The Mel Robbins Podcast8 Truths About College That Nobody Tells You
Mel Robbins on eight Unspoken College Truths: Navigating Change, Freedom, and Friendship Wisely.
In this episode of The Mel Robbins Podcast, featuring Mel Robbins, 8 Truths About College That Nobody Tells You explores eight Unspoken College Truths: Navigating Change, Freedom, and Friendship Wisely Mel Robbins reflects on dropping her son off at college and shares eight hard truths she wishes she and her daughters had known as freshmen. She reframes college as ‘life school,’ emphasizing that the biggest lessons aren’t academic but about change, self-trust, and taking ownership of your experience. The episode covers emotional turbulence, boredom, loneliness, drinking, hookup culture, and friendship dynamics, offering specific behavioral advice for each. Her core message: you’re not in the wrong place—you’re in a massive transition, and if you move your body, get out of your dorm, and advocate for yourself, college can become a chapter you truly love.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Eight Unspoken College Truths: Navigating Change, Freedom, and Friendship Wisely
- Mel Robbins reflects on dropping her son off at college and shares eight hard truths she wishes she and her daughters had known as freshmen. She reframes college as ‘life school,’ emphasizing that the biggest lessons aren’t academic but about change, self-trust, and taking ownership of your experience. The episode covers emotional turbulence, boredom, loneliness, drinking, hookup culture, and friendship dynamics, offering specific behavioral advice for each. Her core message: you’re not in the wrong place—you’re in a massive transition, and if you move your body, get out of your dorm, and advocate for yourself, college can become a chapter you truly love.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasBoredom is normal—and a sign you’re doing college right.
Large chunks of unstructured time are inherent to college, especially early on. Instead of sitting in your dorm scrolling, use boredom as a cue to leave your room, walk campus, explore facilities, attend events, and discover hidden resources and interests.
Your body is in shock; build a morning routine to stabilize yourself.
New smells, beds, food, people, and schedules dysregulate your nervous system, making everything feel ‘off’ and triggering doubts about your school choice. Counter this by refusing to start the day on your phone and instead moving your body first—walking, exercising, or getting breakfast out—to help your system adapt faster.
The change is fast, so you must go slow with partying and hookups.
A flood of freedom, hormones, and alcohol makes it easy to overdrink and hook up indiscriminately in the first weeks, often leading to regret, safety issues, and awkward ongoing dynamics. Pace yourself with substances and intimacy; you have years to experiment and will like your choices more if you wait until you and others are more grounded.
Finding your people is slow; be flexible and inclusive with friendships.
Early friend groups form around proximity and similar backgrounds and often don’t last. Drop the panic about not having a “group,” avoid clinging or exclusion, invite others along (especially quieter peers), and allow friendships to shift over semesters and years.
Your best college experience is at your college, not on your phone.
Watching high school friends’ highlight reels at other schools will convince you your own school is lacking and keep you stuck in your dorm. Limit social comparison, unplug, and actively create your own memories by showing up to your campus’s events, traditions, and communities.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesDon’t let studying get in the way of your education.
— Mel Robbins’ father
College isn’t the greatest school. Life is the greatest school.
— Mel Robbins
If you’re bored, there’s nothing wrong. In fact, it means you’re doing college right.
— Mel Robbins
You’re not in the wrong place. Things feel weird because you’re just not used to what it feels like to be there yet.
— Mel Robbins
Nobody is going to create your college experience for you. You have to rescue yourself from yourself.
— Mel Robbins
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsHow can a new student realistically limit social media enough to stop comparing their experience to friends at other schools?
Mel Robbins reflects on dropping her son off at college and shares eight hard truths she wishes she and her daughters had known as freshmen. She reframes college as ‘life school,’ emphasizing that the biggest lessons aren’t academic but about change, self-trust, and taking ownership of your experience. The episode covers emotional turbulence, boredom, loneliness, drinking, hookup culture, and friendship dynamics, offering specific behavioral advice for each. Her core message: you’re not in the wrong place—you’re in a massive transition, and if you move your body, get out of your dorm, and advocate for yourself, college can become a chapter you truly love.
What are some concrete examples of a simple first-week morning routine that would help regulate your body and mind?
How should someone handle it if they already drank too much or hooked up quickly and now feel ashamed or stuck with that reputation?
What signs distinguish a normal roommate mismatch from a situation that truly requires escalating to an RA or dean for a room change?
How can introverted or socially anxious students practice ‘doing things alone’ without feeling completely overwhelmed or defeated?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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