8 Simple Reminders You Need to Hear Right Now

8 Simple Reminders You Need to Hear Right Now

You don't wait to feel better before living your life — doing it sad, anxious, and uncertain is exactly how healing actually works.

Jul 9, 2026 1:00:50 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Mel Robbins delivers a solo coaching episode built around 8 simple reminders for anyone feeling exhausted and overwhelmed. She covers presence and gratitude, pausing before reacting, not taking others' moods personally, acting despite fear or sadness, taking radical personal responsibility, changing what happens next, letting go of others' drama via the "Let Them" framework, and choosing a good attitude daily. The single most useful takeaway: healing doesn't come before action — the experience of doing it is what heals you.

#energy management #emotional boundaries #Let Them Theory #daily habits #mindfulness #people-pleasing #self-reliance #burnout recovery #personal accountability #healing through action #gratitude practice #boundary setting #resilience #exhaustion #mindset #presence #boundaries #personal responsibility #healing #pause #gratitude #attitude #accountability #small wins

Mel Robbins shares 8 simple reminders to help listeners feel stronger, calmer, and more confident when exhausted and overwhelmed — covering presence, pausing before reacting, not taking others' moods personally, acting despite fear, personal responsibility, changing what happens next, the Let Them framework, and choosing a good daily attitude.

Chapter list
  • Mel opens with warmth and directness, naming the single word she keeps seeing across listener emails, polls, and social comments: exhaustion. She describes the particular flavour of that tiredness — the kind that comes from caring for everyone else while holding yourself to an invisible standard of having it all together. Rather than launching straight into solutions, she pauses to deliver a grounding truth: you do not have to earn rest, and you do not have to earn peace. These are not luxury items reserved for people who have everything figured out. With that reframe as a foundation, she previews the 8 simple reminders to come — things she says to herself on repeat, quotes she has shared online that listeners saved and reshared in the thousands. The scene is set: this episode is a tool you can return to any time your brain gets loud.

  • The episode's first ad block covers three sponsors. Bioptimizers promotes its Magnesium Breakthrough supplement, framed around summer heat depleting the mineral linked to sleep and recovery, with a promo code MEL for 15% off. Amica Insurance is introduced as the show's exclusive insurance partner, with Mel personally endorsing their empathetic, customer-first model as a mutual insurer. Colgate Total Active Prevention rounds out the block, with its clinical claim that the toothpaste prevents cavities and gingivitis before they start — a message Mel ties neatly to the episode's broader theme of proactive self-care.

  • Mel re-introduces herself and the episode for listeners who may have arrived mid-episode or via a share. She explains the origin of the 8 reminders: she posted them online and the audience response was overwhelming — hearts, shares, saves, and comments flooding in. Rather than leave them as one-liners, she decided to break each one down. The framing is sharp: the world is not designed to keep you calm — it is designed to keep you scrolling, comparing, overthinking, and giving your energy away. For anyone who has felt like that lately, Mel positions this episode as a direct counterattack. The promise is concrete: by the end, you will feel the weight lift and believe you can handle today.

  • Mel introduces the first reminder — '20 years from now, you'd give anything to be this exact age, this healthy, and back in this exact moment' — attributed to writer Rich Webster. She invites listeners to consider two rarely held-together truths: that nearly everything stressing you out today was once a dream of your younger self, and that your 95-year-old self would beg to return to this exact moment, difficult as it is. The key metaphor is the melting ice cube: like an ice cube left on a kitchen counter, life dissolves steadily while you're answering texts and beating yourself up for not going to the gym. You don't notice it until it's a puddle. The reminder isn't a call to fake gratitude or pretend everything is fine. It's a skill: in the middle of the chaos, can you still find three things going well? Not perfect — just going well. Mel models this with her own list: drinking water, going for a walk with her husband, getting out of bed on a hard day. The chapter closes with the full reminder quoted one final time, setting up the transition to Reminder 2.

  • Mel opens Reminder 2 with a reframe that immediately lands: you're not overwhelmed because you can't handle life — you're overwhelmed because you handle all of it, all the time, with no filter. Inspired by writer Corey Allen, she makes the case that pausing is a learnable skill, and that without it, the world simply keeps accelerating. She builds the argument through vivid, specific scenarios: the 'K, fine' text that sends your brain into screenplay-writing mode; the 9:17 PM Slack from your boss; the family member who can put you in an age-shrinking machine the moment they walk in the room in a mood. These are not the big life emergencies — those deserve your energy. These are the constant tiny moments where you hand your energy away without noticing. The prescription is a pause, followed by one honest question: is this worth my energy? If the answer is no, you disengage — no explanation, no debate, no justification. Because peace is not something you find; it's something you protect.

  • Reminder 3 dismantles one of the most exhausting habits listeners carry: taking other people's moods personally and appointing themselves emotional manager of every adult around them. Mel is clear that this is not about lacking compassion — it is about recognising a fundamental boundary between you and other people. The person in front of you who seems off is not actually reacting to you; they are carrying their childhood, whatever happened on their last phone call, their stress, their emotional immaturity. Giving people the dignity of their own experience — letting them be in a bad mood, letting them process it themselves — is one of the healthiest things you can do. The real pivot comes when Mel drops the line that lands hardest in this chapter: other people's emotions are information, not instructions. Someone's disappointment is not a command. Someone's anger is not evidence you failed. Someone's coldness does not mean you are unlovable. You can observe, have compassion, offer support — and still decide how much of yourself you give. The chapter ends by setting up Reminder 4 with a teaser about the trap of waiting.

  • The second sponsor block opens with a TikTok ad promoting the platform as a hub for science, geology, and curiosity-driven content. Peacock follows with an extended spot for The Five Star Weekend, a new original series based on Elin Hilderbrand's novel, starring Jennifer Garner as a celebrated cook whose picture-perfect life begins to crack at a Nantucket getaway — Mel endorses it enthusiastically. BetterHelp closes the block with the strongest personal endorsement of the episode: Mel directly challenges the stigma that therapy is a sign of weakness, reframing seeking help as evidence of strength. She promotes a short questionnaire-based matching process and offers listeners 10% off at betterhelp.com/melrobbins.

  • Reminder 4, sourced from the Awaken One account, challenges one of the most common traps in emotional recovery: waiting to feel ready. If you're sad, do it sad. If you're anxious, do it anxious. If you're uncertain, do it uncertain. Because — and this is the core insight of the chapter — healing, happiness, and change do not come before the experience. The experience is what produces them. Mel anchors this in a pattern she has observed in her own life and listeners': every prolonged period of struggle is followed by a quantum breakthrough. The trouble is that most people give up right before that explosion of growth. She walks through a list of things listeners are avoiding — going back to the gym, saying yes to a dinner invite, applying for a new job — all deferred with the promise of 'once I feel better.' Then she delivers a guest cameo: Wall Street titan Carla Harris, whom Mel describes as one of the most successful women of all time, told Mel after their recording that half the world is distracted and the other half is paralyzed. The lane is clear — put your foot on the gas. The chapter closes with the reminder stated one final time.

  • Mel reaches for her own book, reading directly from page 297 of The Let Them Theory: you can have the life you've always wanted — the question is whether you will let yourself have it, because no one else can stop you. The accountability list that follows is both bracing and empowering: you are responsible for the energy you bring, the work you do on what matters, the truths you tell, the money you earn, and the definitions you set for your own life. Nobody owes you anything, but you owe yourself everything. She then introduces the flip side of the famous 'no one is coming to save you' mantra: no one is coming to stop you either. Who exactly is stopping you from writing the book, breaking up, changing careers, posting the song? The answer, usually, is you — through your own fear of how you look, whether you'll fail, what others will think. And so she adds a corollary: don't kill the part of you that's cringy; kill the part of you that cringes at yourself. The chapter closes by connecting the takeaway to the very next practical step: one email, one walk, one honest conversation — proof that you are in charge.

  • The third sponsor block is compact. Paragold is promoted for summer outdoor living — furniture, lighting, and décor shipped directly, with free design services. Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU) is presented as a flexible college option for adults who haven't started their degree yet, with over 200 online programs and no set class times. Expedia rounds it out with a bundle savings pitch — up to 30% off when flights, hotels, cars, and activities are combined in one app. All three are tonally in step with the episode's broader theme of taking action rather than waiting for the perfect moment.

  • Reminder 6 opens with Mel's explicit rejection of 'everything happens for a reason' — she finds it false, because terrible things happen to people who don't deserve them. The version she prefers is more grounded: everything doesn't happen for a reason; you find a reason to move forward despite what happened. That means looking for lessons, tapping into the strength that gets forged by getting knocked down and getting back up. She turns the spotlight inward, sharing that in her 30s and 40s she was jealous, petty, and insecure — someone she would not recommend as a friend. No one fixed that but her. She made a decision not to spend the rest of her life as that version of herself, and she made the changes. The chapter pivots on one liberating insight: you are not stuck. Not in the job, the relationship, the apartment, the financial situation, or the mindset. Every single area of life can be changed through decision, definition, and consistent action. What happens next is always up for revision.

  • The seventh reminder reframes a concept Mel has become closely associated with, correcting a common misread. 'Let them' is not permission for disrespect; it is a proactive refusal to expend energy trying to change people you cannot change. When you say 'let them,' you are asserting: I see exactly what you're doing, I recognize I can't control it, and you're not worth my time and energy. The 'let me' that follows is where the real work lives: let me protect my peace, let me choose what I participate in, let me set the boundary and hold it without apologising when someone gets upset. Because when they do get upset — and Mel returns to this point twice — that reaction is evidence the boundary is working, not that it is wrong. The chapter builds to a crucial clarification: your boundaries are not rules for other people. They are reminders to yourself of what you will and will not do. You do not owe anyone a response, an explanation, or access to your energy. Let them say what they'll say. Let me focus on what I can control: my attitude, my effort, my choices, my time.

  • The eighth and final reminder arrives as a declaration, not a hope: 'Today is going to be a good day because I'm going to make something good happen.' Mel frames this not as toxic positivity but as a deliberate decision — I am in charge of what my day becomes. She cites MIT's Dr. Joseph Coughlin, whose insight 'your life is made up of Tuesdays' grounds the reminder in honesty: most of life is ordinary. It is not the big vacations, the promotions, or the milestone moments. It is waking up, showing up, handling your stuff, loving your people, trying again. So when you set out to make one good thing happen — text someone you love, go outside for five minutes, say no to something draining — you are not engineering a magical day. You are building a good life, one small choice at a time. Mel closes with her own example: stuck in five hours of traffic, she looked up at a painterly sky and that was her one good thing for the day. It made it a good day. The assignment is that small, and the cumulative effect is that large.

  • Rather than a vague sign-off, Mel delivers real value in the closing segment: a complete, ordered recap of all 8 reminders so listeners can walk away with a mental checklist. She acknowledges that most of us don't need new information — we need reminders, because the busy noise of life makes us forget what we already know. She encourages grace and self-compassion: everyone is doing life for the first time, and that is okay. The assignment is to pick the single reminder that hit hardest, write it down or save it to your Notes app, and use it as an anchor the next time your brain gets loud. She ends with a direct, personal expression of belief — 'I love you and I believe in you and I believe in your ability to create a better life' — before teasing the next episode.

  • The episode concludes with an informal behind-the-scenes coda: Mel tries what appears to be a green supplement drink, expresses distaste, references her daughter sneaking upstairs with coffee, and jokes about a printer calibrating mid-recording. After the laughs, the mandatory legal disclaimer is read: the podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only, Mel is not a licensed therapist, and nothing in the episode is a substitute for advice from a physician, psychotherapist, or other professional. The final ad slots go to SiriusXM Podcasts+ (ad-free listening), Pandora (personalised music discovery), and Capella University (lifelong learning). The episode ends.

Let Them Theory
Mel Robbins' framework in which you say 'let them' to stop trying to control others' behavior, then follow with 'let me' to redirect focus to your own choices and actions.
quantum breakthrough
A sudden, dramatic leap in personal growth or life circumstances, used by Mel Robbins to describe the explosive positive change that often follows prolonged periods of struggle.
emotional dumping ground
A person who absorbs and processes other people's negative emotions at a cost to their own wellbeing, used here as a role Mel Robbins urges listeners to avoid becoming.
people-pleasing
The habitual tendency to prioritize others' approval and comfort over one's own needs and boundaries, often at the cost of personal energy and authenticity.
al fresco
Italian/French term meaning 'in the open air' or outdoors; used casually by Mel Robbins to describe outdoor summer living.
bioavailable
Describing a nutrient or substance that is in a form the body can readily absorb and use; referenced in the Bioptimizers Magnesium Breakthrough ad.
mutual insurer
An insurance company owned by its policyholders rather than external shareholders, meaning profits are returned to customers rather than investors; referenced in the Amica ad.
energy leakage
The gradual, often unconscious draining of personal energy through constant small reactions, fixes, and engagements that don't return value — a key concept Mel Robbins addresses in Reminder 2.
proactive
Acting in anticipation of problems rather than reacting after they occur; used in both the Colgate ad and as a mindset theme throughout the episode.
gaslighting (self-gaslighting)
Manipulating oneself into doubting one's own perception of reality; Mel Robbins uses it to describe the habit of convincing yourself that difficult people will eventually change when they won't.
perfunctory
Carried out with minimal effort or care, as a matter of routine; an elevated word for actions done mechanically without real engagement.
hegemonic
Relating to dominance or ruling influence of one entity over others; not used verbatim but relevant to Mel's framing of how external forces dominate our attention.
painterly
Resembling or characteristic of a painting, especially in the richness or texture of color; used by Mel Robbins to describe dramatic cloud formations she noticed.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Introduction: You Don't Have to Earn Rest

Mel opens with warmth and directness, naming the single word she keeps seeing across listener emails, polls, and social comments: exhaustion. She describes the particular flavour of that tiredness — the kind that comes from caring for everyone else while holding yourself to an invisible standard of having it all together. Rather than launching straight into solutions, she pauses to deliver a grounding truth: you do not have to earn rest, and you do not have to earn peace. These are not luxury items reserved for people who have everything figured out. With that reframe as a foundation, she previews the 8 simple reminders to come — things she says to herself on repeat, quotes she has shared online that listeners saved and reshared in the thousands. The scene is set: this episode is a tool you can return to any time your brain gets loud.

Claims made here

Listeners of the Mel Robbins Podcast have been repeatedly reporting the feeling of 'exhaustion' in emails, polls, and social media comments.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Chapter 3 · 06:30

Welcome & Episode Setup: 8 Reminders to Interrupt the Spiral

Mel re-introduces herself and the episode for listeners who may have arrived mid-episode or via a share. She explains the origin of the 8 reminders: she posted them online and the audience response was overwhelming — hearts, shares, saves, and comments flooding in. Rather than leave them as one-liners, she decided to break each one down. The framing is sharp: the world is not designed to keep you calm — it is designed to keep you scrolling, comparing, overthinking, and giving your energy away. For anyone who has felt like that lately, Mel positions this episode as a direct counterattack. The promise is concrete: by the end, you will feel the weight lift and believe you can handle today.

Chapter 4 · 10:30

Reminder 1: Your 95-Year-Old Self Would Give Anything for This Moment

Mel introduces the first reminder — '20 years from now, you'd give anything to be this exact age, this healthy, and back in this exact moment' — attributed to writer Rich Webster. She invites listeners to consider two rarely held-together truths: that nearly everything stressing you out today was once a dream of your younger self, and that your 95-year-old self would beg to return to this exact moment, difficult as it is. The key metaphor is the melting ice cube: like an ice cube left on a kitchen counter, life dissolves steadily while you're answering texts and beating yourself up for not going to the gym. You don't notice it until it's a puddle. The reminder isn't a call to fake gratitude or pretend everything is fine. It's a skill: in the middle of the chaos, can you still find three things going well? Not perfect — just going well. Mel models this with her own list: drinking water, going for a walk with her husband, getting out of bed on a hard day. The chapter closes with the full reminder quoted one final time, setting up the transition to Reminder 2.

Society & Culture
Life Is a Melting Ice Cube

8 Simple Reminders You Need to Hear Right Now · Jul 9, 2026 Society & Culture

Your life is like an ice cube melting on a kitchen counter. You're too busy answering texts and paying bills to notice it shrinking. By the time you look up, it's a puddle — and you don't even know what you spent the time on.

Chapter 5 · 17:50

Reminder 2: Pause Before You React — Is This Worth Your Energy?

Mel opens Reminder 2 with a reframe that immediately lands: you're not overwhelmed because you can't handle life — you're overwhelmed because you handle all of it, all the time, with no filter. Inspired by writer Corey Allen, she makes the case that pausing is a learnable skill, and that without it, the world simply keeps accelerating. She builds the argument through vivid, specific scenarios: the 'K, fine' text that sends your brain into screenplay-writing mode; the 9:17 PM Slack from your boss; the family member who can put you in an age-shrinking machine the moment they walk in the room in a mood. These are not the big life emergencies — those deserve your energy. These are the constant tiny moments where you hand your energy away without noticing. The prescription is a pause, followed by one honest question: is this worth my energy? If the answer is no, you disengage — no explanation, no debate, no justification. Because peace is not something you find; it's something you protect.

Chapter 6 · 21:30

Reminder 3: Let Their Mood Be Theirs — Most of What People Do Has Nothing to Do With You

Reminder 3 dismantles one of the most exhausting habits listeners carry: taking other people's moods personally and appointing themselves emotional manager of every adult around them. Mel is clear that this is not about lacking compassion — it is about recognising a fundamental boundary between you and other people. The person in front of you who seems off is not actually reacting to you; they are carrying their childhood, whatever happened on their last phone call, their stress, their emotional immaturity. Giving people the dignity of their own experience — letting them be in a bad mood, letting them process it themselves — is one of the healthiest things you can do. The real pivot comes when Mel drops the line that lands hardest in this chapter: other people's emotions are information, not instructions. Someone's disappointment is not a command. Someone's anger is not evidence you failed. Someone's coldness does not mean you are unlovable. You can observe, have compassion, offer support — and still decide how much of yourself you give. The chapter ends by setting up Reminder 4 with a teaser about the trap of waiting.

Chapter 8 · 34:40

Reminder 4: Don't Wait to Feel Better — Go Live Your Life Now

Reminder 4, sourced from the Awaken One account, challenges one of the most common traps in emotional recovery: waiting to feel ready. If you're sad, do it sad. If you're anxious, do it anxious. If you're uncertain, do it uncertain. Because — and this is the core insight of the chapter — healing, happiness, and change do not come before the experience. The experience is what produces them. Mel anchors this in a pattern she has observed in her own life and listeners': every prolonged period of struggle is followed by a quantum breakthrough. The trouble is that most people give up right before that explosion of growth. She walks through a list of things listeners are avoiding — going back to the gym, saying yes to a dinner invite, applying for a new job — all deferred with the promise of 'once I feel better.' Then she delivers a guest cameo: Wall Street titan Carla Harris, whom Mel describes as one of the most successful women of all time, told Mel after their recording that half the world is distracted and the other half is paralyzed. The lane is clear — put your foot on the gas. The chapter closes with the reminder stated one final time.

Claims made here

Prolonged periods of struggle and suffering in life are consistently followed by periods of massive personal growth and quantum breakthroughs.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Carla Harris, one of the most successful women on Wall Street, stated that half the people in the world are completely distracted and the other half are paralyzed and exhausted.

Mel Robbins Carla Harris, Wall Street executive, speaking to Mel Robbins' podcast team

The quote 'you can have the life you've always wanted... no one else can stop you' appears on page 297 of The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins.

Mel Robbins The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins, page 297

Chapter 9 · 40:10

Reminder 5: You Are Responsible for Your Own Happiness — Nobody Owes You Anything

Mel reaches for her own book, reading directly from page 297 of The Let Them Theory: you can have the life you've always wanted — the question is whether you will let yourself have it, because no one else can stop you. The accountability list that follows is both bracing and empowering: you are responsible for the energy you bring, the work you do on what matters, the truths you tell, the money you earn, and the definitions you set for your own life. Nobody owes you anything, but you owe yourself everything. She then introduces the flip side of the famous 'no one is coming to save you' mantra: no one is coming to stop you either. Who exactly is stopping you from writing the book, breaking up, changing careers, posting the song? The answer, usually, is you — through your own fear of how you look, whether you'll fail, what others will think. And so she adds a corollary: don't kill the part of you that's cringy; kill the part of you that cringes at yourself. The chapter closes by connecting the takeaway to the very next practical step: one email, one walk, one honest conversation — proof that you are in charge.

Chapter 10 · 45:30

Sponsor Break: Paragold, SNHU & Expedia

The third sponsor block is compact. Paragold is promoted for summer outdoor living — furniture, lighting, and décor shipped directly, with free design services. Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU) is presented as a flexible college option for adults who haven't started their degree yet, with over 200 online programs and no set class times. Expedia rounds it out with a bundle savings pitch — up to 30% off when flights, hotels, cars, and activities are combined in one app. All three are tonally in step with the episode's broader theme of taking action rather than waiting for the perfect moment.

Claims made here

Expedia allows users to save up to 30% when they bundle flights, hotels, vacation rentals, cars, and activities.

Mel Robbins Expedia

In Mel Robbins' 30s and 40s, she describes herself as having been jealous, insecure, and petty — a version of herself she chose to change.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Chapter 11 · 47:20

Reminder 6: You Can't Change the Past — But You Can Change What Happens Next

Reminder 6 opens with Mel's explicit rejection of 'everything happens for a reason' — she finds it false, because terrible things happen to people who don't deserve them. The version she prefers is more grounded: everything doesn't happen for a reason; you find a reason to move forward despite what happened. That means looking for lessons, tapping into the strength that gets forged by getting knocked down and getting back up. She turns the spotlight inward, sharing that in her 30s and 40s she was jealous, petty, and insecure — someone she would not recommend as a friend. No one fixed that but her. She made a decision not to spend the rest of her life as that version of herself, and she made the changes. The chapter pivots on one liberating insight: you are not stuck. Not in the job, the relationship, the apartment, the financial situation, or the mindset. Every single area of life can be changed through decision, definition, and consistent action. What happens next is always up for revision.

Chapter 12 · 49:20

Reminder 7: Maturing Is Realising Other People's Bullshit Is Not About You — Let Them

The seventh reminder reframes a concept Mel has become closely associated with, correcting a common misread. 'Let them' is not permission for disrespect; it is a proactive refusal to expend energy trying to change people you cannot change. When you say 'let them,' you are asserting: I see exactly what you're doing, I recognize I can't control it, and you're not worth my time and energy. The 'let me' that follows is where the real work lives: let me protect my peace, let me choose what I participate in, let me set the boundary and hold it without apologising when someone gets upset. Because when they do get upset — and Mel returns to this point twice — that reaction is evidence the boundary is working, not that it is wrong. The chapter builds to a crucial clarification: your boundaries are not rules for other people. They are reminders to yourself of what you will and will not do. You do not owe anyone a response, an explanation, or access to your energy. Let them say what they'll say. Let me focus on what I can control: my attitude, my effort, my choices, my time.

Claims made here

When people get upset at a newly set personal boundary, it is a sign the boundary is working, not that it is wrong.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Chapter 13 · 53:40

Reminder 8: Today Is Going to Be a Good Day — Make One Good Thing Happen

The eighth and final reminder arrives as a declaration, not a hope: 'Today is going to be a good day because I'm going to make something good happen.' Mel frames this not as toxic positivity but as a deliberate decision — I am in charge of what my day becomes. She cites MIT's Dr. Joseph Coughlin, whose insight 'your life is made up of Tuesdays' grounds the reminder in honesty: most of life is ordinary. It is not the big vacations, the promotions, or the milestone moments. It is waking up, showing up, handling your stuff, loving your people, trying again. So when you set out to make one good thing happen — text someone you love, go outside for five minutes, say no to something draining — you are not engineering a magical day. You are building a good life, one small choice at a time. Mel closes with her own example: stuck in five hours of traffic, she looked up at a painterly sky and that was her one good thing for the day. It made it a good day. The assignment is that small, and the cumulative effect is that large.

Claims made here

Waking up and deciding 'today is going to be a good day' puts you ahead of 99% of people.

Mel Robbins no source cited

MIT's Dr. Joseph Coughlin has said 'Your life is made up of Tuesdays,' meaning ordinary days constitute the substance of a life.

Mel Robbins Dr. Joseph Coughlin, MIT

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Claims & Sources

4 / 12 cited (33%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Listeners of the Mel Robbins Podcast have been repeatedly reporting the feeling of 'exhaustion' in emails, polls, and social media comments.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Magnesium is described as the key mineral for relaxation, recovery, and better sleep, and hot summer days deplete it.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Colgate Total Active Prevention toothpaste is clinically proven to prevent oral health problems like cavities and gingivitis before they start.

Mel Robbins Colgate clinical testing

BetterHelp's therapist matching service has an industry-leading match rate and typically gets therapist pairing right the first time.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Prolonged periods of struggle and suffering in life are consistently followed by periods of massive personal growth and quantum breakthroughs.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Carla Harris, one of the most successful women on Wall Street, stated that half the people in the world are completely distracted and the other half are paralyzed and exhausted.

Mel Robbins Carla Harris, Wall Street executive, speaking to Mel Robbins' podcast team

The quote 'you can have the life you've always wanted... no one else can stop you' appears on page 297 of The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins.

Mel Robbins The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins, page 297

MIT's Dr. Joseph Coughlin has said 'Your life is made up of Tuesdays,' meaning ordinary days constitute the substance of a life.

Mel Robbins Dr. Joseph Coughlin, MIT

Waking up and deciding 'today is going to be a good day' puts you ahead of 99% of people.

Mel Robbins no source cited

Expedia allows users to save up to 30% when they bundle flights, hotels, vacation rentals, cars, and activities.

Mel Robbins Expedia

When people get upset at a newly set personal boundary, it is a sign the boundary is working, not that it is wrong.

Mel Robbins no source cited

In Mel Robbins' 30s and 40s, she describes herself as having been jealous, insecure, and petty — a version of herself she chose to change.

Mel Robbins no source cited