The Mel Robbins PodcastHow to Motivate Yourself: Leverage Dopamine & Overcome Your Excuses
Mel Robbins on crush Excuses: Mel Robbins’ Two-Step Blueprint For Self-Motivation.
In this episode of The Mel Robbins Podcast, featuring Mel Robbins, How to Motivate Yourself: Leverage Dopamine & Overcome Your Excuses explores crush Excuses: Mel Robbins’ Two-Step Blueprint For Self-Motivation Mel Robbins uses her son’s painful rejection from his dream college to explore what real self-motivation is—and what it isn’t.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Crush Excuses: Mel Robbins’ Two-Step Blueprint For Self-Motivation
- Mel Robbins uses her son’s painful rejection from his dream college to explore what real self-motivation is—and what it isn’t.
- She explains that motivation is simply the feeling of wanting to do something, and that dopamine is tied to craving, not to the hard, unappealing tasks that usually change our lives.
- Because motivation and dopamine are unreliable for important but uncomfortable work, she offers a two-step process: reconnect deeply to why a goal matters to you, then act despite your feelings—“just do it.”
- Robbins emphasizes adopting an ethos of “fail at full speed”: give your best available effort toward what matters so you avoid lifelong regret, even when you feel discouraged, rejected, or completely unmotivated.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasRedefine motivation as a feeling, not a prerequisite for action.
Motivation is simply “feeling like doing something”; waiting to feel that way before you act guarantees you’ll stall on hard but necessary tasks. Treat it as nice-to-have, not required.
Stop expecting dopamine to ‘rescue’ you on difficult goals.
Dopamine spikes around cravings (food you love, sex, social media, drugs), not around applications, resumes, or cleaning the kitchen, so it won’t magically make you want to do meaningful but uncomfortable work.
Always start by clarifying why this goal truly matters to you.
Knowing your personal ‘why’ increases self-regulation and helps you choose hard, important actions over easy distractions; without a clear why, sustained effort is nearly impossible.
Use ‘Just do it’ to push through the hesitation moment.
The power is in the word “just”—it targets the moment you’re stuck on the sidelines debating, and calls you to act despite fear, self-doubt, or lack of motivation.
Adopt a ‘fail at full speed’ mindset for everything that matters.
Commit to giving your best available effort (even if that’s only 20% today) so you can live without regret, knowing you ran at your goals instead of backing away from potential rejection.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesMotivation just means you feel like doing something.
— Mel Robbins
Motivation is garbage because it's not there when you really need it.
— Mel Robbins
Do not expect this molecule of motivation to rescue you in a situation where you feel down and discouraged. It's not coming.
— Mel Robbins (on dopamine)
If you’re going to fail, fail at full speed.
— Mel Robbins, quoting her daughter’s coach
Stop waiting around to feel like it. Motivation is not coming—and it doesn’t matter, because now you know what to do.
— Mel Robbins
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsHow can I uncover a deeper, more honest ‘why’ behind a goal that I currently feel meh or ambivalent about?
Mel Robbins uses her son’s painful rejection from his dream college to explore what real self-motivation is—and what it isn’t.
Where in my life am I standing on the sidelines waiting to ‘feel ready’ instead of ‘just doing it’?
She explains that motivation is simply the feeling of wanting to do something, and that dopamine is tied to craving, not to the hard, unappealing tasks that usually change our lives.
What would ‘failing at full speed’ look like in one area where I’ve been holding back out of fear of rejection or embarrassment?
Because motivation and dopamine are unreliable for important but uncomfortable work, she offers a two-step process: reconnect deeply to why a goal matters to you, then act despite your feelings—“just do it.”
How can I distinguish between goals I genuinely want for myself versus goals I’m chasing for external validation (parents, peers, status)?
Robbins emphasizes adopting an ethos of “fail at full speed”: give your best available effort toward what matters so you avoid lifelong regret, even when you feel discouraged, rejected, or completely unmotivated.
On days when I only have 20–30% in the tank, how can I redefine ‘full speed’ so I still move forward without burning out?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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