You are on a journey and this thing called life and absolutely every twist and turn, every no, every setback is preparing you for something.
Mel Robbins
Transcript
Mel Robbins (00:00):
What are your favorite books? Books have been a huge part of my life. It's how I've escaped my life, but what I love about a great book, it opens up your perspective. It makes you think differently. Today I have four different books that I'm going to recommend to you. A first one that I'm going to recommend to you is the Book of Awakening and the introduction of the book. Mark writes, along the way of blessed,
Mel Robbins (00:27):
We come upon an opening that feels eternal and suddenly there's nowhere to go. So we build a fire and stare into life surprised at the tenderness. Our endurance and presence has led us to why is this making me cry? This book just gave me so much hope and the encouragement that I needed to really move forward. Let's talk about book number two, and that book is The Alchemist by Palo Coello. This is a must read, in my opinion. I love this book. My third recommendation is the Court of Thorn and Rose's series, and my final recommendation is, Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast. I am so unbelievably excited to talk to you today. I can't wait to share these four book recommendations with you. You're going to be blown away. It's always such an honor to spend time with you, to be together. And I also want to say if you're a new listener, I wanted to personally take a moment and welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. I am thrilled that you're here and because you hit play on this particular episode, I already know something about you. I know that you are the kind of person who not only cares about your time, but you spend your time doing things that help you grow and learn and feel inspired that like me, you're a reader.
(01:54):
You love books, and you're listening to this episode because you really are interested in getting some good recommendations for some new books that you can read. And I also want to point something else out. If someone sent you this episode and recommended that you take a listen, you know what that tells me? It tells me that they care about you, that they want to feel closer to you. And I think it's a super cool thing that somebody is taking the time to share this with you and you want to know a great way to feel closer to somebody else is reading a book together. Which brings me to today's topic because today you and I are going to talk about one of the most asked questions that I've been getting lately, which is, Mel, what are your favorite books? What are the books that inspire you?
(02:37):
What are the books that you recommend to other people? What are the books that you give to other people as a gift? Today, I have four different books that I'm going to recommend to you, and they're not just any book. First of all, they're not even in the same genre, so they're all different. Second, I am recommending them to you for very different reasons, and some of these books, it's not that they're a great read, it's that there's a really cool backstory about the author and how the book came to be. In other cases, the books themselves have come into my life at a pivotal moment in my life and changed my life for the way that I think, and I'm going to even recommend a book to you that has brought me so close to my daughters, and it's the kind of book that I never would've picked up without them making the recommendation.
(03:22):
Mom, you got to read this. And so four books today. And before we jump into my four books, I want to tell you a little story about me that might not know. Books have been a huge part of my life forever. I was in this program in my public elementary school that was called Great Books, and it was this program that was like a book club for elementary school students. And the discussions about the books were led by slightly older middle school students. And I not only loved great books, but I became a leader in great books when I was in middle school and high school. And so books have been a huge part of my life. It's how I've escaped my life. I mean, books are just so magical because as you're sitting there reading or listening, and let's just set the record straight, listening to a book counts.
(04:10):
Okay? I know there's a lot of debate. Oh, well, I'm not really reading a book. That is not true. There's actually research around what part of your brain that you're using when you read and when you listen, it all counts. But what I love about a great book don't you, is that you can get lost in a different world. It opens up your perspective, it makes you think differently. It helps you do something that can be very meditative and calming. And so I just love reading. And one final thing before I jump into the four books that I'm going to recommend is I have to take a minute and I have to just say thank you. I cannot believe Eve how much you're loving the Let Them Theory. I mean, I'm just so blown away by it. My daughter who I wrote this with, Sawyer Robbins, shout out Sawyer Robbins.
(04:59):
We are so humbled and seeing all of you reading this with your friends, with your families in your book clubs, recommending it to friends, talking about it online, it is so cool. People keep asking me, what does it feel like, Mel, to have the number one book in the world? And I'll tell you what it feels like. I just think it's so cool that everybody is excited about a book that can help you change your life. I think it's cool, heck that at a moment in history where people are spending on average six hours a day on social media that they're excited about reading again. And to me, that is the coolest thing here, that a book is what everybody's talking about. A book and a theory that helps you change your life and a theory that's bringing you closer to people and making you feel peaceful and more powerful is what is in the zeitgeist and trending.
(05:49):
And what a wonderful thing that we're excited about reading again. And so many of you, because of your enthusiasm for the Let Them Theory and how much it's changing your life and your relationships have written in are like, Mel, what are you reading? What are your favorite books? What should I read next? And so I thought, why don't we just do an episode about some of the books that have changed my life? And these are books that have changed my life for very different reasons. They're in very different genres. They're not all kind of like personal development or mindset or relationship books at all. They're not even that serious for crying out Loud, but I think you're going to love them. These are the books that I give as gifts. These are the books that I've read over and over again. These are books that have come into my life at Moments in Time where I've really needed the message that's in the book.
(06:35):
These are also books where in some cases the backstory on the author is so extraordinarily inspiring that just that story alone is something that you're going to be really interested to hear today. And so I've thought a lot about what books have changed my life. I have come up with four books that are completely different from one another that have made a deeply personal and deeply impactful difference in my life. And I cannot wait to share these with you. And before I do though, I really just want to take a moment and say, thank you for real. I sat above the garage with my daughter for a year basically in a cage fight as we were working on the Let Them Theory Together. And this is the first time on my podcast that I've talked to you in any detail about the Let Them Theory and what's happened in the wake of publishing this book.
(07:37):
This book is a phenomenon. I mean, it's on track to become one of the most successful nonfiction books of the entire year. 3 million copies sold in two and a half months. That doesn't happen. I don't even know what to say. I am so excited that this concept is helping. And the reason why this is selling and so many of you're interested in it is because it works. I mean, you don't recommend a book that you don't love. You don't buy a book for other people that hasn't made a difference in your life. And that's the phenomenon of this book, that it's actually making a huge difference. And to know that what my daughter and I with the help of our team and the help of publisher at Hay House and Penguin Random House and our partners at Audible and everybody that worked on this and the 94 books, did you know that there are 94 books that are cited and that were part of the research of me making a case for the Let Them Theory and how to use it in eight different areas of your life?
(08:48):
I mean, that's how much I love reading. That's how much I love books. I have been a bookworm since I was a little kid. Never in my life did I imagine being an author. So to know that I'm now an author and I'm not only writing books, but the stuff that I'm working on I can do with my daughter, and it's just like the coolest thing ever. So thank you for giving me one of the most remarkable experiences of my life to see the lessons and mistakes and the things that I write about that are deeply personal in this book make a huge difference in your life. And the reason why I know that it is goes way beyond the posts on social media. I want to read some very meaningful things that you've written to us. There's two people in particular that I'm going to share today because I think the most exciting thing about this is how it's impacting your relationship with people you care about and the number of ways that you are using this in your life.
(09:45):
We are receiving hundreds of emails every single week. I am blown away by the avalanche of comments of how Let them and Let me is changing your life. And more importantly in my mind, yes, it gives you instant peace. It gives you instant power. But what I love even more is seeing how it's bringing you closer to people. I want to read you something that Aaron wrote in to me. Aaron wrote in and said, I bought two copies of the Let Them Theory, one for my mother and one for me. And we both waited to read our book on vacation, and every night once we settled in, we'd grab our book and start to read. And we kept stopping to discuss the different chapters that both of us could relate to and we could relate to all the stories that Melan her daughter Sawyer mentioned.
(10:28):
And here's the thing, if you haven't read the book, I'm the villain in the book. This book is filled with stories from my life and from my daughter's life. And in almost everyone, I'm the jerk. I'm the one that's the control freak. I'm the one that's judgy. I'm the one that's insecure. I'm the one that's jealous. And what you're going to see in this book and what you probably are seeing, and I think one of the reasons why this is resonating so much is as you read the book, you have these realizations where you're like, oh God, I'm just like Mel was, oh my God, I do the same thing that she does. Or you have the other realization, which is, oh my God, I have to deal with somebody who was just like, Mel, what a nightmare. Now I know how to let them, and now I know how to say, let me protect my time and energy.
(11:12):
Let me show up differently. So the dynamic shifts between us, and another thing that I'm really proud of is that my daughter and I argued day and night about what stories went in. I'd literally be like, well, why don't we talk about this time when dad and I wrote and she'd be like, nobody my age cares about that. Why did we argue so much? Because we wanted absolutely every story and every book that was cited and every piece of research to be relevant to your life. Because if it's not relevant to your life, then it's just some intellectual nonsense that's a waste of our time. And so we just fought night and day. We did 11 and a half versions of the manuscript. We had teams of people that would sit around and read it with us and dig into the research. I discussed the concepts with experts on 19 different podcast episodes before they even made it into the book.
(12:07):
I mean, the amount of research and refining and just trying to craft the single best book that we could for one reason so that it would be entertaining and relevant and impactful to you. And so to see it embraced on such a global scale and more importantly to see it making a difference in your life because as Aaron writes, I love Let Them, but what helped open my eyes and my mom's eyes was the let me part of the book, let me do what I need to do for myself and let me learn how to accept and love the people in my life for who they are instead of trying to change them. Really an eyeopener and life-changing book. Our vacation lasted four days and three nights, and the book was finished by the time our trip ended. How freaking cool. That's the other thing that I love about the book.
(12:59):
It is such an easy read because it's entertaining, because you literally will have so many cringe moments as you're reading the book like, oh my God, Mel, seriously? Oh my God, I can't believe you're admitting you feel that way. And honestly, I've done the same thing. And that's the power of this is to see yourself in the pages. And if you can think of any book that you love, you love it because it brings you either to a completely different world or it awaken something within you. And that's what's so cool. And so with that, let's get into the four books that I want to recommend to you and the reasons why. Because since the Letham theory is spread around the world, you are now asking me, I love this book, Mel, what do you reading? What do you recommend? What do you give to people?
Mel Robbins (13:47):
So let's jump into the four books that I love. And the first one that I'm going to recommend to you is, and you can see if you're watching on YouTube, this is the Book of Awakening. It is the 20th anniversary edition that I am holding in my hands. It is written by the extraordinary Mark Nepo, and there are so many reasons why I want to recommend this to you. And I think the first thing that I want to say is that this is the book that I give as a gift more than any other book. And I think that's an important thing to say to you that when I'm thinking about a book that I want to give to somebody, or I'm going to a dinner party and I want to bring something other than a bottle of wine, I bring a copy of the Book of Awakening.
(14:29):
This book is so meaningful to me. I'm struggling to even find the words to explain the profound difference this book has made. First of all, I've been reading this since 2016, and one of the things that I love about it is it's just short daily meditations that are one to two pages long and it is broken out by the day of the year. So you literally open up the book and it's like, oh, July 21st. And here's what I love about that, especially when you're in a moment in your life where you're super busy, oftentimes you think, I don't have time to read or I don't have time to pick up the book, or I picked up the book and I started reading and then life got busy and I can't remember where I was. You can pick this book up at any time in your life.
(15:14):
You could buy it today. And based on the date on the calendar, you might be flipping all the way back to literally the last 10 pages of the book. And you're exactly where you need to be because it has meditations. October 23rd, October 24th, here's a meditation, I'm flipping forward for May 4th. How cool is that? And these are timeless meditations. And what I love about this book is that it is so digestible and it's reassuring and it's encouraging. And just like everything I'm doing here on the podcast, or at least I'm trying to, I'm always reminding you that the power is inside of you. I'm always reminding you of the simple things that are within your control, your attitude, the things you do or don't do, what you focus on, how you process your emotions and create space for what you're feeling and you are giving yourself grace.
(16:07):
And that's what these episodes are about. And the introduction of the book Mark writes, each of us in our own way is a truth seeker looking for an authentic path that will let the saint in each of us show itself to the world along the way of blessed. We come upon an opening that feels eternal and suddenly there's nowhere to go. So we build a fire and stare into life surprised at the tenderness. Our endurance and presence has led us to, why is this making me cry? I don't know why this is making me cry. I guess it's making me cry because I'm thinking about how my husband not only reads this every day, but he leads a men's retreat called Soul Degree three times a year. And this is one of the books that he gifts to the men that attend the retreat. And there's a part of the retreat where every night they sit around a campfire and there are things that they discuss as they stare into the fire.
(17:05):
And this book helps you slow down on a daily basis. Whenever you have a moment to just pick it up and read a page, it helps you stare into that fire of life and you'll be surprised at the tenderness that your endurance and presence can lead you to. He wrote this during an experience where he almost died from cancer in his thirties. He writes, almost dying from cancer. In my thirties, he had a tumor in his brain and in his back was the opening through which I stared into eternity. And the fire I built was the Book of Awakening. I had no idea that this fire on the edge of everything would warm so many, it's hard to believe it's been 20 years since it was first published. And all that time, I've been humbled by the many ways this book has been embraced. More importantly, the vastness it points to remains an irrepressible resource available to everyone.
(18:01):
I think that it makes me emotional because in 2016, things were really shitty and Chris was really struggling with depression and I was out trying to make money however I could to get us out of debt, and we were just starting to rebuild our lives, and we were at a point where it was like, God, just get out of bed and do what you need to do. And I know so many people feel that way. And when you are in that position in your life, it's easy to beat yourself up and it's easy to convince yourself that your life is never going to feel different. And I think because Mark wrote this as he was facing a cancer diagnosis that he thought was going to kill him, you can feel in the words that he writes, this grappling with where you are versus what's possible.
(19:02):
And this book just gave me so much hope and the encouragement that I needed to really move forward, especially in those moments when things just felt impossible. It really provided a lot of guidance and hope for me at a time when I desperately needed it. And even though I'm not in that place anymore in my life and I've worked extraordinarily hard, and so is Chris, just like you're working incredibly hard, it still is relevant every single day that I crack it open and I turn to the day that it is, and I read the wisdom on these pages and I'm just grateful for it. I just literally flip to a page that Chris has highlighted too often, we struggle stubbornly in an attempt to protect ourselves from the friction of being alive when it is precisely that friction that works our spirit into a seeable gem.
(20:05):
We are more malleable than we think, more durable and changeable than all hope. Thin and fragrant petals do not hide from the wind. They survive to die and break ground again. Even within one life, we shred and reroute, we break, bleed and rearrange into yet another beautiful thing that learns how to reach. Resisting this process doubles our pain. Singing our way through it is the source of wisdom and beauty. The reason why I'm recommending this to you is because having something like this on your bedside table that you can wake up to or you can go to bed to, so that the first thing that you read in the day, the input that everybody talks about is empowering and hopeful and centers you on your capacity and your capability to rise and to meet whatever it is that you're facing in your life, good or bad.
(21:09):
I think that's an incredible resource to give to yourself. And this is why I give it as a gift because we all need words of encouragement. We all need to be reminded of the power within us. And you can't always be with the people that you love, but when you give somebody a gift of a book like the Book of Awakening, you're giving them almost like a surrogate for you that can sit on their bedside table so that when they pick it up, they know that they're not alone. And they also know and think of you and the fact that you cared enough to give this as a gift to them. And I see a lot of you doing that with the Let Them Theory book. I think it's the same thing that when you share an episode of a podcast like this one that made a big difference in your life with somebody, it's a way of saying, I love you and I care about you, and I think this is going to be something you're going to enjoy or get something out of.
(22:03):
When you buy somebody else a book and you write an inscription on the inside, you're doing the same thing. You're literally taking something that represents how you feel about a person and you're giving it to them to act as a companion. Mark Nepo the Book of Awakening. That's number one.
Mel Robbins (00:22:22):
Let's talk about book number two. And that book is The Alchemist by Paolo Coello. There are so many reasons why I love this book. I recommend this book. I have also given this book as a gift. If you have not read The Alchemist, this is must read. In my opinion. I love this book. It is a simple but profound story about a shepherd in Spain by the name of Santiago who has this dream and goes on this spiritual quest in search of treasure. And the entire story has all these beautiful twists and turns and delays and upsets and setbacks and epiphanies, and it takes you on this just amazing journey out there and within.
(23:05):
And the major, major takeaway from this book is a quote that you may have seen before. You may have heard it, but it is what I do believe to be true about life. And the quote is, when you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it. Isn't that a beautiful idea that if you can be clear about what you want and if you are willing like Santiago to walk toward it and to believe that it exists and that it is out there for you if you are willing to journey in that regard to go after the treasure in your life that you feel calling to you when you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it. Now, one of the interesting lessons of this book that I also love is a lesson that you got to be careful what you ask for because you tend to get it, but you just don't get it in the way that you thought that you would.
(24:08):
And I have read this book over and over and over again, and there's another quote that I want to read to you from this book that also is deeply important and incredibly difficult to absorb as a truth about life. And here it is. One is loved because one is loved, no reason is needed for loving. What does that mean? It means that your mere existence makes you worthy of love, and so many of us are out there chasing it. What if you could just believe that you are loved because you're loved and no reason is needed for being loved? And the major takeaway from this book, it's really about self-trust and love and learning to listen to your inner compass and this gigantic takeaway that when you find the courage to believe in yourself and to believe in a vision for your life, and you have the guts to start walking on the path toward this vision that you have for your life, the universe, the world people, they do conspire to help you, that things do start to change.
(25:20):
And I believe that. I believe that so profoundly, and this book has been an important part of my life for over 20 years. In fact, when I wrote my first book, the Five Second Rule, which is now eight years old, I write about The Alchemist in the Five Second Rule. And I want to read to you the reason why this book, not just because of the story of Santiago and the lessons in the book, but there is a backstory to this book that was so resonant for me. And I want to tell you about it because a lot of people don't know this. A lot of people know that The Alchemist has sold 65 million copies. That's a lot of books. A lot of people know that it was on the bestseller list for over 300 weeks. And even though this thing is over 25 years old, heck at this point, it might be over 30 years old, it still will pop on the bestsellers list now and again, that's how relevant and incredible of a book this is and how profound of a story it is.
(26:22):
I would give this to your adult kids. I would read this again if you've read it before. We all need this reminder that you have within you a deeply personal vision for your life that is your treasure that you are seeking, and you also have within you the capability to set out on an adventure and a journey to go find that treasure that is buried within your life and buried within you. And it is a journey of trust. It is a journey of twists and turns, and the more you walk toward it, a magical thing happens. The world, the universe, God, people, it all aligns to help you if you're willing to start to see the world that way, which I do. And one of the other things that I think is incredible about this book is most people don't know the backstory. And so I want to read to you what I wrote eight years ago in my own book, the Five Second Rule in a chapter called Courage Changes Everything.
(27:23):
And this is on page two 17. Have Faith. I believe you can make anything happen as long as you listen to your heart, do the work and give up your timeline. One of my favorite books is the International Bestseller, the Alchemist. It's one of the bestselling books of all time. It has been translated into 80 languages. I've recommended it for more than a decade. And as I was writing this book, I bought myself a new copy to keep me inspired and remind me of the message of the book, the whole universe conspires to help you when you follow your heart. Now, when I cracked open the 25th anniversary edition, I was blown away by the story in the forward of the book. I had no idea that when the Alchemist was first published in Brazil, it failed miserably, miserably. Listen to what Paolo Colo, the author of the Alchemist wrote in the forward of the 25th anniversary of his book, when the Alchemist was first published 25 years ago in my native Brazil, no one noticed a bookseller in the northeast corner of the country told me that only one person purchased a copy.
(28:32):
The first week of its release, it took another six months for the bookseller to unload a second copy, and that was to the same person who bought the first and who knows how long it took to sell the third. By the end of the year, it was clear to everybody that the Alchemist wasn't working. My original publisher decided to cut me loose and canceled our contract. They wiped their hands of the project and let me take the book with me. I was 41 and desperate, but I never lost faith in the book or ever wavered in my vision. Why? Because it was me in there, all of me heart and soul. I was living my own metaphor. A man sets out on a journey dreaming of a beautiful or magical place in pursuit of some unknown treasure. At the end of his journey, the man realizes the treasure was within him the entire time.
(29:28):
You know when I read 41 and desperate, holy cow, I got chills when I read that line in the forward of the Alchemist. That's how old I was when I discovered the five Second Rule. And that's exactly how I felt desperate. And what I've come to realize is that there is no expiration date on discovering and expressing the power in you. As Pao Coello wrote in the Forward, it starts with a belief in yourself. And that belief is grounded in the courage to push yourself forward, set out on a journey dreaming of a beautiful or magical place in pursuit of some unknown treasure. And I'm going to remind you exactly what Pao reminds you of in The Alchemist at the end of this journey. The man realizes the treasure was within him the entire time, but you're never going to find it if you don't push out on the journey.
(30:30):
That's what this book has meant to me. But of course, the story didn't end with failure. As I wrote in The Alchemist, when you want something, the whole universe conspires to help you. I started knocking on the doors of other publishers. One opened and the publisher on the other side believed in me and my book and agreed to give the Alchemist a second chance. Slowly through word of mouth, it finally started to sell 3000, then 6,000 book by book. Gradually throughout that next year, eight months later, an American visiting Brazil picked up a copy of The Alchemist in a local bookstore. He wanted to translate the book and helped me find a publisher in the United States. Harper Collins agreed to bring it to an American audience, but it still took time to sell slowly finding its audience in the United States by word of mouth, just as it had over the years in Brazil.
(31:30):
And then one day the sitting president of the United States was seen with a copy of it. The Alchemists became a spontaneous and organic phenomenon. This book was originally published in Portuguese 37 years ago. Isn't that incredible? Isn't that incredible? And isn't it incredible that it was not a success with the first publisher? Isn't it incredible that just like Santiago keeps moving forward, even though there are all these delays and twists and turns and danger, but he believes in the treasure in his heart that the Alchemist is now celebrating its 37th anniversary, and the book is still very much alive like my heart and like my soul, it continues to live every day because my heart and soul are in it, and my heart and soul is your heart and soul. And that is the story of this book. The story of one person is the story of everyone's.
(32:34):
And one person's quest is the quest of all of humanity. And that is so true. We all have a treasure that is buried deep within us. No one can take it from you, and nobody can prevent you from going and seeking it. Only you can do that to yourself. And if you pick up a copy of The Alchemist, I promise you, you are going to just be so inspired by this story. But more importantly, you are going to feel so excited and just hopeful and encouraged about the treasure that exists within you that is uniquely for you. That can only be discovered by you. And that is when the journey to go find it will actually begin The Alchemist.
Mel Robbins (00:33:28):
We're going to switch gears, and I'm going to recommend a book that is in a completely different category. It is a book that has brought me so close to my daughters. And I don't think every book has to be some big fanfare thing that is deep and profound or self-help or mindset or leadership or relationship. You don't always have to be working on yourself. It's fun to read a book or to listen to a book in this regard that helps you escape your life. It helps you imagine a different world, perhaps a world that doesn't exist. We here in the Robbins household are big lovers of all things, Harry Potter and Game of Thrones and The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings. But I've never considered myself oddly enough like a fantasy reader. You know what I mean? That sort of fantasy, that's also sexy fantasy. And that brings me to my third recommendation, which is the Court of Thorn and Rose's series, otherwise known as AAR to people on TikTok. This is a fantasy series that is five books I think that my daughters recommended.
(34:44):
They were absolutely psycho about these things, and they were like, mom, mom, mom, you've got to read a court of Thorn of Roses. I'm like, I don't care about fairies. And they're like, oh, no, no, no, it's so good. And mom, don't just read it. You have to listen to the dramatic audio. Have you heard of Dramatic Audio? This changed my life. Dramatic audio is like a movie in your ear. Dramatic audio is when they take a book and they don't just read it. I mean, when you listen to a dramatic audio book like a chord of Thorn or roses, holy cow, it's like a completely transformative experience. There are actors, there are sound effects. There is so much sex in this book. It's unbelievable. Yes, it is acted out. You literally will blush as you're listening to this thing. It is so fun, fantasy, and gripping in all ways that you could think of the word gripping.
(35:41):
It is just absolutely incredible. Once I started listening to a Court of Thorn and Roses, I couldn't stop listening. It was like discovering a soap opera that I didn't know existed. I became so invested in the characters. The sound makes you want to escape to the world. And what's so cool about dramatic audio is that I would have my earbuds in all day long. I would be washing dishes, but I'm not in my kitchen with my hands and my soapy water. Oh God, no. I'm literally flying with Resand through the skies of Perian. It's unbelievable. And then I'd be folding laundry or I'd be on a walk and I'm not in Vermont. Holy cow. No, I'm in the snowy underbelly of the mountain where the evil person and the king is. I mean, it's magical how it takes you away. And the coolest thing about dramatic audio, nobody knows you're there.
(36:37):
It's not like you're sitting on the couch watching a movie and everybody can see that you're just watching a movie. Oh, no, because it's in your mind. You actually feel like you're there. It awakens something as you're picturing what they're describing and the sounds are bringing it to life, just like you are talking about the Let Them Theory with your sisters and brothers or your mom and dad or your friends. The Court of Thorn and Rose's series became an obsession of my daughters and I for probably six months because I literally listened to these books for like six months straight, and every time it was done, I was so disappointed, and they were all fantastic. And another thing that I have to give a shout out about is that the cover for the paperback version of the Court of Miston Fury, that's number two in the series, was the inspiration.
(37:33):
Shout out Sawyer Robbins. Shout out Sarah J. Moss for the inspiration of the green cover and the Yellow Effects. This is where we got the idea. And you want to know something interesting when we said we wanted the cover of the Let Them Theory to be Green? Everybody's like, oh, no, no, no. Green Books are bad luck. No, no, no, no. There's a thing in publishing. There are no green books. Green Books are bad luck. You don't want a green book. I'm like, I'm sorry. I don't think it's bad luck. Have you seen a court of Mr in Fury? That book is green and yellow, and it's silly. I don't think people care about the cover of the book being green. We're going with green because we're inspired authentically by a quart of mist and fury. Now, obviously it looks nothing like it. It's just the same.
(38:18):
It's not even the same colors. This is sort of aqua blue. You can see it if you're on YouTube. So hi everybody on YouTube. But this was the inspiration. I love, love it. And in fact, we talked about it so much. My husband, Chris, listened to the entire dramatic series. Thank you for doing that, Chris, because one cool thing about books is they bring you together. That's why people love book clubs. And aren't you seeing a resurgence of book clubs? If you're not in a book club, you kind of want to be in one again. How about you start one? And not all the books have to be serious. It's fun to escape your life. It's fun to have something to listen to that takes you to an entirely different place. It's fun to have something that you can't wait to get back to. I know so many of you feel this way about the podcast, but I got to tell you, I just mainline this.
(39:12):
I know that she's working on now the sixth book in the series. I cannot Wait, wait, wait until it is completed. And if you've never listened to fantasy, if you're not quite sold yet, let me just hit you with a little bit of research, reading or listening or watching fantasy. It is so great for your creativity, your emotional intelligence, your problem solving, because it actually helps you imagine an entirely new world. I mean, just think about things like Star Wars. Think about all these different fantasy worlds that we get pulled into that make you imagine life in a whole different way. That is exactly what this book did for me. I literally started as I was listening to it, going, I want to write a fantasy book. In fact, 10 years ago, my daughters and I were sitting around, we were on vacation, and we started riffing this idea for a book.
(40:03):
I'm not going to tell you what it is because we're actually, I think, going to do it. But this is 10 years in the making, and it was listening to this book, especially the dramatic audio, and just immersing myself in world making and thinking about different worlds and wars. And it just cracked open a level of creativity in me that I hadn't accessed before. And I think it might do the same thing for you. And if not, it's just great book about fairies and wars and sex, and you're going to love it. And it's a great way to blow off a bunch of time as you're driving a car or taking a walk or passing the time while you're washing dishes or doing laundry. And I'm just going to warn you, you might just get sucked into it and you're going to love it. And that's my third recommendation, court of Thorn Roses. And I'm now so hooked on the genre. I'm now listening to the dramatic audio of Onyx Storm. So once you're in, don't blame me. It's hard to step back out, but you're going to love it.
Mel Robbins (00:41:03):
And my final recommendation is the Firm. Yep, the Firm by John Grisham. Now, this is a book that came out in 1991, and the reason why I love this book is because this was the first page turning thriller novel I had ever read. It was discovering an entirely different genre, and it blew my mind, but it not only blew my mind because of how incredibly gripping and what a page turner it was, I stayed up all night reading this book. And do you want to know why? I remember staying up all night reading this book. It's because I was a first year law student. I didn't have any time.
(41:47):
I needed to be spending my time reading law textbooks and researching the law so I could actually be prepared for class in the morning. This was a book about a lawyer who literally discovers after he joins this big prestigious law firm that, oh my gosh, the law firm is actually tied to the mob and they're laundering money. The FBI gets involved. And this young new associate is now in the fight of his life to save him and his wife as all of this is unraveling, he's discovered it, and now they're chasing him trying to kill him. He was unbelievable. But that's not the only reason why this book was unbelievable to me. So in 1991, when I discovered this book, I was in my first year of law school at Boston College Law School, and I felt like I had made the world's biggest mistake.
(42:44):
I hated law school the second I got there. I don't know if you've ever had an experience like this, whether it's in a job or a relationship or a school or maybe you move into an apartment, you're like, oh, no, not here. I knew with every cell of my being that this was not me. I hated all the reading. I hated how intense it was. I hated how competitive everybody felt. I didn't want to be a lawyer. I just didn't know what to do with my life. And so I applied to law school because people around me had applied to law school. And so I felt like I had made the biggest mistake. I felt like I was going to be stuck being a lawyer my whole life. I felt like I was going to just forever, forever, forever, never be happy. There was no turning back.
(43:31):
And when I read this book, I was like, wait a minute. The guy who wrote this is a lawyer. You could be a lawyer and you can write fiction books. What? And it opened up my eyes to a very simple fact, you're not stuck anywhere. You're not stuck with the degree that you have. You're not stuck in the profession that you're in just because you've studied to do one thing or you dropped out of college and didn't study to do anything. Doesn't mean you can't write a book. Doesn't mean you can't try something new. It doesn't mean you can't start a YouTube channel. And so it was this huge epiphany to me at a moment in my life where I felt like I had railroaded myself into the wrong profession that wait a minute, maybe this law degree is actually leading me somewhere. Maybe I'm going to learn a bunch of stuff here, but I don't have to go to a big law firm, especially not one that's laundering money for the mob.
(44:25):
I don't have to practice law. I could do what John Grisham did. I could actually just get a law degree and figure it out. And that's what I've done. And there's also another reason why I wanted to recommend this book, and it's because John Grisham's story is freaking unbelievable. It reminds me a little bit of Pao colos story in terms of the alchemist and the twists and the turns and the failing. But I want to tell you the backstory here, because this man, John Grisham has sold 300 million books, 300 million books. That's insane. But he didn't start that way. Wait till you hear his career path. And this is important to hear because it's easy to gaslight yourself into thinking that there's only one career, or that making a mistake or being told no is the end of the story. It's not the end of your story, it's just part of the story because it just shows you over and over and over and over again.
(45:37):
You're not stuck where you are. You literally are not stuck where you are. Everything that you are doing in life is leading you somewhere else. Every experience that you have is not a waste of your time. It's actually experience that you're gaining that is going to help you down the road. You are on a journey and this thing called life and absolutely every twist and turn, every no, every setback is preparing you for something. And so let me tell you a little bit about John Grisham's life before he wrote the firm in 1991. So he attended community college because he wanted a baseball career, but then he was benched and check this out, he failed English class in community college. He then transferred to Delta State University as a walk-on player for baseball, but cut from the team. Why? Guess the universe had some other plans for 'em.
(46:33):
How are you going to sell 300 million books if you think you're going to be a baseball player? And it's so important that you actually adopt this mindset that what if this all works out? What if all the nos, what if all the heartbreak, what if all the disappointments is actually the world's way of pushing you in the direction you're meant to go? It's incredible. That's how life works. So he leaves Delta State University after one semester. He changed colleges, not once, not twice, three times before completing his degree, initially studied economics, then he switched to accounting. He earns a bs, a Bachelor's of Science from Mississippi State University in 1977. He was inspired by a Vietnam veteran classmate to pursue law. Now, check this out. When he enrolled in the University of Mississippi School of Law, he intended to be a tax lawyer, but then he shifted to civil litigation.
(47:30):
He graduated in 19 81, 10 years before he wrote this book, and he practiced criminal law for nearly a decade in South Haven, Mississippi. That's the exact kind of law that I practiced for the Legal Aid Society in New York City. When I graduated from law school, he was also in the House of Representatives in Mississippi. And his first novel was called A Time to Kill. And he was inspired to write that novel because he witnessed the harrowing testimony of a 12-year-old in 1984, and that's what inspired him to start writing a time to kill. Now, check this out. Was it an instant success? Nope. He was rejected from 28 publishers before he published a Time To Kill in 1989. He began writing the firm immediately afterwards. And holy cow, this is unbelievable. Here's what John Grisham said In an op-ed piece in the New York Times in 2010, writing was not a childhood dream of mine.
(48:36):
I do not recall longing to write as a student. I wasn't sure how to start. Each year from January through March, I was at the State Capitol in Jackson, wasting serious time. But now I realize I was also listening to great storytellers. I took a lot of notes, not knowing why, but feeling that someday these tales would come in handy. A time to kill didn't sell. I stuck with my day job defending criminals, preparing wills and deeds and contracts. Still something about writing made me spend large hours of my free time at my desk. I had never worked so hard in my life nor imagined that writing could be such an effort. It was way more difficult than my former jobs of laying asphalt. And at times more frustrating than my former job of selling underwear. But it paid off. Eventually I was able to leave the law and quit politics.
(49:31):
Writing is still the most difficult job I've ever had, but it's worth it. So the firm by John Grisham is my final recommendation, not only because it was such an important book for me in 1991 where I felt lost in my career and it opened my eyes to a whole different possibility. And what's interesting is I didn't think, oh, I could write a book. I just thought, oh, I don't have to practice law. And just like John Grisham, when I was little, even though I was a voracious reader, I never thought maybe I'll write a book one day. And so I also love this book because I love his backstory and his backstory, step by step, point by point, prove something that I believe is true, that I fundamentally share with you in any way that I can, which is what we've been talking about today.
(50:27):
Your life is preparing you for something extraordinary that hasn't happened yet. And learning how to wake up every day and focus on the power that's inside of you, buoy yourself up by encouraging yourself and embrace the fact that there is a treasure inside of you. There is something uniquely that is yours, that is meant for you, that is contained within you, within this life that you have. And I do believe that the universe is nudging you along all the time. And you may be listening right now at a moment in your life where you feel completely stalled out, where you feel like you've just faced nothing but rejection. I promise you, if you hold on to the faith that all of this is preparing you for something extraordinary, it just hasn't happened yet. If you can reframe all of the painful things, the heartaches, the rejection into lessons that are trying to teach you something, if you can take every experience that doesn't seem like it adds up, I promise you, I promise you, one of these days off in the future, you are going to wake up and you're going to look back on this moment in your life and you're going to say, oh, I can see exactly why that happened.
(51:51):
I can see exactly what I learned from it. And I can also see that this entire time the universe was nudging me and trying to push me in the right direction all along. Your job and my job in life is simply to wake up and be present and recognize it when it's happening in case nobody else tells you. I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you and I believe in you. The reason why I say I love you is because love is a very simple thing. Love is literally just admiring something in someone and having them in mind. And if I go to the books that I recommended in The Alchemist one is loved because one is loved, no reason is needed for loving. And see, I admire the fact that you're the kind of person that makes the time to listen to something that makes your life better.
(52:48):
I admire that in you. So that's why I say I love you, because I admire that in you and I have you in mind. And I also tell you that you can create a better life because there is no doubt in my mind that you have the capacity and the capability and the treasure inside yourself to do so. And it is my hope that these four books and the Let Them Theory are going to help you achieve it. Alrighty, I'll talk to you in a few days because I'll be waiting to welcome you in to the very next episode, the moment you hit play. I'll see you there and for you on YouTube, thanks for watching all the way to the end. Thanks for sharing this, and this is what you're going to want to watch next.