The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Stop Caring What People Think of You
Episode Date: January 9, 2025Today, you’re going to learn the simple trick to stop caring what other people think.If you find that you take things personally, worry what other people think about you, are scared of being judged,... or find that you can’t stop overthinking, you’ll love this episode.You’ll learn how to stop people-pleasing and start doing what is right for you.Featured in today’s episode is Chrissy Teigen, who opens up about her own struggles with people-pleasing. Mel gives Chrissy the coaching session of a lifetime, and what they talk about together will resonate deeply with you.This episode is both deeply personal and highly practical. You’ll learn:Why you care so much about what other people think.How to Let Them think bad thoughts about you.The tools you need to live your life on your own terms again. Get ready to take back control of your life again and live it for yourself.To listen to Chrissy Teigen’s new podcast on Audible, Self-Conscious with Chrissy Teigen, click here.Get a copy of Mel’s new book, The Let Them Theory, which she mentions in this episode, here.For more resources, including links to the studies mentioned in the episode, click here for the podcast episode page.If you liked this personal, tactical, and relatable episode, listen to this one next: The One Tool to Transform Your Relationships: The Let Them TheoryConnect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeGet Mel’s new book, The Let Them TheoryFollow 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
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Today, you and I are going to talk about one of the biggest obstacles that's holding you
back.
What is the obstacle?
Oh, it's worrying about what other people think and then how hard you are on yourself
because of it.
So if you're exhausted by worrying about other people or if you're tired of constantly feeling
misunderstood or if you feel like you're trapped in this prison of self-criticism, you're so hard on yourself.
Our conversation today will set you free. I'm going to teach you a revolutionary new approach
to life. Let people have negative thoughts about you. Your power is never in what someone else thinks. Your power is in what you think about
yourself. Today, you're going to learn how to use the let them theory to let people have their
opinions and focus on living your life in a way that makes you proud of yourself.
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so thrilled to be here with you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for hitting play on this episode and choosing to spend
some time with me.
It is always an honor to be together with you.
If you're brand new to the Mel Robbins podcast,
I just want to welcome you to the family.
Here's what I know about you.
The fact that you actually hit play on this
tells me that you're the kind of person
who really values your time,
and that you've made the time to listen to something
that could truly help you create a better life.
There is no doubt in my mind you have hit play
on the perfect episode, because today we are going to unpack a topic
that I personally believe is the single biggest obstacle that stands in the way of you and your ability to achieve absolutely everything that you want in your life.
And what is that obstacle? That obstacle is your fear of what other people think about you. Mm-hmm. We all have it.
We worry about it.
We care about what other people think.
We try to manage what other people think.
You probably don't even realize how much of a default it is
for you to stop and consider what somebody might think
before you post something on social media,
before you say something at work,
before you make the move that you've been afraid to make,
before you start the conversation,
you always stop and you consider what somebody else is going to think or do in response to it.
And you don't even realize how often you do this.
I didn't either until I discovered the let them theory.
And starting to learn to catch myself whenever I was considering what somebody else would think
or how they might react and worrying about it. I've been trying to catch myself whenever I was considering
what somebody else would think or how they might react
and worrying about it and learning how to say let them,
it has been life altering.
And one of the reasons why I thought I got to dedicate
an entire episode to this is because first of all,
you struggle with this.
That's why you chose to listen to this.
That's why somebody that you care about deeply forwarded you this episode,
because they want you to stop worrying so much about what everybody thinks and live your life
and be happy. But I'm here to tell you, you're not alone. Every single human being struggles with
this. And so I thought, here's what we're going to do. We're going to unpack this today, because in
the 35 press interviews that I've done so far for the Let
Them Theory book, this is the biggest question everybody's asking. And I don't care who's on
the other side of the microphone with me, whether it's Oprah Winfrey or the New York Times or it's
Time Magazine or it is the Wall Street Journal. Everybody wants to know how do I stop caring about
what other people think? And that's what we're going to do today. And I'm so excited because I'm going to teach you this in a really special way.
We're going to talk about this topic and I'm going to unpack it by sharing a conversation
with you that I had with Chrissy Teigen.
And before we even jump into it, I want to thank Chrissy.
I want to thank her for allowing me to share this conversation with you.
Because we were talking on her new podcast and she was so open with what she's struggling
with and she struggles with what other people think about her.
I mean, it's almost crippling to her that people would think something negative, that
they would attack her, and she was so open about it.
And on top of it, she allowed me to coach her. And I got in her face about
this because it's really sad when you hold yourself back because you're afraid of something
that you can't control. Because you're going to learn you will never, ever, ever be able
to control or guarantee what another person thinks about you.
Never.
And so I not only got in Chrissy's face about this
because I want her to have a breakthrough,
but I need to get into your face about this
because you need a breakthrough about this.
Right now you are holding yourself back
because you're worried about
what your friends from college are thinking,
or you're worried about what your parents
are gonna be thinking,
or you're worried about what your boss is gonna are thinking, or you're worried about what your parents are gonna be thinking, or you're worried about what your boss is gonna think,
or this or that or the other thing.
And more importantly,
it's not even that worrying about it is the problem.
It's the fact that you then aim it back at yourself.
Like I think it's fine to care what other people think.
It's a sign that you're a good person.
That's not the problem.
The problem is how you hold yourself back, how you silence
your opinion, how you use other people's opinions as a means to make yourself feel like you're
not good enough as you are. That's going to stop today.
And the reason why we struggle with this is because you believe that there's a way that you can behave
that somehow can manipulate or guarantee
that somebody will think a certain thing. I'm here to tell you, you can't.
And any time and any energy that you pour
into trying to manipulate or control or guarantee what somebody
else is going to think about you is a gigantic waste of time and energy. And in fact, anytime you
start worrying about what somebody else thinks about you, you actually cause stress and anxiety
for yourself. The fact that you're worrying about what everybody thinks so much is actually a major
source of stress and there is an easier way to live.
I am going to prove it to you today with the help of Chrissy Teigen.
And it may surprise you that when you listen to Chrissy and you listen to her share, it
may surprise you that when you consider her life, well, this is a woman that is so wildly
successful.
She's an extraordinary businesswoman.
She has four amazing kids.
She's got an incredible marriage to John Legend.
And she struggles with this.
And so from the outside, you see somebody who's succeeding.
So you don't think that this is a person who feels misunderstood.
You don't think that this is a person who feels like she's living in a prison of her own making.
You don't think that this is a person who lives in fear that she's going to pass this
onto her kids.
And what is it that she's afraid she's going to pass onto her kids?
Well, it's this fear of being misunderstood, this fear that people are criticizing her,
this fear that she can never do anything right.
And the let them theory is liberating in this regard, not only for Chrissy Teigen, but also for you
and for whomever you share this with.
And so I just want to thank Chrissy
because she is giving me permission to share a few segments
from her new podcast, Self-Conscious with Chrissy Teigen.
And you can listen to the whole conversation
that Chrissy and I had right now
if you just go to audible.com forward slash Chrissy and Mel.
So on the opening of her podcast,
I explained to Chrissy what the let them theory is.
And in case you're brand new
to the Mel Robbins podcast family,
let me just share what the let them theory is to you as well.
So let them theory is a very simple mindset tool
that shows you instantly what's in your control
and what's not in your control.
And there's two very simple parts to the let them theory. you instantly what's in your control and what's not in your control.
And there's two very simple parts to the let them theory.
Part one, you're going to use whenever you feel yourself starting to get frustrated or
stressed out or annoyed or worried about what somebody else is doing, feeling or saying.
Just say, let them.
Let them say what they're going to say.
Let them think what they're going to think.
I'm going to stop trying to control them and just let them.
And the second step is when you say, let me.
And when you say, let me, you remind yourself that in life, there's only three things you
can control.
It's what you think.
It's what you do or don't do.
And it's how you process the feelings that are rising up.
And when you say, let me, this is where you get your power back.
Let me remind myself that my power is not in what other people are doing.
My power is always in my response.
And when you focus on your response, and particularly you focus on showing up in a way that makes
you proud of yourself, you're now in control of your life. And so I explained that to Chrissy on her new podcast, and this is what she had
to say in response.
I can say that to myself all I want. I can say, let them, let them, let them think their
thoughts, let yourself be misunderstood. It's okay. You have a wonderful family, wonderful
friends, a wonderful life, but it is so incredibly challenging
for me. The one thing I wish I could change was that I wish I weren't so misunderstood and I wish
people knew how good I was. And it's so desperate sounding and so sad, but that for me is my biggest
battle in life.
biggest battle in life. Yeah, I'm so happy that she shared that because I don't think it sounds desperate at all.
Haven't you ever had an experience in your life where you felt like you just wish that
people didn't misunderstand you?
That you wish people knew how good you were?
How you had such great intentions.
I think that's a really universal fear.
And I was so glad that she actually shared
that this is the one thing I wish I could change.
I mean, just imagine what would change about your life
if you really could just let people think what they think
and you didn't worry about being misunderstood.
And so of course I had to ask Chrissy directly, like, why are you so concerned about what
other people think?
And what is it exactly that you're afraid of?
And this is what she had to say.
Since I was little, I really wanted to be loved.
And I really wanted adoration and affection.
I had a parent that was not very touchy-feely.
I felt growing up that I was someone
that she could show off.
And so when I was little and going up to people
and saying my words in Thai or doing what I was told
and being good, I got really good feedback from that.
And I got that feeling of always wanting to be really good for everybody.
And it's been in me since I was little.
I think it's been inside all of us since we were little.
I mean, if you just think about your own life, when did you get positive attention?
It's when you were performing or you got good grades
or the team that you were on won.
And so what she's talking about here is something
that so many of the psychologists and psychiatrists
that have come on the Mel Robbins podcast talk about,
which is the experience that you had when you were little,
where you got positive attention, it kind of tells you, oh, oh, oh,
when other people are telling me that I'm good,
when other people are giving me positive attention,
that's how I know that I feel good about myself.
But here's the problem.
As long as you locate your goodness
and whether or not you're doing a good job as a person
in the opinions and the moods of other people, you're never gonna be in control of it.
And that's why so many of us,
whether it's Chrissy Teigen or it's you or it's me,
we find ourselves in these situations in life
where you're like, oh my gosh,
why am I so concerned about what other people think about me?
And as I explained to Chrissy,
look, it's natural when you're a kid
because you need to be cared for,
to be deeply, deeply connected to the people around you and attuned to them and looking to them
for positive signaling that you're okay and that you're good.
That's what happens when we're kids. But when we are adults, we have to pull that back to ourselves.
And that's where the let them theory
is really going to change things.
Because when you outsource your self-worth,
when you outsource the positive affirmations
to other people's opinions, you will never feel safe.
And so I was explaining to Chrissy
that you're really gonna love the let them theory
because it's gonna teach you
how to stop looking outside yourself for the thing that you're actually seeking.
And as I started to explain this to Chrissy, that the more you can learn to let other people
say what they're going to say, be who they're going to be, the better your life is going
to get because you're going to understand that what you think about yourself is actually
the most important thing.
And in this next part, in the conversation that we had on her new podcast,
Self-Conscious, she started talking about her relationship with herself.
And this is where it starts to go way deeper. Take a listen.
The relationship with myself is the hardest part. I've always been a punisher, whether it was through diets and
food emotionally or drinking. I always inflict some kind of pain on myself and punish myself
for letting people down or feeling like I wasn't good enough in a group of people. And
it's so all-encompassing. I very rarely leave the house because when I do and I interact
with people out in the world,
whether it's through work or just being out shopping
at the grocery store, I just destroy myself
and work so hard to make sure that they had
the really good experience with me.
And then I come home and I dwell on it forever.
It's getting so exhausting being this mean to myself.
And I don't know what it's like to not be that way.
And if I could heal that part of myself, so much would change.
So much of my day would be free to think of other things that really matter.
But right now I'm in the prison of it.
You're clearly in a prison of it because you've given all the control to other people. Your worth, your value, whether or not
you're happy, whether or not you are proud of yourself is entirely given away to other people's
reactions or what they say. And just like you cannot control what another human being feels,
you will never be able to control
what someone else thinks about you.
I can by being really good.
No, you can't.
I know. No, you can't.
When we're done talking,
can you control what I'm gonna say about you
when my two daughters are like,
oh, it was a life-crisis.
Can you actually control what my thoughts and feelings
about you are going to be?
No.
Excellent. I know that,
and I'm saying that, but there's another level of me
that I can do the best I can to ensure that you are.
Oh, great.
So there's a couple of things I want to unpack about this,
So there's a couple things I want to unpack about this because she's describing something that you have experienced, which is, if you ever had the experience of you wake up in
the morning, you feel fine, you feel good about yourself, the day starts and then you
get to work and something goes down.
And suddenly you're obsessing over the email
that somebody sent you or the mood that your boss is in
or maybe something happened at school or with your friends
and you start obsessing, I should have done this,
I should have done that, I should have done the other thing.
What are we doing when we do that?
What we're doing is we're giving our power away.
We're basically saying that our worth lies
in what another human being thinks about us.
That if you don't act the right way at work and somebody's upset with you, that somehow
now you're the bad person.
I'm here to tell you, absolutely not.
This is why you need the let them theory.
Like your boss's bad mood doesn't mean you're a bad person.
Somebody saying something negative about you doesn't mean you have to feel negatively about yourself.
And I knew that intellectually,
but I never knew how to separate myself
from other people's moods and other people's opinions of me.
And the let them theory has been life altering
in this regard.
And this is what I was trying to explain to Chrissy.
She's literally describing how you probably go through your day two, where you're concerned
about what people at work think about you.
You're concerned about what your sorority sisters think about you.
You're concerned about what your family thinks about you.
What if we were to invert this?
What if you were more concerned about what you think about you?
And instead of exhausting yourself
over something you'll never be able to manage,
you pull the power back.
This is what I was trying to explain to her.
And I think she's starting to get it.
And if I could heal that part of myself,
so much would change.
So much of my day would be free
to think of other things that really matter.
Can you actually control what my thoughts
and feelings about you are going to be?
No.
She said the correct answer, no.
Just like I can't control what you're gonna think about me
as you're listening to this podcast episode.
Please take a moment and share this
with everybody that you care about,
because everybody needs to learn
how to let people have negative thoughts
and take their power back.
Oh, there's so much more that we need to unpack,
and I want to stay on this topic,
but let's take a quick pause
so we can hear from our amazing sponsors
of the Mel Robbins podcast,
and don't go anywhere,
because I'm going to be waiting for you
after this short break.
The relationship with myself is the hardest part.
I've always been a punisher, whether it was through diets and food, emotionally or drinking, I always inflict some kind of pain on myself
and punish myself for letting people down or feeling like I wasn't good enough in a
group of people.
And it's so, it's getting so exhausting being this mean to myself.
And I don't know what it's like to not be that way.
And if I could heal that part of myself, so much would change. Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins. I am so glad that you're here. I'm so glad
that you're learning how to let people have negative thoughts. And again, I'm so grateful
that Chrissy Teigen is allowing me to play some moments from her new podcast, Self-Conscious with Chrissy Teigen.
As we're unpacking this and it's really starting to sink in,
you know, I have to applaud Chrissy
because she shared something very personal
in this next segment.
And I wanted to share it with you
because I think it's really important
to stop and consider that how you move through life
is an example to other people.
And using the let them theory, you can truly take the power back
and decide who you want to be.
That's the let me part.
Let me decide what I want to think about myself.
Let me align my actions with the kind of person I want to be.
Let me allow my emotions to rise and fall instead of navigating my life based on what
I think everybody else expects of me or is going to be disappointed.
And that brings me to this part of Chrissy's new podcast and the conversation that we had
that I wanted to share with you. Because she shared this fear that she had that is extremely
personal.
And I think it's an important part of this conversation.
Check this out.
One of the worst parts about it is me feeling crazy or feeling that nobody else will understand
this feeling.
Why am I like this?
I'm really scared of passing this along to my kids.
I think that is the big realization for me.
I can't do this to my kids.
I don't ever want them to feel like
they have to perform for everybody
and be good all the time.
But I know that sometimes I probably am that way.
I do want them to be the most polite
and I don't want people to think
that they're just celebrity asshole kids. and so I might go harder the other direction to make sure that they don't come off that way and
I really need to break that because I'm okay
This is another reason I'm in therapy. I'm okay with
Me getting the shit end of the stick on anything or living this life where I'm stressed and in pain
But I'm not okay with them. Yeah. Well, I can see that really bothers you. Yeah. Yeah. Because
I see how much my interactions with adults as a child affected me from so many different layers,
from whether it was sexual or the reason I became such a people pleaser and that was
Through sleeping with people it travels so far in my life
It's not just that I wanted to smile and say my little tie words for people and went in it that started that way
Yes, but then I ended up
Believing sorry, I ended up believing that I was for everybody and my body
was for everybody. And it took a hold on every part of my life. And as you can see, it still has a
hold on me now. So I cannot imagine this for my kids. I hope that they don't want to please
everybody in life. And I hope that they know that their body is their own,
their mind is their own, their actions are their own,
and they can't control other people.
I cannot have them live this way that I live.
Who is going to teach them this?
And that's the enormous opportunity that you have.
When you understand what you're dealing with,
you have the ability to face it
and to make decisions to live differently. And that's exactly what you're doing.
And your kids watch you.
And they are watching how much
strangers and other people impact how you feel about yourself. And so as you
take this on and you truly start to separate what is your responsibility to manage? Which is your thoughts, your feelings, your words.
When you focus on that and you align your values with how you show up in life
and you put yourself first in that regard, you are also showing your children
that their opinion of themselves is more important than what anybody else says or does.
Because they're no longer seeing their mom destroyed by what other people are saying.
It always amazed me that I was the give no fucks girl. I'm like, you guys have no idea how many fucks I give.
Well, anytime anybody says, I don't give a shit what they think, you know they totally
do because it's when you have to say that out loud, it's evidence that you are still
processing something that bothers you.
It's so true, isn't it?
I bet you're thinking about somebody in your life who constantly says, I don't care what
they think.
This is an episode they need to hear because the fact that they're saying it out loud means
they care what they think.
And I really want to unpack this whole idea of not giving any fucks.
And let's look at what Chrissy Teigen actually said, because I have it right here.
It always amazed me that I was the give no fucks girl.
I'm like, you guys have no idea how many fucks I give.
You guys have no idea how many fucks I give.
Give is the word.
Because when you actually are worried
or try to manage what somebody else thinks.
You give someone else power.
That's why Chrissy's crying because she's sensing and realizing how much power other
people had over her life.
And here's the other thing I want to say, both to you and to Chrissy, and I said this
to her on her podcast. this isn't your fault.
This isn't your fault.
This was conditioned in you as a child.
When you get positive reinforcement based on other people's behavior, your mom's or
the adults around you, of course you're getting conditioned to please other people.
Of course you're getting trained to care what other people think.
And a bigger issue is you're actually being taught somehow that you are responsible for
other people's moods and opinions and that your worth is outside of you.
And so I want to come back to the word give.
When you give fucks or you give a shit or you give power to what somebody else thinks,
you are always going to feel stressed out, anxious, and unworthy.
Because you're never going to be in control of what somebody else thinks.
And you're always going to be up in your head, worried about it.
And that's why the let them theory is going to change your life.
Because when you say, let them think something negative, let them be disappointed,
let them be upset that I'm not meeting their expectations, let them say that
I'm rude, let them believe that I should be acting a different way, let them unfollow
me, let them think what they're going to think. And then a really funny thing happens, and
this is something that I've noticed in my own life. The more I say, let them think something negative,
and the more I take my power back,
and I really put all my time and energy
into showing up in my life
in a way that makes me proud of myself,
I know who I am.
And when I know who I am, and I'm proud of myself
because I'm trying and I'm doing my best
and I know what my intentions are,
I don't actually think about other people a whole lot
because I know the truth.
And that's what's available to you.
And I want to go back to two things that Chrissy said
that really struck me in the moment.
She said,
One of the worst parts about it is me feeling crazy
or feeling that nobody else will understand
this feeling.
Why am I like this?
Why do I do this?
Why am I so mean to myself?
Why am I such a people pleaser?
Why do I constantly worry about what other people are thinking?
Why, why, why?
And the truth is, we're all like this.
And it's a fundamental part of the human wiring.
See, we are super hard on ourselves.
And I'm sure if you really are honest with yourself,
the way that Chrissy Teigen was honest with me
about how she is bashing herself all the time,
and she doesn't wanna do this, and she doesn't want to do this,
and she doesn't want to pass this on to her kids, that I don't think we mean harm to ourselves,
and yet here we are caught in this negative loop with ourselves. And so this is why we're looking
for validation outside ourselves, because we're trying to escape the criticism that is running on repeat
in our own heads.
We're looking for clues from the outside world.
And what I'm here to tell you is that since this has been going on since childhood, the
better approach is to learn how to give yourself clues internally.
And I never understood this until I talked to world-renowned psychiatrist and bestselling author, Dr. Paul Conti.
He wrote the New York Times bestseller, Trauma, The Invisible Epidemic.
And the introduction for that book, The Forward, was written by Lady Gaga because he treated Lady Gaga.
And she says that Dr. Conti saved her life. As soon as I was done
talking to Chrissy Teigen, I remembered Dr. Paul Conti and his appearance on the Mel Robbins
podcast and I'm like, this is exactly what he was talking about. I wish he was here talking
to me and Chrissy. Well, through the magic of podcasting, I can bring him into this conversation
because he explained why we are all so negative, why we are all
criticizing ourselves, why we all feel like we're not good enough, and also why we give
so much weight to other people's opinions, why we're constantly looking around at our
bosses and our parents and our significant others and our friends for validation that
we're a good person. And the way that he explains it, it's just,
it's gonna help you understand that other people's thoughts
and other people's behavior does not determine your worth,
even though this is how you've been operating
since childhood.
It's because this missing thing called attribution.
This is so important that I really want you to hear
Dr. Paul Conti explain this
to you.
Children are trying to understand, especially at this stage of life where there's so many
connections forming and the child is growing and learning about the world around them that
the child is trying to understand, but without the benefit of abstract thought
and of life experience.
But in children, they're trying to make sense of things without those capabilities.
So then the idea is, it must be me, because there's not the thought, oh, people can have
issues of their own that can impact how they're responding.
So in one sense, they're responding to me, but they're not really responding to me, they're
responding to what's inside of their head.
So, if I say, you know, mom or dad, can I have something to drink?
And the person says, just go in the other room, or just yells at me.
I didn't really do anything wrong.
That person, my mom or my dad was in a bad place.
They can't do that. So the attribution is to self,
which is why the lessons that we learn in childhood
can be so, so difficult into the future
because we don't have the capacity for the abstract thought.
We don't have the life experience.
So we attribute the negative things around us to ourselves.
And this is where there was an English physician
named Winnicott who wrote
about the idea of raising children so that the child can feel good enough, right? And
this wasn't an idea of limp over the line. That's not what good enough meant. Good enough
means solidly good enough, that I'm good enough to face what there is for me to face. If that's
something negative, I can get myself through negative things
and also I can get myself to better places.
I can find better for myself.
If I get knocked down, I can get back up again.
These are the lessons that we want
and if we can get through childhood
and if we didn't get through childhood feeling good enough
and there's aspects of not good enough we carry along in all of us, then we can go back and look at that and we can change
that later in life.
And at the deepest level, that's what you and I are talking about today.
If anything that Chrissy Teigen and I shared with you in those moments in her podcast resonated with you,
or if somebody in your life struggles with people-pleasing, or if you're constantly on this negative loop
and you really are navigating your life based on people's moods or their opinions or worrying about them
or acting in a way, twisting yourself and not so that people think
that you're the good daughter or the good wife
or the good mom or the good dad,
there's a different way that you can live.
That good enough means that you know that within yourself,
you have the ability through your thoughts
and your actions to face anything.
That you know based on your thoughts and actions
that you're a good person.
You know what you intended.
And that you hold the power
and you are the person that determines your worth.
I am on a roll.
I have so much more I wanna share with you,
but I gotta hit the pause button
so you can hear a word from our amazing sponsors.
But don't you dare go anywhere.
Because when we return,
we're jumping right back in
to this masterclass coaching session that you need,
the people that you love need.
So take a moment and share this with people in your life
who need to be set free.
Don't go anywhere, I'm gonna be waiting for you
after a short break, and then we're gonna jump
right back in, so stay with me.
The one thing I wish I could change was that I wish I weren't so misunderstood and I wish people knew how good I was.
And it's so desperate sounding and so sad, but that for me is my biggest battle in life. Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins. I am so glad that you're here. I'm so glad that you're
learning how to let people have negative thoughts. And again, I'm so grateful that Chrissy Teigen is
allowing me to play some moments from her new podcast, Self-Conscious with Chrissy Tiegen, because we all need to learn how to let people think negative thoughts
and take the power back. And using the let them theory, you can truly take the power
back and decide who you want to be.
Since childhood, we have been looking outside of ourselves to confirm that we're okay and that we're loved and that we're worthy.
And the opportunity of this conversation is for you to take that power back
and know inside yourself based on how you act, how you treat yourself,
what you think about, what you do, what you don't do,
that you are a good person because you know who you are at your core
and nothing has helped me do that more
than learning to say, let them.
Because when I say let them,
if I put it in the words of Dr. Paul Conti,
I'm now practicing attribution.
I'm saying that if that person is in a bad mood, let them.
If that person has a negative opinion about me, let them.
I am attributing their behavior to them
and I am not attaching it to me and my self-worth.
Isn't that so cool?
It's the world's best boundary.
Because you realize that when you let other people
think, say, do, feel how they feel,
that you attribute their behavior and their thoughts
to them alone.
And then you say the second part, let me, and you take all the power back and attribute
your power to your thoughts, your feelings, and what you do or don't do.
And that is how you will know deep in your core that you are good enough. That's how you're gonna start to change
the way that you talk yourself, the let me part,
let me remind myself of who I am and that I'm a good person,
and I know what I intended.
And that's how you stop this habit that so many of us have
of constantly bending ourselves in knots
or exhausting ourselves to try to please other people.
Enough. You do not need
to live that way. And I want to stay right on this topic because it's so important. I really wanted
Chrissy to get this point that you will never be able to control what somebody else thinks.
That's number one. And number two, that two things can be true at once is a really important thing
that I teach
in the let them theory and that I've learned
over the last two years,
that somebody can be disappointed in you
and still like you or love you.
Somebody can misunderstand you
and you can still be a good person.
Somebody can have a negative thought about you
and you can still have positive self-worth.
Two things can be true at once. And so in order to make sure that Chrissy and you
understand that people are always going to have negative thoughts about you, always,
and instead of exhausting yourself or putting yourself in a prison trying to manage what other
people think, learning to manage what other people think.
Learning to just accept that people have negative thoughts,
including the people that are the closest to you.
That is a liberating way to go through life.
You're just going to learn to let them think something negative.
So in this next segment from her podcast, Self-Conscious with Chrissy Teigen.
I want you to hear me set up this next piece of coaching
all about how you're never gonna be able to control
what somebody else thinks.
And even the people that you love the most,
they have negative thoughts about you all the time.
Check this out.
The issue is you're focused on me and what I think of you.
I want you to start focusing on you
and what you think of you.
That's what matters.
And I'm gonna prove something to you.
The people that love you the most,
so who loves you more than anybody on the planet?
John.
And who do you feel the safest with?
John.
Do you think John has negative thoughts about you?
No.
Baloney.
I know you love John, so give me some negative thoughts
and opinions that you've had about John today or yesterday.
Oh God. I think one of the fights we really get in is about scheduling or being home enough, being together enough, without kids sometimes.
I'll share some for mine. So my husband gets up in the morning and farts and I'm like, you're disgusting.
Or I worked late last night and I came down in the kitchen and he was eating cereal and I'm like, why are you. Or I worked late last night and I came down in the kitchen
and he was eating cereal and I'm like,
why are you not making dinner?
What the hell?
That's a negative thought.
My daughter Sawyer, she's so intense.
I'm like, you need to chill, dude.
My daughter Kendall, I love her to pieces.
Yeah, the kid thing is easier for me.
I probably have, because the kids can drive you crazy,
but John is so even keeled and just...
But doesn't that drive you crazy?
Aren't you like sometimes?
God, yes, actually.
Yes, I want some passion sometimes.
I want him to get mad at me.
I want him. But yeah.
So that's an example of even though you love the person.
Negative thoughts pop in your mind.
It doesn't make you love him less.
And there are times where you drive John
flipping crazy. He may not be telling you this, but he's thinking in his mind
something about you. And the point I'm trying to make is the average human
being has 70,000 thoughts a day, Chrissy, and they can barely control what they're thinking. There is never going to be a moment where you can ensure
that another human being thinks something
that you want them to think.
That's not where your power is.
Your power is in the let me part.
So whenever you feel yourself getting worked up,
whether it's a press storm or it's something
else, let them.
When you spend all your time and energy exhausting yourself to make everybody else happy, you
lose yourself.
It is not your job when you become an adult, Chrissy, to manage or fix other adults' emotions. As a parent,
you are responsible for helping your children process their emotions because children cannot
regulate their own emotions without an adult helping them. But you are never responsible
for managing someone else's emotions when they are an adult, no matter what you do.
And I'm gonna share some things with you
to have you really try to embrace
the truth of what I'm saying
and the freedom that is available to you.
Because it's so sad to me to see a woman that I respect
who has an extraordinary marriage,
you do so many remarkable things,
you are an unbelievable businesswoman, who has an extraordinary marriage. You do so many remarkable things.
You are an unbelievable business woman.
And you place all of this power that you have
in the hands of strangers on the internet.
And you don't have to live like this.
It's so interesting when someone tells me
something that I needed to hear
or when I have an epiphany about something I get this like
Incredible throbbing in my wrists and arms and I can really feel it so hard now
And I hope you're feeling it too and
The sentence I want you to really laser in on
is you don't have to live like this.
And you don't have to have the millions of followers
that Chrissy Teigen does to be paralyzed
by people's opinions.
I'm gonna give you a simple example
that I want you to think about.
And it's an example that I know that you're gonna relate to.
And I shared it over and over and over
when I would get asked about how you use the let them theory to stop caring about other people's
thoughts. And I would say, well, you're never going to stop caring because it's important to
care what other people think. Otherwise you'd be a selfish jerk. And I don't want you to be that.
What you need to do is care more about what you think. And so learning to let people have negative thoughts,
first of all, it recognizes, number one,
that you'll never be able to control
what somebody else thinks, therefore,
it is not worth your time and energy
because you protect your time and energy.
And second, you also recognize that your value
as a human being is not in what somebody else thinks,
it is in what you think about yourself.
And three, when you let people think negative thoughts,
you are acknowledging the fear that you have,
because the reason why you worry
about what everybody else thinks
is because you're afraid that it's gonna be negative.
So when you say let them,
you're allowing this fear without allowing it.
And you're also really valuing your time and energy
because you're saying,
I'm not gonna waste time and energy
on something that I can't control.
And I also know that the power
is not in what somebody else thinks.
The power is in me and what I think about myself.
And I know myself, so let them think something negative
and let me remind myself that the power's
in what I think about myself.
And as long as I conduct myself in a way that I'm proud,
even if somebody misunderstands me or is disappointed,
I know the truth.
Do you see how that means you hold the power?
That you could be misunderstood
and still understand yourself.
That's true power.
That's what's available to you.
And so let me give you this example
that I shared over and over and over again,
as people would ask me questions about this.
I want you to think about posting on social media.
So you open up your favorite app, mine is Instagram,
and let's just say that there's something that you want to be using social media for.
And maybe it's because you want to launch a new business, or maybe you're a singer and you want
to put out your music, or maybe you're an artist and you want to post about your artistry, or maybe
heck, you just want to put up a photo of you in a bathing suit or without a filter.
So you're at this moment where you've got social media open, you go and you select a photo of you in a bathing suit or without a filter. So you're at this moment where you've got social media open,
you go and you select a photo
or you select this kind of video that you've shot.
And then what do you do?
As you look at the photo or the video, you're like,
oh, is this, you know, I don't know,
filter, filter, filter, should I put this on a,
is this too much?
Too much for whom?
As you're looking at the photo, who are you thinking about?
You're not thinking about how you feel about the photo.
You've actually in that moment,
as you stop and consider the photo,
you are giving power to somebody else's opinion
about the photo or video that you wanna post.
This is how quickly you put yourself in a prison.
And then you go to write the caption and
you're like blah-ba-dee-blah-ba-dee-blah, oh delete delete delete, emoji emoji emoji,
is this too much? For who? I want to remind you of something. Your social
media is for your self-expression. It's for your business, it's for your
artistry, it's not for your sorority sisters from college, it's not for your
family, it's not for the women in your mother's group.
It's for you.
And you want to know how sad it is
that you literally have so many draft posts
that you've saved.
Those are the graveyard of your dreams and self-expression.
All those draft posts that you never posted
on social media, why?
Because you sat there,
you looked at the thing you wanted to do,
and then you gave power to somebody else's opinions
or feelings.
They're gonna unfollow me, what are people gonna think?
And that's something you're never gonna have control over.
This is why you don't feel control of your life.
This is why you don't feel like you're understood.
It's because in this moment,
you're actually censoring yourself.
Do you wanna know how sad this is?
You don't have to live like this.
Let them think a negative thought about what you're going to post.
Let them unfollow you.
Let them roll their eyes. Let them gossip.
You can't control any of it anyway.
The only thing you can control
is you can control what you think of yourself.
And so in that moment on social media,
if you like the photo, post it.
If you wanna say something, say it.
Your social media, you are giving power to people
all damn day long, you will never be able to control it.
There's a different way to live.
Use the let them theory.
Let them think something negative,
let them do something negative like unfollow you
or write some comment or whatever.
Let them.
You know that the power is not in someone else.
The power is in you.
And let me remind myself that what I think about myself
matters more than what anybody thinks, says, or does,
or feels about it.
What I do or don't do is where the power is.
That's why I'm gonna post what I wanna post.
I'm gonna post the bathing suit photo.
I'm gonna post this video without the filter.
I'm gonna write something powerful in the description
and not dumb it down with an emoji
because I'm afraid of what somebody thinks,
all of which is beyond my control.
That's what we're talking about here.
Let them think something negative and
take the power back for yourself and you are going to feel so different in your life. Your
social media is going to be different. You're going to be different at work, different with
your family because you're going to stop giving power to something that is beyond your control.
You do not need to live that way.
And the let them theory will help you take your power back.
I just want to give one more big shout out to Chrissy Teigen and to our partners and
friends at Audible.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for allowing me to share some of that extraordinary conversation
with you.
If you want to hear the whole thing, just go to audible.com forward slash
Chrissy and Mel and you can listen to the entire thing. And I also want to thank you. Thank you
for hitting play and finding and making the time to listen to something that will truly change your
life. And I wanted to have this conversation in the way that I did because I knew that if
you listen to some of the conversation with Chrissy, you would see yourself or somebody
that you love in it.
And by bringing in the deeper explanation from Dr. Paul Conte, I knew it would hit you
at a much more profound level.
It is possible to change how you think, it's possible to change how
you talk to yourself, it's possible to feel good enough, and it is possible to learn how to let
people think negative thoughts about you. Because when you know the truth about who you are,
you're not really going to think much about other people at all.
Alrighty, and in case nobody else tells you this, I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you
and I believe in you.
And I believe in your ability to take
what you just listened to and watched today
and use it to change how you talk to yourself
and to change where you pour your time and energy
and to take your power back.
And when you do that, there is no doubt in my mind
that your life's gonna get better.
And I will be waiting for you in the very next episode as soon as you hit play.
All right, great. Thanks, guys. Here we go. Okay, hold on. Sorry. Let me hit that again.
Don't be... Oh my God. Damn it. Sorry. I am, blah, blah, blah, blah. I am on a roll.
I am on a, look, I am just starting.
Look, I'm just getting going.
Oh my God, damn it.
Okay, I can't put a word together.
Okay, so here's what I'm gonna say, I got it.
You ready?
Okay, that was perfect.
Wow, that's incredible.
I don't know, guys, let's try this.
Ha, ha, ha!
Ha, ha, ha!
Ha, ha, ha!
Ha, ha, ha!
Ha, ha, ha!
Our garage band.
Good.
I think we got it.
Don't you?
That's a wrap.
Oh my God.
Whoo.
That was a monster.
Thank you guys.
Great job, everybody.
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.
Sticher.