The Mel Robbins Podcast - The Secret to a Happy Life: What the Ultimate Study on Happiness Reveals
Episode Date: September 7, 2024In today’s episode, you’ll learn the surprising science of happiness. This is a masterclass on everything you need to know about happiness: what really creates it, the different types of happines...s, and 4 easy habits that will make your life better.You’ll learn lessons from the longest study on happiness, what habits are blocking your happiness, and science-based tools for feeling better.It’s also grounded in questions from listeners just like you, who are seeking more happiness, fulfillment, and meaning in their lives. This is an encore episode with new and exciting insights from Mel at the top of the episode. You’ll be happy you joined. Because happiness is not only possible; it is an option for you.Get out your notebook because we are drilling into decades of psychological research that will ladder up to more meaning, purpose, and satisfaction in your life.To hear more about some of the powerful research mentioned, listen to this episode with happiness expert Dr. Robert Waldinger: What Makes a Good Life? Lessons From the Longest Study on HappinessIf you, like Mel, find it hard to truly let yourself be happy, listen to this very personal episode about why you’ve been blocking happiness: The Secret to Success & Happiness Nobody Talks AboutFor more resources, including the studies mentioned today, click here for the podcast episode page. Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s new free 26-page workbook, What Do You Really Want, to finally answer that question and redefine your future. Watch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so excited that you're here with me today because we're going to mix it up.
For today's episode, I went into the inbox.
Oh, you didn't know that I have an inbox where you can suggest topics that you and I are
going to talk about on this podcast?
Well, I do.
Just go to melrobbins.com slash podcast
and you will see a little button that says submit a topic.
Boom, and you're in.
So I was in the inbox recently.
There were so many questions about the topic of happiness.
So that's what we're going to talk about today.
And we're going to talk about it using the questions
from your fellow listeners around the world. We are going to talk about everything you need to know about today. And we're going to talk about it using the questions from your fellow listeners
around the world. We are going to talk about everything you need to know about happiness.
What it is, what it isn't, the surprising impact that genetics play, how to feel happier,
why you're not as happy as you used to be, and the truth about how to make other people
happy. You really need to hear that one. And my favorite topic, how do you let more happiness in? And we're going to start with this question from Andrea, who wrote
in and asked me if I would just talk about happiness in general. Because as she put it,
she's not sure she's ever felt true happiness. She said, Mel, I'm just living. I guess I
feel that something is missing and I believe it's happiness.
Andrea, you're probably right. Happiness is missing. And I know exactly what you need to do.
Hey, it's Mel. Welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so happy to spend the time together with you today. You can probably hear it in my voice. And if you're brand new, I just
want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family and
say, I am so glad you're here. And there is nothing that you need to listen to more than
this conversation today, because your happiness is worth prioritizing. In fact, you should be proud of yourself for taking the time to listen to something that
will make you happier.
And that's exactly what's going to happen today.
You're going to feel happier.
Maybe you've been prioritizing other people's happiness over your own, like I did for so
many years.
Or maybe you don't even know what would make you happy at this point in your life.
Maybe you used to be happy, but you're not quite sure how to get back to that feeling
again.
Well, you're not alone.
So many listeners feel the exact same way as you do.
And I say that because happiness is something we all deserve more of, and we all struggle
with at times.
So as you listen, I hope you'll also feel inspired
to share this episode with people you love
because it's a simple thing you can do
to help them be happier too.
So let's start with Andrea's question.
Hey, Maddie, it's Andrea.
Can you talk about happiness?
I can't think of a time that I have felt true happiness.
I'm just living, I guess. I feel that something is missing
and I believe it's happiness. Andrea, I love the way you framed that question.
And for you listening, I'm going to put that question right back to you. Can you think of a
time that you felt true happiness? Or are you, like most people,
that you feel like something is missing from your life
and you can't quite put your finger on it?
You know, when I hear Andrea's question,
I can totally relate to it
because I know I felt the way that she's feeling.
And one of the mistakes that I was making
when I felt like something was missing
is I of course went on the search.
I gotta find happiness.
And here's the first piece of research
that I wanna talk about.
Research says that happiness or that feeling
that we're seeking of happiness, it's often fleeting
because we are searching for happiness
in the wrong places.
In fact, researchers at Rutgers
and the University of Toronto found
that people who pursue happiness, you're chasing it,
you're looking for it outside yourself.
You often feel like you don't have enough time in the day
and this paradoxically makes you feel unhappy because when you feel like you don't have enough time in the day because you this paradoxically makes you feel unhappy.
Because when you feel like you don't have enough time
in the day because you're constantly chasing
all these things outside of you,
you start to feel like you're not in control of your life.
And I think that's what Andrea is talking about.
That we're all chasing down some version of happiness
that we think we're supposed to be chasing, right?
That society has marketed some version of life to us.
And that's why you probably are familiar with that phrase,
I'll be happy when.
We also come to that thinking,
I'll be happy when I lose the weight,
I fall in love, I land that dream job,
I pay off my bills, I get into my dream school,
I find the perfect apartment.
And there's multiple problems with thinking like this. First of all, if you think that you'll be happier
when you achieve something, what always happens
is when you achieve it, you're not as happy
as you thought you would be.
And then all of a sudden, because you don't have
this big goal in front of you anymore,
your happiness plummets.
And so the research is very, very clear
that these big events that we're chasing,
that we think are gonna give us a boost of happiness,
that happiness doesn't last.
And there's a second reason why this kind of thinking,
that you'll be happy at some point in the future,
why this is really problematic.
It's because you are anchoring your happiness
on something that hasn't happened yet.
That means your happiness is something you have to earn.
Your happiness is something that's outside of you.
And that's not what happiness is at all.
Happiness is always within your control.
Happiness is something that you want to cultivate
in your life where you are right now.
And the good news is, you don't have to wait to be happy when.
You can learn to be happier now.
So let me explain, based on the research, how happiness works when it comes to you individually.
So there's this formula that's supported by the science that says that if you
think about your capacity for happiness, you have 100% capacity for happiness.
That's what you got.
Your cup can be full and runneth over.
100%, baby, happiness is for you.
50% of that capacity is genetics.
That's your default.
So you might be somebody that has 50% genetics
that are preset to being very sunny
and kind of bubbly and happy.
Or 50% of your genetics might be like,
you're kind of grumpy.
That's okay, because you still have
the other 50% to play with.
10% of the rest is based on the circumstances
that you're facing right now.
And 40% of happiness, period, in your life right now
is completely under your control.
And that's what we're gonna focus on,
because that's awesome.
No matter what kind of family you were born into,
no matter what you're facing right now in your life,
40% of your capacity for happiness right now
completely in your control.
And so before we go forward,
I wanna make sure that as we're talking,
that we're in complete agreement
about what the word happiness means.
Because when you and I use the word happy or happiness, we might be saying totally different
things.
There's a huge spectrum when people use this word.
In fact, researchers even talk about the fact that happiness is all over the map.
Some people, when they say happiness, they mean laughing and having a good time.
Other people mean fulfillment or thriving or kicking ass in life.
And so you and I are going to have a conversation right now about what you mean when you say happiness.
Where are you on the spectrum between laughter and having a great time to feeling completely fulfilled and thriving in life.
And so in order for you and I to get on the same page,
I'm gonna bring a metaphor in.
You know Mel Robbins, she loves her metaphors,
she loves her visual explanations
for these big, heady concepts,
and thankfully I got a great one for happiness.
So whenever you hear the word happiness, I want you to think about an ocean, okay?
There are waves in an ocean, and that's one spectrum of happiness.
And waves come and they go.
And having fun in the waves requires you to jump in the waves, to get into the ocean,
to decide that you're going to go have fun.
But then if you think about the ocean, there are days that there's no waves at all.
It's perfectly still.
And the ocean itself, and your ability to stand in that ocean, to float and to swim,
that's a deeper form of happiness.
Or what about the days where the ocean is stormy
and you wouldn't dare go in,
but on those days that you're on the beach,
aren't you so present
to the wind, to the salt,
to the waves crashing on the beach?
That's what I want you to think about.
That huge range of how an ocean shows up.
And I love this metaphor of an ocean for happiness,
the waves being fun,
and the still ocean being your ability
to just experience happiness,
and you being present,
even on the stormiest days to the little details.
I love this range because it ties right back to all of the research, from the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely,
the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, the most grotesquely, happiness, and hedonic happiness is, am I having fun right now? It's the moment-to-moment fluctuating experiences that you have.
And let's go back to the metaphor.
It's like the waves in the ocean.
They come and they go.
You can jump in, you can play, you can have fun, and then it's over.
And then there is the deeper happiness, the eudaemonic happiness, which is the sense of your life
having meaning, of you feeling fulfilled and thriving in that life of yours.
And it's important for you to understand that happiness has these two buckets, because I
think what happens for a lot of us, and this kind of gets to Andrea's question,
is that maybe you have one type of happiness.
Maybe you're having a lot of fun on the surface, but life doesn't feel very meaningful.
Or maybe you're deep in it, but you're not having any fun.
And so I really want to unpack the difference between these two things and why you need both
before we jump into the three different ways
that you can increase happiness in your life.
And we're going to do that by bringing in another question
from a listener named Rachel.
But first, we're going to hear a word from our sponsor
and then we'll hear Rachel's question when we come back.
Hey, it's Mel.
Welcome back.
I want to thank you for listening to our sponsors because they help us bring you this podcast
at zero cost.
And today's topic is super important.
We are unpacking all of the research around happiness.
And we've been talking about the importance of what researchers call
the two parts of happiness, hedonic and eudaemonic happiness. And eudaemonic happiness is that sense
of life having meaning and being worthwhile. And we're going to go to a question from Rachel,
because it's going to help me truly distinguish between the two parts and why Hedonic having fun is really important.
Hey Mel, I absolutely love your podcast and all of your work.
I have a very loaded question and I know a one size fits all answer might not exist, but I wanted to ask anyway.
How can I truly be happy? How do I cultivate happiness?
I read so many self-help books,
read a lot about the effects of childhood trauma.
I journal, I try to be conscious of my habitual thoughts
and patterns and work to reframe them.
I exercise, I'm always listening to inspiring
and transformational content like you.
I feel like I do all the things,
but I still struggle just to be happy and to feel happy.
And I feel very stuck in the same emotions
and I really want to change.
I really want to enjoy my life.
Do you have any advice?
Rachel, I so relate to you.
And I want to just pass the mic to you listening right now.
When Rachel said, I just want to enjoy my life, relate to you. And I wanna just pass the mic to you listening right now.
When Rachel said, I just wanna enjoy my life,
didn't you get the chills? Didn't you nod along and say,
yeah, I just wanna enjoy my life too?
And this is really on my mind
because I think that's the point of life, right?
To really try to enjoy it.
And one of the things that I notice can happen when you are in a period in your life where
you're trying to heal.
You're investing in yourself and your personal growth.
You mentioned that you're working on trauma.
You're trying to dig out of some of the holes maybe that you feel like you fell into,
you're trying to change your mindset. That's serious work. That was me for years too. Here's the problem with having a big healing journey. You're not having any fun. You know, I think about
periods of my life when I was going through a lot of change and I was working on myself and I was doing everything that you're doing.
Every book I picked up was self-help.
Everything that I listened to was self-improvement.
I couldn't even remember the last time I read a fiction novel
or I went to a concert or I went to a party.
Everything got so serious
because my focus became so serious.
And my focus was about improving my life,
improving my life, improving my life.
And doing the work to change your life, it's important.
Doing the work to identify toxic patterns that you have
or bad thinking patterns that make you feel like shit,
that's super important.
But you must also double down on the fun while you're doing the deeper work.
And so the first thing that I want you to do is I want you to set an intention that your number one
goal this year is to have more fun. To invest in that first category, hedonic happiness,
that researchers say is so important,
because yes, it's meaningful, yes, it's fulfilling
to do the hard work to change your life for the better,
but changing your life for the better also means
that you need more moments of fun in your life.
And I worry a lot about this based on
what we've all experienced in the past
three years. We've all become hermits. It's hard enough to get yourself out of your house, but the
other thing that's happened is if you're not going into work, if you're still working from home,
you're also missing out on all of the spontaneous stuff that happens when you bump into people when
you're out and about. In fact, I can tell you a story. Just the other night this happened to me.
It was Sunday night, and you know, as a bit of background, my husband and I had gotten some
really awful news last week that a very, very close friend of ours suddenly died. Age 47,
heart attack, gone. And I had been holed up in my house
ever since hearing the news.
I was super sad, feeling down,
and I hadn't left the house in days.
And so on Sunday, Chris says to me,
Mel, I made a 430 reservation
at the paddle tennis courts with some friends.
It was the last thing I wanted to do.
I wanted to just curl up on the couch
and suck my thumb and feel sad.
And we got into the car and the entire ride over,
I was sitting there thinking,
should I tell Chris I'm pissed that he made this date
with this couple to go play paddle?
Should I tell him this is the last thing that I wanna do?
I kept saying to myself, should I say this?
Should I not say it?
And then I would say, just suck it up.
It's going to be okay.
We pull up, the sun's starting to go down.
It's freezing.
I've got a hat on and mittens on and I'm grumpy
and I don't really want to be there.
And then I see our friends and I felt a little lighter. Do you know it took about five
seconds of hitting that ball around for me to feel totally different? The truth is I needed the fun.
I needed the laughter. I needed to not be thinking about something so heavy. I needed to see people
that I really like. I needed to do something that wasn't that serious, like working on myself or feeling sad or grieving. I needed
fun. And getting out on that paddle court, it was fun. And there's a part of me that
is sitting here going, Mel, are we really having a conversation right now on this podcast about
the obvious? That we need to schedule time to have fun? That we need to force ourselves
out of our houses? That we need to break this habit of being isolated and lonely? Yeah,
we do have to have this conversation. Because I don't think you and I have truly grasped
the extent to which our day-to-day lives and
our happiness has been impacted by these past three years.
It's our new default.
And so it sounds obvious for me to say to you, you have to prioritize fun.
But this isn't just obvious, it's well researched.
Researchers have proven that the difference between people
who are happy and those of us who aren't
is that happy people prioritize doing things
that make them happy.
I know, it's so dumb, but I need the reminder too.
So now let's go back to my analogy about the ocean
and the beach and waves and happiness.
And I want you to just imagine that you're sitting on the beach and those waves are rolling
in and they're rolling out and there's a boogie board sitting next to you.
At some point, you have to get off the towel and you you gotta run into that ocean, and you gotta go play.
And the fact is, it just takes one person
to get everybody else to go.
There's always that one person in a group of people
at a beach who stands up first and grabs the boogie board
and says, let's go body surfing.
Come on guys, let's go into the waves.
And thankfully, this past Sunday night,
for me it was Chris.
He was that one person.
And look, being intentional about enjoying your life,
about having fun, particularly during those periods of time
where you're grieving, where you are going through something
difficult, where life feels heavy, prioritizing fun is critical.
But that's just one of the three things
that you and I are gonna discuss
when it comes to getting intentional
and amplifying up the 40% of happiness
that is within your control right now.
And if you're sitting there scratching your head going,
oh my God, this is so me, but Mel, like,
I think I forgot how to have fun.
Don't worry about it.
I've got an entire episode that we did a while back
called How to Have More Fun,
and I will link to that along with all the studies
that we're talking about in the show notes.
And so now that you and I have been playing in the waves
and you understand that dragging yourself out of the house,
to the beach, off the towel, into the ocean,
and forcing yourself to do things that are fun,
that that is part of happiness that we cannot escape,
you and I are now going to go deeper into the ocean.
And we're gonna talk about the two other elements
that you can tap into to create more happiness
in your life right now.
And we're going to do that using more questions from fellow listeners of the podcast when we come back.
Welcome back. I'm Mel Robbins, and you and I are talking about what research says about
creating more happiness in your
life.
We've already talked about the fact that researchers have identified two types of happiness, hedonic
happiness and eudaemonic happiness, both of which are critical to your overall feelings
of happiness.
And we've talked about why getting intentional about having more fun is critical
to you feeling happier now.
Now we're gonna jump into the deeper part of happiness.
And that is the eudaemonic happiness,
whether or not your life has meaning.
Because when you go through periods of life
where life is monotonous, it just feels kind of blah,
you're on autopilot, you're not gonna feel that happy.
Just ask Jenna.
Hey Mel, my name is Jenna, and my question for you is,
how do you truly find happiness in everyday ordinary life?
I'm a mom of two boys, and I struggle most days
with being as joyful as I was when they were very little.
As a mother of three kids who are now young adults, I can relate to what you were saying
about how you were joyful when they were little.
And I love that you use the word joyful because I want to go back to that metaphor that I
introduced at the very beginning of an ocean and thinking about an ocean when you think about happiness.
And so to me, when you go to the beach and it's a very, very calm day, there are no waves,
there might not even be a cloud in the sky.
Boy, it sure is beautiful.
Happiness is like a still ocean on those days. It's your ability to stand in that ocean
and feel this state of presence and connectedness
and gratitude to simply being in the ocean.
And I wanna come back to something that you also said
that I absolutely loved.
You used the word ordinary.
And the reason why I think it's important for us to focus in on the word ordinary is
we often make the mistake of thinking that happiness is this big thing, this big burst,
the big wave.
And when it comes to the eudaemonic happiness, the deeper meaning in your life
that creates the sense of happiness and fulfillment for you, I want to flip this perspective.
Because true happiness comes from finding the extraordinary in the ordinary. That's right, true happiness is actually pretty ordinary.
And researchers have identified the number one factor
in you living a happy life.
And it is the most ordinary thing on the planet,
which is why most of us miss it.
And that's the quality and depth of your relationships.
So let's unpack this.
The Harvard study of adult development
is the longest in-depth longitudinal study
of human life that's ever been done.
I mean, this has been going on for 84 years and counting.
And for those of you super geeks like me out there,
this used to be called
the Harvard Men's Study.
So when you hear people talking about the Harvard Study
of Adult Development, that's the new name for this.
And it now includes three generations of people
that they've been studying.
The original 724 participants now include 1300 descendants.
How cool is that?
And here's the thing about this study.
This study followed people through their life,
asking them all kinds of questions as people aged.
And one of the reasons why this study is so profound
is because it tracked people as they lived.
Most studies have people looking backwards,
which means when you look backwards,
you often change the details.
That's why the Harvard study of adult development
is so exciting and so accurate,
and the most accurate and important study of happiness
that's ever been done.
These results from the Harvard MEN study,
they've been replicated in five other huge global studies.
And I'm telling you all this
because there's one singular conclusion from all of this data. replicated in five other huge global studies. And I'm telling you all this
because there's one singular conclusion
from all of this data, all of this research,
all of these fancy institutions, and it's this.
Good relationships make you happier and healthier.
The single best decision you can make
to improve your health and happiness is to cultivate what researchers call warm relationships.
I know what you're thinking, Mel, what the hell are warm relationships?
Well, from a clinical standpoint, warm relationships are relationships that don't cause conflict,
and you feel positive emotions around the people that you have a warm relationship with.
Said in a normal person's way, it's basically people that make you feel warm and fuzzy.
That's what warm relationships are.
And I want you to stop and think right now.
Let's apply the science.
If you think about people in your life, I just want you to put two columns in your mind.
Who would you put under the column labeled warm?
They give you the warm and fuzzies.
You get a text from them.
You're like, ooh, yeah, okay.
You know, you're excited to see them.
You feel energized when you make plans.
Now there's the cold column.
These are people that put you on edge.
These are people that drain your energy.
These are the people that when they call or. These are people that drain your energy.
These are the people that when they call or text you,
you're like bracing for something.
I can boil 84 years of research down to one takeaway.
You want to be happier?
Put all your energy into warm relationships,
building them, strengthening them,
spending time with those people in the warm column.
You do that, you will be a happier you right now.
And the second way that you can do that, by the way, prioritizing the warm,
is spend less time with people in the cold column.
You either need to stop hanging out with them because they're sucking your energy dry,
or you got to put some effort into warming them up by forgiving them or reframing how you see them or working
on your boundaries so that you're not triggered by them and their negativity doesn't impact
your happiness.
So keep that visual of a warm and a cold column.
And as you meet people in your life, you can immediately feel what they're
like. Are they warm? Are they bringing out the fuzzies? Or are you feeling on edge? Because when
it comes to happiness, your happiness right now, not the I'll be when happy, the happiness that
truly matters, standing in that deep end of the ocean, the quality of your relationships is truly
end of the ocean. The quality of your relationships is truly the most important thing that matters.
And I can explain why at an even deeper level. The reason why this matters so much, it is the number one indicator of a happy life. Good, warm relationships, floating in that ocean with your
warm buddies, keeping you buoyant. The reason why is evolution.
See, positive or warm interactions with people,
you know what that does, that warm, fuzzy feeling?
Those kind of people in your warm column,
they make you feel safe.
When you're around those people, you're not on edge,
so your body feels safe.
And the opposite is true when you're around people
that you would put in the cold column, true when you're around people that you would put in the cold column because when you're around negativity, when people trigger
you, when they put you on edge, when you feel like you can't be yourself, you're
now in a stress response of fight, flight, or freeze. And this response to other
people, it's wired in you. Early Homo sapiens survive because their bodies and their brains, they not only
encouraged connection, but they also signaled when somebody might be unsafe. You and I survived
because we're social beings. So this is hardwired into us. And here's where it gets interesting.
And here's where it gets interesting. When you feel loneliness,
your brain perceives that as life-threatening.
And loneliness is not just about physical separation
from other people.
You can feel very lonely in a crowded room.
You can feel lonely in a bad marriage.
You can feel lonely in a toxic friendship.
And if you're nodding your head right now,
thinking, wow, maybe it's not unhappiness.
Maybe the core issue for me is I'm lonely.
Well, 75% of adults feel moderate
to high levels of loneliness.
And loneliness is about the quality of your relationships.
And I want to tie this back to evolution.
Loneliness feels threatening
because you're meant to survive in a tribe of people.
You're meant to be connected with people
that make you feel safe and warm.
It's not only part of happiness,
this goes down to your mind and body needing protection.
And they've even proven that when life is really hard,
when it can come at you in full on attack mode,
when you're in survival mode,
warm, connected relationships protect you from the stress of life.
So how do you do this?
How do you tap into relationships?
It sounds simple, but again, make the column warm and cold, and then call your friends,
text them, arrange time to meet them. Arrange time to meet them. So when you feel a pang of loneliness,
I want you to understand it's an alarm, just like anxiety.
It's a signal that you're missing connection.
Please do not ignore it. You may be surprised to hear
that I felt this way for a very long time.
I kept saying out loud, I'm not happy.
I don't feel fulfilled.
But when I dug deep into what was really going on for me,
the core issue was loneliness.
I was having fun.
I was really busy.
I was doing meaningful work.
But deep down inside, I was really lonely.
And it may also surprise you to hear that it was during one of the most successful stretches
in my career.
I was on the road all the time, the business was booming, I was making lots of money, and
I have never been unhappier because I was lonely.
I was traveling so much, chasing success, chasing achievement, going for the next thing,
staying busy that I never saw my friends.
I barely saw Chris.
I missed out on a ton of time with our daughters while they were in high school.
It was just go, go, go.
Now I had a lot of fun on the business trips.
I would laugh a lot.
I was always traveling with colleagues,
so I wasn't alone.
And I was having fun in the waves of life.
But when you talk about floating
in the deep end of the ocean,
I was profoundly lonely.
And that meant I was profoundly unhappy.
And it can be powerful when you admit this to yourself,
because when you realize what you're dealing with
is loneliness, that helps you identify
the issue you need to improve, which is you need to start reaching out to people.
You know, we underestimate the impact
that simply getting an unexpected text
from an old friend can have on you.
I mean, think about how amazing it is
when you have a birthday and everybody on social media
that gets, you know, the kind of notification that it's your birthday,
they come out of nowhere and they wish you happy birthday.
It's like, that's unbelievable.
It feels so good.
You haven't talked to that person since high school,
but it feels good to have somebody just give you
a quick comment on your birthday.
And so if you're sitting around saying, I'm really lonely,
but you're not reaching out, you're sitting around saying, I'm really lonely, but you're not reaching out,
you're not calling people,
you're not the one making plans
or inviting people over for dinner,
guess what, you're gonna stay lonely.
Because when I really looked in the mirror and said,
I'm lonely, I need to do something about this.
I never get invited anywhere, I don't see anybody.
Well, I wasn't inviting anybody over.
I wasn't making any plans I don't see anybody. Well, I wasn't inviting anybody over.
I wasn't making any plans.
It starts with you.
And look, it could be anybody.
It could be friends, family, coworkers.
All you need to do is identify old relationships
or cold relationships or warm relationships
where you haven't seen somebody in a long time and
reach out.
And by the way, it could be old relationships.
It could be people you haven't seen in a long time.
Just anybody at all that makes you feel warm, start putting energy into talking, texting,
commenting, and making plans to see them. And be careful of the cold people,
because research shows that spending time
with the people in the cold column,
it can actually make you feel more lonely,
and it even worsens your health
to be around people like that.
And so you've got your friend Mel Robbins permission
to stop putting energy into draining relationships,
because that's only gonna make you feel more lonely
and spend more time with warm relationships.
And that brings me back to Jenna's question,
because she mentioned, did you notice,
that she felt happier when her kids were little?
I suspect that when your kids were little,
you were probably part of mom groups.
You saw young moms all the time at drop-off,
at pick-up, at play group,
and you felt like you were part of something.
You had more warm relationships in your life.
That's a sign that you're just missing connection.
I know I said it already,
but I can't highlight enough
how profound of a difference it can make
to simply admit to yourself that you're lonely.
That was the turning point for me
when I realized a couple years ago,
holy cow, I'm unhappy because I'm profoundly lonely.
I don't see Chris enough, so I'm lonely in my marriage.
I am lonely in my family because I'm not, so I'm lonely in my marriage. I am lonely in my family because
I'm not around. I'm working all the time. I never see my friends. And so once I said it was loneliness,
that was the cause of my unhappiness. I could do something about it. And you want to know the first
decision I made? I made a decision that I was going to change my work life, that I was gonna get off the road,
that Oakley being in high school was like a melting ice cube
and once the time was gone, I was not gonna get it back.
And so I reorganized my entire career, my entire business.
Instead of sitting on a plane,
I'm now sitting above my garage talking to you in a microphone
so that I can be home. And it took a lot of work, but I'll tell you what, realizing that
traveling that much for work was making it hard to cultivate those warm relationships,
that was just a huge wake-up call.
Because on the surface, it looked like
I was having a great time.
I was in the waves.
But I sure as hell wasn't when it came to the deeper stuff.
And I know what you're thinking.
Well, Mel, at least you have friends to go back to.
What if I don't have any friends or many friends?
Well, I would say this, here's where you can start.
Part of warm relationships and happiness
is also cultivated by social interactions,
the tiny ones you have every single day.
Just talk to strangers.
This is a great thing to do, by the way.
And there's a study that was done
by the University of Chicago
that you have no clue how happy a random social interaction
with a stranger can make you.
You kind of inflate in your mind that it's going to be messy
to talk to other people, but you underestimate
the actual benefits of talking to other people.
People who talk to strangers on a train or on a plane or at
a bus stop or just at a coffee shop, they're much happier after they talk to the stranger,
even if they don't think beforehand that they will be. You know who's great at this? My mother.
I was just visiting my mom and when I was little, I used to think it was so annoying, but I now admire this about her. Absolutely everywhere we go, my mom talks to everybody.
She talks to everybody about everything.
She's constantly commenting on,
oh, I like that sweatshirt, or hey, how you doing,
or nice day, and people stop and they talk.
And next thing you know, they've made a connection,
or they're talking about a restaurant recommendation or some, it's just amazing. And the energy is immediately boosted. And if you're not
good at this, here's a great tip. Always compliment somebody's nails. If somebody is waiting on you or
standing in front of you in line, or you're sitting next to them, just compliment their nails. If you
see somebody reading,
ask them what they're reading and if they like it.
That's a simple way to compliment somebody,
to open up the dialogue and it always boosts the energy.
These tiny social interactions go a long way
to making you feel warm.
So bottom line, relationships, relationships, relationships.
Talk to that stranger in line.
Push yourself to reach out to people.
Text somebody every single day.
And don't forget about reaching out to family.
You kind of put family on the back burner, don't you?
Because you think they're always going to be there.
Make an effort.
There's a lot of people in your family,
maybe even cousins you haven't seen in a while,
that you have a warm relationship with,
but you got to push yourself, okay?
Let's make ourselves a promise
that we're both going to do this,
because you got the research
and you now know why it matters.
Now I want to talk about the third aspect of happiness,
and we're going to unpack this with a question
from a listener named Steve.
Hey Mel, this is Steve.
Mel, I just wanted to say thank you.
Thank you for being you.
Thank you for being your authentic self
right there in front of us, changing lives.
And you truly are amazing.
And I really want you to know that.
I was wondering today if you could talk about inner peace
and the difference between that
as opposed to material possessions, money, status,
job titles, you name it, and instead the feeling
of happiness within yourself
to be comfortable with.
Thank you, Mel.
Oh, Steve.
First of all, thank you for saying such kind
and heartfelt things about how I'm showing up.
I really, really appreciate it.
It makes me feel warm.
Second, this question about happiness with yourself, inner peace, as opposed to chasing
those material possessions, job titles, this is really front and center in my life right now.
I have a friend who died recently, and so I've been thinking a lot about this person
I've been thinking a lot about this person and what he means to me, the person that he was,
how he made me feel as a friend.
You know, at the end of the day,
that's what truly matters, right?
Not the things he owned, not his job title.
I mean, you're never gonna see a hearse pulling a U-Haul to a graveyard because we
can't take all that shit that we've been chasing down in life with us.
And it truly doesn't matter.
What matters is how you feel about yourself, the kind of person that you are, the quality
of the relationships that you have.
And the most important relationship
is the one you have with yourself.
And that is very closely tied to inner peace.
If you're beating the hell out of yourself,
if your dialogue about yourself is super negative,
that's not gonna make you happy.
And inner peace, the term that you used,
it is defined as feeling content and secure.
Dr. Daniel Gilbert, who is a professor at Harvard,
he did this huge study that close to half
of our waking moments are spent thinking
about something other than what we are doing in the moment.
And so when you talk about inner peace, other than what we are doing in the moment.
And so when you talk about inner peace, study after study shows that a wandering mind, thinking
ahead, worrying about what's next, I'll be happy when this happens, not being present,
that a wandering mind is deeply connected to unhappiness.
Because if you're always wandering ahead
or worried about what's next
or chasing down something that hasn't happened,
I'll be happy when,
you're never actually in your life.
A wandering mind is the opposite of inner peace.
And look, you are able to think ahead.
You're able to look back.
It's one of the amazing things about being human.
But when you live in a state where you're never present,
you rob yourself of the extraordinary,
ordinary moments in life.
That inner peace, that contentment, that security,
that you're okay, that you're
aware of what's happening, that you're present to it.
And here's where it gets even more interesting.
Research shows that the amount of time that you think you have left to live, it shapes
your priorities now.
And if you think you have a ton of time, you're often thinking about the future, but you're
not in the present right now. Yet, research shows that the nearer you get to the end of your
life, the more you begin to appreciate the presence, which is why despite the fact that
most of us, you know, say, oh, old people are grumpy, that's actually not true. That's
a myth. Research shows that people are their
happiest in the later years of their lives. Why? Because older people, everyone over 70,
they're much more likely to be present and not worry about the bullsh** that you and
I wrap ourselves around the axle about. They're more present in the moment to just be happy
with the extraordinary, ordinary aspects of life.
You know, I was just with my parents.
It's so funny because they're in their 70s and I noticed their life is very simple.
They get up, they go for a walk, they see their friends for breakfast, they play golf,
they play mahjong, they read a book, they watch the sunset, they go to a friend's house.
They're in the moment.
They don't need some big thing to chase.
They're just in the moment, enjoying the feeling of living.
I want to say that again.
Part of inner peace and being present
and being alert in your day-to-day life
is the feeling of actually living.
It means you're no longer an autopilot.
You're able to pay attention to what's in front of you.
And the real superpower is being able to do that
no matter how old you are.
Mindfulness just means connecting with the present moment.
Inner peace is just about being present.
So how can you bring this into your life?
Number one, when you are around other people, actually listen to them.
I didn't say hear them.
I said listen to them.
There's a big difference between hearing what somebody says and listening to them.
Listening to someone is when you actively give the other person the experience that you are present.
And your attention is the most basic form of love that you could give somebody else.
And practice listening and being present and making somebody feel like you are right there with them, not in your head, being in the moment.
It is an act of love, and it is a way to cultivate mindfulness,
to cultivate that warm connection.
The second way that you can tap into this is that when you're doing a task,
just something in your ordinary life, hyper-focus on it.
I call this moving meditation.
And I'll give you two examples.
Number one, I love to eat nuts, okay?
Little confession, I like the blistered peanuts salted
from Trader Joe's, and I love myself some smoked almonds.
So I'll grab a handful of those,
and one way that I practice being
present and mindful is I eat them one at a time. And I try to notice the difference in
taste between one nut and another. And it's pretty surprising. Like you eat a handful
of nuts, you don't really taste a big difference of anything. You eat them one at a time. It's
amazing how it pulls you into the moment.
The second thing that you can do
is I love having a flower right at the kitchen sink
because I love flowers and it pulls me right in
and I will stare at that flower
and be in the present moment.
A third way that I practice this inner peace
and this cultivating the eudaemonic type
of happiness in my day-to-day life is savoring the moments. So last night, I taught Oakley,
our son, how to make his absolute favorite recipe, which is from the cookbook Six Seasons that my mom bought me. And it is called beef with lots and lots and lots of onions.
It is the easiest thing on the planet to make.
You take a hunk of beef, you brown it,
you throw some garlic in, you throw some thyme in,
you throw a little butter, little wine in,
and lots and lots and lots and lots of onions.
That's it.
And then you bake that sucker at 300 for like five hours,
and the whole thing melts into this soupy, messy, amazing goop
where the onions disintegrate, and it's like shredded beef
and a French onion such and such.
And we just had so much fun. I was so in it when we were
cooking. And because I was in the moment, I wasn't wandering ahead, I wasn't thinking about anything
else, I was with Him. I was happy. And so let's go back to our metaphor.
I was happy. And so let's go back to our metaphor.
Being in the present moment is a lot like walking
on the beach.
Whether it's a stormy day or the ocean is still,
whether it's raining or the sun is rising
or the sun is setting or there are amazing waves
that you wanna surf.
When you're walking on the beach, a great walk is one where you are fully present.
You feel the sand between your toes, the wind in your hair, the salt on your skin.
You're staring at the ocean and gazing at the beauty no matter what kind of day it is.
You're not thinking ahead.
You're not reflecting
on the past. You're just in the moment. Happy. That's what happiness is. And so when you
are thinking about happiness, always come back to this metaphor because it embodies 84 years of research and studies
around the world.
The waves remind you to have fun.
Get off that blanket of yours, grab your friends and jump in the waves and play.
The big still ocean, swimming, floating, it reminds you to get into the deep end and it's way more fun in there
if you're floating around with your friends. Nothing like a warm day. You want those warm relationships.
Spend more time with them. Invite them to the beach with you.
That's who you want on the sand, on the towels, in the water with you.
The people that make you feel warm. And finally, walking on the
beach, being present, being in the moment, constantly coming back to these three fundamental things.
And the fact is, you never know how much time you have. You just don't. So now more than ever, I just want you to not only
appreciate the moment, I want you to take these small steps to truly enjoy the
moment and be happier in your life. And in case no one else tells you, I want to
be sure to say I love you, I believe in you, and I believe in your ability
to create a happier, more fulfilling life. Now go do it.
Hey, it's Mel and thank you so much for tuning in. I just want to take a minute and thank you.
I already said thank you.
Let me just take a minute and wait.
Okay, let's start over quickly.
All right.
And the and the hold on a second.
And that's what we're going to talk about next.
Wait, what is it?
The brain is empty.
I don't know what I'm talking about.
Okay.
Fabulous job.
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.