Pushkin Hay Slight Changers. I have some exciting news. I've written a book. It's called The Other Side of Change, Who we become when life makes other plans. It's available for pre order today at changewithmaya dot com slash book. I would appreciate your early support of this project so much. Is truly the thing I'm most proud to have created. You can find the link to pre order in our episode description. Thanks so much, and now onto the show,
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I actually thought that I would feel safe if everybody around me was okay, that if everybody around me was happy, if everybody around me was not disappointed, if everybody around me liked me or thought I was cool, then I would be okay.
Mel Robbins is a best selling author and podcast host.
And the problem with that is that the one thing you can't control in life is other people, and so to hand your safety and sense of self over to other people's moods and thoughts and expectations of you means you will forever in your entire life, always feel as though you're not in control of what's happening.
On today's show. To all my people, pleasers, control freaks, perfectionists and micromanagers, we're learning to let it all go. I'm Maya Schunker, as scientist who studies human behavior, and this is a slight change of plans. I show about who we are and who we become in the face of a big change. If you've ever found yourself bending over backwards to meet other people's expectations or trying to control their emotions and behaviors, I promise that you are
not alone. Mel Robbin's, host of the wildly popular The Mel Robins podcast, has a new book out called The Let Them Theory. It's all about how to stop giving other people so much power and to let go of our need to control them. To better understand her interest in this philosophy, I wanted to know more about Mel's relationship with control. What kind of messages do you feel that you were absorbing as a child about what it meant to live a good life, to live at a happy life.
You know this is a difficult question for me to answer, I don't have a lot of memories from my childhood, and I know why, and the reason why is because I basically kind of lived in a constant state of being on edge or being in fight or flight, which is very common if you have any past trauma, or if you have had any adverse childhood experiences, or if you just live in a household where the moods of the adults are chaotic, or there are things going on
that you shouldn't have to deal with as a child. But what I would say is that when I think about my childhood and very happy times, my mom and I would always go to the farmer's market and all the farmers would be at their various stalls. My mom knew every single person there. She knew whether they had kids or grandkids, she knew the name of the dogs. As she would be picking up the radishes or squeezing the peaches, they'd be chatting up a storm about the weather or the crops, or how their.
Kid is doing. And it really made.
An impression on me. And so I would say, a good life, in my mind, is one where you are living your life in relation to other people, and you are showing up in a way where you're interested in them and their well being and what they're doing.
It's so interesting because you said living a good life is about living in relation to others, and I can see that that can be a double edged sword. You might become beholden to the views of others and their impression of you. And I am curious to know you mentioned that you were kind of in a constant state of being on edge, probably hypervigilant. Tell me more about what your relationship with control was like as it pertained to trying to control your environment and the people in it.
For me as a young kid, it was a lot around wondering what mood certain people were going to be in in the household, and this sense that I have to behave a certain way in order to make sure that things are peaceful or people are happy, or nobody's mad at me. Like it was just this constant state of something's wrong, I'm about to get in trouble, and.
The you know, I like.
The thing that I should say is that I had this incident when I was in the fourth grade where I woke up in the middle of the night at a big family ski trip and there was an older kid on top of me, and you know, they were doing something very inappropriate, and I possmed. I just froze and rolled over and I don't even remember how it ended because I left my body. And I think from that point forward, I had this intense sense in my body that something was terribly wrong, and I didn't tell anybody.
And I didn't tell anybody because as an eight year old, I thought somehow I had done something wrong, which meant I was going to get in trouble. And that core experience I did something wrong and waking up every morning feeling like something bad has happened is what haunted me all the way into my thirties because I suppressed the experience. And so to your question, the way that control played
out for me is I outsourced it. I actually thought that I would feel safe if everybody around me was okay, that if everybody around me was happy, if everybody around me was not disappointed, if everybody around me liked me or thought I was cool, then I would be okay. And the problem with that, when we unpack it, is that that is the one thing and the one strategy that actually will never put you in control of anything, because the one thing you can't control in life is
other people. You can't control what they think, what they do, how they feel, what they expect of you, the lies they might tell, the disappointment they You can't control any of that. And so to hand your safety and sense of self over to other people's moods and thoughts and expectations of you means you will, forever in your entire life, always feel as though you're not in control of what's happening.
Yeah.
What is so interesting to me, though, is that you place an even greater burden on yourself because you are both giving power to others while seating that their behavior we're a direct function of you and your behaviors. What an enormous weight to carry as a young child. And I feel like what's coming to mind for me is the illusion of control, where we overestimate the degree to
which we determine outcomes in our lives. But what's really interesting is that they study people and they found that there's a continuum here where you can move from either an internal locus of control to an external locus of control, and people with an external locus of control are much more comfortable with uncertainty and ambiguity and things not quite going to plan because they understand that exogenous factors, the external world actually plays a really big role in dictating
our lives. Then, people who are in the internal locus of control, we ascribe events to our own doing, so our successes are ours, and our failures are ours, and the behaviors of others are ours. Right, And a strong internal locus of control is association with greater happiness and greater well being and greater purpose overall, except that when things don't go according to plan, we're much more likely
to self blame. We're much more likely to self break because we are the only explanation for why things didn't go well. And so what I'm hearing is that young Mele developed a really powerful internal locus of control where everything fell back on you. That's a lot.
It is a lot.
So you have this relationship with control when you're a child, and then as an adult you run up against the limits of your ability to maintain that equanimity in your environment when you and your family hit rock bottom, right, your husband's business crashes as a result of the Great Recession.
Oh, and stupidity.
I mean, like, there's a lot of stupid, like myself included like, I'm not going to blame it out there, like.
There are some things that we did that were just dumb.
Yeah, I should have known internal locus of control. Gal. Of course, you're going to make sure that you take accountability. I love this. You're eight hundred thousand dollars in debt at this point. You were in your early forty one, forty one yep, trying to raise three kids. Bring me back to that moment and what that might have taught you or not taught you about kind of the limits of your control, or how you might want to rethink that relationship.
Oh my god, there's so much that it taught me. You know, when you're in a rock bottom moment, the worst thing somebody can say to you is you're going to look back on this as a blessing, Like you literally want to punch people in the face.
No.
I was forty one, and you know, look, I'm a very ambitious person, and never in my life had I made a vision board where I had cut out images that said bankruptcy, alcoholism, million dollars in debt, foreclosure, divorce.
That was not part of the plan, of course, And what's interesting is We can talk reinvention and pivots and everything saying all we want right, but when it's happening to you, it's a different experience because what happens is your emotions takeover and you start to tell yourself a story that you're never going to get out of this. And for me, what that meant is, I lost my job. We were eight hundred thousand dollars in debt because we were complete freaking idiots by cashing out our life savings
and shoving it into his business. After one location of a pizza restaurant went okay, and then all of a sudden, you know, two thousand and seven hits two thousand and eight, the recession hits our houses upside down. We have leans on it. We've cashed out everything we own. I've got three kids under the age of ten. Friends and family have invested in this business, and the bills are starting to pile up on the counter, and I'm pulling a kid out of town soccer because we can't afford one
hundred and twenty five dollars. And I'm having trouble some weeks because Chris is not getting paid and I don't have a job. Putting gas in the car tank. Financial stress is crushing and you can't escape it, and there's a lot of shame around it, and so I drank myself into the ground. I became very angry and avoidant. I started blaming everything on my husband, and I became paralyzed. I was in like a frozen trauma response, which is the exact same thing that happened to me when I
was eight years old. And because I felt like I couldn't control everything that was happening, I just ran away from it. I got drunk, I yelled at my husband. I became a person. I didn't recognize the kids were missing the bus. I couldn't or I didn't think I could control the demise that was looming. But I could control avoiding it. I could hit the snooze button six times. I could numb myself at night, I could avoid the bills.
Because avoidance is a major form of control, anger is a major form of controlled and so my control was still there, it was just being aimed at the wrong things.
Yeah, so that leads us to the need for let them bring me back to the moment when you were first exposed to it. Obviously, it's rooted in ancient wisdom. But you know, I hear wise things all the time, and they kind of can just go in one year and out the other, Like I want to know what made it stick for you in that moment in your life.
I've been trying to be less controlling my whole life. I've tried to be stoic. I have tried to be more Buddhist. I have tried to manage my response. And it's one thing when you're sharing ideas. It's a whole other thing when the teacher shows up and the student is ready. It's the difference between concept and the moment when that concept hits you like a freaking sledgeing, exactly. And so I was at the high school prom with my son. I was being a super micromanagy mom, really annoying.
If you've ever been in a situation where you're all stressed and the words are coming out of your mouth and you wish you could shove them back in, that was me.
So I was just.
Micromanaging him, you know, you got a tux and let me tee the thing, and shoving the flowers at him even though his date doesn't want a corsage. And now it's starting to rain, and I'm like, you can't get your shoes wet, and her hair is going to get ruined, and you can't go to the taco stand before dinner because then your tuxedo is going to be wet. And my daughter was home and she reaches out and grabs
my bicep and she's like, you're being annoying. If she doesn't want flowers, letter, if it's going to ruin his shoes, let them. If he wants to get soaking wet, let them. If she's going to ruin her hair, letter, And it was just like this, let them, let them, let them. It's their prom, not yours for crying out loud. Let
them do what they want to do. And there was just something about the nails of my biceps and the cringe in her voice and the cascade of the let, let let that my shoulders has dropped, and I just kind of had this obvious epiphany where I'm just like, why am I worried about this?
Seriously? Why why am I? Why am I concerned about this?
And the second that I just stopped trying to control it, I felt peace, And then I could see that everybody around me felt peaceful, And so I just started to say, let them in any moment in my life where things just felt stressful, traffic, let them the person's root in front of me. You know, some days I've got the energy to step in and be like, hey, you know, they're they're they're doing the.
Best they can.
Some days they're just like, let them. I'm not going to be the you know, manners police today. I just don't have the energy for this. My mom's in a bad mood, let her be in a bad mood. My dad's disappointed, to be disappointed, let me show up with a little bit more compassion. And so I just started saying let them, let them, let them. And it was so profound. And the first insight that I had was I could not believe how much time I wasted on stupid things. I couldn't believe how stressed out I was
due to dumb things. If you allow zoom calls and traffic and you know, somebody's mood or a curt email to constantly keep your amygdala humming and your body in a stressed out state, you're gonna go home and take it out in your family. And that's why you don't have time and.
Energy because it's being sad.
Because it's getting drained all day long. Yes, And so it became this like boundary with the world where I started to recognize, wait a minute, my time and energy has value, and I need to protect that time and energy because I want to use that time and energy to either better my life or to better the world
around me. And if I'm constantly allowing all this stuff to drain me, I'm never going to have the energy to do anything about what's wrong in the world or what as bothering me in my relationships or with my health.
We'll be back in a moment with a slight change of plans. On the night of her son's prom, Mel Robbins was trying to micromanage everything, like where her son and his friend should go for dinner or whether his date should wear a corsage. Then Mel's daughter said two simple words, it's let them, And for whatever reason, it was exactly what Mel needed to hear. She's held onto those words ever since and has written an entire book about it. I asked her to break it down in more detail.
For me, the let them theory is simple.
The more you let other people live their lives the better your life gets, and the more you learn how to let people be who they are and who they're not, the better your relationships get. And the theory itself is about power and control, and the way that it works is simple. There are two steps, and the first step gets all of the fame, but it's the second step that's actually where your power is. The first part is
let them. So when you're stressed out, when you're annoyed, when you're hurt, when you're frustrated, when you're confused, when you're just like feeling like somebody's disrespecting you or hurting you. As weird as it sounds, you're going to quietly say to yourself, let them. And I want to be very clear about something. This is not a theory that says you should let people hurt you. This is a theory about where your control is and where your power is.
And the mistake that we make when we're in a situation where there is disrespect or there is some kind of hurtful behavior is we believe that that other person is going to change. We get gas lit into thinking that the power is in changing the other person. Let them is simply a tool that reminds you that hoping that they're going to change, or pouring time and energy into trying to make someone else change isn't where your power is. Let them is kind of you saying, Okay,
this is who this person is. Their behavior is the truth. Let me is the second part. Let me is where you say to yourself, I can't control this other person. Let me decide what I'm going to think about this, Let me decide what I'm going to do or don't do about this, and let me decide how I'm going to process my own feelings about this.
And so in normal day to.
Day's circumstances, the way that this works is if somebody's disappointed, let them be disappointed.
You can't make it.
To the thirty second birthday party where you're going to meet at a Mexican restaurant and split a check with fourteen people and not even talk to your friend that's holding the birthday, and you've had a long day at work and you just would rather go to a yoga.
Out of my brain, mel how do you know my life? Like?
Literally, let them be disappointed, because here's what I want.
You to a meditarian and I don't drink alcohol so I always get ripped off when you do the fourteen persons split.
Yes, because they're splitting the check and you didn't have anything to drink, and it's loud as hell and you don't want to be there, and it takes too long. And so here's the thing. Let your friend be disappointed. Tell them that you're not going to come tonight. It's been a busy week at work. Let them be disappointed, acknowledgment, and then let me remind myself that I need to
take care of myself. And let me ask my friend if they'd be willing to go to a yoga class this weekend and go get some tea, because I'd actually like to catch up with you.
One on one.
And that's how you handle that situation and kind of a day to day thing. In a more serious situation, if you're dealing with somebody emotionally immature or that has a very very challenging personality style, which I have in my life, a person like this. The thing that I can see now that I've been practicing let them and let me, which is really about boundaries, what's mine to own and what's yours? Down is I, for years just
expected this person to change. I wish they would. I wish the dynamic would have been different, and so I would go into every experienced And one of the things that let them did is let them force me to practice radical acceptance. Let them forced me to see the situation and the person that I'm dealing with as they are, instead of constantly explaining away behavior that I've been explaining away for a very long time and somehow turning it
back as it's my fault. And then the let me part helps me start to understand that if I'm going to let this person be who they are, then let me decide how much time and energy I'm going to put with this person. Let me protect myself when I'm around this person. Let me remind myself I can leave a conversation or a dinner table, or a text chain, or a date or an interview or like a family
thing anytime I want. And it starts to slowly remind you in these dynamics that we get stuck with with other people that there are little things you can do when you first learn to separate yourself from managing the other person and focus more on protecting yourself in the situation.
When it comes to accountability, which is something that you raised when I reflect on my personal life. Granted, this is also growing up in an Indian immigrant family where my parents had no filters around giving me feedback. Some of my greatest moments of growth stemmed from the people in my life not just letting me be a certain way. They didn't use let them. Instead, they were very forthcoming with me about my weaknesses or their needs or maybe
how I'd even let them down. And so in their articulating those feelings to me, I in turn was challenged in some way. I was able to think differently. I was able to do things differently. And so, how can we apply the let them theory in the right places so that it doesn't stop other people from engaging in difficult conversations that could help us become better people, or us engaging with other people to try to help them.
Yeah, let me is where you engage in the conversation. Let me is where you tell the truth. Let me is where you approach the people in your life that you worried about, and instead of judging them, you approach it with compassion and concern and support. Hey, I'm worried about you. I notice you're not acting like yourself now that you're dating this person? How are you feeling about the relationship. I'm here to support you, you know, is there anything I can do to support you? Is there
anything you want to do about this? Instead, what we do is we avoid the conversation. We judge, We just kind of don't have the hard conversation. We don't push the people in our lives because we're afraid of having
any kind of tension with somebody. And so instead, I think we have an epidemic of people walking around very emotionally immature, stressed out, avoiding the conversations and avoiding taking accountability for your needs and actually asking for it in a way that is respectful and not emotional, instead of constantly avoiding the conversation, then resenting people, and then being pissed off. And so let's go back to what we've
been talking about. We've been talking about control. Every single one of us needs to feel in control of our lives. When we don't feel in control of our decisions or our future, what we're doing this afternoon, or what's going to happen at work tomorrow, we start to feel unsafe and a little on edge, and the mistake that we make is when someone else's behavior because they're dating somebody we hate, or they're letting themselves go, or they're not quote trying at school, or they can't get a job,
and now you're starting to worry that they're unmotivated. When their behavior worries us, we now feel out of control. So we step in and try to fix it. And what happens when you do that is that you bump up against that person's need for autonomy and control, and so they're not going to do what you ask them to do.
They might do it once to appease you and get you authors back, yes.
But they're not actually going to create lasting change because the change for a person has to come from within. And so one of the reasons why the let them theory is going to help you in situations where somebody is in your life and you want to change them, and we all we want to change everybody in our lives, got opinions about everybody.
So the way that you do is you let them be there and let me try a different approach.
You know, what I'm hearing, what I'm reflecting on as you're sharing these sorts of stories, is that there's a dynamic interplay between let them and let me throughout the entire duration of the experience. These are like flexible categories. You can start with let me, maybe you sit down,
you have a conversation. But what I say, see let them serving as is a psychological safeguard such that if you engage in the let me in good faith and you explore all the options, you have a safe landing with let them, which is, if I'm not able to change them, I'm not going to allow it to erode my well being and mental health.
Yes, or this relationship or this.
Relationship, because part of what actually creates friction and tension and distance in a relationship is the opinion that somebody else should change.
Yeah. And what I've.
Found is if you create this space where you let people be, you let people have their feelings, You let people have their opinions, You let people have their expectations, you let people have their timeline for their own healing, and you hold a boundary that creates acceptance of that person as they are, or at least witnessing them clearly
as they are. Now you have a separate boundary in relation to them, which has let me, let me remind myself that the only power that I have in this relationship is myself, and if I want the relationship to change, the only thing that will change it is me. And if I focus on what's in my control, which is what I think about this, what I do or don't do, and how I process my emotions, I change how I relate to this person, how much time I give, how much energy I change, how reactive I am, and that
shifts the dynamic entirely. You know, the truth is this thing brings you closer to people in your life because when you create space for people to have different opinions or disappointments or expectations and you don't make it your job to change them or manage them, you're now actually in relation with the person as they are, and you're not in relationship with the possibility or what they hope they'd be, or trying to change them or the tension
of the die. Now, I just see you exactly as you are, And even though I don't understand your opinion, if I'm the kind of person that wants to understand it, let me try to understand why you think the way that you do.
Instead of judging you and not talking to you about it.
I love what you just said because I just interviewed Amanda Knox for the show and she was saying, true freedom for her is seeing the world as it actually is, not as you believe it should be. And you know, this is a woman who's faced wrongful conviction after wrongful conviction. She knows what she's talking about, and she felt like that was the one definition of freedom that no one
could ever take away from her. And when you're saying that to me, it's like, actually, what a beautiful thing to engage with the world and that people in it as they are. Yes, what a wonderful way to live. Just even hearing you say that sends tingles down my spine. Yeah, to free ourselves of every expectation and every preconceived notion and every hope of what we want them to be or could be, or how we want to be with
them whatever. It is, Like, we come to every social interaction with so much, like we carry so much mental and emotional baggage that just surrounds that interaction. And imagine you just like strip away that artifice. What a raw and beautiful interaction you could have. There's no agenda anymore.
No there's no agenda because you just see people as they are, and you know, to your point, I think so much of this comes from the conditioning that we have about human relationships as children.
Yeah.
If you think about the experience of being a child, your entire conditioning around relationships is from a power dynamic where somebody expects things of you and tells you what to do and parents you, and that's their job. But then we become eighteen years old and we think that that's what relationships are, that we're supposed to parent other people,
and that's not what adult relationships should be. Learning how to see somebody exactly as they are and exactly as they're not, and then choosing how you're going to show up with them as they are that is a just groundbreaking, late, freeing, beautiful idea. It's certainly brought me closer to people in my life, and it's made me confront how much expectation and judgment and opinions that I have about my kids,
about my husband, about anything. Yeah, and learn how to have boundaries between your desire and conditioning, to manage people's happiness and moods and hold space for people's experience instead, and one of the other beautiful things that's happened for me as a parent is that something was happening with one of my kids that was upsetting. A breakup, problems with friends, issues with money, anxiety, all this stuff that's just normal stuff of life, right. I would just rush
in and try to take it away. I would come in with the advice. I would tell them what to do, and I was stepping over the actual thing that needed to be done, which is literally listen, validate somebody's feeling, let them have the experience. And then here's the most
important thing. If you believe in the person's capacity and capability to move through this challenge and learn from it, then your role in their life is very different because you move from a fixer to a person who stands on the sidelines, reminding and coaching that you have the ability to deal with this, to learn from it, to survive this, to come stronger from it. You put people back into the driver's seat of their life. As you're sitting there next to them saying, I can see your
heart broken. You know, I'm sorry is happening to you, and I believe in your ability to move through this. I believe that you're going to be okay. But is there anything that you want to do about this right now?
Yeah, when you look back now on young mel and what she felt she needed in order to have a stable existence, which is to manage and control her environment right the people in it, and for all of them, to make them all happy, do all the right things, check all the boxes. And then you reflect on yourself today. I mean, the evolution's extraordinary. How would you summarize what your current relationship with control is in relation to other people?
Well, it is a daily practice because everybody has a hardwired need to feel in control and that's never going away. But boy, has it been transformational to really have tools to be able to help me decipher what's in my control and what's not. What do I have power over
and what do I not? Where do I want to give my time and attention because time and intention and your energy those are the single most valuable things you have in life because where you put your time and what you pour your energy into determines the experience you have in life. I mean, it's just been life changing because I actually do feel more in control and I more importantly feel very peaceful most of the time.
Hey, thanks so much for listening. Just as a reminder, you can pre order my new book, The Other Side of Change at the link in our episode description or at Change with maya dot com slash book and join me next time when we hear from best selling author and podcast host Glennon Doyle about her lifelong search for belonging.
Many times in my life, I've had moments where I'm like, Oh, I'm out of here. I won't spend another moment in this cafeteria, in this high school, in this marriage, in this life.
That's next week on A Slight Change of Plans. See you then. A Slight Change of Plans is created, written and executive produced by me Maya Schunker. The Slight Change family includes our showrunner Tyler Green, our senior editor Kate Parkinson Morgan, our producers Britney Cronin and Megan Lubin, and our sound engineer Erica Huang. Louis Scara wrote our delightful
theme song, and Ginger Smith helped arrange the vocals. A Slight Change of Plans is a production of Pushkin Industries, so big thanks to everyone there, and of course a very special thanks to Jimmy Lee. You can follow a slight change of plans on Instagram at doctor Maya Schunker see you next week.
Can I just tell you something, the worse I look, the better our content does. And I'm looking pretty decent today.
So we're fun.
We're totally screwed.