episode or figuring out what the audio editing software was.
And simply researching podcasts, simply becoming a student of it,
every single day when I did something, knowing that it was leading
toward this bigger thing,
it got me moving.
I didn't feel stuck again.
And that was years before the podcast actually launched.
That's a great minimally viable action.
So tell us about the role of failure because everyone's so terrified of failing at this.
How do you reframe the way you think about failure to help yourself get unstuck and be successful?
Yeah, so very few failures are the be all and end all.
It's all about framing and how you think about a failure.
Very few failures mean you can never do this thing again.
Usually they open up other options, opportunities,
a second attempt at the same thing.
And so the first thing is to accept that
and to recognize that failure is inevitable.
It's gonna happen as you get better,
as you challenge yourself.
But usually that's not irrevocable.
It's not the end of the world.
You can move forward.
So that's, I think, the first very useful thing.
The other thing is to figure out what to take away from that failure.
So there are good failures and bad failures.
Bad failure is where you fail.
You have no idea why, and it doesn't help you move forward and you feel dejected.
You don't feel good about it. Good failure is saying, I've learned something.
Here is what I've learned.
This part of what I did actually worked quite well.
Here is where I got close.
Here's where I fell short.
It may even be a case of learning through that failure
that this is not something you should be doing
and you can quit.
You can move on to something else.
There's nothing wrong with doing that.
There are a billion things we could be doing with our time and if failure is teaching you
something about what you shouldn't be doing, that's also valuable. So essentially the question that
differentiates good failure from bad failure is have I learned what the next thing should be from
this failure? And if the answer is yes, then it's good. It helps you. It wasn't a failure at all.
It wasn't a failure. I love that Dr. Alter. So I have then it's good. It helps you. It wasn't a failure at all. It wasn't a failure.
I love that, Dr. Alter.
So I have another question for you.
Who should you talk to when you feel stuck?
There are essentially three kinds of people that are very useful when you're trying to
get unstuck.
The first kind are people who are like you, who overlap with you, similar backgrounds,
similar ideas.
They kind of get where you're coming from.
Got it.
So organizations, when they put teams together, will often do this.
They'll sort of knit together people who are similar.
The second kind of person is someone who is completely different or non-redundant.
So I see this happen when companies come to NYU to recruit.
A lot of the best companies will come in and say,
we don't just want, you know, we're an organization that focuses on, say, investing. We don't just want, you know, we're an organization that focuses on say investing.
We don't just want the best finance students.
We want the best two finance students, the two marketing students, the two French literature students, the two organic chemistry students.
Because they'll all have a very different idea about the world and when you put those different ideas together, you get something very useful.
So when we're often stuck, we consult with people who are like us, and that often further entrenches us.
There's something very valuable in going out and speaking to people
who are deliberately quite different from you.
And then the third kind of person is a black sheep,
someone who actively pushes back against you.
So most of us can think about people in our lives
who sort of consistently see things, not just differently,
but actually in opposition.
They push us a little bit to sort of challenge the way we see the world.
And so Pixar has done this for a while, where when they have a team of people working on
a film, they will bring in a black sheep.
So they might have a whole lot of people who say the most important thing is our animation.
That's what sets us apart.
But they'll bring in someone who says animation doesn't matter.
Essentially, it's all about narrative.
Let's make sure that that first scene in the movie up
is the best narrative we can write.
Because if you don't grip people early,
then we're never gonna get them.
So these three kinds of people,
everyone should have essentially a brain trust.
So once you feel like you're stuck,
you go to the people who get you.
They really know you, they are a lot like you.
You go to the people who are a bit different,
they have different backgrounds and ideas, and then you go to the people who really push lot like you. You go to the people who are a bit different, they have different backgrounds and ideas,
and then you go to the people who really push back on you.
And you are much more likely to succeed in making progress
with the influence of those three kinds of people.
You know, and if I were to translate that
to the personal life, right?
So it makes perfect sense if you're trying
to have a creative breakthrough or a breakthrough
in your business or a breakthrough in the way
that you're approaching a project.
If you were to translate that to the personal life,
I'm sitting here thinking, I'm like, okay,
I got my high school friends and they're kind of like me.
I got maybe the college friends or the work friends.
There's some diversity there in terms of how people think
and problem solving backgrounds.
And then I got to find that one outlier
that just looks at life differently to bounce this off of.
If the person listening were to just do one thing, like what is the most important thing
that you want them to remember and put into action from this conversation, Dr. Alta?
There are two things that you could do, two ways of approaching life. There are two ways of approaching
a sticking point. The first one is called exploration,
where you try different things.
The second one is exploitation,
where you drill really deep into one thing.
You cannot do both at the same time.
You can't both be exploring all your options
and really doing as much as you can
to make one particular option work for you.
Figure out which stage you're in
and then bounce between the two.
So try different things, figure out which one is best, drill down on that until you
hit a wall, and then go back to exploring again and bounce between those two phases
and you will effectively get unstuck.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for being here.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
And I also want to thank you for listening today and for sharing this with people that
you love because what a waste it would be
to go through your life and not tap into the potential inside of you and
I know that based on what you learned today
You have a roadmap to help you do that
And so I hope you take everything that you learned and you put it into action
And one more thing in case no one else tells you today
that you learned and you put it into action. And one more thing, in case no one else tells you today,
let me be the one to say I love you and I believe in you.
And I believe in your ability to change your life.
And now you don't have any excuses
because you have the three simple steps
based on the research to plant a signal out into the future
and wake up every day and start chipping away at it, okay?
So go do it, five, four, three, two, 1. I'll talk to you in a few days.
Dr. Alta, here we go.
You're not even pronouncing it.
See?
An hour later and it's easy.
It's just Alta.
Well, I think it's good that I had that authentic fuck up.
You know what?
It's like Harvard Yard. Just say Harvard Yard. Alta. Alta. Well, I think it's good that I had that authentic fuck up. You know what? It's like Harvard Yard.
Just say Harvard Yard, Ulta, Ulta.
Ulta.
It's just a Boston accent.
Okay, gotcha.
You're rolling, everything's recording.
Excuse me.
Oh.
Oh, I love these chairs.
Lynn's gonna probably tape a blanket
to the back of that thing.
Oh, and of that thing.
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.