Sarah Jakes Roberts got pregnant at age 13 and gave birth to her son at age 14.
How to Become the Most Confident Version of Yourself & Step Into Your Power
Sarah Jakes Roberts says you can't heal while still punishing yourself — and the moment you open the "cupboard" of your past is the moment your power begins to flow.
The Mel Robbins Podcast
How to Become the Most Confident Version of Yourself & Step Into Your Power
Sarah Jakes Roberts says you can't heal while still punishing yourself — and the moment you open the "cupboard" of your past is the moment your power begins to flow.
TL;DR
Mel Robbins revisits her conversation with Sarah Jakes Roberts — New York Times bestselling author, pastor, and daughter of a megachurch pastor who became pregnant at 13. Sarah shares her framework for self-forgiveness, identity reclamation, and building confidence from the raw ingredients of your past. Her core insight: you cannot heal while still punishing yourself [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "You can't want to heal and punish yourself at the same time." 12:44 . The "open the cupboard" metaphor — facing every painful ingredient of your story rather than hiding it — is the central tool [2] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Most people sit with their past but sit there punishing themselves — replaying shame, rehearsing rejection. Sarah's radical insight: you ca…" 12:28 . The single most useful takeaway: let your hopes and dreams live outside of you in words and actions, because that act of release creates space for transformation [3] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "All the podcasts, all the books — if it stays inside you, it drowns you. Sarah's breakthrough insight: speaking your dreams and your becomi…" 1:03:40 .
Mel Robbins revisits her conversation with Sarah Jakes Roberts — New York Times bestselling author, pastor, and daughter of megachurch pastor T.D. Jakes. Sarah shares her journey from teen pregnancy at 13 to becoming a powerful speaker on healing, self-forgiveness, and reinvention, teaching listeners how to stop letting one mistake define their entire identity.
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Mel Robbins opens with a direct address to the listener, framing the episode as the answer to the most common question she receives worldwide: who do you listen to when life gets overwhelming? Without hesitation, she names Sarah Jakes Roberts — bestselling author, pastor, and one of the most powerful voices alive on healing and reinvention. Mel explains that this is a conversation she personally returns to when she needs hope and optimism, and that she shares it with anyone in her life who is dragging the weight of the past. She sets the stage clearly: if you're tired of beating yourself up and want to start becoming who you're meant to be, you're in the right place.
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The episode's first sponsor block covers two brands. Dell promotes its XPS laptop powered by Series 3 Intel Core, starting at $699 with student pricing from $599, directing listeners to dell.com/deals. Amica Insurance is introduced as the exclusive insurance partner, emphasised for treating customers like real human beings and operating as a mutual insurer built around putting customers first — 'coverage with empathy.'
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Colgate Total Active Prevention toothpaste is promoted with a message that mirrors the episode's theme: be proactive, not reactive, and prevent problems before they start. Mel then delivers her full, warm welcome — introducing Sarah Jakes Roberts to the audience as a New York Times bestselling author, speaker, philanthropist, and entrepreneur whose rare gift is taking the messiest parts of being human and turning them into fuel for a big, beautiful future.
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Mel asks Sarah to share what listeners can expect to experience, and Sarah immediately grounds the conversation in her own story. As the daughter of a prominent megachurch pastor, getting pregnant at 13 was not just a personal crisis — it was a public one. The event confirmed a pre-existing insecurity: that she was never one of the 'God girls,' never quite right for the church world surrounding her. Rather than fighting that label, she accepted it, deciding that the good church people could do their thing while she figured out everything else on her own. What she didn't yet know was that this pivotal moment of shame and separation would become the foundation of her life's work.
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For ten years, Sarah tried to locate herself by comparison — finding someone she resembled and becoming that person, only to discover she didn't fit there either. She cycled through roles and relationships, each time hoping the next version would finally feel right. The exhausting search ended with a radical decision: to stop wearing other people's shoes entirely. 'I'm going to be barefoot,' she tells Mel — standing flat-footed in isolation, loneliness, and the uncomfortable truth of who she was. From that ground, she allowed herself to try faith, not the institutional faith of her upbringing but an intimate, personal relationship with God that, for the first time, felt like it might work for someone like her. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "For 10 years, Sarah tried on other women's identities — academic, government worker, waitress at a strip club — searching for herself in re…" 09:41
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Sarah makes the distinction between two kinds of sitting with yourself: the punishing kind, where you replay shame and ask 'how could you?', and the compassionate kind, where you stretch toward love for every facet of who you are. For ten years, Sarah was doing the former — the constant repetition of negative words others had spoken over her. The revelation that changed everything was recognising these two modes are mutually exclusive: punishment and healing cannot coexist. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Most people sit with their past but sit there punishing themselves — replaying shame, rehearsing rejection. Sarah's radical insight: you ca…" 12:28 Mel stops the conversation to make sure no listener misses this, calling it the most profound thing she has ever heard. Sitting with yourself in the pursuit of compassion, Sarah explains, is uncomfortable precisely because it requires loving yourself in a way you're not yet sure is possible — but it is the greatest gift you can give yourself.
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One of the episode's most quotable and practically useful ideas emerges here: the 'but also' framework for reclaiming identity. Sarah explains that she spent years trying to escape or disconnect from the label of teen mom, when the real work was to hold that identity alongside everything else. She isn't trying to be just her achievements or just her struggles — she wants to be the full, complex, tapestry of a girl on a journey and a woman owning her power. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Sarah didn't try to erase her past as a teen mom — she added to it. 'I'm a teen mom, but also I'm an incredible person, but also I dream, b…" 14:15 Mel is visibly moved, and Sarah grounds the insight with humour: after everything, she is also on the Mel Robbins Podcast, which she notes has millions of weekly listeners. The takeaway is that adding to your identity, not subtracting from it, is how you build wholeness.
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Responding to Mel's question about 'discounting yourself to the lowest bidder,' Sarah traces the mechanism with painful clarity. Growing up during purity culture's peak, the highest possible female prize was virginity before marriage — and when she lost that at 13, she metaphorically slapped a discount sticker over her own worth. From there, she explains, the logic is inevitable: a lower price means accepting experiences and treatment you wouldn't have tolerated at full value. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "When you can't live up to someone else's definition of a woman, you put a discount sticker over your value. And a lower price means you sta…" 21:37 The progression she describes is one many listeners will recognise: I'm not smart enough, thin enough, beautiful enough, so I have to accept this. But this, Sarah insists, is a lie. Your value is not set by your experiences or by society's ever-shifting definitions. It is an inside job — a commitment to recognising that everything you've survived has added to your worth, not subtracted from it.
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Sarah's most memorable and practical metaphor arrives here. She tried for years to build a new life by ignoring what was in her cupboard — attempting to become a CFO, to create a completely new existence on top of her teen pregnancy. Every attempt failed, because she wasn't using the ingredients she actually had. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Sarah tried for years to build a new life on top of her teen pregnancy — to become a CFO and leave her past behind. It never worked, becaus…" 25:43 Real reinvention means opening the cupboard, acknowledging every ingredient — including the ones that are bitter, spicy, or have gathered dust — and working with them. Mel immediately personalises the metaphor, listing her own painful ingredients: molestation, trauma, cheating, anxiety. Sarah laughs and notes that most of us, confronted with our actual cupboard, would rather go grocery shopping. But closing that cabinet comes at a cost: it forces you into inauthenticity and people-pleasing. And opening it, Sarah promises, is where the light begins to enter.
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Mel breaks from the conversation to give listeners a moment to process, describing what they've just heard as 'profound wisdom' and encouraging them to share the episode with someone who needs it. The sponsor block covers three brands: Southern New Hampshire University promoting flexible, affordable online degree programs with a free application at snhu.edu/mel; Expedia promoting bundled travel savings of up to 30%; and a repeat Dell XPS laptop read directing listeners to dell.com/deals.
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Picking up from where the break interrupted, Mel and Sarah move into the idea of generational compassion: looking at your parents not as people who failed you but as humans who were doing the best they could with what was in their own cupboard, shaped by what their parents had in theirs. Sarah articulates what it means to look at your life through a lens of love rather than judgment — her definition of compassion — and observes that when we can't extend that lens to ourselves, we either can't receive love or we become harsh with others. She illustrates this with a Starbucks parking lot story: when a man called her 14-year-old daughter an ignorant name for accidentally dinging his car door, Sarah's response was not fire but 'now that wasn't kind' — a grounded power that caught him off guard entirely.
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When Mel asks what Sarah does to stay grounded in her power, the answer begins with rest. Not just sleep but spiritual rest — allowing her brain to decompress through gratitude, prayer, meditation, and genuine reflection. The most vivid practice she describes is letting the 13-year-old girl who heard 'you're nasty,' 'you're a slut,' 'there's something wrong with you' actually listen to what people say about Sarah now. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Son is now 21: Sarah's son, born when she was 14, is now 21 and thriving — a milestone she uses as a practice of gratitude, revisiting the …" 46:34 This inner child work — the grown woman taking the little girl's hand and saying 'look, you made it' — is how Sarah keeps herself from the autopilot of achievement. She also shares a remarkable statement of contentment: she is in the overflow right now. If she never wrote another book or recorded another podcast, what has already been built is more than she could have imagined or asked for. It feels greedy to want more.
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One of the episode's most emotionally resonant stories unfolds here. When Sarah got pregnant at 13, someone close to her said 'I always knew to expect something like this from you' — words she describes eating for breakfast for ten years as confirmation that something was fundamentally wrong with her. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "When Sarah got pregnant, someone told her 'I always knew to expect something like this from you' — words she ate for breakfast for 10 years…" 48:09 Then, years later, about to launch a sold-out tour and feeling imposter syndrome creeping in, she was in prayer when she felt God speak those exact same words back to her — but as pure affirmation. The sentence that had been spoken as condemnation was transformed into the deepest possible assurance: that God had always seen this for her, had always known what she would become. Sarah is moved to tears recounting it. This, she says, is why she refuses to let others keep moving the marker: she already knows she won.
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Mel pauses to address the listener who may not share Sarah's faith, asking how they can access the same profound grounding. Sarah's answer is philosophically generous: she grounds her confidence not in doctrine but in the belief that the entire world operates with intention. Everything from the solar system to the mosquito plays a purposeful role. She cannot believe that this intentionality reached humanity and then ran out. From that belief, she is as essential to her time on earth as the sun or the ocean. She then turns this into a practical directive: to stay in an optimal state — as whole, as reconciled, as aware as possible — so that she can be most sensitive to the role she is meant to play in every moment.
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Mel asks about daring to believe in yourself, and Sarah responds by rejecting the 'just take the leap' paradigm. When you've spent more years doubting yourself than believing in yourself, an overnight transformation is not just unlikely — it's unrealistic. What you can do is take a baby dare: introduce the new version of yourself incrementally, starting by giving it language. Sarah's own example is instructive — when a collaborator declined an international invitation on her behalf because 'she likes being at home,' Sarah circled back to correct the record: actually, she was open to it. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Sarah cringes at 'just take the leap' advice. When you've spent more time doubting yourself than believing in yourself, you can't switch ov…" 59:20 That single conversation was a down payment on who she was becoming. Small dares compound. Look up one day and you've transformed — not because you leapt, but because you kept making tiny adjustments that stretched your environment to make room for the person you were growing into.
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The conversation reaches its practical crescendo when Sarah observes that the problem with consuming self-help content — podcasts, books, tools — is that people keep all of it living inside them. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "All the podcasts, all the books — if it stays inside you, it drowns you. Sarah's breakthrough insight: speaking your dreams and your becomi…" 1:03:40 The release mechanism is language: speaking your dreams, intentions, and becoming out loud. This act simultaneously empties you out so new things can flow in, and creates a shape outside of you for the person you're growing into to inhabit. Mel nearly loses her composure with excitement. Sarah then addresses the fear that typically holds people back — the belief that sharing who you're becoming will break your relationships. In her experience, 9 times out of 10 the people around you have far more flexibility than you've given them credit for. Keeping things inside doesn't protect your relationships; it denies you access to the support that was always there.
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The second full sponsor block features three distinct brands. Genesis promotes the GV70 SUV with a focus on its 300-horsepower performance, blind spot cameras, and award-winning technology. TikTok is promoted as a platform for wonder and scientific curiosity — physics breakdowns, geology, and real-world experiments. UnitedHealthcare pitches its human connection approach to health insurance, directing listeners to uhc.com/care.
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Mel asks what power means to Sarah, and the answer is nothing like conventional definitions of authority or dominance. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Power isn't getting knocked down and getting back up. It's that plus humility (owning what you did wrong) plus authenticity (knowing when y…" 1:09:57 Power, Sarah explains, is a cocktail — authenticity (knowing when you're the beast on stage and when you need to be nurtured), resiliency (getting back up), and humility (owning your mistakes and their impact on others). The mistake most people make is equating power only with resiliency, with getting knocked down and standing up again. But without humility, resiliency becomes arrogance. Without authenticity, it becomes performance. The three must flow together. And the key word is flow — power is not a trophy you earn and keep on a shelf. It moves. Which means the question you must always ask yourself is not 'am I powerful?' but 'what does power look like for me right now?'
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Sarah opens her discussion of confidence with Esther Perel's definition: having knowledge of both your gifts and your flaws and not being destabilised by either. True confidence is not about how you look; it's about who you are on the inside and your ability to hold onto that in any circumstance. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Mid-sermon at her father's megachurch, Sarah's wig started slipping. She calculated the physics, decided she couldn't stop, and took it off…" 1:15:05 She then tells the story that makes this concrete: mid-sermon at her father's traditional megachurch — now back in Dallas after years in Los Angeles — her wig began slipping. She did the math in seconds, realised she couldn't stop it, and simply took it off. Fifty thousand people were streaming. Her father wasn't there. Her husband was out of town. She threw the wig to her sister and kept preaching. Women in the congregation started removing their own wigs in solidarity. What Sarah had prepared to be the internet's joke became a liberation moment — women messaging her to say she had given them permission to show up as they truly were. The sermon she spent weeks studying became secondary to the authenticity of that single moment.
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Behind the wig story is a deeper spiritual question: when Sarah and her husband relocated from Los Angeles — where she had developed her confidence within an accepting, vibrant community — to Dallas to support her father's church, she genuinely didn't know if her version of ministry would work there. The doubt was real. The wig moment, she realised in retrospect, was the answer. Not a joke to survive, but a message: the most authentic version of who you are has been anointed to help from this place. If you are just who you are, that is enough. A woman threw her own wig onto the altar in solidarity — tired of pretending to have it all together. For Sarah, this sealed the understanding that power flows across contexts. The same power that worked in LA, expressed differently, would work in Dallas. The question was never whether power was available — only what it looked like now.
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In one of the most emotionally charged moments of the episode, Mel makes a declaration she has been waiting to voice. Sarah, she says, wasn't derailed by getting pregnant at 13 in purity culture — she was placed there to break it open. No other path could have made her the living proof that there is more than one definition of a godly woman. Sarah is visibly affected. She admits she had never thought of it quite this way. Mel presses further: the 'undeniable grace' and inexplicable swell of influence Sarah describes — there is a reason for it. In 20 years, it was always going to make sense that a generation lost inside a one-path church culture would find its way out through someone who had been exactly where they were and had built something extraordinary from those same ingredients.
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Sarah closes the body of the conversation by crystallising the concept of versions — the past you who made choices from a different set of ingredients, the present you, and the future versions not yet revealed. The unfolding is not hard, grinding work; it is the natural result of owning where you are now and letting what's inside you live outside of you. Sarah has lived a thousand lives in 35 years by allowing each version to fully emerge. Her one practical action for the listener: open the cupboard. Look at every single ingredient. Dust off the dreams and gifts that have gone unused. Lay them out on the counter and start dreaming about what you can make. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Open the cupboard — use all your ingredients: Sarah's 'leftovers' metaphor: instead of trying to reinvent yourself with ingredients that do…" 25:43 Mel wraps with warmth, a reminder that both she and Sarah love the listener, and the episode's legal disclaimer. Post-credits sponsor reads cover Sephora beauty products and the Capital One Venture X Business Card.
- Purity culture
- A movement prominent in evangelical Christian communities that places supreme value on sexual abstinence before marriage, often to the exclusion of other measures of a woman's worth or spiritual standing.
- Imposter syndrome
- The persistent feeling that one's success is undeserved or fraudulent, even in the face of clear evidence of competence; Sarah used it to describe doubting herself when her platform grew despite being open about her past.
- Woman Evolve
- Sarah Jakes Roberts' ministry and conference platform that creates community for women with non-traditional spiritual journeys, celebrating diverse paths to faith and wholeness.
- Power Moves
- The title of Sarah Jakes Roberts' book, subtitled 'Ignite Your Confidence and Become a Force,' which argues that power is a fluid state of being rather than a series of actions.
- Dysregulation
- In psychology, the inability to manage emotional responses appropriately; Sarah used it to describe the discomfort that arises when trying to extend compassion to oneself in unfamiliar ways.
- Anointed
- In Christian tradition, being divinely chosen or empowered for a specific purpose; Sarah used it to describe her belief that her gift for communication is spiritually endowed rather than self-generated.
- Reconciliation
- The process of making two things consistent or compatible; Sarah used it both in the accounting sense (going back to the books to check) and spiritually (making peace between past and present self).
- Confluence
- The junction or flowing together of multiple streams into one; Sarah used it to describe the point where authenticity, resiliency, and humility combine to create a flow of power.
- Mega-church
- A Protestant Christian congregation with an average weekend attendance of 2,000 or more, often with multiple campuses and significant media presence; the context in which Sarah Jakes Roberts grew up as T.D. Jakes's daughter.
- Inferno
- A large, intensely burning fire; Sarah used it metaphorically to describe how many individual 'flickers' of connection and light accumulate into a transformative blaze of identity.
- Posture of resignation
- An embodied stance of giving up or accepting defeat; Sarah used it to describe how underestimating one's own necessity leads people to passively withdraw from their potential impact on the world.
- Blended family
- A family unit formed when partners who each have children from previous relationships merge their households; Sarah referenced her own blended family of six children as context for the daily demands on her energy.
- Esther Perel
- A Belgian-American psychotherapist and author widely known for her work on modern relationships and desire; Sarah cited her definition of confidence approvingly during the episode.
- Relentlessness
- Unyielding persistence that does not slow or stop; Sarah used it to describe the quality that emerges once a person has made the internal conversion from self-discount to self-belief.
- TestimonY
- In Christian tradition, the personal account of how one's life has been transformed by faith; Sarah used it to describe how sharing one's authentic story becomes a light offered to others.
Chapter 4 · 05:36
Sarah's Story: Pregnant at 13 in a Megachurch Family
Mel asks Sarah to share what listeners can expect to experience, and Sarah immediately grounds the conversation in her own story. As the daughter of a prominent megachurch pastor, getting pregnant at 13 was not just a personal crisis — it was a public one. The event confirmed a pre-existing insecurity: that she was never one of the 'God girls,' never quite right for the church world surrounding her. Rather than fighting that label, she accepted it, deciding that the good church people could do their thing while she figured out everything else on her own. What she didn't yet know was that this pivotal moment of shame and separation would become the foundation of her life's work.
Claims made here
Sarah spent approximately 10 years struggling with shame and trying on different identities before finding herself.
Getting pregnant at 13 in a megachurch family didn't just confirm Sarah's fear that she didn't fit — it launched a decade-long identity crisis. The shame she felt wasn't just personal; it was amplified by the scrutiny of her father's 50,000-strong congregation.
Sarah Jakes Roberts became pregnant at age 13 and had her son at 14, an experience she says confirmed her pre-existing insecurity that she didn't fit in the church world her father led.
Chapter 5 · 09:40
Ten Years Barefoot: Identity, Comparison, and Finding Herself
For ten years, Sarah tried to locate herself by comparison — finding someone she resembled and becoming that person, only to discover she didn't fit there either. She cycled through roles and relationships, each time hoping the next version would finally feel right. The exhausting search ended with a radical decision: to stop wearing other people's shoes entirely. 'I'm going to be barefoot,' she tells Mel — standing flat-footed in isolation, loneliness, and the uncomfortable truth of who she was. From that ground, she allowed herself to try faith, not the institutional faith of her upbringing but an intimate, personal relationship with God that, for the first time, felt like it might work for someone like her. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "For 10 years, Sarah tried on other women's identities — academic, government worker, waitress at a strip club — searching for herself in re…" 09:41
Claims made here
You cannot want to heal and simultaneously punish yourself — the two intentions are mutually exclusive.
For 10 years, Sarah tried on other women's identities — academic, government worker, waitress at a strip club — searching for herself in reflection. She finally stopped when she decided to be barefoot: standing flat-footed in the truth of who she was, even if that truth was isolation and loneliness.
Most people sit with their past but sit there punishing themselves — replaying shame, rehearsing rejection. Sarah's radical insight: you cannot want to heal and punish yourself at the same time. The only path forward is sitting with yourself in pursuit of compassion, not conviction.
Sarah spent 10 years sitting with herself, but doing so in a punishing way — replaying negative words others had spoken — which prevented any real healing.
Sarah's central insight: simultaneously wanting to heal and punishing yourself for past mistakes is a contradiction that blocks all progress.
Chapter 6 · 13:50
The Healing Paradox: Compassion vs. Self-Punishment
Sarah makes the distinction between two kinds of sitting with yourself: the punishing kind, where you replay shame and ask 'how could you?', and the compassionate kind, where you stretch toward love for every facet of who you are. For ten years, Sarah was doing the former — the constant repetition of negative words others had spoken over her. The revelation that changed everything was recognising these two modes are mutually exclusive: punishment and healing cannot coexist. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Most people sit with their past but sit there punishing themselves — replaying shame, rehearsing rejection. Sarah's radical insight: you ca…" 12:28 Mel stops the conversation to make sure no listener misses this, calling it the most profound thing she has ever heard. Sitting with yourself in the pursuit of compassion, Sarah explains, is uncomfortable precisely because it requires loving yourself in a way you're not yet sure is possible — but it is the greatest gift you can give yourself.
Sarah didn't try to erase her past as a teen mom — she added to it. 'I'm a teen mom, but also I'm an incredible person, but also I dream, but also I'm an author.' The refusal to let one defining moment crowd out everything else is the core of her identity framework.
Chapter 7 · 17:40
'But Also': Refusing to Be Defined by One Moment
One of the episode's most quotable and practically useful ideas emerges here: the 'but also' framework for reclaiming identity. Sarah explains that she spent years trying to escape or disconnect from the label of teen mom, when the real work was to hold that identity alongside everything else. She isn't trying to be just her achievements or just her struggles — she wants to be the full, complex, tapestry of a girl on a journey and a woman owning her power. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Sarah didn't try to erase her past as a teen mom — she added to it. 'I'm a teen mom, but also I'm an incredible person, but also I dream, b…" 14:15 Mel is visibly moved, and Sarah grounds the insight with humour: after everything, she is also on the Mel Robbins Podcast, which she notes has millions of weekly listeners. The takeaway is that adding to your identity, not subtracting from it, is how you build wholeness.
Chapter 8 · 21:30
Discounting Yourself: Self-Worth, Purity Culture, and the Lowest Bidder
Responding to Mel's question about 'discounting yourself to the lowest bidder,' Sarah traces the mechanism with painful clarity. Growing up during purity culture's peak, the highest possible female prize was virginity before marriage — and when she lost that at 13, she metaphorically slapped a discount sticker over her own worth. From there, she explains, the logic is inevitable: a lower price means accepting experiences and treatment you wouldn't have tolerated at full value. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "When you can't live up to someone else's definition of a woman, you put a discount sticker over your value. And a lower price means you sta…" 21:37 The progression she describes is one many listeners will recognise: I'm not smart enough, thin enough, beautiful enough, so I have to accept this. But this, Sarah insists, is a lie. Your value is not set by your experiences or by society's ever-shifting definitions. It is an inside job — a commitment to recognising that everything you've survived has added to your worth, not subtracted from it.
Claims made here
During purity culture, girls in Sarah's church community were primarily valued for virginity before marriage, to the exclusion of education or other achievements.
When you can't live up to someone else's definition of a woman, you put a discount sticker over your value. And a lower price means you start accepting things you never would have otherwise. Sarah's point: your worth is not set by your experiences or society's standards — it's an inside job.
Sarah tried for years to build a new life on top of her teen pregnancy — to become a CFO and leave her past behind. It never worked, because she kept trying to cook with ingredients she didn't have. Real transformation requires opening the cupboard and using every single ingredient, including the painful ones.
Sarah's 'leftovers' metaphor: instead of trying to reinvent yourself with ingredients that don't exist, you must use every ingredient — including the painful ones — to build something authentic.
Chapter 10 · 34:20
Mid-Episode Sponsor Break
Mel breaks from the conversation to give listeners a moment to process, describing what they've just heard as 'profound wisdom' and encouraging them to share the episode with someone who needs it. The sponsor block covers three brands: Southern New Hampshire University promoting flexible, affordable online degree programs with a free application at snhu.edu/mel; Expedia promoting bundled travel savings of up to 30%; and a repeat Dell XPS laptop read directing listeners to dell.com/deals.
Claims made here
Expedia allows travelers to save up to 30% when bundling flights, hotels, and other travel components.
Regret is what happens when you turn a movie on in the middle and watch only one scene on repeat. Sarah's prescription: look at your life from the opening credits. When you see the full context — the loneliness, the family upheaval, the lack of guidance — you stop asking 'how could you?' and start feeling compassion.
Sarah's advice for sitting through cringe: instead of judging your life by one painful scene, look at the whole movie from opening credits to now — given what was in your cupboard, you did the best you could.
Chapter 12 · 46:00
Rest, Reconciliation, and the Inner 13-Year-Old
When Mel asks what Sarah does to stay grounded in her power, the answer begins with rest. Not just sleep but spiritual rest — allowing her brain to decompress through gratitude, prayer, meditation, and genuine reflection. The most vivid practice she describes is letting the 13-year-old girl who heard 'you're nasty,' 'you're a slut,' 'there's something wrong with you' actually listen to what people say about Sarah now. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Son is now 21: Sarah's son, born when she was 14, is now 21 and thriving — a milestone she uses as a practice of gratitude, revisiting the …" 46:34 This inner child work — the grown woman taking the little girl's hand and saying 'look, you made it' — is how Sarah keeps herself from the autopilot of achievement. She also shares a remarkable statement of contentment: she is in the overflow right now. If she never wrote another book or recorded another podcast, what has already been built is more than she could have imagined or asked for. It feels greedy to want more.
Sarah's son, born when she was 14, is now 21 and thriving — a milestone she uses as a practice of gratitude, revisiting the moment through the eyes of her 13-year-old self.
When Sarah got pregnant, someone told her 'I always knew to expect something like this from you' — words she ate for breakfast for 10 years. Then in prayer before a sold-out tour, she felt those same words come back in God's voice, transformed into total affirmation. The very sentence meant to destroy her became her anchor.
Chapter 15 · 59:20
Taking a Baby Dare: How to Begin Believing in Yourself
Mel asks about daring to believe in yourself, and Sarah responds by rejecting the 'just take the leap' paradigm. When you've spent more years doubting yourself than believing in yourself, an overnight transformation is not just unlikely — it's unrealistic. What you can do is take a baby dare: introduce the new version of yourself incrementally, starting by giving it language. Sarah's own example is instructive — when a collaborator declined an international invitation on her behalf because 'she likes being at home,' Sarah circled back to correct the record: actually, she was open to it. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Sarah cringes at 'just take the leap' advice. When you've spent more time doubting yourself than believing in yourself, you can't switch ov…" 59:20 That single conversation was a down payment on who she was becoming. Small dares compound. Look up one day and you've transformed — not because you leapt, but because you kept making tiny adjustments that stretched your environment to make room for the person you were growing into.
Sarah cringes at 'just take the leap' advice. When you've spent more time doubting yourself than believing in yourself, you can't switch overnight. What you can do is take a baby dare — introduce the new version of yourself gradually, use your words to create space, and look up one day to find you've transformed.
Chapter 16 · 1:03:40
Let It Live Outside of You
The conversation reaches its practical crescendo when Sarah observes that the problem with consuming self-help content — podcasts, books, tools — is that people keep all of it living inside them. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "All the podcasts, all the books — if it stays inside you, it drowns you. Sarah's breakthrough insight: speaking your dreams and your becomi…" 1:03:40 The release mechanism is language: speaking your dreams, intentions, and becoming out loud. This act simultaneously empties you out so new things can flow in, and creates a shape outside of you for the person you're growing into to inhabit. Mel nearly loses her composure with excitement. Sarah then addresses the fear that typically holds people back — the belief that sharing who you're becoming will break your relationships. In her experience, 9 times out of 10 the people around you have far more flexibility than you've given them credit for. Keeping things inside doesn't protect your relationships; it denies you access to the support that was always there.
Claims made here
9 times out of 10, people have more flexibility in their relationships and environments than they assume when they fear sharing their dreams.
All the podcasts, all the books — if it stays inside you, it drowns you. Sarah's breakthrough insight: speaking your dreams and your becoming out loud doesn't just share information. It empties space inside you for more, and creates room in your environment for the person you're growing into.
Speaking your hopes and dreams out loud empties you out and creates space inside for new growth, while also stretching your environment to make room for who you are becoming.
Sarah argues that 9 times out of 10, your relationships have more flexibility than you assume, and that not speaking your dreams aloud means you never discover the support that was always there.
Chapter 18 · 1:09:55
Power Defined: Authenticity, Resiliency, and Humility in Flow
Mel asks what power means to Sarah, and the answer is nothing like conventional definitions of authority or dominance. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Power isn't getting knocked down and getting back up. It's that plus humility (owning what you did wrong) plus authenticity (knowing when y…" 1:09:57 Power, Sarah explains, is a cocktail — authenticity (knowing when you're the beast on stage and when you need to be nurtured), resiliency (getting back up), and humility (owning your mistakes and their impact on others). The mistake most people make is equating power only with resiliency, with getting knocked down and standing up again. But without humility, resiliency becomes arrogance. Without authenticity, it becomes performance. The three must flow together. And the key word is flow — power is not a trophy you earn and keep on a shelf. It moves. Which means the question you must always ask yourself is not 'am I powerful?' but 'what does power look like for me right now?'
Power isn't getting knocked down and getting back up. It's that plus humility (owning what you did wrong) plus authenticity (knowing when you're the beast on stage and when you need someone to take care of you). Power is a flow, not a trophy — and it works anywhere you place it.
Sarah defines power not as authority or dominance but as the combined flow of 100% authenticity, 100% resiliency, and 100% humility — a state of being, not a destination.
Sarah Jakes Roberts and her husband run a blended family of six children, a reality she uses as a practical example of needing both nurturing others and being nurtured yourself as part of authentic power.
Chapter 19 · 1:12:25
Confidence: The Wig Story and What It Actually Means
Sarah opens her discussion of confidence with Esther Perel's definition: having knowledge of both your gifts and your flaws and not being destabilised by either. True confidence is not about how you look; it's about who you are on the inside and your ability to hold onto that in any circumstance. [1] — Sarah Jakes Roberts "Mid-sermon at her father's megachurch, Sarah's wig started slipping. She calculated the physics, decided she couldn't stop, and took it off…" 1:15:05 She then tells the story that makes this concrete: mid-sermon at her father's traditional megachurch — now back in Dallas after years in Los Angeles — her wig began slipping. She did the math in seconds, realised she couldn't stop it, and simply took it off. Fifty thousand people were streaming. Her father wasn't there. Her husband was out of town. She threw the wig to her sister and kept preaching. Women in the congregation started removing their own wigs in solidarity. What Sarah had prepared to be the internet's joke became a liberation moment — women messaging her to say she had given them permission to show up as they truly were. The sermon she spent weeks studying became secondary to the authenticity of that single moment.
Claims made here
Esther Perel defines confidence as having knowledge of both your gifts and your flaws and not being moved in either direction.
When Sarah's wig fell off mid-sermon, approximately 50,000 people were streaming the church service online.
Sarah and her husband relocated from Los Angeles to Dallas to support her father's church leadership.
Sarah cites Esther Perel's definition of confidence as knowing both your gifts and your flaws and not being moved by either — an intentional owning of your full identity.
Mid-sermon at her father's megachurch, Sarah's wig started slipping. She calculated the physics, decided she couldn't stop, and took it off. Women in the congregation started throwing their own wigs. What could have been the internet's joke became a liberation ceremony — proof that the message is always bigger than the mess.
When Sarah's wig began slipping during a sermon with 50,000 online viewers, she removed it mid-message — turning a potentially humiliating moment into an act of radical authenticity that liberated her congregation.
Chapter 20 · 1:19:30
Power Is Fluid: The Move to Dallas and the New Chapter
Behind the wig story is a deeper spiritual question: when Sarah and her husband relocated from Los Angeles — where she had developed her confidence within an accepting, vibrant community — to Dallas to support her father's church, she genuinely didn't know if her version of ministry would work there. The doubt was real. The wig moment, she realised in retrospect, was the answer. Not a joke to survive, but a message: the most authentic version of who you are has been anointed to help from this place. If you are just who you are, that is enough. A woman threw her own wig onto the altar in solidarity — tired of pretending to have it all together. For Sarah, this sealed the understanding that power flows across contexts. The same power that worked in LA, expressed differently, would work in Dallas. The question was never whether power was available — only what it looked like now.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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New York Times bestselling author, pastor, and speaker; central guest of the episode discussing identity, healing, and power.
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Sarah's father and famous megachurch pastor whose public prominence intensified the shame Sarah felt after her teen pregnancy.
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Belgian-American psychotherapist whose definition of confidence Sarah Jakes Roberts cited and paraphrased during the discussion on power.
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Satellite radio and podcast platform mentioned as a way to listen to new Mel Robbins Podcast episodes ad-free.
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Sarah Jakes Roberts' ministry and conference community for women with non-traditional spiritual journeys.
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The podcast on which this conversation originally aired and is now being revisited with a new introduction.
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Sarah Jakes Roberts' book subtitled 'Ignite Your Confidence and Become a Force,' whose central argument is that power is fluid and a state of being.
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City to which Sarah and her husband relocated from Los Angeles to help her father with church leadership, testing whether her power would carry into a new context.
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City where Sarah developed her confidence as a speaker within an accepting and vibrant church community before relocating to Dallas.
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Sarah Jakes Roberts' home state, referenced when she described deciding to stand 'flat-footed' and 'barefoot' in her own truth.
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Location of the Mel Robbins Podcast studios where the original conversation with Sarah Jakes Roberts was recorded.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Sarah Jakes Roberts got pregnant at age 13 and gave birth to her son at age 14.
Sarah spent approximately 10 years struggling with shame and trying on different identities before finding herself.
During purity culture, girls in Sarah's church community were primarily valued for virginity before marriage, to the exclusion of education or other achievements.
You cannot want to heal and simultaneously punish yourself — the two intentions are mutually exclusive.
Sarah's blogging in her early 20s attracted a following specifically because she was open about her teen pregnancy, divorce, and dropping out of college.
When Sarah's wig fell off mid-sermon, approximately 50,000 people were streaming the church service online.
9 times out of 10, people have more flexibility in their relationships and environments than they assume when they fear sharing their dreams.
Esther Perel defines confidence as having knowledge of both your gifts and your flaws and not being moved in either direction.
Sarah and her husband relocated from Los Angeles to Dallas to support her father's church leadership.
Sarah Jakes Roberts is a New York Times bestselling author.
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