You are strengthening this muscle inside of you to be in a state of flow, to be present, to be your full expression, to allow happiness and connection in, to let the love in.
Mel Robbins
Featured Clips
Transcript
Mel Robbins (00:00:03):
I said to Amy, how you doing? And she looked at me and she said, everything's great. And I'm just in a bad mood today. You said something about you need to take responsibility for how you're feeling or whatever. Why can't you just be in a bad mood?
Amy (00:00:18):
I think there are two parts to it. Number one, I don't like the feeling of being in a bad mood. Let's unpack that.
Mel Robbins (00:00:26):
Hey, it's Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I'm excited to see what happens here because I was just sitting here talking to my friend Amy. Hey everyone. And Amy's always in a good mood and she looked a little off today. And so I said, are you okay? How are you doing? Yeah.
Amy (00:00:46):
And I said, no, I don't feel like myself today.
Mel Robbins (00:00:50):
Oh my God. You literally, I mean, can you hear? It sounds like she's going to start crying. And so I said, I think that we should talk about this. Yeah,
Amy (00:01:02):
Let's talk about it. Maybe we don't do it with the video.
Mel Robbins (00:01:06):
Oh, that's totally cool. You're cool with us recording this conversation? Absolutely. Okay, great.
Amy (00:01:11):
Let's just not do video.
Mel Robbins (00:01:12):
Okay, go ahead. Alright. Alrighty. I am so excited because I was just sitting here talking with my friend Amy, and we also worked together. I said to Amy, how you doing? And she looked at me and she said like,
Amy (00:01:30):
Everything's great. And I'm just in a bad mood today. I feel like below the line, not so great.
Mel Robbins (00:01:39):
What does below the line mean? What does that mean?
Amy (00:01:41):
Below the line is it just means that you're in a state of mind where you basically can't really take responsibility for how you feel. Almost you. Yeah. It's like a weird thing. I wish I could explain it better and maybe I will, but it's kind of like you're just in kind of blame mode where you're not taking responsibility for your own stuff and you're just kind of like, oh God, my husband. It's so annoying. That sort of thing.
Mel Robbins (00:02:12):
So you feel like it's like a victim.
(00:02:15):
So when you say that you're, here's what I want you guys to know. You're going to get to know Amy as you begin, listen to more and more podcast episodes.
Amy (00:02:23):
She's really screwed up.
Mel Robbins (00:02:24):
No, you are not. Well, I only have friends that are screwed up, screwed up, and that are working on it. It's a privilege mal. Thank you. No, because I don't like perfect people or people who pretend to be. Nobody does. And I also don't like shallow conversations. Right? A hundred percent. And if you go deep with anybody, what you actually hit are the things that people are working on. And so one of the things that, first of all I got to say is that when you said, I don't feel like myself, I'm in a bad mood today. I have never experienced you in a bad mood.
Amy (00:03:01):
I know, I know that sounds bad, but I know I rarely experienced myself in a bad mood. So I don't like this feeling. I'm kind of like, maybe you can hear it in my voice. I feel like I'm going to cry a little bit. You did look like you.
Mel Robbins (00:03:13):
Well, you did look at one point.
Amy (00:03:15):
Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:03:16):
You had these glassy don't like these light, light blue, beautiful eyes, but they started getting a little watery.
Amy (00:03:21):
I know.
Mel Robbins (00:03:21):
As you said, I'm kind of sad and for bad. You said mad though. I thought you said,
Amy (00:03:25):
Didn't I say that
Mel Robbins (00:03:26):
Or bad mood? You said bad. These are all words that rhyme bad, sad, mad. Well, let's turn this into rad. So here's what I wanted to talk to you about.
Amy (00:03:35):
Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:03:36):
I had a therapy call this morning and this tool that my therapist Ann Davin just shared with me. I not only think I know it's going to help you because it really helped me, but before I share that tool with you, I just want to ask you a question. You said something about you need to take responsibility for how you're feeling or whatever. Why can't you just be in a bad mood? I think there are two parts to it.
Amy (00:03:58):
Number one, I don't like the feeling of being in a bad mood. Let's unpack that. And then number two is I don't know how to be in a bad mood and just let it go. Feel the feelings and just let them go. It's like I feel kind of like, I don't know. How do I do this? How do I manage myself through this bad mood? Because I'll tell you what, when you are somebody, when you have this, I don't even know how to say this, but I'll just say it very plainly. When you're normally in a good mood and then you're in a bad mood, people notice. People ask you like, Hey, what's up? And then you kind of feel like, am I the barometer? I'm having a bad day. I just need my time. And then so that external stuff, the people asking you about, it makes you feel kind of like, what is going on? What is happening with me?
Mel Robbins (00:05:03):
Did something happen or did you just wake up in a bad mood?
Amy (00:05:05):
I just woke up in a bad mood.
Mel Robbins (00:05:08):
I blame menopause. Good call. No, I wanted to share something with you. Then you also said, I'm just trying to hook into how do I feel or what the hell is happening.
Amy (00:05:21):
Yeah. I haven't felt like this in a long time.
Mel Robbins (00:05:24):
Okay. That's what I wanted to share with you. So I have just spent the last 14 days on the road,
(00:05:33):
And normally being on the road is a huge fricking chafe. And the past 14 days has been the exact opposite of that. We went to Montreal and everything was smooth sailing. The speech was great. We had a great dinner when we got there. And then I got a text from my friend Jay Shetty, and he's like, Hey Mel, are you in Montreal? And I'm like, yeah, I'm at the Four Seasons. And he is like, I'm here too, is six above me. So I go up, we hang out, I then fly to Boston. I see my daughter, I see some friends. I then fly to a family wedding in Montana. I see Chris. We have this incredible time. It was an amazing, just imagine a cool Montana wedding. And as we're driving up here from New York City, it is the most spectacular, spectacular fall I have ever seen in my entire life in New England.
Amy (00:06:32):
I agree.
Mel Robbins (00:06:32):
And I am soaking it in, not to mention, if we want to make the image perfectly, I have a brand new baby puppy in your lap. In my lap. And I am just soaking it in. And then I get a text and I learn that we have just surpassed a half a million downloads in one week flat on our too much. It is Amy's last two to three months pure perfection. Oh yeah, yeah. Just like actual magic people, just everything. It is driving up whatever third avenue in New York City or Lexington or whatever, and every light turns green and you are just catching it
Amy (00:07:21):
And catching it. And you're on your way to a massage appointment.
Mel Robbins (00:07:23):
Oh, that would be amazing.
Amy (00:07:24):
Right? It's going to end
Mel Robbins (00:07:26):
Green. Yeah, totally. So we pull in to the house. Yeah. I get out of the car, my husband Chris comes out of the house...
Mel Robbins (00:07:38):
Beautiful house that we've been building, and the man is wearing a red flannel shirt. Yes. He looks very Vermont handsome. He had clogs on, he had clogs with wool socks on. Wool socks. Yep. Yes. Yep. He was just looking amazing.
Amy (00:07:55):
Yes.
Mel Robbins (00:07:56):
The colors are exploding. I see two women that I adore that I love. I see Amy, who you're listening to. I see Jesse.
Amy (00:08:05):
Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:08:06):
It's just perfection. And as I walk into this house and I see you guys, I feel a massive wave of anxiety.
Amy (00:08:22):
Maybe you felt my anxiety.
Mel Robbins (00:08:24):
I don't, it wasn't yours. It was mine. You felt some okay. It wasn't yours. It was mine. And I felt myself literally leaving my body. Oh my gosh. I put my hand on my heart and I used the tools from the episode that we did with Dr. Kennedy about healing anxiety. And I started saying, okay, that's the alarm of little Mel. And what is little Mel trying to tell me right now? This is a very familiar feeling, just like I bet kind of feeling either sad
(00:09:07):
Or low energy or angry or whatever it might be that you're feeling is somewhere deep down, a very familiar feeling. And so I tell myself, okay, Mel, you're okay right now. I love you. It's okay. I know you all of a sudden feel sad for some reason. And I did. I felt like what I would describe as I felt this heaviness, all of a sudden I felt this sadness. And the second you feel, or for me, what I learned from Dr. Kennedy in that episode is the second that you feel that sort of negative sensation in your body. I could feel myself doing exactly what Dr. Kennedy taught us in episode four, which is I could feel myself going up into my brain and saying, what's wrong with me? I don't feel like myself. Why do I feel like this? And then I start scanning around me and I go, oh, it's because I'm here and our family is texting about this puppy. He's just arrived...
Mel Robbins (00:10:07):
And our girls are going, I wish I were there. I wish you were there. And it makes me sad that they can't be here because they can't drive from LA right now. And they've got a job in Boston right now. And I felt this deep sadness. And I'm like, but I don't think that's what it is. So fast forward. And lo and behold, it wasn't a massage appointment that was waiting for me when those green lights on Third Avenue kept hitting. I had a therapy call in place for today. And so when I get on with my just profoundly gifted therapist,
Amy (00:10:41):
I'm glad you go to therapy.
Mel Robbins (00:10:42):
Oh my God. And Davin, you are my saving grace.
Amy (00:10:46):
I love this woman. I'm glad mine too. And you would know this, but it's a two for one. When you talk to Mel, I get the goods too.
Mel Robbins (00:10:54):
I always unpack my therapy sessions with you or with Chris.
Amy (00:10:55):
It's really good.
Mel Robbins (00:10:58):
Yeah,
Amy (00:10:59):
She is. She's unbelievable. Unbelievable.
Mel Robbins (00:11:01):
So I say to her, I explain this whole delicious Disney scene, just like your life has been this disneyesque thing for the last two months of everything is working even in the ups and downs, it's working.
Amy (00:11:15):
Right?
Mel Robbins (00:11:18):
I say to her, after describing these past 14 amazing days, she had me close my eyes and she asked me, where on my body was I feeling this thing? And I said, it was for me, it was almost like a brass corset that you would expect somebody to wear on House of Dragons around my lower ribs. Where do you feel like the heaviness and the sadness?
Amy (00:11:47):
The upper chest, maybe even into the neck, the back of my neck, the tightness there.
Mel Robbins (00:11:53):
So she told me to close my eyes once I had that kind of, what is it made of? What is the shape and what is your thing made of when you feel that sadness?
Amy (00:12:05):
It's kind of like an oil slick.
Mel Robbins (00:12:07):
Whoa, really? It's viscous like that. I
Amy (00:12:11):
It is. And yeah, and viscous. Wow.
Mel Robbins (00:12:17):
Wow. So she told me to kind of imagine that thing floating away from my body so I could see it in space. And then she told me, I want you to imagine for me it was this copper corset thing. I want you to imagine that it's now taking the shape of you at a younger age. Do you have an age in mind?
Amy (00:12:52):
I'm always eight.
Mel Robbins (00:12:54):
Okay.
Amy (00:12:54):
It's always my age. So yes.
Mel Robbins (00:12:56):
Okay. I had one too. It was high school. Okay. And then all of a sudden, and I had a very specific memory of me in high school, and the memory is one of the worst things that ever happened to me.
Amy (00:13:13):
Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:13:14):
I'm almost embarrassed to tell you that.
Amy (00:13:16):
Oh gosh. Don't be, what was it?
Mel Robbins (00:13:20):
Senior year of high school, our English teacher decided it'd be really awesome if we read Dante's, what is it? Dante's Inferno.
Amy (00:13:27):
Inferno.
Mel Robbins (00:13:28):
And then as a wonderful exercise of learning how to write in that cantos or whatever the heck it's called, that we would each be, hear this assignment sounds dorky right away. But yeah, we had to write one in that cantos what format, poem thing, sending someone else in the class to hell.
Amy (00:13:47):
Wow.
Mel Robbins (00:13:48):
And then
Amy (00:13:50):
what the fuck kind of high school then
Mel Robbins (00:13:53):
public high school. And then
Amy (00:13:56):
The teacher left immediately after that year was done.
Mel Robbins (00:13:59):
And then it gets worse after turning it in. Yeah. What? You read them out loud? Of course. God damnit, the first six or seven were about me. No. Yes. And if I'm being honest, I was an asshole in high school. I was a complete, insecure, anxiety ridden, pretentious, condescending, insecure. I had not processed a single bit of my trauma. I had not even remember that I had been molested. That's how just miserable I was. And how raging the anxiety, I don't blame everybody. I would've picked Mel Robbins, well, Mel Schneeberger,
Amy (00:14:43):
But Mel Schneeberger insecure in that seat. You must have dealt with that in the most horrific way. You couldn't process that. I sat there, Amy,
Mel Robbins (00:14:55):
And said, I'm not going to cry. I'm not going to cry. I am not going to cry. I am not going to cry. I'm not going to try. And then what happened? I could feel the tears coming and I got up and left the classroom and left the school and did not go back to school for a couple days.
Amy (00:15:09):
That is unbelievable.
Mel Robbins (00:15:13):
And on one hand I go, well, you fucking deserved it. You were a complete bitch. Seriously. And on the other hand, I knew how much I was struggling. I knew how much I hated myself. I knew how insecure I was. And so that was the memory that came to mind because I immediately felt that pain of sitting there in that moment and my rib cage tightening like the armor going up.
(00:15:43):
And so I then said, but wait a minute. Here's what I'm realizing. When my anxiety started to truly spiral, and I would say things really started spinning out of control for me, junior year of high school every fall, despite the fact that it was my favorite season was the most acute...
Mel Robbins (00:16:08):
Moment for me in my anxiety. And every fall, junior and senior year of high school, every fall of Dartmouth, the fall I spent overseas, horrible. The three falls I spent law school, horrible. And then I met Chris the first year I lived in New York at the end of the fall season. And I said to her, I said, I think there is a connection with this feeling and the season of fall and
Amy (00:16:49):
Why? What do you think that's all about?
Mel Robbins (00:16:51):
Well, she said, well, it makes sense because here you are at a moment in your development where you're basically, I think the word is individuating in.
Amy (00:16:58):
Yes. Is that the right word? I mean, I don't know if it's individuating, but yeah, you're becoming your own self and you're realizing your shit and taking
Mel Robbins (00:17:08):
Responsibility
Amy (00:17:08):
For it.
Mel Robbins (00:17:09):
Yes. And you're not diagnosed with anxiety yet. And you are coping with alcohol. And by attaching yourself in a very suffocating meaning, Mel, you're suffocating him relationship. And I even said to her, I didn't really engage in classes either. No. I literally was checked out for most of my college years.
Amy (00:17:35):
I relate to that so much. And everybody says, college is this amazing time. When you have trauma in your past, you can barely remember it.
Mel Robbins (00:17:44):
You're
Amy (00:17:45):
Like, I hope I did. Okay. I have report cards that are in my dresser in my parents' house that have never been opened. Oh my God. I was just like, I hope I did okay. I couldn't even look at them. Oh my God, yes. You're in college and you're having a hard time.
Mel Robbins (00:18:02):
And so I then kept going and she said, and there's two things going on. You process seasons and seasonal changes both through the limbic brain and through circadian rhythm. And so you're processing things from a psychological and a emotional and chemical and physiological level. And as the days get shorter and as night starts to go, and as this huge season of change happens,
Amy (00:18:31):
And the smell too, like the smell of fall and all
Mel Robbins (00:18:34):
The triggers of fall, they're huge. And she said that this is triggering all your stored memories of all the very difficult transitions that you went through as a young adult in fall marked by your self hatred, marked by your disassociation.
(00:18:55):
So it gets even cooler and better. So I'm now like, oh my God, I have to move from Vermont. I can't live in the mountains. I can't list around it by the fall. This place is all pumpkin lattes and cornstalks and farms and the leaves turning and leaf beavers get the fuck out of here. And then she said, and your primary symptom when you felt injured or scared or alone or sad, is to disassociate and disconnect. And then she says, and I want you to consider that you have done two years of intense therapy. You've done two years intense, two years of intentional changes in your business, in where you live, in your marriage, in your own psychology, your own nervous system. And she said, you are strengthening this muscle inside of you to be in a state of flow, to be present, to be your full expression, to allow happiness and connection in to let the love in. And you just, in the past 14 days, Mel, you just were the purest expression of your highest self. And you have figured out through what you do, whether it's talking to people that you bump into that are fans that are impacted by your work as you're eating dinner or you're walking down the street, that is a pure expression of the light inside you.
(00:20:37):
If you're standing on a stage, if you're seeing friends who are magically like Jay was six stories above, if you're allowing people to celebrate you if you're creating, because I said to her, I have never felt more creatively energized. She said, of course not, because you're letting love in and because you are letting people in and because you are working so hard on your own healing, you're able to receive. But let me tell you, and this is where she flipped it on me,
Amy (00:21:01):
Oh God.
Mel Robbins (00:21:02):
And where I think that there is a connection for you, this is where Anne flipped the pancake and I wasn't ready yet. There's those pieces that get left on the pan. Yes. She goes, you have not done that work yet completely in your private life. So when you're with friends, when you are creating something, when you are out and about and in the world, and you are channeling all of who you are into service and making a difference through the work that you do and how you show up for other people, she said, we have been working in therapy and you being able to do that same thing for yourself as an individual when you're in private moments.
(00:21:55):
And so she said, it's not surprising that since you are plugged into this part of you that can channel magic and the divine and flow states and quantum, and you are your highest level of service and you're driving up to Vermont and you're highly connected to
Mel Robbins (00:22:17):
All these beautiful colors and you're in a state of awe and it's just incredible. And then you walk into this beautiful house and all there is to do is for you to just be that injured part of you, that kid that was sitting in that seat in high school being sent to hell, that kid that felt lonely or sad or unseen, that part of you looks for a place to plug in. And she said, and what you always did is you disassociated.
(00:22:56):
And that's all that's happened. And she also then said the fact that you recognized it, the fact that you recognized that your mind started racing for answers. So of course you would go, well, my daughters aren't here. That's why I'm said that's why. That's not why I feel this. I feel this because my body, and I learned this from Dr. Becky, you are an adult living in the body that you were born in fashioned by the experiences that your mind doesn't have a story to tell about. And so I still have that body of feeling sad and feeling lonely. And the only thing that my body does in those moments is it disassociates. And so the opportunity for me in those moments is to notice it, to not try to change it. Decided that tonight, I said to Chris, all I want to do is lay on the couch with you and watch a movie I used to do when I was a kid. Just want to watch a movie. Sounds awesome. So Amy, what are you getting from this
Amy (00:24:03):
Immediately when you did that exercise with, where do you feel your shit? I don't know. What's that exercise called?
Mel Robbins (00:24:11):
Where do you feel you close your eyes and where do you feel the pressure or the tension or the sadness? And tell everybody what you said again and I'll walk you through it.
Amy (00:24:20):
My upper chest and my neck area is where I felt it.
Mel Robbins (00:24:26):
And do you feel it now?
Amy (00:24:30):
It's still there, but it's significantly less.
Mel Robbins (00:24:34):
And can you visualize that oily, viscous thing floating out in front of you?
Amy (00:24:41):
Yeah. I actually find it easier to take a step back from it. But yeah, same thing.
Mel Robbins (00:24:47):
And when you turn it into yourself at any age, what is it?
Amy (00:24:52):
Ugh. I immediately feel so bad for that kid. I just feel so bad for that kid. And what comes up for me is just being left out, not being the favorite, not ever being able to be the favorite.
Mel Robbins (00:25:22):
Did this happen, you listened to the episode on narcissism by any chance? I
Amy (00:25:26):
Happen
Mel Robbins (00:25:27):
To do that. I happen to do that, yes. And were you the scapegoat of your
Amy (00:25:32):
Family? I definitely was not the golden child. My brother was the golden child. And then of course, my brother died. My brother had cancer for two years. He died at the age of 12 and I was 10. And when the golden child is six feet under, they're even more golden than you can't compete with somebody who isn't even here. He was just so fantastic. And I mean that funny and not funny. He really was fantastic. And also he was too fantastic for me. So I listened to the narcissist episode and I got so much from it, even though I have studied that for a really long time. Still, it comes up in layers. You're ready to hear one part, and then you hear it a few months or a few years later and you're like, oh my God, I'm hearing this part. And you can get stronger and stronger in it. And that means you have to understand more and more of it too. So yeah, that was really helpful. And also I'm doing work on that part.
Mel Robbins (00:26:40):
What triggered you today? What do you think? Is it, because for me, it made a lot of sense for me when she said, you have been really dialed in a very healed way and feeling very empowered, and at some point you're going to feel injured again. And it was the fall and it was the, oh, she used this analogy. She said, it's like you've been riding a roller coaster. That was awesome. And then you get off that roller coaster and you feel shaky.
Amy (00:27:12):
Yeah, that's really good. You should just record your therapy sessions then. We don't have to talk about
Mel Robbins (00:27:17):
I have asked Ann. She said she is thinking about it.
Amy (00:27:20):
Okay, good.
Mel Robbins (00:27:21):
I have asked her if she would be willing to come on once a month and I would do therapy with her.
Amy (00:27:27):
She's so smart.
Mel Robbins (00:27:28):
Or anybody,
Amy (00:27:29):
That idea of the rollercoaster. Rollercoaster and what other thought I had too, which was like, I hope I don't have this thought, but I think I have this thought, which is the other shoe always has to drop. It's so great. What are you going to make that's going to be shitty now because it just has to be shitty. I don't think I'm that person, but I was like, oh shit. Am I that person that's now making things bad because I can't cope with things that are really fucking awesome? I won't be able to deal with it. So I have to kind of
Mel Robbins (00:28:12):
Make things bad. And when there's nothing bad, this is what I am learning about myself, is that this is such a coping mechanism to lower your expectations or to disassociate or to feel lonely or alone. The story that you told yourself as a kid, even though yours was true, by the way that did happen,
Amy (00:28:30):
It's true. And I don't need to believe it for myself now
Mel Robbins (00:28:35):
As
Amy (00:28:35):
An adult, I can let that go. But I think there's a lot of emotion in letting that go and just allowing that to come up is important and painful. Sometimes it's painful.
Mel Robbins (00:28:49):
It is. The more that I'm aware of these moments where I disassociate or the injured part of me appears from childhood, my natural instinct is to be like, well, let's just have a drink or let's just laugh this away, or let's just ignore the sensation and get busy. Of course. And I'm trying so hard to get curious instead to go, oh, there it is. Don't start making up a story. Say it out loud to yourself. Oh, I'm actually feeling really sad
Amy (00:29:21):
Out loud. You have to say it. That
Mel Robbins (00:29:23):
Is, well, I am. I'm like, because otherwise I think about it.
Amy (00:29:25):
Right? And we know the thinking is not what we need to be doing right now
Mel Robbins (00:29:31):
In
Amy (00:29:31):
Those moments. Definitely not. And then I turned to Chris. I was going to say, I hope you do. Yeah. So what do you say to Chris?
Mel Robbins (00:29:37):
Well, first I put my hand on my heart because I know now from Dr. Kennedy, Russell Kennedy, on the heal your anxiety stuff that you have to first reassure yourself. You have to give yourself love in that moment. You have to affirm your okayness. You got to let your own love in. And so I did that and it definitely quieted the alarm, but I really wanted more because I don't like to feel this way.
Amy (00:30:02):
I know.
Mel Robbins (00:30:03):
And so I just asked Chris if he would give me a hug. And I said to him, I said, I feel anxious. I don't know why. I don't know. I don't want to feel this way. And so I just hugged him in that...
Mel Robbins (00:30:03):
Great soft red flannel shirt, Faherty. If you ever want to sponsor this podcast, let me know because my husband and son live in the legend plaid shirts. Great hugging shirts, by the way. And it was a nice long hug. It let the alarm go away. But I still felt that sort of outof body experience. It was talking to my therapist, Anne Davin, and her going, well, there are two parts of you and there's two parts of all of us. There's two parts of Amy, there's two parts of you. There's the part of you that is, I'm just going to use the word divine, that you have the ability to tap into this flow state. You have magic to offer the world. It's those moments where you're lost in laughter or wonder or awe or creativity where things feel effortless, where you feel connected to something bigger. And I am working my ass off to figure out how to stay in that space more
(00:31:29):
And not spend so much time in the other part of us, which is the injured part, the part of us from childhood that had to cope with whatever was happening to you as a young kid,
(00:31:46):
Most of which I'm learning more and more as we interview experts on this podcast and talk to people about their lived experiences that happened to you before you were even five, which means the only story you have about it is the story. Adults have told you about it if you even have a story about it, but your body has a memory of it. And so these deep emotions, like the sadness that you're feeling or feeling off or not feeling like yourself, I think the more work you do on yourself, the more anytime you don't feel like yourself is ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, the injured, you are drifting into the injured. You just sit with it.
Amy (00:32:33):
Yeah. They want you there and they need you there. And that's where you need to be. And you and I are both. I don't want to be here. Oh, I hate it. It's not fun.
Mel Robbins (00:32:42):
I'm like, can this bitch just go back to elementary school? So over this feeling,
Amy (00:32:46):
If you get an au pair for your injured self and just have somebody else take care of it, I don't want to do it. It is painful.
Mel Robbins (00:32:54):
Well, the other thing that Anne said to me that was so interesting, and I am sure people have said this to me a million times before, but today I got it.
Amy (00:33:01):
Oh, I love that.
Mel Robbins (00:33:02):
You ready?
Amy (00:33:02):
Tell. Yeah, because I'll probably get it too. Now, I hope
Mel Robbins (00:33:07):
She said that that injured part of you is so familiar with whatever it was that you did as a kid to protect yourself from getting hurt. And an example of that would be if your parents were not that affectionate to begin with, you would start to learn, why on earth would I put myself out there? Yeah. I'll just pull back. Because not expecting it, not asking for it is a way to protect myself.
Amy (00:33:44):
It's better than being
Mel Robbins (00:33:44):
Rejected from the rejection that I feel or staying quiet so that you don't get in the middle of the fight or keeping the peace or all the things that you did to gain the approval and love and the okayness that we all needed as kids, that the injured part of you is so used to. For me, it is leaving my body and then getting stuck in my head thinking all kinds of terrible things.
Amy (00:34:12):
Right.
Mel Robbins (00:34:14):
For you, what is it?
Amy (00:34:18):
Shame and sadness.
Mel Robbins (00:34:22):
What she said to me was this. She said that injured part of you, whenever you feel the normal emotion of shame and sadness, right?
Amy (00:34:29):
Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:34:30):
It is so used to reaching for the thing you did as a kid, which was for me, leave my body and go up my head and start to worry. And given the fact that I am in the season of the Mac daddy...
Mel Robbins (00:34:48):
Unbelievable transition that involves not only the color but the weather. And very soon we're going to have my least favorite day of the year, which is the day we turn the clocks back.
Amy (00:35:00):
Oh Lord.
Mel Robbins (00:35:01):
And it becomes dark at three o'clock in the afternoon, and I start to feel like winter is coming and it's Game of Thrones final episode. Oh my God. Bill cue, the seasonal depression, light ads. Oh Lord. And I just no wonder I'm reaching for the uhoh, but I now have tools to not be scared of it and to be able to go, oh, that's that part of me that I call the injured self. So what does Anne say? Is she like, we have to break this habit. No, she's literally, nobody can ever live. Unfortunately, there's a lot of us that live in the injured self all day long.
Amy (00:35:45):
Yeah,
Mel Robbins (00:35:45):
I did for decades. When you start to become aware and you start to work on your own healing.
Amy (00:35:50):
Yeah. The pain body, that's what Ecker totally calls the pain body. You're just constantly in your own pain all day long. You're creating your own misery. Yeah. Campaign of misery. Yeah, campaign of misery. Okay.
Mel Robbins (00:36:02):
Yeah, go ahead. And I'm working on living more and more in the other place, which is getting out of my head and not reacting with such intensity to the feelings of my body and forcing myself when those moments happen, to notice the feeling to say something about it, to reach for a hug, to give myself a hug and the reassurance to remind myself that the feeling will pass. And according to research, if you don't resist it or grip it passes typically in about 90 seconds.
Amy (00:36:46):
Yeah, thank God.
Mel Robbins (00:36:48):
But knowing that there's two parts of me, the old little me that did the best that she could, that is the injured part and the adult me that is seeking a different experience from life. I want to own what I experience. I want to be in charge of it. I want to feel more of those moments of being in the flow and being connected to the divine and being present in the moment and being out of my fricking head and in my work or in my family or in the beauty that is southern Vermont or being, I was in that state as we pulled in and I saw you two up here, and I'm waving from the car sunroof like, oh my God, they're my friends. I'm so excited to see my friends. And then we get out and I'm like, oh my God, with right. It fell apart.
Amy (00:37:39):
It just all went downhill
Mel Robbins (00:37:41):
Because I'm in the middle of a big transition. I'm moving from this 14 day amazing high on a rollercoaster that was incredible to refinding my balance as I step into, again, a new home and a totally different energy,
Amy (00:38:04):
Or maybe just a different 14 days, that's going to be great too. But it's like you got to get off that rollercoaster. You can't stay on it the whole
Mel Robbins (00:38:11):
Time. And so you want to know, here's what I'm going to leave you with.
Amy (00:38:13):
Okay.
Mel Robbins (00:38:16):
The injured self is that shaky feeling and calls it the rattle. Oh God. Yeah. That's still there from childhood will probably always be there from childhood going, Hey, remember me? There's still a part of me that's sad. There's still a part of me that's scared. And it's that period of time after you get off the rollercoaster that's divine, where you feel shaky until you find your footing again. And that's all that it is. And so the good news for both of us is that you've been flying for two months, and when you say, I don't feel like myself, what's fucking awesome is you now have an experience of yourself as being a half B golden child. You are on this team. That's how we all see you.
Amy (00:39:13):
Sounds like Amy. Yeah. Everybody
Mel Robbins (00:39:15):
Fucking favorite.
Amy (00:39:17):
No, I appreciate that. Now, literally from front to back on this conversation, now I feel like, oh, I can just appreciate how I feel. Oh, I was just in a bad mood. I feel it. I don't know exactly how to say it. I feel better and I feel like I can handle the bad mood a little bit more. Maybe it's the oil slick that's left, whatever. Or maybe it's just kind of talking it out or hearing how you are dealing with it. I do feel better and I can appreciate the low part of the rollercoaster. And then you just kind of go back up again. But sometimes when you're at that low, you're looking around for, did this thing stop? Am I ever going to go back up again?
Mel Robbins (00:40:13):
This is hard. I don't want to be here. The visual that helps me is this, that I don't visualize the low of the roller coaster, if that helps you do it. I visualize getting out of it...
Mel Robbins (00:40:30):
And I'm on that platform and I'm like, whoa, whoa. And I'm like shaky because I am going from this really high, amazing state into kind of my day-to-day life. And that's always where the injured person shows up.
Amy (00:40:50):
Yeah. Wow. So what did you get when you felt that brass corset and you did that exercise with Anne and you let it go? What
Mel Robbins (00:41:01):
Happened? Great question. Anne did a second exercise with me. I'll walk you through it next. Okay. So the second exercise that Anne did with me was this. She said, okay, in the past 14 days, I want you to come up with a very specific memory that really is magical. You are present in the moment you felt connected, you were happy. And just describe a moment like that. And so I described this moment where on Friday night of parents' weekend, Kendall's music friends, they're all in the pop music program. They just threw this impromptu thing where kids were doing an open mic night on someone's porch. And so here we are in a random neighborhood in downtown la, so freaking awesome. And there was this awesome kid just banging it out on the kind of keyboard, and he was singing these great songs. And there were, I don't know, 17 kids sitting there and a couple of parents standing around. And all of a sudden Kendall rolls up with her music friends as this awesome kid's playing, and she's got her guitar and the other guy's got a drum thing and another one's got a keyboard and somebody else has another guitar. And they were like the big kids coming in. And
(00:42:36):
This is just my vibe, right? It's like as a parent, and you got to understand, she's been in this music program for four years, and because of Covid, I've been able to see her perform live once. That's it. And so she has been in this program for four years working with these Grammy award-winning artists, the greats of the greats, getting all of this training, music industry stuff has just been unbelievable. I've not seen what's going on. So you're about to
Amy (00:43:03):
See it go down.
Mel Robbins (00:43:05):
And this is just a casual thing in somebody's front porch, right?
Amy (00:43:08):
Yeah. Right.
Mel Robbins (00:43:09):
Peeling paint on the front porch, bricks falling off and kind of a window up top with duct tape holding it together. And she gets on that porch and first things first, she pulls out a guitar and I'm like, oh my God, she's playing guitar in public. Who is this child? And she starts playing a cover of Ariana Grande. Tell me, we'll play a little bit in this thing.
Mel Robbins (00:43:46):
It is like a fricking angel singing. And as she was taking the porch and they're setting up stuff, oh, about 25 other people's rolling in and they're like, Hey, I hear Kendall singing. Oh my gosh. So all of a sudden, all these people start showing up. Oh my gosh, that's so cool. And as she starts to sing, all these phones go up. Oh my gosh. And there's this full moon rising above the teeny little rundown college student house next door. And her voice was so insane. She was so in her element. I just to witness somebody in a state like that, just given their gift completely connected to the divine that I think is inside all of us. So I just stood, I was just so in awe of who she's become and that experience of watching her share this gift and watching the result of years and years and years of work, not only on singing and music, but also on her confidence and figuring out who she is. And so Anne said, great, close your eyes. Where's that in your body? And so I told her it was kind of like between my belly button and my, the hell is it called pelvis?
(00:45:25):
And she said, great. I want you to feel the full moon on you. I want you to hear your daughter's incredible voice. And as she told me to do that, and I realized the song I'm visualizing is, if you want to keep me, you got to love me harder. Which is now I'm realizing a message that if you want to keep yourself in that divine state, you got to love yourself a little harder. And so for you in the last two months,
Amy (00:46:16):
Yeah, I was doing that. As you were saying that about Kendall, I lately have wanted to have what they call peak experiences with my kids. Oh, I love that. I think we've talked about this before where I just really want to experience awe, pure awe and joy and just being in the moment with my kids, and I'm saying once a month, that's it. Let's just start there. So I had this really incredible time with my youngest daughter, Jane, this weekend. We were so in the moment, you know what we were doing? What were you doing errands. We were running errands. I love that. And what do we have to do? I told her all the things we had to do, and she wrote 'em all down. And I was like, you're in charge. You're in charge of the time. We have to get home at noon.
(00:47:14):
We're leaving at 10. You're in charge. Just tell me what we need to do. I know the thing. I know what to do when we get to the store, but you tell me what to do. How about we play that game? She loves playing games. And we used to do this when she was little, but I don't, it just kind of came up. We went to the paint store, we went to TJ Maxx. Of course, we went to Price Chopper. We went to, where else did we go, like the bookstore and the jewelry store and pick up this and do that. And Mom, you have two minutes and dad's going to be waiting for us. Do you want me to call Dad? We're going to be a little late if you keep talking to this lady, dah, dah, dah. Does she want a job? I know. She was so good.
(00:47:50):
And I looked at her after the last stop and I said, I'm having a lot of fun right now. And she was like, I'm too. This is so much fun. We used to do this when she was in nursery school and her two older sisters were out, and she's like, mom, this is just so much fun. And she said, but we're just doing errands. And I was like, you know what? It's allowed. I was like, just Jane, just humor me. Would you call this a peak experience with me? And she was like, you know what, mom? I would, this is really, really great. So it was really great. It was really great that I didn't have to plan it. It just was spontaneous. We found each other, my divine, as you say, found hers, and we just together made this really awesome thing. So when you are going through that thing with Kendall and your memory of her and putting yourself back in that moment, I went to that moment with my, oh,
Mel Robbins (00:48:47):
That's beautiful.
Amy (00:48:47):
It's my Jane. Yeah,
Mel Robbins (00:48:48):
That's beautiful. Because what I also realize in those moments is that we are allowing ourselves to receive.
Amy (00:48:58):
Oh yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:48:59):
There is that reciprocal nature of your giving love, and you're giving positive energy and you are open and receiving it back.
Amy (00:49:08):
And it is pure flow. Yes. It is literally a peak state, a state of flow, because it wasn't hard for Jane to be Jane, and it wasn't hard for me to be me. And it is definitely not hard for Kendall to be Kendall and you to be you, and we're all just feeding each other and feeling fucking awesome and getting errands
Mel Robbins (00:49:31):
Done at the same time for me in my
Amy (00:49:32):
Case. Totally.
Mel Robbins (00:49:33):
So it is this incredible thing. And so what Anne told me to do is to now close your eyes and locate where is that experience in your body now? Really allow yourself to feel it. You leaning over and looking at her and going, now, was that a big experience for you? Yeah. Now go back up to your neck where that viscous crap was, and kind of zero to 10, has it gone down?
Amy (00:50:05):
Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:50:06):
Great. Now go back to wherever and where in your body is that?
Amy (00:50:11):
Right? In my solar plexus. Right above my belly button. In between my belly button and my ribs.
Mel Robbins (00:50:18):
Amazing. And allow yourself, is this a peak experience? Wow. Yeah. Right. Great. Yeah. Now what Anne told me is happening, wait till you hear this, is that you could just do this little exercise of find moments where you're freely receiving and giving love, where you're in deep connection, either with nature, a new puppy, something you're working on where you're just in that flow state and the resistance isn't there. Or some moment for yourself. Maybe you're in Shavasana after a class. Maybe you have just had an incredible moment with your lover. Something where you have allowed this sort of divine peak connection to self or something bigger or another human being to love to come in,
(00:51:07):
Find it in your body, and allow yourself to feel it and fire it up. Because what she said to me is that the injured self and all those stored experiences that feel like armor for me or viscous oil for you, those are encoded in your amygdala. And a different part of the brain needs its circuitry fired up that stores these experiences of being in deep connection and in a state of flow. And so when you go back and forth between the two and you access that memory for the rest of my life, I can access that memory of Kendall. You can access that moment of Jane, you can then close your eyes, feel it in your body, and fire up a different part of your brain,
(00:52:01):
Which allows you to start to create the circuitry and the muscle mentally tied to the positive emotion. So there's a couple things that I just want to make sure that everybody's tracking with us, because this started as what we're probably going to start to call an on the fly episode. And I knew that this was going to be an incredible conversation because Amy is often not in a down mood. Not at all.
(00:52:31):
And I have just come from a therapy call where I had this life-changing revelation, and I've probably heard these things over and over. Anne's probably said them to me on every therapy call for two years. But for some reason today, it really clicked this idea that there's the divine you and the injured self from childhood. And that the more that, and most of us live in that injured self, and that's why we say we're stuck and we're on autopilot and we're sad, and again, full of excuses and we're keeping the same pattern. Groundhog dig. Yeah. And that there's something else available that you can change. You can rewire your brain, and when you start to notice yourself checking out or feeling said not feeling like yourself, that can be a good sign because it means you've actually experienced something else than the sadness or the anxiety or those other things.
Amy (00:53:29):
And I feel that now, and I feel the appreciation for that sadness coming up because it's in me. It's a part of me, and it's like, that's okay to come up and I feel an appreciation for how I normally am. I've grown to really love that person and really want to be there more often than not. But it doesn't mean that I can't be sad every once in a while. Of course, that's cool too. Yeah. Yeah. I got a lot out of this conversation. Oh, I do too. I feel a lot better now. I do feel a lot better. I have a headache, which means that's a good sign for me.
Mel Robbins (00:54:08):
Usually. I kind of do too. I've noticed. I feel almost like I feel after taking a standardized test, you know where you have that brain?
Amy (00:54:20):
Yeah. Kind of feel like I need a diet Coke. Right. I'm with you. I'll have an athletic brew and we'll call it a sponsored episode,
Mel Robbins (00:54:28):
Red Heart. Okay. Speaking. Okay. If that's not divine. Oh Lord. Oh my God. Oh my God. Kendall, I'm sitting here with Amy and I was just telling this story about you being on the porch singing that song and how it felt like I was experiencing the divine.
Amy (00:54:49):
It sounds awesome, Kendall. It just sounds like such a wonderful time. And your mom played us a video and we got the chills.
Kendall Robbins (00:54:58):
Aw, thank you so much for saying something.
Amy (00:55:01):
Oh my gosh. Thank you.
Kendall Robbins (00:55:05):
Mom. I'm calling you because I'm at the boot store.
Mel Robbins (00:55:09):
Oh, okay
Kendall Robbins (00:55:10):
I sent you a photo of a pair of boots that I really like. I wanted you to look at them.
Mel Robbins (00:55:14):
Okay. Give me five minutes and I'll call you back.
Kendall Robbins (00:55:18):
Okay, great. I sent you a photo of them and the price too, but I just wanted to see what you thought first.
Mel Robbins (00:55:26):
Okay. You can have the boots. You gave me a religious experience on the porch the other day.
Kendall Robbins (00:55:32):
You didn't tell me it was religious the day after. You now just realizing it was
Mel Robbins (00:55:36):
Yeah. Yeah. Basically you have become that image of you. You know how...
Mel Robbins (00:55:42):
In therapy, whenever my therapist is like, okay, what's an image of protection for you? What do I say?
Kendall Robbins (00:55:50):
Buck beak.
Mel Robbins (00:55:52):
She say it again. Tell everybody what it is.
Kendall Robbins (00:55:56):
Buck beak. It's the magical creature from Harry Potter that haggard tames, and then they pretend to kill, but they don't actually kill.
Mel Robbins (00:56:04):
And now whenever she tells me to channel the divine and like a flow state, Kendall and the infinite,
Kendall Robbins (00:56:11):
So I'm now the new buck beak.
Mel Robbins (00:56:13):
No buck beak is for protection. You can't protect me. That's not going to happen.
Kendall Robbins (00:56:17):
I was going to say that's a little,
Amy (00:56:18):
Yeah. I mean, you're good at guitar and singing.
Mel Robbins (00:56:20):
Yeah, you can sing, but
Amy (00:56:22):
Not, let's be honest,
Kendall Robbins (00:56:23):
I'm no bugsy,
Mel Robbins (00:56:24):
But I am going to experience that. I'm going to come back to that moment all the time. That moment of standing there in that front yard under a full moon watching people stop their cars and your friends gather and phones go up and you channeling something divine in you, you sharing your gift with the world.
Kendall Robbins (00:56:50):
I appreciate that.
Mel Robbins (00:56:52):
Alright, I'm going to hang up. I want to finish this podcast that we're taping.
Kendall Robbins (00:56:56):
I love you guys. Thanks for calling and saying that love.
Mel Robbins (00:56:58):
I love you.
Kendall Robbins (00:56:59):
Okay. I love you too.
Mel Robbins (00:57:00):
Bye. Bye. Bye. Okay. And now we go from the divine to cowboy boots. Can you buy me cowboy boots?
Amy (00:57:06):
Right? Right back into real life.
Mel Robbins (00:57:08):
See, that's getting off the roller coaster.
Amy (00:57:10):
Yeah. Right. Feeling a little shaky. I got a headache. I need a diet Coke and a cotton candy. Oh, they're really cute. The boots. Yeah.
Mel Robbins (00:57:21):
They look like they have a phoenix on them. Come on, look at this. I have a closeup of the design of the fucking boots. It is buck beak.
Amy (00:57:33):
Oh my God.
Mel Robbins (00:57:36):
What in the hell is happening? I'm going to tell you what's happening. Everybody. What's happening, if you look at him flying from above, that is the shape of him flying. It looks like a dragon. Honest to God, this is freaking gosh, the timing of that. So here's why this is important. Everybody. You deserve to access that space of the divine. You deserve to tap into a flow state. You deserve to shift the energy toward getting in the flow, and it starts with noticing where you're gripping and holding on.
Mel Robbins (00:58:12):
Try the exercises that we just walked you through in real time. And because what happens is when you start paying attention to this state of being in flow, in connection, in love, is that it sends ripple effects that I believe call in crazy coincidences like Kendall, of course, calling randomly right after we played her song, me referencing Buck Beak as a fricking joke, right? As a joke, and her then looking at the boots she's calling me to buy, and there is a freaking silhouette of what looks like a dragon, which basically is what buck beak looks like, A flying hawk dragon thing
(00:59:01):
In the sky eighties. You know what I call these? Everybody signs? Amen. These and paying attention to the signs and coincidences and magical things that happen in life and calling them out. That is how you also strengthen the circuitry in your brain that is wired for flow and connection and all this incredible magic in your life, period. For those of you that have read the High Five Habit, you know that the exercise about looking for hearts that occur naturally in the world like a heart shaped cloud or our new puppy has a heart shaped freckle on his nose or heart shaped stone or a heart shape like stain on the ground or a heart shape in your coffee,
Amy (00:59:51):
A heart shaped pea stain from the little
Mel Robbins (00:59:52):
Puppy. Yes, exactly. If you just play a game with yourself, this is one way you can start to tap into this state. Start to train your brain for something other than fricking complaining
Amy (01:00:04):
Miserable
Mel Robbins (01:00:05):
Other than right? Look for a heart shape today, and when you see it, I want you to do something that's going to sound cheeseball, but this is brain stuff. You ready? I want you to look at and be like, by God, Mel Robbins, put that there for me to find. I want you to allow yourself to let a little magic in. If you can pick it up, pick it up, and put it in your pocket. Take it home. Put it on your shelf in front of you, right? Take a picture, start calling out the signs of things going right. Start noticing when you're gripping, when you're holding on, when you don't feel like yourself. Both Amy and I did not feel like ourselves today
Mel Robbins (01:00:48):
And just very casually, we just sat here talking about something else and I'm like, how are you doing? And said, honestly, that's so great. And where lettuce is somewhere amazing. Yeah, it's true. God, I love you.
Amy (01:01:05):
I love you too, Mel. I'm glad you're home. It feels more like home when you're here.
Mel Robbins (01:01:10):
Thank you. That's great. Thank you. Okay, everybody, so you want to see those boots? Go look in the show notes.
Amy (01:01:18):
I come out,
Mel Robbins (01:01:20):
I'll put some photos of some hearts there too that people find, and Amy and I just want to say, look, we love you. We believe in you.
Amy (01:01:30):
You deserve to feel in the flow, peak stake. Anybody that wants to come do errands with me on a Saturday, I will show you how to be in a peak state when I'm in my zone. I love it when people are in their zone. We're all better off when you're in the flow and you're doing your thing. So I'm glad that we're doing this and we're helping people get there and
Mel Robbins (01:01:53):
Feel it. We're going to send you out with the best reminder, which is you got to love yourself a little harder. Yeah. Kendall Robbins, covering Ariana Grande. Hey, it's Mel. Thank you so much for being here. If you enjoyed that video, bye. God, please subscribe because I don't want you to miss a thing. Thank you so much for being here. We've got so much amazing stuff coming. Thank you so much for sending this stuff to your friends and your family. I love you. We create these videos for you, so make sure you subscribe.