The Mel Robbins Podcast - These 4 Words Will Silence Your Self-Doubt: A Life-Changing Conversation
Episode Date: August 17, 2023In this episode, you and I are dismantling one of the most crippling forms of self-doubt. "Imposter Syndrome" is when you think you’re not good enough and that everyone else is smarter, more succes...sful, and has more to contribute than you do. Everyone feels it. It’s so common that the Harvard Business Review found that even 70% of the world’s top executives have struggled with it. My mission today is to convince you that Imposter Syndrome is actually a GOOD thing. And I’ll use an example from my own life to prove my case. Come backstage with me to a huge music festival, where my daughter Kendall, an aspiring singer-songwriter, comes face-to-face with the famous musicians who inspired her career. Cue the panic. Self-doubt almost made her bail on what turned out to be a life-changing weekend in her career.She turned it around (you’ll hear how) and, as a result, was invited impromptu to perform twice with Grammy-winning musicians!Listen and learn how to be more courageous and confident in those moments that really matter. I can’t wait for you to hear: The 4 words Kendall repeated that crushed self-doubt and got her on stage.The powerful mantra to say when you’re nervous walking into a room.How to use humor (and tuna sandwiches) to connect with anyone.Why being a "nobody" is the most amazing "somebody" you could be.  It’s time to hit delete on your self-doubt forever. This one is so good and so relatable that you’ll be yelling, Encore! Xo, Mel In this episode, you’ll learn:2:15: Harvard Business Review says imposter syndrome is #1 fear of executives.3:40: Kendall puts us at the scene of her own paralyzing episode of self-doubt.5:30: Imagine being surrounded by everyone you’ve admired your entire life.11:30: This is the message you need to hear if you’re deep in self-doubt.12:45: My own story of feeling like an imposter before I became a speaker.19:30: Here’s how to start shifting your mindset and boost your confidence.20:20: The piece of advice that will help you stand taller.21:40: The three-letter word you need to repeat when your insecurity creeps in22:30: Once you change your mindset, your actions fall into place.24:00: You have a gift to offer even the most experienced people in your field.25:00: The seven words Kendall dropped that I’m still thinking about.27:15: The #1 takeaway from this conversation about self-doubt.28:45: Own where you are, and here’s what we mean by that.31:00: What you’re thinking will happen probably won’t.33:00: Learn how to balance giving and receiving, and you'll crack the code.35:15: Are you waiting for validation? Listen to this.38:00: There’s a reason you’re here. Here’s how to start believing that41:00: Here’s why imposter syndrome is a GOOD thing.  Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Today we are going to get right into it. We're going to talk about Imposter Syndrome and the
reason why I wanted to talk about this is because our daughter Kendall, who is 23 years old,
just had a situation this weekend at this music festival that triggered Imposter Syndrome.
And I thought, why don't we unpack this moment
where your imposter syndrome got triggered?
And then more importantly, the incredible things
that you shared with me that helped you turn it around.
So ladies and gentlemen, everybody who's listening,
Kendall Robbins.
Hey everybody.
All right, so tell us what happened.
Okay, so this past weekend, I had my first experience as an artist in the real artist world
is what I'm going to call it.
What does artist mean?
I am pursuing a career as a professional recording and touring artist. And I'm a singer, songwriter.
I've started to write my own music.
I'm moving out to LA in a few weeks' time.
And this past weekend was my first experience
surrounded by really successful artists
that are doing the thing that I want to do.
And as somebody that's been in school for the past four years, I've had very few experiences like this.
And so this past weekend was my first few days,
fully existing in that world without the label of a student on my back.
I didn't have that sort of shadow to hide in anymore.
I was feeling embarrassed, I was feeling awkward, I was feeling like an imposter. Like I don't belong because I don't have music out and I don't have
fans and I don't have a social media following. Let's just back the truck up a
minute. So let's just set the table. First of all, every human being struggles
with moments of imposter syndrome. I'm looking at the research right here
everybody. I've got my research.
Psychologists call this fear of being found out in posture syndrome.
It was coined in the 1970s by two female researchers.
In fact, Harvard Business Review Kendall says that executives worldwide
agree that their number one fear is being found to be incompetent.
Oh, okay. So this is a very normal thing for everybody to experience. And it is called
intellectual self-doubt. Where you enter a situation or you enter a room or you think about doing
something. And in your own mind, you start doubting yourself, you start doubting whether or not you're
able to do something, you start doubting whether or not you deserve to be in a certain place,
and you start feeling worried that people are going to find out that you have no idea
what you're talking about.
And one thing that I will say from the get-go is the reason why I wanted to have you on
is because the situation that
you found yourself in on Friday morning just a few days ago is not only so relatable, but
I was pretty impressed by how you coached yourself through it and turned it around and
had one of the coolest, most affirming weekends of your life.
And I know that you have a lot of value to share.
So are you willing to go there? Yes, I am willing. Okay, great.
So put us at the scene. What was happening Friday morning? So this past weekend,
I was lucky enough to go to a music festival and I had an artist pass, which means that I got to watch all of the musicians and artists that were performing at the festival
perform from backstage in this separate area that the people with the artist pass can
hang out in. And I didn't really know what that meant until I got there.
And I honestly had no idea what artist pass meant. I was just like, sweet, okay.
I get to cut the line.
That's really awesome.
I feel really grateful.
And then I walk backstage and I'm surrounded by all of these like very established musicians
and artists and performers and people that I've been listening to for the past however
many years.
What was that like?
I mean, it was, it was really scary at first because I had no idea that I was gonna be
within arms reach of all these people
that I've looked up to for the past few years,
and being there as somebody that has just gotten out of school,
does not have anything released,
is just in the woods right now figuring out
who I wanna be, what I wanna be,
what I wanna write, what I wanna release.
I basically don't exist right now in the world
that I'm stepping into.
And so stepping into this festival as somebody
that doesn't really exist online or in this industry yet,
but stepping into it physically and being surrounded
by all these people was just incredibly daunting
and honestly terrifying.
And I felt really scared and awkward and I stood alone
a lot of the time. Can you put us at the moment when you arrive at the festival, you get this
pass that is a special thing around your wrist that gives you all access to go anywhere. And you walk into almost like the tent that serves
as the greener.
Yeah, okay, okay.
So I have a family friend that works at this festival
and has been going to this festival for a while.
So he was the one that was actually able
to get me the artist's pass.
I knew that there were some VIP features of this pass,
but I did not know what my days were gonna look like.
I didn't know what the schedule was like.
And so basically, we get to the festival,
we cut the line, we go to this special tent
where I get this wristband,
and then we walk into the festival.
Immediately we're in this crowd,
I'm seeing all the food tents, smelling all the smells,
seeing all the people,
and then we go behind the stage into this roped off section. Meanwhile, the family
friend that I am with is sort of showing me the ropes, but of course he's very busy and
has things to be doing at the festival. And he said, this is sort of the hangout spot.
Okay, I got a goat now. Okay. And I was like, okay. So you're 15 minutes into this 30 minutes
in. I'm wearing a long skirt and it's 85 degrees outside, which automatically
I'm a rookie. And he says, okay, this is sort of the hangout spot. This is sort of our touchpoint.
We can meet here. There's not a lot of service at the festival. So in general,
sell service, there's no service at the festival. So if you need to find me, we'll just meet at
this tent. I'm like, okay, sweet. I walk into the 10, I'm like, okay, free food, free drinks.
This past is freaking awesome.
Right.
And then I start to recognize a lot of artists
whose music I have been listening to for years now,
whose name I have seen on the lineup for the festival,
who are now standing in front of me at the free food line.
And so I'm thinking, oh my God, okay,
this 10 is where all the artists and performers hang out.
And because I have this artist pass,
I am also allowed to be in this tent.
So I'm putting the pieces together slowly.
Immediately my heart drops to my stomach
and I'm just like, why am I here?
I should not be here.
I should be out in that audience with people.
I'm not performing, I'm not part of a band. I'm here be here. I should be out in that audience with people. I'm not performing.
I'm not part of a band. I'm here on a family connection. I feel like, I don't know. I just feel
like, why am I here? This is so awkward. Not to mention, I'm alone. So you can imagine that the
imposter syndrome was even grander than if you're with somebody that you can bond with it over.
Can this sounds like a situation that absolutely every one of us can relate to?
I know I can and I'm sure as you're listening to her tell the story, you're feeling that same
self-doubt and the imposter syndrome creep up, but the fact is you don't have to be around
like people that are famous or people that are really big for you to feel this. I mean,
think about the situations that happen every single day.
You're on an email text chain,
you're sitting in a meeting at work,
you're surrounded by a group of people,
and you start to feel like everybody's smarter than you,
or they've got more to contribute than you,
and you feel yourself shrinking and doubting yourself,
that's imposter syndrome, intimidating you
in your everyday life.
And so this is so relatable.
And I guess what I wanna know is,
you're standing there, you're super intimidated.
How the heck did you turn this around?
I mean, did you actually talk to somebody?
What did you do?
No, so basically I walk into this tent
and I see all these people that I've been following
and I put the pieces together and realize,
oh my God, this artist pass on my wrist that says artists
means that I have access to everything the performers do.
Which immediately makes me want to rip the thing off my arm
and go stand in the audience because I'm not performing.
I'm not on the industry side.
I'm not a musician.
I mean, I'm not a musician performing with anyone.
I'm just here as Kendall.
And like I said before,
doesn't really exist in this industry world yet.
What do you mean by that, you don't exist?
I don't have anything out to,
I feel imposter syndrome talking about the fact
that I don't have music out yet on Spotify.
I hate talking about it.
It makes me wanna throw up everywhere.
It makes me so embarrassed.
Why?
Because everybody else seems to have it figured out and have shit going on.
I know that when I am not in an anxious state of mind, I remind myself, you know, I'm
on my own timeline.
I don't really want you to include that.
No, but I think that's important because it's a, it ties into what I was going to share
with you.
Please say that.
Okay.
I feel very embarrassed to share with my mom's millions and millions and millions of followers
and listeners that I don't have anything out on any streaming platform yet.
I don't have a social media presence.
I don't have fans. I don't have a social media presence. I don't have fans. I don't
have anything. And I'm talking about being an imposter on this podcast when I've never been on tour.
I don't have an album out. I don't have followers. I don't have fans. I feel like an imposter
for being an imposter. I feel like I haven't been an impostor for long enough to talk about being an impostor.
What does that even mean?
This is just such a classic example of the syndrome, which is I feel as though I haven't,
this feeling is so new to me that it feels like I don't even have enough qualification
to talk about it.
Oh, so do you know what I mean?
You don't feel like you're an authority on how
to do athmposter syndrome because you're struggling with it. I don't feel like I had my first
real experience this past weekend dealing with imposter syndrome. And I definitely learned
from it. I definitely gained a lot of insight from the experience, but it was my first experience
and I feel unqualified to talk about it because it was my first experience, and I feel unqualified to talk about it,
because it was my first experience.
You're not really selling the episode.
I'm trying to make a joke, and you're like,
well, let me just say one thing.
I do feel like an imposter right now,
because I feel like all of the other people
in my industry have experienced this so much more than I have,
and now I'm getting on here and getting on my soapbox and trying to tell everybody what
it is.
You're not getting on your soapbacks.
You're not getting on your soapbacks.
You're not getting on your soapbacks.
You're not getting on your soapbacks.
This is why this conversation is so important.
You're in it.
Yeah.
Everybody listening feels like an imposter in some area of their life.
Everybody can relate to that feeling.
Like here I am.
I am physically next to the people who are doing what I want to do.
And it's so close I can reach out and touch it.
These people I've admired, I've streamed, I've watched them at award shows.
They're standing right there, they're doing what I want to do.
And the only thing that's keeping me from doing what I want to do is this feeling of not
being ready or this feeling that I'm not going to have what it takes.
This feeling of being a nobody.
This feeling like somebody's already done it.
Is there room for me?
And because you're in it, you are in a much better place to validate where everybody is, Ken.
Like somebody's already figured this shit out, coming in and being like,
well, when you feel like an imposter, do this, this, and this.
It's easy when you're through it.
You're right up against it right now.
That tension that you feel is important.
I remember, God, this must have been like nine years ago when I first
got into the speaking business, Ken. I hadn't been paid to give a speech and I get invited
as I'm just starting out to go to this event in California and speak on a panel. I don't even know what the hell I was speaking about.
All I know is there is this opening reception, okay?
Sort of like what you're describing,
an opening reception for the people
who had been invited to speak at this thing.
And so like you, I walk into this room,
I have the land you're at around my neck,
you've got the little artist thing around your wrist.
And I walk in and I am like,
oh my God, there's Christy Turlington,
the super model, oh my gosh,
there's Gretchen Rubin, they author,
oh my gosh, there's this person,
there's that person there.
And I see all these famous people,
all of whom are speaking.
I felt like I had no business being there.
Yeah, same.
And all these people were talking, and they all seemed to know each other. And there were a couple instances where I'm like I had no business being there. Yeah, same. And all these people were talking,
and they all seemed to know each other.
And there were a couple instances where I'm like,
okay, here we go.
And I would walk up to a group of people,
and I'd introduce myself, and they'd all turn,
oh, what do you do?
And I didn't even know how to answer it.
I had given one TEDx talk,
and nobody had heard of it yet. I didn't have a book. I
Didn't have anything. I felt like I had nothing. I didn't even know why it was there and
After I would introduce myself and people are like, oh, did you write a book?
And I'm like, no, I'm just kind of speaking about
motivation. Oh, okay, and then they turn.
And something flipped in me because I felt like such a fraud being there,
but something deeper was going on, and this is what was going on.
I realized in that moment that I wanted to do something that mattered. I wanted to do the work or write a book or do something
that when I walked into a room it was like, oh, you're the woman who wrote the five-second
rule. I freaking love that thing. And that discomfort that I felt, it sucked in the moment.
I went back to my hotel room, I didn't go to the dinner, I cried, I stayed up all night,
what am I going to do?
But there was something deep inside of me that was like, you don't want to feel this way.
You have something that you want to contribute.
And feeling like you're on the outside of something that you want to be a part of is a normal experience.
See I think in posture syndrome that discomfort that you were feeling that first few hours
at the artist's tent at this music festival, I think that is your dreams going, we got
work to do.
Oh shit.
Like you want to be in here, you want to be doing this?
You got stuff to contribute?
You got to wake up.
Like you got to start putting yourself out there.
Like this is a step on the path that's so important
because you only feel imposter syndrome in situations
that you care about.
Because you care about whether or not
you've got something to show for what you're doing.
Well, like I said, I was alone and all of these very established famous artists are walking by me and I'm literally drinking a white claw alone.
And it's not like I can be introducing myself to people and saying, oh, go check me out on Spotify, go check me out on Instagram.
It's like, hi, I'm Kendall.
And then I'm just, then I disappear.
To the point where someone literally came up to me
was like, are you okay?
Like, I looked like I was not supposed to be there.
That's how like the Imposter Syndrome
had basically creeped onto my face.
I was so uncomfortable.
And so just like embarrassed and just felt like,
why am I here?
I need to leave.
I don't want to be here.
I want to go home.
I don't want to tell people I'm an artist.
I don't feel like that at all right now.
I don't feel like anyone's going to give a shit about me,
including myself.
Like, but yeah, it was horrible.
It was, it was really horrible, but I mean,
what changed though?
Because this is where I wanna go to.
We can all, well, hold that thought.
I wanna hear a quick word from our sponsors.
And when we come back,
we're gonna right to the moment where you flip the switch
because you did, and you made it one of the best weekends
of your life, and you made incredible friendships.
And you came home a different person after those three days.
And we're going to talk about what changed when we come back.
Welcome back.
I'm Mel Robbins.
And I'm sitting here with our daughter, Kendall, who's 23 and
she is pursuing her dream and goal of being a touring singer-songwriter. And we're talking
about Imposter Syndrome. And so, Ken, I want to go back to the moment where you've been
standing in the artist's tent at this music festival for the first five hours on day one.
Somebody has come up to you and said, are you okay? Because you look so out of place and you're
alone drinking a white cloth surrounded by all these touring musicians that you admire.
Did you? What did you do to turn this around? Because you turned it around, dude.
Well, it definitely was not immediate.
It continued for about a few more hours,
but in that 10, and I'm slightly tipsy now
because I've had two white cloths of law.
And I'm sitting alone. Let me just tell you, every single person in
that tent was with another person, if not three or four. I probably look so weird sitting
alone. And I was just kind of thinking, you know, I'm here. I get to be around some of
my biggest inspirations. I get to go backstage and be an arm's length from them
while they absolutely murder it on stage.
I get free food, I get free like a loss.
Why the fuck wouldn't I enjoy this?
I'm just gonna enjoy this because no, I'm not performing,
although I wish that I was.
No, I don't have a Grammy, although that is a dream of mine.
No, I don't have music, I don't spotify
that I can tell my favorite artists
that are here to listen to.
No, I can't do any of that,
but you know what, I can be grateful that I'm here.
And I can lean into that gratitude and just have fun.
So once I exhaled and I was like,
okay, I'm gonna enjoy myself.
This has been got off all up until this point.
So, they're grateful for the got off.
I mean, why not?
Why not have fun?
You know, I'm either gonna continue to torture myself
in front of my favorite artist
so I'm gonna have fun and put a smile on my face.
So I said, you know what?
I'm really happy that I'm here.
Let's start to have some fun.
And as I'm sitting alone drinking a water this time,
I'm thinking about all of this advice that I've gotten over the past years.
What are other things I can lean into while being here
and try and find some sense of belonging in a place that I feel I don't belong.
And I think back to this piece of advice that one of my amazing mentors, Sean Holt, who is the
Vice Dean at the Thorin School of Music at USC, gave to me and he said, you know, because you're a
beginner, Kendall, these rooms that you're going to start to walk into and these experiences that
you're going to start to have, you can't be walking in there with some massive ego thinking,
you know, I know best, I know this,
that's not the way to go about this.
But instead, you should walk into those rooms
with a learner's posture and lean into the gratitude
that you have for learning, all that you're going to learn.
And he said every room that you walk into,
know in the back of your mind,
that you have something to give to the people in that room that they don't have, you might not even know in the back of your mind that you have something to give
to the people in that room that they don't have.
You might not even know you have to give, but there's a reason you're in that room and
you're going to give them something that they don't know they needed, just like they're
going to give you something you don't know you needed.
Mike drop.
Thank you, Sean.
Can I just stop there?
Yeah.
I wish I had known that when I walked into the room in Los Angeles, because I walked in there and I felt like,
oh my God, these are people I admire or I, they're famous or they're known or they're
doing cool things. I'm not doing anything. I'm a nobody. I don't have anything yet.
And yet, that's the important part,
yet, it's not that you can't do it, it's that you haven't done it yet.
But if I had been able to flip to a state of, I'm just so grateful to be here, and I am
going to introduce myself to everybody, and I am going to learn as much as I can. And I'm going to
soak things up. And I'm going to be like a beginner. You know, if you were my shoes,
what's one piece of advice you would have? Like just soak it all up and in. And I like,
it would have flipped off the insecurity that imposter syndrome can overwhelm you with.
Because when you get up in your head and you start going, I don't belong,
and you become very intellectual about it,
you isolate yourself,
and you cut yourself off from both
what you can get and gain from the room,
and what you can give.
Because every time you talk to somebody
who is beginning at something you're really good at,
they're enthusiasm and passion, Always rubbed off on you.
Yeah.
I just started to relax into it
and I started to meet people.
How did you meet them?
Well, the family connection that I had
who invited me to the festival,
had a few friends there and he introduced me to those people
who I really hit it off with and we started talking
and it was the first time that I was talking to people.
But it was also the first time that I was talking to people, but it was also
the first time that I was like able to just own where I was at and say, I'm an artist,
I'm a beginner, I don't have anything out.
I'm just in my creative, curative space right now.
I'm working on some stuff.
I'm really excited about it.
I'm not trying to rush the process.
And I think saying that and just speaking that out
into the universe was sort of a weight lifted.
But just being able to meet people and tell them
that I'm a beginner and that I'm so excited
and that I'm so grateful to learn from them
and to be just surrounded by the greats
and all these people that I've just been so inspired by
for the past few years was enough, you know.
What happened? Well, they were so nice and they welcomed me in and they took me under their wing and
introduced me to a bunch of cool people and nobody was quick to judge me that I was a
beginner.
And I had a few people even say, you know, it's so inspiring being around you because we
have to make ends meet by doing this.
And we pay our bills doing this because some days it gets long and it gets hard
And we don't want to do it. It's so cool to be surrounded by someone that's just so fresh off and ready to go and it
Reminds us all of the reason that we started
Which is because we fell in love with it and like we can feel that love coming off of you and that was just so validating because
They weren't complementing my original music,
but they were just complementing my spirit and my ambition and my drive and my passion,
which is like what I needed to be complemented on at this phase in my journey.
It's actually more important than being complemented on the journey.
Yeah.
And so I made a bunch of friends and I even got the chance to perform with some of the people
at this late night performance.
And after I performed,
I had a bunch of people ask if they wanted to collaborate
with me and write music with me.
And it was just really awesome.
I think once I sort of owned where I'm at,
which is a beginner, I'm not an imposter as a beginner.
You know, because that's what I am. Wait. Say that again. I'm not an imposter if I'm a beginner,
because that's what I am. Oh, my God. Kendall, that's genius.
Yeah.
You can diffuse the imposter syndrome if you just accept where you're at.
I felt like an imposter around all of my favorite artists because of what they have accomplished
that I haven't yet, but if I just give myself the space to meet me where I'm at,
then the imposter syndrome sort of disappears.
You're not an imposter. You're just a beginner.
Yes.
And what I also love about those moments where you're new to something,
you're in a new job.
You start at a new school.
You feel like an imposter when you move to a new neighborhood, when you try something new.
And I think so many of us are so terrified of feeling like a beginner or feeling mediocre at
something that we don't give ourselves permission to just be a beginner. Because we think people are gonna like us more
if we have it all figured out.
And the truth is nobody has a figure that.
Completely.
No.
The people that you admire are tire-to-touring.
And so the passion and the beginner's mindset
infuses them with something.
Yeah.
I have so many takeaways from this conversation.
Number one, the next time that you're in a situation
where you feel like you don't belong or you get up in your head, recognize it and flip it to
gratitude. Be grateful that you are here at this new school or you're here in this new job or you
are here in a room with people that you admire. Adopt that learner's mindset
and just absorb as much as you can.
Another thing that you said that I think is brilliant
is that as soon as you gave yourself grace
to just be where you are and to say it out loud.
Well, I have something to say about that.
Okay.
Another way to think about it
and this is another piece of advice that I got from
Sean Holt, is that you become one of the most powerful people in the room when you beat
everybody to your inconvenient truths.
Whoa.
I love that, and I don't even know what the heck it means.
So let's take a quick break, your word from our sponsors, and when we come back, I want
you to unpack this advice for all of us.
Stay with us, everybody.
Welcome back, I'm Mel Robbins.
I'm here with our daughter, Kendall,
and we have been talking about an experience
that she had just this past weekend with Imposter Syndrome.
And she had just shared this really incredible advice that helped her.
It was advice she got from her mentor at USC, Sean Holt, about beating people to your
inconvenient truths.
Can you tell us more about that?
It means if you're a beginner and you don't have music out on Spotify, just say it.
And just say, you know, I'm feeling pretty embarrassed
and feeling a little bit out of place in this room.
Love that.
Instead of trying to pretend like you have it all figured out
when you walk into this room,
just be everybody to your inconvenient truth.
It's inconvenient that I don't have music out.
It's inconvenient that I haven't gone on tour.
It feels inconvenient that I don't have fans
or a social media following.
And so instead of pretending like I have it all figured out,
I'm just gonna be honest,
and I'm just gonna be vulnerable.
Because if you come from a place of vulnerability,
you're definitely going to make connection.
What happened the first time you said
to somebody in that artist,
ten?
Well, I haven't released any music yet.
Well, let me talk about how it felt to say that.
Yes.
Because it was horrible.
Okay, so say it.
I mean, the first time that I kind of recognized that I was a beginner and was able to say it
out loud was when I would be talking to people and then of course the question comes,
well, do you have any music out?
And my jaw would lock and I somehow spit out no and said I just graduated from school. I'm working on some music now.
I'm trying to figure out who I am,
what I want to sound like, what I want to say, and I'm not there yet,
and I'm really excited for the process,
but no, I don't have music out.
I don't have an Instagram page.
I don't have fans.
I don't have any of it.
I don't have TikTok, I don't have it.
And it's definitely scary being around everybody here
that not only has that,
but has gone around the country, showing people. But I'm a
beginner and I'm excited and I'm so happy that I get to be here around all of you who
are people that I've looked up to for however long. And yeah, I'm just really excited.
And you know, I was met with so much, oh my gosh, that's awesome. You should take your
time. You're so young. You have all the time in the world, just things that I've been told for so long, but hearing
it from these people that I've been so inspired by for so long was so validating.
It's like you have to be bad at something before you're good at it, and people are so afraid
of being not so great at something that they don't even try.
Yeah. And they're embarrassed to admit that they don't even try. Yeah.
And they're embarrassed to admit that they're at the beginning of trying.
Yeah.
And also, every single person in that tent has probably had an experience like mine.
Of course.
You know what I also find interesting is that you call yourself a beginner, but you just graduated from the top program in the world for pop music
at USC Thornton, studying with Grammy Award-winning artists and collaborating with plenty of musicians.
You're not exactly a beginner, but you're a beginner on the journey of the touring artist world.
And so I think that there are levels to that beginner mindset.
Because when I started this podcast, I was not a beginner when it comes to audio.
I hosted a radio show in 2008 and won awards for it.
And I've published all these audiobooks with Audible,
but I felt like a beginner that had never done a podcast.
Yeah, when I started this.
No, I'm not a beginner singer.
I am a beginner songwriter.
I am a beginner in an artist,
I am a beginner talking to my favorite artists.
I am a beginner waiting in line behind my favorite musicians.
Like there are so many things that I have.
It all ties back into the,
there's something to learn and there's something to give.
I think if you're only on I have something to give,
you're gonna get too caught up in your own world
and you're not gonna be able to feel into the gratitude
and the service and you're gonna to be too obsessed with yourself.
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give?
What do I give? What do I give? What do I give? What do I to give. And I definitely have not figured it out, although it sort of maybe on this podcast sounds like I have,
but the balanced thing, it's an everyday practice.
But one thing I want to point out,
based on what you told me,
is that the first thing that you gave is your sense of humor.
Yeah.
It had nothing to do with music.
You started cracking jokes with somebody
that you were introduced to
that is highly regarded. And it was your
humor and your passion and your beginner mindset that broke the ice. Yeah. And had you make this
incredible connection with somebody who will probably be part of your career moving forward.
Another way that I think about imposter syndrome is I think about the fact that I'm a nobody.
That's kind of what I was feeling.
I was literally texting my friends who I graduated with at USC, who are incredible musicians
and have music out and are just my best friends.
And I was texting them being like, I'm a nobody.
Why am I here?
Someone so just walked by, I'm drinking alone. Help me.
And they were all responding like, you're kindle effing Robbins. You're not a nobody. Like go be
you. Go have fun. You're supposed to be there. Love you guys. You know who you are. And I think
in saying like, I'm a nobody. The only reason that I was thinking everybody around me was
where somebody's is because of the accolades
and the accomplishments that they've achieved
and the following's and the fans.
But like the fans, at least in my opinion,
the fans, the awards, the accolades,
the attention that all of the people I was surrounded by have
are not who they are.
As I was thinking about this, I was going, you know,
so and so is not her Grammy.
She's her.
I don't have music out right now,
but I'm still me and I can still be me.
And at the end of the day, we're all kind of nobody's
because people think we're somebody's when we have stuff to show.
But without that stuff, we're just us, the beauty of life, we're all just us.
You know what's interesting is that you just said people think you're somebody because you have
some thing to show for yourself, but we're all just nobodies because there is something that is
special about you
that nobody else has.
Yeah, that's a great way of thinking about it.
And I think the word nobody is, it's so negative
and people think, oh, I'm invisible,
but like we're all kind of just doing our own thing
because I don't have music out,
because I don't have these awards,
because I don't have this following
that everyone around me has
I'm like, you know what? All I can do is just be me
And that's kind of all that I'm gonna do throughout my career
So I'm just gonna do that right now because I hope that even when I do have those accolades and when I do have those fans
I can still be me and I'm sure that all these people around me at some capacity are just trying to be themselves too. I learned and I hope
You guys can learn that, in just being me, the things that I started to give
had nothing to do with my music
and nothing to do with my voice
and nothing to do with anything that I thought
it would have to do with.
The things that you are gonna give in these rooms
that you walk into where you feel like an imposter
will likely have nothing to do with that actual career or the skill set you mastered in college to get the job that you got.
It's probably going to have to do with your humanity or some experience you had that's relatable or your sense of humor or the fact that you're passionate about sewing. I don't know, who knows what it's gonna be,
but I think what I learned this past weekend
is that people felt a magnetic pull towards me
because of my humor and inappropriate jokes
that really, I guess, brought some laughter
to the rooms that I was walking into
and in giving people comedic relief and giving people laughter, that's what they learned
from me.
And in turn, I started learning from them and the doors all open.
And like lean into you in those rooms and just be you and recognize you're a beginner,
beat people to your inconvenient truths, be honest, by telling them, just be you.
And I think if you're you,
you're gonna give and you will also receive.
If I was trying to be somebody
that had all these awards or had a TikTok following
or whatever it may be, I wouldn't be Kendall.
Right.
And I was Kendall and she'd a great weekend.
I made a bunch of friends. I ate good food. I saw great weekend. I made a bunch of friends.
I ate good food.
I saw old friends.
I made new friends.
One of the things that will beat imposter syndrome is when you start to also tell yourself that
there's a reason I'm here.
We didn't talk about this enough.
I don't think.
Okay.
Well, there's a reason why I'm here.
You don't have to be like, I deserve to be in this room.
Grab faith.
You're in the room for a reason,
and you might not know why,
but have faith that there is a reason for you
to be in that room.
There's something for you to learn.
There's something for you to give, and that's why you're there. When you tell yourself
that you have faith that there's a reason why you're sitting in this room.
There's a reason why you're near these people. There's a reason why you're at
this school. And if you can't muster up the belief that you deserve to be, anchor
yourself in that there's something
for you to learn, there's a lesson, there's something for you to discover about yourself,
because when I look back at my experience nine years ago, and I was in that room with
all those people I admired, all these famous people, and I felt so unworthy.
There was a reason I was supposed to be there. That discomfort that I felt, I don't want to feel like this in rooms like this.
I want to feel like I'm somebody who's contributed something that's important.
That's what started to motivate me.
That's what got me to accept the fact that I really wanted to be a person that had published a book.
I showed up in rooms for the next two, three years, Ken,
still feeling like an imposter.
Oh, I'm sure it never goes away.
There are new levels to it,
but I met Alex Cooper and was on her show,
called Her Daddy, and I was in awe of her,
the number one female ranked podcaster in the world,
and I hadn't even launch my podcast yet.
You know what? I just absorbed everything I could learn from her and I learned a lot. She's
amazing. So there are going to be moments where you feel that because you're going to be a beginner
again. But if you really embrace what Ken and I are sharing with you, you don't have to destroy yourself.
You can immediately catch yourself and flip it into a learning opportunity in a gratitude
moment and reminding yourself that, wow, I have faith that I'm here right now because
there is something I'm meant to learn by doing this right now.
So I'm not going to get it right.
I'm not going to be perfect.
I'm going to be me and I'm going to learn.
And that is so helped me.
And I think it'll help you listening right now.
Yeah.
And I think the thing you also said about the fact that in posture syndrome, I think comes
from a place of, well, I really want this to feel like.
Yes.
I really, the only reason that you're feeling that that in posture syndrome is because you
want to not feel
like an imposter in those rooms.
You wanna be a bad out in all those rooms.
It's a good thing.
It's a good thing.
It's kind of like your mental compass going like,
yeah, this is what you want.
There's a reminder.
There's a work to do.
I mean, I don't feel imposter syndrome
when I go to like a financial convention
because I don't know anything about that.
And I don't have a passion to.
I don't desire to. I'm not like a passion to. I don't desire to.
I'm not like, oh my God, I'm never gonna make it in this.
I'm like, I don't wanna be here.
I don't wanna be in this room.
I wanna be in a different room,
but it's the rooms that you wanna be in
that you're like, oh fuck, I don't know if I'm supposed
to be here, it tests everything.
It makes you look in the mirror.
It kind of like shines a light on the things
you don't know about what you're so obsessed with and makes you want them.
And that scares the shit out of you.
Yeah, it's true.
I think it comes back to the idea that some days
you're going to be a beginner in the room,
some days you're going to be the expert.
If you find yourself in that room or that tent or backstage or in that workout class, wherever
you are, and you start to feel that creeping up, I shouldn't be here.
I don't belong here.
I don't know what to do.
I don't know what to say.
Just trust that you're supposed to be there and that there's a reason that you're there.
And take on your learner's posture. If you feel like you don't
know anything and everybody else does, then just get really grateful and really excited
to learn from the other people. And don't leave the room. Don't leave that room.
Boom. Cheers. Cheers. Oh, and in case no one else tells you, Kendall and I are going to tell you.
We love you, we love you, and I believe in your ability to create a life that you want
and to do the work.
Don't leave the room.
Talk to you in a few days. I
Hold the phone that would be
The loudest ice machine you've ever heard. Okay, there it goes Chris dad we're recording
I don't want to like say like Chris Dad We're filming and recording
So you can't be here
Okay be quiet because I just had a moment and you ruined it
Anyway, fuck I had a really good superpower.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
We were thinking about, what else were we talking about?
Imposter syndrome, nobody's.
Oh, oh, oh.
Hang on, Mom.
Oh, God.
No, I just want you to make sure I hit record. Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyer's right 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.
you